<h2><SPAN name="Page_87" title="87"> </SPAN>THE TRUST PROPERTY</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p class="no-indent"> <span class="small-caps">Brindaban Kundu</span> came to his father in a rage
and said: ‘I am off this moment.’</p>
<p>‘Ungrateful wretch!’ sneered the father,
Jaganath Kundu. ‘When you have paid me
back all that I have spent on your food and clothing,
it will be time enough to give yourself these
airs.’</p>
<p>Such food and clothing as was customary in
Jaganath's household could not have cost very
much. Our <i>rishis</i> of old managed to feed and
clothe themselves on an incredibly small outlay.
Jaganath's behaviour showed that his ideal in these
respects was equally high. That he could not
fully live up to it was due partly to the bad influence
of the degenerate society around him, and
partly to certain unreasonable demands of Nature
in her attempt to keep body and soul together.</p>
<p>So long as Brindaban was single, things went
<SPAN name="Page_88" title="88"> </SPAN>
smoothly enough, but after his marriage he began
to depart from the high and rarefied standard
cherished by his sire. It was clear that the son's
ideas of comfort were moving away from the
spiritual to the material, and imitating the ways
of the world. He was unwilling to put up
with the discomforts of heat and cold, thirst and
hunger. His minimum of food and clothing rose
apace.</p>
<p>Frequent were the quarrels between the father
and the son. At last Brindaban's wife became
seriously ill and a <i>kabiraj</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</SPAN> was called in. But
when the doctor prescribed a costly medicine for
his patient, Jaganath took it as a proof of sheer
incompetence, and turned him out immediately.
At first Brindaban besought his father to allow the
treatment to continue; then he quarrelled with
him about it, but to no purpose. When his wife
died, he abused his father and called him a
murderer.</p>
<p>‘Nonsense!’ said the father. ‘Don't people die
even after swallowing all kinds of drugs? If
costly medicines could save life, how is it that
kings and emperors are not immortal? You don't
expect your wife to die with more pomp and
<SPAN name="Page_89" title="89"> </SPAN>
ceremony than did your mother and your grandmother
before her, do you?’</p>
<p>Brindaban might really have derived a great
consolation from these words, had he not been
overwhelmed with grief and incapable of proper
thinking. Neither his mother nor his grandmother
had taken any medicine before making
their exit from this world, and this was the time-honoured
custom of the family. But, alas, the
younger generation was unwilling to die according
to ancient custom. The English had newly come
to the country at the time we speak of. Even in
those remote days, the good old folks were horrified
at the unorthodox ways of the new generation,
and sat speechless, trying to draw comfort from
their <i>hookas</i>.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, the modern Brindaban said
to his old fogy of a father: ‘I am off.’</p>
<p>The father instantly agreed, and wished publicly
that, should he ever give his son one single pice in
future, the gods might reckon his act as shedding
the holy blood of cows. Brindaban in his turn
similarly wished that, should he ever accept anything
from his father, his act might be held as bad
as matricide.</p>
<p>The people of the village looked upon this
<SPAN name="Page_90" title="90"> </SPAN>
small revolution as a great relief after a long period
of monotony. And when Jaganath disinherited
his only son, every one did his best to console him.
All were unanimous in the opinion that to quarrel
with a father for the sake of a wife was possible
only in these degenerate days. And the reason
they gave was sound too. ‘When your wife dies,’
they said, ‘you can find a second one without delay.
But when your father dies, you can't get another
to replace him for love or money.’ Their logic
no doubt was perfect, but we suspect that the
utter hopelessness of getting another father did
not trouble the misguided son very much. On
the contrary, he looked upon it as a mercy.</p>
<p>Nor did separation from Brindaban weigh
heavily on the mind of his father. In the first
place, his absence from home reduced the household
expenses. Then, again, the father was freed
from a great anxiety. The fear of being poisoned
by his son and heir had always haunted him.
