The Whispering Palms
Chapter 1:The Return of the Prodigal Son
The morning mist hung heavy over the Brahmaputra, clinging to the tops of the date palms like a tattered white shawl. In the village of Nayanpur, the day didn't begin with an alarm clock, but with the rhythmic thud-thud of a wooden dheki crushing rice and the distant, melodic call to prayer.
Kashem Ali, a man whose face was a roadmap of seventy years of harvests and droughts, sat on his haunches by the courtyard. He puffed at his hookah, the water bubbling softly. His eyes were fixed on the dirt path that wound through the mustard fields—the path that led to the bus stop at the highway.
"He won't come, Kashem," his wife, Khadija, called out from the kitchen, her voice thick with the smoke of the wood fire. "The city swallows people whole. You've been staring at that road since the first light."
Kashem didn't move. "He said he would come for the harvest, Khadija. A son of this soil cannot forget the smell of wet earth after the first rain."
The Arrival
Around midday when the sun was high enough to turn the pond into a sheet of hammered silver, a figure appeared. He wasn't carrying a plow or a sack of seeds. He carried a sleek, black suitcase and wore a crisp shirt that looked dangerously out of place against the backdrop of mud-plastered walls.
It was Arif, their youngest. He had been in Dhaka for three years, working in a glass tower that Kashem couldn't even imagine.
As Arif approached, the village seemed to hold its breath. The neighbor's children stopped playing with their bicycle tires, and the village elders gathered under the ancient Banyan tree shifted their gaze.
The tension was palpable:
Arif looked thinner, his eyes carrying a weariness that didn't belong to a man of twenty-five.
He didn't bow to touch his father's feet immediately; there was a moment of hesitation, a bridge of time that seemed too wide to cross.
In his hand, he clutched a legal-sized envelope—one that bore the official seal of a land developer.
A Hidden Agenda?
That evening, over a meal of steamed hilsa and homegrown lentils, the air was thick with more than just humidity. Arif barely touched his food.
"Father," Arif started, his voice barely a whisper over the chirping of the crickets. "The village is changing. You can't keep farming this small patch of land forever. It's not sustainable."
Kashem stopped eating. The silence that followed was heavy. "This land fed your grandfather during the famine of '43. It paid for your books, Arif. What are you trying to say?"
Arif laid the envelope on the floor mat. "There are people... people from the city. They want to build a factory near the river. They are offering a price that would let us move to a flat in the city. You wouldn't have to toil in the mud anymore."
Khadija dropped her glass. The water spilled across the floor, soaking into the very earth Arif was proposing to sell.
Next Chapter Teaser:
Kashem must decide between his heritage and his son's future, while a local political leader begins to eye the land for his own gain.
