A Dire Isle Read online




  A Dire Isle

  RV Raman

  A Harith Athreya Mystery

  The following is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used in an entirely fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2021 by RV Raman

  Cover and jacket design by Georgia Morrissey

  ISBN: 978-1-951709-52-5

  eISBN: 978-1-951709-78-5

  Library of Congress Control Number: Available upon request

  First hardcover edition published in December 2021

  By Agora Books

  An imprint of Polis Books, LLC

  www.PolisBooks.com

  44 Brookview Lane

  Aberdeen, NJ 07747

  Also by RV Raman

  Harith Athreya novels

  A Will to Kill

  Fraudster

  Insider

  Saboteur

  Conspirator

  Chapter 1

  The inflatable rubber dinghy careened down the River Betwa, carrying its five occupants inexorably towards the rocks and the forbidding white water beyond. The two boatmen at the rear deftly steered it toward the gap in the rocks as the two other men sitting in front of them held their oars clear of the cold water. The fifth occupant, a bright-eyed girl of sixteen, sat at the bow of the raft, mesmerised by the approaching drop in the river. All five pairs of eyes were riveted to the abrupt descent and the roiling waters beyond.

  “Hang on!” Athreya called as his right hand let go of the oar and clenched the taut nylon rope under his legs.

  To Harith Athreya’s left sat his friend and host, Sharad Sikka. Sharad was a native of Bundelkhand, which Athreya was visiting again after many years. Crouching at the bow in front of the men and tightly gripping ropes with both hands was Moupriya, Sharad’s daughter. The boatmen at the rear of the raft watched the swirling waters ahead warily, as if expecting them to throw up a nasty surprise at any moment.

  Presently, the raft tilted forward alarmingly as its bow plunged over the drop and buried itself – and Moupriya – momentarily into the churning eddies of the Betwa. The girl’s squeal of excitement turned into a gasp and ended in a splutter as a mass of frigid water drenched her from head to toe. It would leave the raft with at least six inches of standing water.

  “Hold tight, Mou!” her father called. He had reached forward in anticipation and was clutching the collar of her windbreaker.

  The raft bounced and spun dizzyingly as the rest of it followed the bow over the drop and hit the frothy water.

  “Row!” called one of the boatmen over the din of the cascading torrent, and four oars plunged into the white water as the raft sought to fight its way out of the eddies.

  Ahead lay a sharp bend in the river where it also narrowed considerably. The quickening current surged and leapt over rocks as the river narrowed, forcing the men to give their undivided attention to steering the raft. The boatmen’s primary task was to keep it from crashing onto rocks, seen or unseen. This turbulent stretch was – depending on one’s perspective – the most thrilling or the most dangerous part of their rafting adventure.

  After an interminable length of time, they emerged onto calmer waters beyond the bend of the river. Athreya rested his oar and took a well-deserved breather, letting his tired arms hang limply at his sides. The other three men did likewise, allowing the raft to drift down the river.

  Athreya ran his long fingers through his uncommonly fine hair that was revealing its first specks of grey. Except the silvery tuft in the front, the rest of his head was largely black. His fine-haired beard, too, was mostly black, except at the chin where a small patch of silver matched the tuft on his head. Sitting there with his hair and beard dripping water, he looked like a bearded collie that had just had a bath.

  After staring at little other than the raging waters, and watching out for submerged rocks, Athreya now lifted his gaze to take in the new vista that greeted him beyond the bend.

  The river was broader now. The forest on the riverbank to his right was dense, green and silent. Not a sign of civilization marred the stretch of undisturbed nature. The left-side riverbank, however, was not as thick or verdant as the opposite bank. An occasional manmade structure peeped through relatively sparse foliage.

  Ahead, the river widened and split into three arms, creating two islets as its outermost arms veered away from each other. The middle arm of the river cut a narrow, rock-strewn channel for the water between the two islets. The boatmen quietly steered the raft towards the left-side arm that was visibly wider. Not only that, but they were ensuring that the raft drifted as close to the left-side bank—and as far away from the islets—as possible.

