He was thirteen when it happened. Red brick laid paths, ponds with floating moss, the church bell cutting through afternoons like a blade. The church festival had illuminated the village beyond itself. Lights were tied to bamboo poles, sweet smell of jaggery and frying oil hung in the air, and men drank more than they should have. By evening, voices hardened. By night, fists appeared. The brawl started near the toddy shop—one shove, one insult too many. People circled instinctively, like they always did. That was when the sound arrived first. A deep, confident growl. A Royal Enfield. It came through the narrow road as if it owned it. The rider stopped without hurry. Tall, broad-shouldered, hair slicked back, a cigarette hanging carelessly from his lips. His shirt clung to him like it knew him well. He did not look at the crowd. The crowd looked at him. Someone whispered his name. It traveled faster than the bell. He picked up a sugarcane from a nearby cart. Tested its weight...
Janalppalikal means window slits—small openings through which we glimpse lives not fully ours. This blog is a series of such glimpses: people I grew up with, moments that shaped me, and memories that still linger quietly.