When he ate his scanty fare, he could never banish
the thought of poison from his mind. This fear
had abated somewhat after the death of his
daughter-in-law, and, now that the son was gone,
it disappeared altogether.</p>
<p>But there was one tender spot in the old man's
<SPAN name="Page_91" title="91"> </SPAN>
heart. Brindaban had taken away with him his
four-year-old son, Gokul Chandra. Now, the
expense of keeping the child was comparatively
small, and so Jaganath's affection for him was
without a drawback. Still, when Brindaban took
him away, his grief, sincere as it was, was mingled
at first with calculation as to how much he would
save a month by the absence of the two, how much
the sum would come to in the year, and what
would be the capital to bring it in as interest.</p>
<p>But the empty house, without Gokul Chandra
in it to make mischief, became more and more
difficult for the old man to live in. There was no
one now to play tricks upon him when he was
engaged in his <i>puja</i>,<SPAN name="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</SPAN> no one to snatch away his
food and eat it, no one to run away with his inkpot,
when he was writing up his accounts. His
daily routine of life, now uninterrupted, became
an intolerable burden to him. He bethought him
that this unworried peace was endurable only in
the world to come. When he caught sight of the
holes made in his quilt by his grandchild, and the
pen-and-ink sketches executed by the same artist
on his rush-mat, his heart was heavy with grief.
Once upon a time he had reproached the boy
<SPAN name="Page_92" title="92"> </SPAN>
bitterly because he had torn his <i>dhoti</i> into pieces
within the short space of two years; now tears
stood in Jaganath's eyes as he gazed upon the
dirty remnants lying in the bedroom. He carefully
put them away in his safe, and registered a
vow that, should Gokul ever come back again, he
should not be reprimanded even if he destroyed
one <i>dhoti</i> a year.</p>
<p>But Gokul did not return, and poor Jaganath
aged rapidly. His empty home seemed emptier
every day.</p>
<p>No longer could the old man stay peacefully at
home. Even in the middle of the day, when all
respectable folks in the village enjoyed their after-dinner
siesta, Jaganath might be seen roaming over
the village, <i>hooka</i> in hand. The boys, at sight of
him, would give up their play, and, retiring in a
body to a safe distance, chant verses composed by
a local poet, praising the old gentleman's economical
habits. No one ventured to say his real name,
lest he should have to go without his meal that
day<SPAN name="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</SPAN>—and so people gave him names after their
own fancy. Elderly people called him Jaganash,<SPAN name="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</SPAN>
<SPAN name="Page_93" title="93"> </SPAN>
but the reason why the younger generation preferred
to call him a vampire was hard to guess.
It may be that the bloodless, dried-up skin of the
old man had some physical resemblance to the
vampire's.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>One afternoon, when Jaganath was rambling as
usual through the village lanes shaded by mango
topes, he saw a boy, apparently a stranger, assuming
the captaincy of the village boys and explaining to
them the scheme of some new prank. Won by
the force of his character and the startling novelty
of his ideas, the boys had all sworn allegiance to
him. Unlike the others, he did not run away
from the old man as he approached, but came
quite close to him and began to shake his own
<i>chadar</i>. The result was that a live lizard sprang
out of it on to the old man's body, ran down his
back and off towards the jungle. Sudden fright
made the poor man shiver from head to foot, to
the great amusement of the other boys, who shouted
with glee. Before Jaganath had gone far, cursing
and swearing, the <i>gamcha</i> on his shoulder suddenly
disappeared, and the next moment it was seen on
the head of the new boy, transformed into a
turban.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_94" title="94"> </SPAN>The novel attentions of this manikin came as a
great relief to Jaganath. It was long since any