  That was when Athreya noticed that a sudden quiet had fallen over them and their surroundings. Only the whispers of the river around him intruded. The woods on both banks were silent. Even more so were the two islets looming ahead. There was a curious stillness about them that caught Athreya’s attention, stirring his not inconsiderable imagination. There was something about them that didn’t feel quite natural.

  Several long moments passed in silence as they drifted closer to the islets. Dusk was beginning to fall. The index finger of Athreya’s right hand, which seemed to have a mind of its own, traced unseen designs and words on his knee. This was a reflexive action whenever his mind was churning.

  Athreya caught himself staring at the larger islet. There was something subliminal about it that was casting a spell over him.

  Suddenly self-conscious, he broke out of the trance and looked around the raft. Moupriya was staring unblinkingly at the islet as her fingers crept into the waterproof plastic pouch under her windbreaker to pull out her mobile phone. Sharad seemed ill at ease as his eyes darted from the islet to his daughter. The two boatmen at the rear of the raft had done something peculiar – they had swivelled to their left and now sat facing the left-side riverbank. Their backs were turned towards the centre of the river.

  Perched awkwardly, both of them were staring upriver toward the direction they’d come. While Athreya couldn’t see their faces, their rigid postures made it apparent that they were tense. It was as if they were averting their gaze from the islets. Were they afraid to look at it?

  Athreya turned his attention back to the nearing larger islet, wondering what it was about it that had stirred his imagination. His index finger resumed tracing words on his knee.

  The foliage on the islet – dark green with patches of brown and black – seemed thicker than the forest on the far riverbank. Thick tree trunks stood on the very edge, reminding him simultaneously of the Amazonian rainforest and the Sundarbans mangroves. The slanting evening sun rays seemed incapable of penetrating or brightening the islet, even as it dispelled the darkness in the woods on the riverbanks.

  As he stared, oblivious to whatever else the raft passed on the riverbanks as it drifted downstream, he thought he saw a flicker of white deep in the trees. It was a fleeting impression that lasted less than an instant. Something had momentarily caught the rays of the setting sun. But it had vanished almost as soon as it had appeared.

  Athreya continued staring. Some more long moments passed. Just as he began doubting what he had seen, it appeared again – a hazy, translucent patch of whiteness in the gloom that seemed to move among the trees.

  At that instant, he heard the sound of a photo being taken. Moupriya—who also had been staring at the islet—had clicked her mobile phone’s camera. The sound seemed unnaturally loud in the oppressive silence.

  “Mou!” he heard Sharad hiss. “Don’t!”

  Simultaneously, the raft rocked as the boatmen suddenly changed their position. Athreya turned. The boatmen were no longer staring up the river. Instead, they were gaping at Moupriya with horrified expressions on their faces.

  Ignoring her father, Moupriya raised her mobile phone again, pointing its camera at the islet.

  “Madam!” one of the boatmen called, startling Athreya. The shout was laced with indignation as well as fear. “Madam, no photo!”

  Such was the urgency and intensity of the shout that Moupriya, who was about to click another picture, paused in the act and looked back in surprise over her shoulder.

  “No photos, madam,” the boatman repeated fiercely in his limited English. “Bad luck! Bad luck!”

  “Moupriya!” Sharad snapped, taking his daughter’s full name in exasperation. “I told you not to.”

  “But, Pa—” the girl protested, only to be cut off.

  “No!” Sharad barked. “Put your phone away.”

  Athreya saw Moupriya’s ears redden. Just when he thought that the spirited girl was going to push back, she gave in. She lowered her arm, slid her mobile phone back into the waterproof pouch and zipped it up. Sighs of relief sounded from behind Athreya.

