The Hungry Tide. Amitav Ghosh

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TWO

       The Flood: Jowar

       Beginning Again

       Landfall

       A Feast

       Catching Up

       Storms

       Negotiations

       Habits

       A Sunset

       Transformation

       A Pilgrimage

       Destiny

       The Megha

       Memory

       Intermediaries

       Besieged

       Words

       Crimes

       Leaving Lusibari

       An Interruption

       Alive

       A Post Office on Sunday

       A Killing

       Interrogations

       Mr Sloane

       Kratie

       Signs

       Lights

       A Search

       Casualties

       A Gift

       Fresh Water and Salt

       Horizons

       Losses

       Going Ashore

       The Wave

       The Day After

       Home: An Epilogue

       Keep Reading

       About the Author

       Author’s Note

       Praise

       About the Publisher

PART ONE The Ebb: Bhata

       The Tide Country

      Kanai spotted her the moment he stepped onto the crowded platform: he was deceived neither by her close-cropped black hair, nor by her clothes, which were those of a teenage boy – loose cotton pants and an oversized white shirt. Winding unerringly through the snack-vendors and tea-sellers who were hawking their wares on the station’s platform, his eyes settled on her slim, shapely figure. Her face was long and narrow, with an elegance of line markedly at odds with the severity of her haircut. There was no bindi on her forehead and her arms were free of bangles and bracelets, but on one of her ears was a silver stud, glinting brightly against the sun-deepened darkness of her skin.

      Kanai liked to think that he had the true connoisseur’s ability to both praise and appraise women, and he was intrigued by the way she held herself, by the unaccustomed delineation of her stance. It occurred to him suddenly that perhaps, despite her silver ear-stud and the tint of her skin, she was not Indian, except by descent. And the moment the thought occurred to him, he was convinced of it: she was a foreigner; it was stamped in her posture, in the way she stood, balancing on her heels like a flyweight boxer, with her feet planted apart. Among a crowd of college girls on Kolkata’s Park Street she might not have looked entirely out of place, but here, against the sooty backdrop of the commuter station at Dhakuria, the neatly composed androgyny of her appearance seemed out of place, almost exotic.

      Why would a foreigner, a young woman, be standing in a south Kolkata commuter station, waiting for the train to Canning? It was true of course that this line was the only rail connection to the Sundarbans. But so far as he knew it was never used by tourists – the few who travelled in that direction usually went by boat, hiring steamers or launches on Kolkata’s riverfront. The train was mainly used by people who did daily-passengeri, coming in from outlying villages to work in the city.

      He saw her turning to ask something of a bystander and was seized by an urge to listen in. Language was both his livelihood and his addiction and he was often preyed upon by a near-irresistible compulsion to eavesdrop on conversations in public places. Pushing his way through the

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