boy had taken such freedom with him. After a
good deal of coaxing and many fair promises, he
at last persuaded the boy to come to him, and this
was the conversation which followed:</p>
<p>‘What's your name, my boy?’</p>
<p>‘Nitai Pal.’</p>
<p>‘Where's your home?’</p>
<p>‘Won't tell.’</p>
<p>‘Who's your father?’</p>
<p>‘Won't tell.’</p>
<p>‘Why won't you?’</p>
<p>‘Because I have run away from home.’</p>
<p>‘What made you do it?’</p>
<p>‘My father wanted to send me to school.’</p>
<p>It occurred to Jaganath that it would be useless
extravagance to send such a boy to school, and his
father must have been an unpractical fool not to
have thought so.</p>
<p>‘Well, well,’ said Jaganath, ‘how would you
like to come and stay with me?’</p>
<p>‘Don't mind,’ said the boy, and forthwith he
installed himself in Jaganath's house. He felt as
little hesitation as though it were the shadow of
a tree by the wayside. And not only that. He
<SPAN name="Page_95" title="95"> </SPAN>
began to proclaim his wishes as regards his food
and clothing with such coolness that you would
have thought he had paid his reckoning in full
beforehand; and, when anything went wrong, he
did not scruple to quarrel with the old man. It
had been easy enough for Jaganath to get the better
of his own child; but, now, where another man's
child was concerned, he had to acknowledge defeat.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>The people of the village marvelled when
Nitai Pal was unexpectedly made so much of by
Jaganath. They felt sure that the old man's end
was near, and the prospect of his bequeathing all
his property to this unknown brat made their
hearts sore. Furious with envy, they determined
to do the boy an injury, but the old man took care
of him as though he was a rib in his breast.</p>
<p>At times, the boy threatened that he would go
away, and the old man used to say to him temptingly:
‘I will leave you all the property I possess.’
Young as he was, the boy fully understood the
grandeur of this promise.</p>
<p>The village people then began to make inquiries
after the father of the boy. Their hearts melted
with compassion for the agonised parents, and they
<SPAN name="Page_96" title="96"> </SPAN>
declared that the son must be a rascal to cause
them so much suffering. They heaped abuses on
his head, but the heat with which they did it
betrayed envy rather than a sense of justice.</p>
<p>One day the old man learned from a wayfarer
that one Damodar Pal was seeking his lost son,
and was even now coming towards the village.
Nitai, when he heard this, became very restless
and was ready to run away, leaving his future
wealth to take care of itself. Jaganath reassured
him, saying: ‘I mean to hide you where nobody
can find you—not even the village people
themselves.’</p>
<p>This whetted the curiosity of the boy and he
said: ‘Oh, where? Do show me.’</p>
<p>‘People will know, if I show you now. Wait
till it is night,’ said Jaganath.</p>
<p>The hope of discovering the mysterious hiding-place
delighted Nitai. He planned to himself how,
as soon as his father had gone away without him,
he would have a bet with his comrades, and play
hide-and-seek. Nobody would be able to find
him. Wouldn't it be fun? His father, too, would
ransack the whole village, and not find him—that
would be rare fun also.</p>
<p>At noon, Jaganath shut the boy up in his house,
<SPAN name="Page_97" title="97"> </SPAN>
and disappeared for some time. When he came
home again, Nitai worried him with questions.</p>
<p>No sooner was it dark than Nitai said: ‘Grandfather,
shall we go now?’</p>
<p>‘It isn't night yet,’ replied Jaganath.</p>
<p>A little while later the boy exclaimed: ‘It is
night now, grandfather; come let's go.’</p>
<p>‘The village people haven't gone to bed yet,’
whispered Jaganath.</p>
<p>Nitai waited but a moment, and said: ‘They
have gone to bed now, grandfather; I am sure they
have. Let's start now.’</p>
<p>The night advanced. Sleep began to weigh
heavily on the eyelids of the poor boy, and it was
a hard struggle for him to keep awake. At midnight,
Jaganath caught hold of the boy's arm, and
left the house, groping through the dark lanes
of the sleeping village. Not a sound disturbed