  Surprised at the tension and the unexpected display of emotion over a simple picture, Athreya turned towards Sharad to ask the obvious question: why shouldn’t Moupriya take pictures? But his words remained unsaid on his lips when he saw that Sharad, normally a stoic man, was agitated. His face conveyed a mixture of embarrassment and ire.

  Nonplussed, Athreya turned to look at the two boatmen behind him. They had returned to their earlier position and were sitting stiffly with their backs to the islets and their gazes directed up the river. Athreya now had no doubt that they were avoiding looking – even by chance – at the islet.

 
“Sorry, Athreya,” Sharad said sheepishly, interrupting Athreya’s thoughts. “The place is a bit of a bogey for locals. There are some superstitions about it that I’ll tell you later.”

  “Does it have a name?” Athreya asked. “This islet?”

  “Yes, it’s called … Naaz Tapu.”

  Hardly had Sharad spoken the name than one of the boatmen protested.

  “Sharad Sahib,” he uttered plaintively. “Naam mat lijiye, don’t utter the name!”

  Silence fell, and Athreya turned his attention to Naaz Tapu. They were passing it now. It was no more than a hundred and fifty yards away. The boatmen were still perched rigidly with their backs to it and their eyes fixed on the left riverbank. Moupriya, her young face flushed in excitement was staring wide-eyed at it. Whatever the local tales and superstitions about Naaz Tapu, the girl clearly did not subscribe to them.

  Sharad was throwing quick glances at the islet, but his eyes never rested on it for more than a couple of seconds. He, too, was ill at ease.

  * * *

  An hour later, now back in dry clothes, they were in Sharad’s car en route to Jhansi. They had come ashore about a kilometre downstream from Naaz Tapu, where Sharad’s car and a small truck were waiting for them. The boatmen had loaded the raft into the rear of the truck and departed with it. Meanwhile, the other three had changed into dry clothes in a conveniently located shack and warmed themselves with cups of masala chai before starting their journey back to Jhansi by road. Every stitch they had worn on the raft, including their shoes, had been drenched, and was now lying as a bundle in the boot of the car.

  “Why did the boatmen react so violently to Mou taking a picture?” Athreya asked. “It’s just open wilderness there, isn’t it?”

  “Yes,” Sharad replied, “but the locals have their own reasons for fearing the islet.”

  “Fearing it?” Athreya repeated in surprise. “What’s there about an islet to fear?”

  “Well … old beliefs. They believe that there is something on the islet that is best left alone.”

  “What kind of something? A creature?”

  “Something resides there,” Sharad said cautiously, pointing furtively with his eyes to the back of the driver’s head. Apparently, Sharad didn’t want to speak openly about Naaz Tapu in the driver’s presence. “Something that is … let’s say … insalubrious.”

  Athreya guessed that Sharad had deliberately chosen a word the driver wouldn’t understand. He continued in the same vein.

  “This insalubrious thing that resides there … what form is it? A carnivore? Some kind of a predator?”

  “It’s not an animal, Athreya. Something more esoteric … some kind of a presence.”

  “An apparition then?” Athreya asked. “A local spirit or a phantom?”

  “Apparently.” Sharad nodded.

  “I noticed that you, too, were averting your gaze,” Athreya teased his friend. “Not as much as the boatmen were, but you were not comfortable either.”

  “I grew up here, Athreya,” Sharad explained sheepishly. “As a boy, I heard the stories. When you are young and impressionable, such things embed themselves deeply in the mind. What you saw was the instinctive reaction of someone who grew up with these superstitions. My rational part, of course, doesn’t believe in it.”

  “I’m sure it doesn’t,” Athreya concurred. “I saw that you didn’t prevent Mou from staring.”

  “But he stopped me from photographing it!” Moupriya interposed petulantly from the front seat of the car. “Papa doesn’t believe those stories. Yet, he stopped me.”

