A few kilometers away from the temple, we wolfed down our late lunch at a dhaba. When we crossed the road outside the eatery and got into our car, the sun was about to set. Our ears yearned for the roar of waterfalls. We decided to visit them the next day before taking the route to Palamau.
The many adventure stories we have read, and films we have watched played in our mind as we approached the derelict Palamau Fort inside the forest. The chamber with its exposed brickwork, the steep stairway with no support and the seemingly bottomless well embraced by thick stemmed creepers were enough to make us wander into the past. After lingering here for a considerable time, we drove to our next destination. Series of steps going upwards or downwards(thankfully more upwards than downwards as this meant the journey back would be less grueling) took us to the Lodh falls, the highest waterfall in Jharkhand. Water ripped the rock facade, scooped out a deep, wide plunge pool and hustled down the hills as a sea-green river.
We reached the sunset point at Netarhat just before the last fleck of purple faded from the sky. Spotting a tiny children's park, Nirjhorini made a dart for the swing. Given the huge number of tourists who had gathered to watch the sunset, their SUVs and our car had to brave a traffic congestion during the return journey, however incredulous the idea of a jam in the remote hills might seem. After checking into our hotel, we swung open the door of the balcony, imagining how the sun would greet us in the morning uncoiling its rays across the slopes, streams and meadows. For now, Nirjhorini flipped open her drawing book, took out her pencils and let the colors siege the blank pages. We nibbled at the snacks we had ordered, till it was time for dinner.
It was pitch dark when the alarm went off. Even as we hurried through our ablutions, the revelry grew louder outside. Large groups of tourists were trooping to the sunrise point, their chatter and excitement echoing in the night air and reaching us in our hotel room. We hastened to the roof when it was almost time for the dark curtains to part. First it was just a pink blush between two trees. Then a speck of gold pricking at the horizon. In a few moments it became a glowing orange curve. Little by little the round shape emerged like a fistful of light molding itself into a ball. Soon the light burst out from the crooks of the trees and the crevasses of the hills to pour upon us.
A couple of hours later we trudged down the steps of the hotel and shoved our luggage into the car. A long, tortuous path through the dense forests took us to the lower Ghagri Falls. Without our guide - a thirteen-year-old local boy - we could have been lost among the teak trees. The falls, like a white ray of light, blazed its way through the dominion of green. We tuned into the silence suffused only by the rasp of leaping water.
From Netarhat began our journey back to Kolkata. It was almost 2:00 AM when I blinked my groggy eyes and caught the lights from the Second Hugli bridge strung across the regal Hugli river. Subha had been driving non stop, battling drowsiness, darkness and a host of apprehensions fostered by the Maoist infested forests along the highway. Back in Kolkata, looking at the rows and rows of buildings stamped against the smoggy sky, the five days spent in the lap of nature seemed surreal. We slipped back into our daily lives, roused by the frenzied waterfalls, lifted by the dreamy hills and tinged by the stunning sunsets.