the stillness, except the occasional howl of a dog,
when all the other dogs far and near would join in
chorus, or perhaps the flapping of a night-bird,
scared by the sound of human footsteps at that
unusual hour. Nitai trembled with fear, and held
Jaganath fast by the arm.</p>
<p>Across many a field they went, and at last came
to a jungle, where stood a dilapidated temple
<SPAN name="Page_98" title="98"> </SPAN>
without a god in it. ‘What, here!’ exclaimed
Nitai in a tone of disappointment. It was nothing
like what he had imagined. There was not much
mystery about it. Often, since running away from
home, he had passed nights in deserted temples like
this. It was not a bad place for playing hide-and-seek;
still it was quite possible that his comrades
might track him there.</p>
<p>From the middle of the floor inside, Jaganath
removed a slab of stone, and an underground room
with a lamp burning in it was revealed to the
astonished eyes of the boy. Fear and curiosity
assailed his little heart. Jaganath descended by a
ladder and Nitai followed him.</p>
<p>Looking around, the boy saw that there were
brass <i>ghurras</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</SPAN> on all sides of him. In the middle
lay spread an <i>assan</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</SPAN>, and in front of it were
arranged vermilion, sandal paste, flowers, and other
articles of <i>puja</i>. To satisfy his curiosity the boy
dipped his hand into some of the <i>ghurras</i>, and
drew out their contents. They were rupees and
gold <i>mohurs</i>.</p>
<p>Jaganath, addressing the boy, said: ‘I told you,
Nitai, that I would give you all my money. I
<SPAN name="Page_99" title="99"> </SPAN>
have not got much,—these <i>ghurras</i> are all that I
possess. These I will make over to you to-day.’</p>
<p>The boy jumped with delight. ‘All?’ he
exclaimed; ‘you won't take back a rupee, will
you?’</p>
<p>‘If I do,’ said the old man in solemn tones,
‘may my hand be attacked with leprosy. But
there is one condition. If ever my grandson,
Gokul Chandra, or his son, or his grandson, or his
great-grandson or any of his progeny should happen
to pass this way, then you must make over to
him, or to them, every rupee and every <i>mohur</i>
here.’</p>
<p>The boy thought that the old man was raving.
‘Very well,’ he replied.</p>
<p>‘Then sit on this <i>assan</i>,’ said Jaganath.</p>
<p>‘What for?’</p>
<p>‘Because <i>puja</i> will be done to you.’</p>
<p>‘But why?’ said the boy, taken aback.</p>
<p>‘This is the rule.’</p>
<p>The boy squatted on the <i>assan</i> as he was told.
Jaganath smeared his forehead with sandal paste,
put a mark of vermilion between his eyebrows,
flung a garland of flowers round his neck, and
began to recite <i>mantras</i>.<SPAN name="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_100" title="100"> </SPAN>To sit there like a god, and hear <i>mantras</i> recited
made poor Nitai feel very uneasy. ‘Grandfather,’
he whispered.</p>
<p>But Jaganath did not reply, and went on
muttering his incantations.</p>
<p>Finally, with great difficulty he dragged each
<i>ghurra</i> before the boy and made him repeat the
following vow after him:</p>
<p>‘I do solemnly promise that I will make over
all this treasure to Gokul Chandra Kundu, the son
of Brindaban Kundu, the grandson of Jaganath
Kundu, or to the son or to the grandson or to
the great-grandson of the said Gokul Chandra
Kundu, or to any other progeny of his who may
be the rightful heir.’</p>
<p>The boy repeated this over and over again,
until he felt stupefied, and his tongue began to
grow stiff in his mouth. When the ceremony was
over, the air of the cave was laden with the smoke
of the earthen lamp and the breath-poison of the
two. The boy felt that the roof of his mouth had
become dry as dust, and his hands and feet were
burning. He was nearly suffocated.</p>
<p>The lamp became dimmer and dimmer, and
then went out altogether. In the total darkness
that followed, Nitai could hear the old man climbing
<SPAN name="Page_101" title="101"> </SPAN>
up the ladder. ‘Grandfather, where are you
going to?’ said he, greatly distressed.</p>
<p>‘I am going now,’ replied Jaganath; ‘you
remain here. No one will be able to find you.