  “I had to, Mou,” Sharad responded. “Otherwise the boatmen would go bonkers. You know that. They had told me beforehand that we shouldn’t photograph the islet. If we disregard their request – especially this one – they won’t rent their rafts to us in the future.”

  “I take it that there is a story behind this superstition?” Athreya asked. “There usually is a juicy tale behind local beliefs.”

  “Oh, yes!” Moupriya trilled. “It goes like this—”

  “Not now, Mou!” Sharad growled. “Not here.”

  “Okay, Papa,” Moupriya tittered gaily. “I’ll tell you later, Uncle. Just remind me.”

  “Tell me, Sharad,” Athreya asked, turning to his friend. “Is this only about tales and superstitions? Or is there anything more concrete that has stoked people’s fear?”

  “I believe there has been a history of incidents over the past hundred years or more,” Sharad said. “They say that men who went to the islet didn’t return. Some were found dead. Some went mad. Stuff like that spooks people.”

  “Over a hundred years or more?” Athreya asked. “Isn’t that more in the nature of a legend or a myth? Is it believable?”

  “Depends on the person who hears it, I suppose,” Sharad answered doubtfully. “Someone like you, who has dealt with crime and death for many years, won’t be easily convinced. But few people are like you, my friend. Most people like to believe in myths and legends. Especially folks with little education. They are suckers for the supernatural.”

  “I guess you’re right. There isn’t a place in India that has long history behind it and doesn’t have a ghost story to tell. It’s par for the course. We are an old land with a rich supply of myths.”

  “Maybe.”

  “You’re not sure, Sharad?” Athreya gazed quizzically at his friend who seemed hesitant. “Is there something else? Something more recent?”

  Although he asked the question casually, Athreya had a pressing reason to ask it. He had come to Bundelkhand on an inquiry, and was wondering if the myth of Naaz Tapu had any bearing on the subject of his investigation.

  “Well …” Sharad paused for a long moment, and then continued reluctantly. “There was an occurrence two years ago. A young man went to the islet as a part of a wager. He went in the middle of the night. The next morning, he was found dead.”

  “Dead? Where?”

  “There is a place that has a rock ledge and a stretch of sand. That’s the best spot to alight from a boat if you want to visit the island. He was found a few feet from the water. His head had been broken, and there were claw marks on him.”

  “Claw marks?”

  “So they say.”

  “How did they locate him? Did someone go searching for him?”

  Sharad shook his head. “There was no need. The body was visible from the riverbank.”

  “I see.”

  “And,” Sharad went on, “there was another event more recently – a few months ago, if I am not mistaken. A middle-aged man who was sane and sensible by all accounts, went there in broad daylight. He was a father of two and a responsible husband.”

  “What happened to him?” Athreya asked, searching his friend’s face.

  “He didn’t return. He hasn’t been seen since.”

  “Didn’t anyone go searching for him?”

  “They did. But they wouldn’t go very deep into the woods. They found nothing.”

  “Is it certain that the man actually went to the islet?”

  Sharad nodded.

  “People saw him – he went by a small raft during daytime. Men saw him tie the raft to a tree at the same spot I mentioned earlier – the one with a rock shelf and a stretch of sand. The raft remained where he had tied it. But there was no sign of him.”

  “Why would a sensible father of two go to the islet to begin with?”

  “He was taking soil samples as a part of a local geological survey. I’m told he was a down-to-earth man who didn’t subscribe to the local myths.”

  “Hmm,” Athreya said, frowning. “But why don’t they want anyone photographing the islet?”

  “They don’t want to do anything that could disturb the presence. That’s why they don’t go to the islet, either. They are afraid that they may provoke it by merely going there.”

  “And what would it do, if it were provoked?”

  “So far, it has stayed on the islet. The locals believe that it doesn’t like crossing the water. Provoking it, they fear, may make it cross the water and come ashore. That’s not a possibility they want to deal with. There is no telling what the malevolent thing might do once it finds itself amongst living men.”