Remember the name Gokul Chandra, the son of
Brindaban, and the grandson of Jaganath.’</p>
<p>He then withdrew the ladder. In a stifled,
agonised voice the boy implored: ‘I want to go
back to father.’</p>
<p>Jaganath replaced the slab. He then knelt
down and placed his ear on the stone. Nitai's
voice was heard once more—‘Father’—and then
came a sound of some heavy object falling with a
bump—and then—everything was still.</p>
<p>Having thus placed his wealth in the hands of
a <i>yak</i>,<SPAN name="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</SPAN> Jaganath began to cover up the stone with
earth. Then he piled broken bricks and loose
mortar over it. On the top of all he planted turfs
of grass and jungle weeds. The night was almost
spent, but he could not tear himself away from the
spot. Now and again he placed his ear to the
ground, and tried to listen. It seemed to him that
from far far below—from the abysmal depth of the
earth's interior—came a wailing. It seemed to
<SPAN name="Page_102" title="102"> </SPAN>
him that the night-sky was flooded with that one
sound, that the sleeping humanity of all the world
was awake, and was sitting on its beds, trying to
listen.</p>
<p>The old man in his frenzy kept on heaping
earth higher and higher. He wanted somehow to
stifle that sound, but still he fancied he could hear
‘Father.’</p>
<p>He struck the spot with all his might and said:
‘Be quiet—people might hear you.’ But still he
imagined he heard ‘Father.’</p>
<p>The sun lighted up the eastern horizon.
Jaganath then left the temple, and came into the
open fields.</p>
<p>There, too, somebody called out ‘Father.’
Startled at the sound, he turned back and saw his
son at his heels.</p>
<p>‘Father,’ said Brindaban, ‘I hear my boy is
hiding himself in your house. I must have him
back.’</p>
<p>With eyes dilated and distorted mouth, the
old man leaned forward and exclaimed: ‘Your
boy?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, my boy Gokul. He is Nitai Pal now,
and I myself go by the name of Damodar Pal.
Your <em>fame</em> has spread so widely in the neighbourhood,
<SPAN name="Page_103" title="103"> </SPAN>
that we were obliged to cover up our origin,
lest people should have refused to pronounce our
names.’</p>
<p>Slowly the old man lifted both his arms above
his head. His fingers began to twitch convulsively,
as though he was trying to catch hold of some
imaginary object in the air. He then fell on the
ground.</p>
<p>When he came to his senses again, he dragged
his son towards the ruined temple. When they
were both inside it, he said: ‘Do you hear any
wailing sound?’</p>
<p>‘No, I don't,’ said Brindaban.</p>
<p>‘Just listen very carefully. Do you hear anybody
calling out “Father”?’</p>
<p>‘No.’</p>
<p>This seemed to relieve him greatly.</p>
<p>From that day forward, he used to go about
asking people: ‘Do you hear any wailing sound?’
They laughed at the raving dotard.</p>
<p>About four years later, Jaganath lay on his
death-bed. When the light of this world was
gradually fading away from his eyes, and his
breathing became more and more difficult, he
suddenly sat up in a state of delirium. Throwing
both his hands in the air he seemed to grope about
<SPAN name="Page_104" title="104"> </SPAN>
for something, muttering: ‘Nitai, who has removed
my ladder?’</p>
<p>Unable to find the ladder to climb out of his
terrible dungeon, where there was no light to see
and no air to breathe, he fell on his bed once
more, and disappeared into that region where no
one has ever been found out in the world's eternal
game of hide-and-seek.<SPAN name="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</SPAN></p>
<div class="story-title"><SPAN name="Page_105" title="105–106"> </SPAN>THE RIDDLE SOLVED</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />