Books From the Pantry: Cycling to the End of the World by Neil Leadbeater reviewed by Michael W. Thomas

In his 2022 short story collection, The Man Who Loved Typewriters, Neil Leadbeater created worlds in which the bizarre lurked in the recesses of the everyday. The effect was of a black-marketeer with bottles of dubious whiskey hidden in the folds of his capacious coat. In the eighteen stories that make up Cycling to the End of the World, novelty again lies in wait to trap and enthrall the reader. So too do comedy and sadness, poignancy and compassion. For some of the characters here, startling revelations confirm their suspicion that life is a rum old proposition and no mistake; for others, they mark a profound turning point in existence.

The stories vary in length. In the shorter ones, a portal effect frequently operates: humdrum activity becomes a conduit through which a character enters a world exceedingly rich and strange. ‘Alice was not expecting any adventures,’ reveals the narrator at the start of ‘Alice in Slumberland’. ‘She was after a new mattress because she wanted to get a good night’s rest’. But the title promises otherwise. Alice is soon swamped by re-versioned characters out of Lewis Carroll; even so, madcap capers lead her, improbably, to make the perfect purchase. In ‘Spin’, meanwhile, we are in the world of wordplay. In a launderette, Rosalind and Sandy are treated to a woman loudly holding ‘the conversation to end all conversations’ on her phone. They are shocked – but should they be? This is, after all, the ultimate arena for washing dirty linen. The woman is the very picture of self-assurance, as is Sid Sorrell, the department store lift attendant in ‘Going Up In The World’. His pronouncements, however, aid rather than astonish. Like an archetypal taxi-driver, he is part functionary, part philosopher (he even thinks of the lift as his ‘cab’). He soon learns to read the quiddities of those whom he ferries up and down: ‘the man who kept straightening his tie…the boy with the unabashed gaze who looked in awe at everything’. Like a London taxi-driver, he perfects his version of The Knowledge, condensing what each floor exhibits to one or two words for his passengers’ enlightenment, ever mindful that he is performing for them, ensuring that ‘The tone would change from day to day according to his mood’.

One thing that makes these stories appealing is the relationship between narrator and material. Leadbeater allows their impact, humorous or otherwise, to emerge naturally. There is no nudging, no flagging up of an imminent joke or moment of tragedy. This is particularly the case when the focus is on a character whom life has marked with solitude. ‘Green Bottles’ is a meditation on fragility: of glass and of human existence. Pip, something of a loner like his Dickensian namesake, ventures into a bottle factory next to his school. Once, when he’d visited it on a school trip, it seemed like a place of disquieting mystery: ‘The heat in the factory was like something from Dante’s inferno. Pip hadn’t reckoned on God placing hell so close to the playground’. Now it’s abandoned – but something draws him back. Or is it abandoned completely? At the end of a long corridor, he makes a discovery that he can never unsee, that forcibly ushers in the next phase of his life, symbolized by a bottle that he knocks off a shelf during his confused departure: ‘It was one of the few that had been left behind and it smashed into pieces the instant it hit the ground’. Something that can never be unseen also characterizes Sarah’s appointment for an eye test in ‘The Examination’, where the optometrist’s unhurried routine, his professional proximity to her, morphs into a hellish memory: ‘Could he see what she had seen when the stranger had entered her room? She’d screamed then, more out of pain than surprise’.

In some of the stories the prose is worked closely, almost taking on the compression of poetry. In ‘Viridian’, divers come upon ‘a beautiful bronze sculpture’; their minds racing, they wonder if ‘she was Salacia, the goddess of saltwater or Amphitrite…wife of Poseidon’. Once positioned on land, in the Abbey Gardens on Tresco, she exhibits a mesmerising restlessness, her glaze alternating ‘between Tiffany blue and Persian green’, her mouth a birthing ground for hosts of butterflies. Immobile herself, she is the site of endless fluidity. In ‘Cycling to the End of the World’, the narrator addresses the reader directly. A meditation on time and distance, the story offers a triangulation: our thoughts on where the world ends (having long ceased to be flat); the delirious illusion of speed and distance created by a fixed exercise bike; and Carl Orff’s ‘final musical statement to the world’, De Tempore Fine Comoedia, or A Play on the End of Time. The story concludes with a powerful image: hearing Orff’s opera while sending the speedometer off the dial on such a bike. Managing to do that, it could be said, you have thwarted distance and reached the end of time – all without leaving your room. ‘What a way to go’, remarks the narrator as if, between them, Orff and the bike have conjured the ultimate journey and time cannot hope to contain it.

One of the most moving stories in the collection is ‘Red Letter Days’. Blake Eddison is a baby boomer, a term still suggestive of youth – in terms of hope, at least, if not reality. In fact he is a widower ‘in his mid-seventies’ but he does not live alone. His past is at large in his house: in a printing press, in newspapers and school reports, on examination papers – and, most tellingly, on old reel-to-reel tape recordings, three of which are central to the story. (That his name echoes the famous inventor’s is fitting, given the presence of so many artefacts from bygone times.) But the story isn’t a variation on Krapp’s Last Tape. Eddison is not a counterpart of Samuel Beckett’s obessive, rancorous listener. Instead, he selects particular tapes from key points in his life: when he began to understand what makes people tick, when he became attuned to the sights and sounds of the world, when he found himself on the threshold of a whole new phase. Here he is on Spool ‘20/36’, a holiday job on Uncle Remy’s fish van, learning of customers’ habits and the importunate ways of cats – until a change in those habits causes Uncle Remy’s downfall. Here he is on ‘Spool 20/47: Landscape Gardening with Eddie Snape: Holiday Job: Summer 1970’. He’s just about to go away to College; shortly, his world will move up a step. Sunbathing in one garden nearby, a woman goes the full come-hither, but Eddie gets between her and Blake’s hormones: ‘It’s best to take no notice. You don’t want to get involved with that sort of thing’. Notwithstanding the free love and dishevelled carelessness that ‘baby boomer’ connotes, it’s advice that has served Blake well all his life; in fact, he keeps a radio on in the house to make up for the loss of his wife. Finally, he listens to ‘Spool 56/25: Mr Price: Ironmonger: Fireworks: November 1960’ – a fitting choice, given that the story is set on the fifth of November. Now, once again, he loses himself in the array of fireworks that, like a licensed Mephistopheles, Mr Price sold to eager children ahead of the big night: ‘It was his rockets that I liked the most. I thought every one of them would reach the moon but some would only chortle in the neck of a bottle without ever leaving the ground’.

‘Oh well’, thinks a character at the end of another story, ‘Glass Half Full’, ‘stranger things happen at sea’. It is a testimony to Neil Leadbeater’s breadth of curiosity and inventiveness that he captures so much strangeness and sets it down in these pages. But always the strangeness has a purpose. His characters start the day thinking that the world is like this; by the end, they cannot deny that it is like that, and it is a testament to their fortitude – or capacity for hope – that they reshape their behaviour accordingly. Like Pip in the bottle factory, they cannot unknow what they discover. These stories are by turns humorous, wistful, reflective; always they are absorbing. The result is a bicycle ride that cries, Alice in Wonderland-style, Jump On!

Michael W. Thomas’s latest poetry collection, with Tina Cole, is Nothing Louche or Bohemian (Black Pear Press). His latest novel is The Erkeley Shadows (Amazon KDP / Swan Village Reporter). His reviews have appeared in The Times Literary Supplement, The London Magazine and Writing in Education. For several years he was Poet-in-Residence at the Robert Frost Festival, Key West, Florida. www.michaelwthomas.co.uk

Neil Leadbeater is also one of our Ink Pantry reviewers, and published poets. You can find more of Neil’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: Earth movers: Dolmens: The Gift by Mark Young

Earth movers

I open the kitchen pantry
& let the ditchdigger out
for its evening run. It is
painted in pastels, as if to
say it is not just some fell
creature of the forest, has
culture, compassion, feels
for the earth each time it
tears it open to lay fiber

optic cables or waste or
water pipes. It claims it
has sensitivity, has read
poetry, is informed by
the poems of Edna St.
Vincent Millay & Emily
Dickinson. I half-believe
that — the poem bit, but
not the poets. Too often

I have opened the pan-
try door & found the
bucket raised, the crock-
ery & preserves smashed,
the digger turning semi-
circles, back & forth, back
& forth, & shouting at the
walls, ”rage, rage, against
the dying of the light”

Dolmens

The light the moon lays
down on the pavement. Faint
footprint or bleached skull.
Enough to see, not to see
by. Small particles exist as
talismans. Talismen? The
night around, the moon
is part of it. Paving is
basedrop, solid to the
touch. Trees are cutouts,
substance only by impli-
cation. Cannot be touched,
cannot be solid. The moon
a round, the night is apart
from it. Neither seen. Neu-
trinos passing. A footprint
gleaming as it fluoresces
in the skull. Small talis-
man, past article of faith.

The Gift

Supposing it to be
the proper charm
I spell it out. But
maybe my pro-
nunciation or a

shift in meaning
of a keyword
has rendered it in-
operable. So instead
of the largesse I

had hoped
I have only these
small fragments to
bring to you. There is
still a little sense

to them, some
miscellaneous
magic. But, perhaps
if you were to
breathe on them…..

 Mark Young‘s most recent books, all published in March, 2025, are Some Unrecorded Voyages of Vasco da Gama, from Otoliths, Home Hill, Australia,; the downloadable pdf, Closed Environment, from Neo-Mimeo Editions, Nualláin House, Monte Rio, California, U.S.A.; & The Complete Post Person Poems, from Sandy Press, San Diego, California, U.S.A.

You can find more of mark’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: The Seagull’s 238th Seguidilla: A Duplex Only Turns 74 Twice by Jake Sheff

The Seagull’s 238th Seguidilla

I suspect the genesis
Of many a gull
Poet goes something like this:
Language is a tool
For introspection,
That becomes clear; a desire
For self-connection

Blossoms. The diary is os-
Tensibly the place
To start. After a certain
Amount of entries,
They find the deformed
Children of Narcissus and
Neurosis have stormed

Their pages. Compared to what
Had sparked so much hope
In words, these are sand. But rath-
Er than giving up
On their quest or los-
Ing faith in marks, they turn from
Their oceans of prose.

A Duplex Only Turns 74 Twice

All professions are conspiracies against the laity
George Bernard Shaw, The Doctor’s Dilemma

“Nothing exists from which no good comes,” it said.
“What do you mean?” I asked. With a tender click,

The night was tightly closed. “I mean nothing
Exists from which no good comes.” “Even war?”

“Even war,” it said. In a tight close-up,
The hour began to look like a black-eyed

Houri of paradise. “Even death?” I asked.
“Especially death.” “Who are you?” “I am

That iamb,” it said. Who am I to kill
A subtle brilliance? “And,” it said, “your sister.”

“I have a sister? I have a sister!”
When you have a sister, no bruising is

Unexplained; this darkest of medical
Maxims makes the goodness of nothingness plain.

Jake Sheff is a pediatrician and veteran of the US Air Force. He’s married with a daughter and a crazy bulldog. Poems, book reviews and short stories of Jake’s have been published widely. Some have even been nominated for the Best of the Net Anthology and the Pushcart Prize. A full-length collection of formal poetry, “A Kiss to Betray the Universe,” is available from White Violet Press. He also has three chapbooks: “Looting Versailles” (Alabaster Leaves Publishing), “The Rites of Tires” (SurVision) and “The Seagull’s First One Hundred Seguidillas” (Alien Buddha Press).

You can find more of Jake’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: The Library of Lost Languages by Mohit Saini

Here, the dictionaries are tombs—
words folded like unsent letters.
A scholar coughs over the brittle spine
of a tongue that forgot how to sing.
The caretaker oils the hinges at dusk,
his hands fluent in silence.
Moths annotate the margins,
their wings whispering palimpsest.
Children run fingers over Brahmi’s bones,
tracing what the ink refused to hold.
A parrot in the courtyard repeats
the last curse, the last lullaby.
Rain taps the roof in Morse code,
asking if the dead can still be read.
The librarian shelves the question
between memory and monsoon.

Mr. Mohit Saini is a writer, poet, and researcher, working as an
Assistant Professor at Compucom Institute of Technology & Management,
Jaipur. With 8 years of experience in the field of language and
linguistics, he has contributed significantly to research and
education in these areas. His academic qualifications include a
Bachelor of Education, a Postgraduate degree in Business
Administration, and a Master’s in English from the University of
Rajasthan. His areas of expertise encompass literature, second
language acquisition, psycholinguistics, English grammar, multilingual
education, and the implementation of language policies in higher
education. He is also the author of several published poems,
showcasing his creative engagement with language alongside his
academic pursuits. He resides in the culturally rich city of Jaipur.

Poetry Drawer: The Silence by Sumit Kumar Thakur

And
I just nodded my head
Perhaps, the silence was the answer
The silence; extreme silence
Where nothing comes and goes
Nobody dares to hear the sound of silence
The scattered dreams, pains, gains, joy
Relentlessly striving towards silence
The sign of nothingness
That persists here and there
Nowhere and everywhere
Leading the anonymous to the ocean of emptiness
The emptiness within; in and out
All the way in fully fledged environs
Where nothingness exists
And
Emptiness rules.

Sumit Kumar Thakur is from Nepal. Sumit has an M.A. and M.Phil. in English from Pokhara University, Nepal.

Poetry Drawer: In Response to a Motivational Speech: The Gravediggers: What sort of? by Dr. Susie Gharib

In Response to a Motivational Speech

One’s worth is measured by what one owns
in the Western, Northern, and Middle Eastern realms
and an academic degree would bring one a tripled ridicule
if it has the potential to become a power abuse
and instead opts for integrity and observing the rules:
it is a sure sign that its owner is a damned fool.

I am certain that your wisdom-impregnated breaths
are not wasted on your attentive audience.
You do transform the lives of people
with your hard-harvested experience.
Yet please make an allowance for one exception:
a person whose life has been war-ridden,
impoverished by recession,
and still subsists without electric currents.
We have been without power for years
so have become like the appliances of our households
in a state of constant disuse,
eternally waiting to be enthused
by being plugged to a charged socket.

They have been experimenting on us with their latest inventions.
We have become the playgrounds for weapons of mass destruction,
and believe me they are not as in Peter Gabriel’s lay:
games without frontiers,
or even without scalding tears.

I agree with you that there are no saviours
to rescue us.
I have waited long enough
until ageing has claimed me a victim:
(I do wear the costume of a victim).
I am no longer awaiting a miracle
but have opted to be waiting for Dodo
in the remaining interval.
When I cannot save a single child from air raids,
or starvation in a siege,
or the theft of their internal organs,
I feel a personal, internal change is not worth the effort.
But thank you all the same
since your speech has inspired this dictum.

In our lives, we have no comfort zones to wallow in,
neither spiritual nor regional.
In our immediate circle swim sharks and snakes,
and the cobwebs we had weaved have all perished
in manufactured storms.

Our only remaining nutrition is music that transcends:
Zimmer’s and Enigma’s.

Your words resonate with Stoic teachings.
I once thought of myself as a Stoic,
and the Brontë Sisters were my role model.
I kept silent for years
until my nose began to bleed
and my subconscious exploded with a surplus of unease.

We are not mere substance like pottery and swords
that can be forged with fire.
We do possess a vulnerable soul
that can get scorched,
that can be depleted by grief and trials
until it grows cold
to everything that humans stand for.

The Gravediggers

My dog utters a howl of sheer remonstrance
for my ears to capture the clash between metal and soil
right beneath the window of my bedroom.

I wake up with a startle
and wonder if some thieves
are up to new mischief.
It is 5 am and still very dark for eyes to dilate.

To my great consternation, the digging continues.
So, I awaken my brother,
who enthusiastically inspects the surroundings
with a pair of sleepy orbs
since he has learned to take me seriously when I become appalled.

He first discerns two persons digging a hole
in the ground below,
with a big dead dog lying beside
to be interred.

“It is just a dead dog,” he whispers to calm me down,
but I find it hard to understand
why this particular spot
has to be the hallowed site
when a neighbouring wasteland is fitter to be a burial ground.

A political turmoil has indeed made the sound of bullets
and every trespassing footstep
orchestral manoeuvres in the dark,
and this is no allusion to the famous pop band.


What sort of?

What sort of dominion do you have over your domain?
Do you keep it under lock,
or does it boast a very wide, open stone gate?
Is it bullet-proof,
or with a monitoring satellite
and a thermal all-seeing eye
that are pinned to a crate?
Do security guards or robots
patrol your massive estate?
And do you at all feel safe?

What sort of noise disturbs your slumberous phase!
Do you sleep with one eye wide open
as birds do and other vigilant breeds?
Do you resort to pills that can keep you sedate,
or entrust your precious being to a nanny
who is past middle-age?
And do you at all contemplate getting betrayed?

Dr Susie Gharib is a graduate of the University of Strathclyde with a PhD on the work of D.H. Lawrence. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in Adelaide Literary Magazine, Green Hills Literary Lantern, A New Ulster, Crossways, The Curlew, The Pennsylvania Literary Journal, Ink Pantry, Mad Swirl, Miller’s Pond Poetry Magazine, and Down in the Dirt.

Susie’s first book (adapted for film), Classic Adaptations, includes Charlotte Bronte’s Villette, Virginia Woolf’s The Waves, and D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover.

You can find more of Susie’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: Untitled: Running by Pulkita Anand

*
Hornbill, he is busy, too busy.
He doesn’t look at me.
What the hell is he doing from one branch to another
Ransacking the leaves like files.
Oops! He got something. Oh! he gobbled it.
Unperturbed by the din and the dark,
He just enjoys eating and eating.
Guttler!
*
Hey Gorg! Don’t kill me with this look.
I look and look at you
And you? Just fly off
Perch somewhere else
I love you, dove.
Tell me, you too are in love.
*
Does the teel know that she is cute?
Does the snake taste its poison?
Is the banyan tree bothered about its matted hair?
Where did the sparrow learn her song?
And why is this squirrel nibbling my poem?
*
Once upon a day, like any other days
I was reading poems, with beautiful passages, like most poems.
While I was about to fly on the wings of Poesy
I heard a cracking, a gentle, gingerly cracking.
I said, “Whose there?” and got no reply.
And then again begin the sounds of cracking
I rose and went out. I saw two doves eating crumbs.
Now, when the night removes its veil, and the sun slants its rays
At my house, not only doves but sparrows and squirrels crackle.
And I wonder how subtly they cracked my ego, my sorrow and my fear.
*
What if a cloud descends on you and takes you in its arms?
What if a centipede starts thinking about balancing
its legs instead of walking?
What if you hide yourself in the rose?
What if I become transparent like a river and flow everywhere?
What if I know what the trees are telling the wind?
What if you treasure the golden sunlight early in the morning?
What if you feel the green of the forest brighter than
Green notes?
What if you feel the wind, sing with birds, and enjoy as they do?

Running

Running a marathon, I never
Then? Life
I just entered for fun, ok.
Soon started running ahead of my successors
There came a waft of love, a fragrance of peace, a song of joy
But I ignored it for succeeding
When I reached there, I saw wounded, bleeding knees, sobbing voices,..
The hour grew late, and happiness left long ago
I forgot the names of friends and relations.
I forgot what I got.
Forgot that time is not for anyone.
I forgot the way to return and
I forgot to get the return ticket.

Pulkita Anand is an avid reader of poetry. Author of two children’s e-books, her recent eco-poetry collection is ‘we were not born to be erased’. Various publications include: Tint Journal, Origami Press, New Verse News, Green Verse: An anthology of poems for our planet (Saraband Publication), Ecological Citizen, Origami Press, AsiaticInanna PublicationBronze Bird BooksSAGE Magazine, The Sunlight Press and elsewhere.

Poetry Drawer: Bacteria: Walking on White Snow: A Bite by Seungwoo Lee

Bacteria

I’m watching you scratch your head with your nails,
Frantically writing down notes in your neatly organized notebook.

And at that moment
I realize
That we are characters in a movie.

A big bang,
A new history,
I emerge as a baby, fresh out of my mother’s womb.

I suddenly hear the jazz music in the background,
muffled by the sound of chatter;
I hear the syncopated rhythm,
             Improvised and irregular.

Then, tiny beads of water slip from your cup
And drop onto the table;
They spread,
like bacteria,

Just like how
Everything within the suffocating walls of this room –
You,
Me,
The notebook,
The music
The cup –
Multiplies &
Wakes me from my sleep.

Walking on White Snow

I’m scared to walk on white snow.
I’m afraid that I’ll make footsteps with my dirty shoes.
Touch what I should not touch –
take what has been taken from me for a long while.

I stand by my front door and wonder
how the snow maintained its beautiful, curvy figure
over the long, scary night,
how it never encountered the touch of a stranger who could
do things that he knew were just not right.

I don’t want to leave any marks on this trail
of white snow; I want to protect it
and ensure that it keeps its whiteness that
I so greatly miss, on some quiet night.

So, I’m scared to walk on white snow.
As much as I love a winter day, I shall stay in my house,
let the snow stay this way
& hope that it will stay this way for a long while.

A Bite

A natural extension of the hand,
sharp,
chopping, slicing, and dicing
slicing meat off the bone

The handle is hollow and filled with sand
You grab it, tight,
containing the silent ghost.

Then comes a plate.

A mosaic
chewy, bouncy and firm in the hot broth.
warm, earthy, and slightly citrusy

I meet
a magical bite,
a pop of unexpectedness –
clambake memories in one course

There is
a voice in the meal

A whisper that leaves
without saying goodbye.

Seungwoo Lee is a student in South Korea. He is an avid writer/reader who has a great interest in languages. His interest in poetry recently rekindled after attending a summer creative writing program in New York. In his freetime, he enjoys writing poems, listening to music, and daydreaming (…about literally anything) on his bed.

Poetry Drawer: A blue butterfly: Under the Umbrella: The Ladies Dressed Black and White by Nikollë Loka

A blue butterfly

A blue butterfly
comes to rest on my brow,
without a key, without a knock,
it opens the door of the soul
and measures
the depths of your feeling
against the pending dawns,
when night
parts from the sun.
And you, the new moon,
your orbit drawing near,
are burned
in the invisible flame
of a world awakening.
Just a breath of you
remains inside me –
enough
for another world,
without the moon,
and the old sun.

Under the Umbrella

With my glasses on,
I mistake you for the fog.
You dissolve into the wind,
drifting through the rain.
I, intoxicated,
wander the streets beneath an umbrella,
hoping
to see you again.
You walk toward me,
and the umbrella shrinks,
just enough
for one body,
and one soul.
When you rest your head
on my shoulder,
colours of the rainbow
rise from your eyes.

Wearing your glasses,
I pass above the fog.
The clouds unravel
like skeins across the sky.
Beneath the umbrella’s shelter,
the world expands,
the world rejoices-

in the rain and the sunlight.

The Ladies Dressed Black and White

I saw a lady dressed in white,
on a grey day of late fall,
she seemed like an unintentional lost vision,
coming here just like an echo.

I saw a lady dressed in black,
on a scorching day in June,
it seemed like the shadow released a breeze,
and the soul was touched by its hand.

When the ladies in rainbow clothes appear to me,
the usual dissolves into the season’s canvas.
The mysterious ones, in black and white clothes,
stop us, and we reflect just like we do in front of a mirror.


Nikollë Loka was born in Sang of Mirdita on March 25th, 1960; graduated as a teacher at Luigj Gurakuqi University of Shkodra; Master’s degree in Pedagogy at the University of Tirana, Doctorate in History of Education at the University of Tirana. He worked as a teacher, principal in a high school and education inspector in the district of Mirdita, then a teacher in a high school in Tirana and a lecturer at Aleksandër Xhuvani University in Elbasan. Lives in Tirana. Author of nine poetic volumes in Albanian and three poetic volumes in Italian (two of which with co-authors); included in the anthology La Poesie contemporaine albanaiseL’Hartmattan publications, Paris 2024. In addition to Albanian, his poems have been published in Italian, English, French, German, Arabic, Romanian, Swedish and Mecedonian. Invited to television and radio shows dedicated to literature. Editor and reviewer of several literary works, mainly in poetry. Winner of several literary awards in the country and abroad. Member of several national and international literary associations. Ambassador of culture in the organization International Foundation Creativity Humanity (IFCH)-Morocco. Included in the Lexicon of Albanian writers 1501-2001, editions Faik Konica, Pristina 2003 and in the Encyclopedia of Italian language poets, Aletti Editore, Rome 2021, then in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mirdita, editions Emal, Tirana 2021.

You can find more of Nikollë’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Pantry Prose: The Last Whistle in the Meadow by Dr. Ghulam Mohammad Khan

Author’s note: ‘The Last Whistle in the Meadow’ is a richly layered, atmospheric short story that explores memory, isolation, and the ineffable bond between man, land, and beast. Told in a meditative tone with impressionistic detail, the narrative orbits around Rahman Kak, an enigmatic, solitary herder who commands an almost mythic reverence in a Kashmiri village for his uncanny control over cattle and the rhythms of rural life.

At its core, the story is not just about pastoral rituals or rural routines—it’s an elegy for a vanishing world and a meditation on habit, loss, and quiet resistance. Rahman Kak emerges as a figure rooted in the landscape, as gnarled and weathered as the willow trees that surround the meadow. He represents an older order, one in which human and animal instincts are synchronized through unspoken ritual. The recurring motif of his whistle—low, uncanny, almost supernatural—serves as a symbol of this mysterious bond and lends the story an almost magical realist hue.

Violence simmers beneath the surface throughout. The meadow, behind the mosque, becomes a silent arena of ritual combat—not between men, but bulls, whose primal clashes reflect the unvoiced tensions of the community. The villagers, complicit spectators, seem to hunger for spectacle, for distraction, for drama—until it spills over, literally, into blood and broken trees. The story critiques this desensitization through the metaphor of the “orchard bleeding”—a moment where nature suffers because of human indulgence.

Behind the village mosque lay a forgotten wedge of land. To one side, the road curled like a drowsy serpent; to another, the mosque’s whitewashed walls stood sentinel, their peeling paint whispering of decades past. And on the third side, the apple orchard hunched, its gnarled branches heavy with fruit that glowed like stolen embers in the dawn light.  

This was no ordinary patch of earth.  

Every morning, as dew retreated from the blades of grass, the villagers came. They drove their cattle forward—great, snorting beasts with flared nostrils and restless hooves—until the air thickened with dust and the scent of warm hide. Then, the gathering began. Old men with tobacco-stained teeth, wide-eyed children balanced on hips, women with their shawls pulled tight—all lined the road like spectators at some ancient, bloodless coliseum. And the bulls, sensing the audience, obeyed some primal script. They clashed, their horns locking with a crack that echoed off the mosque’s walls. Sometimes, a stray hoof sent a bystander sprawling; sometimes, a furious charge splintered the orchard’s fence, sending apples thudding to the ground.  

And then, just as the chaos threatened to swallow the morning, he appeared. Rahman Kak.  No one knew when he had first begun this ritual, just as no one dared ask why the cattle obeyed him. He emerged from his hut—a crooked silhouette against the rising sun—his face carved into a grin that didn’t quite reach his eyes. In his right hand, a stick, notched and polished by years of use, swung like a pendulum. Some claimed he had whittled it himself, shaping it with the same knife he used to cut meat into small pieces. Others swore it was something older, something found.  

Then came the whistle.  

Not the shrill call of a shepherd, but something lower, stranger—a sound that slithered between the beasts’ ears. The bulls stilled. The cows lowered their heads. Even the dust seemed to settle, as if the earth itself held its breath. And with that, Rahman Kak would turn, his stick tapping against his thigh, and lead the herd away—toward the meadow, toward the mist, toward whatever secrets the grass hid from the rest of them.  

The villagers would scatter then, murmuring. But no one ever followed.  

Rahman Kak was in his early sixties—or so he claimed one evening, as we sat beneath the gnarled arms of the ancient willow nursery that stood like a silent guardian at the edge of the grass meadow. The trees here were old souls, their leaves murmuring secrets in the wind, and it seemed fitting that he would choose this place to occasionally unspool a rare scrap of his past. Not that he ever gave much. Even his age felt like a concession, tossed out carelessly, like a bone to a dog.  

He was a man of rigid uniformity. Through the sweltering summers, he wore the same ash-coloured Salwar Kameez, its fabric daubed with the stains of years—mud, sweat, and something darker, something that might have been blood. On his head perched a discoloured white cap, its edges frayed, its fabric sun-bleached to the pallor of old bones. It never left him. Not in the noonday heat, not in the lashing rains, not even—villagers whispered—in sleep. Had anyone ever seen him without it? No. And those who dared to imagine what lay beneath found their thoughts skittering away, uneasy.  

Time had not been kind to him. It had carved three deep furrows into his forehead, trenches where the dust settled like an old curse. On scorching afternoons, you could see it, the grime mixing with his sweat, trickling down in slow, dirty rivulets, as if the earth itself were weeping through him. His body was a paradox: thin, wiry, yet humming with a restless energy that defied his brittle frame. His eyes, small and perpetually wet, seemed to retreat deeper into their sockets with each passing year, as though they were afraid of what they had seen.  

And his face—ah, his face. If you told me, you had seen him smile, I would call you a liar. His cheeks were barren, his mouth a slash of weathered leather. The villagers knew him for his temper, for the way he would square off against anyone—man, woman, even the imam’s eldest son—over some perceived slight involving the cattle. His shoulders would hitch backward, his drooping head snapping up with sudden, venomous pride. Then came the stick—always the stick—lifted and balanced across his shoulders like the yoke of some invisible burden. His words would follow, a torrent of guttural, spiteful syllables, half-lost in the rasp of his breath. No one could decipher them, not at first. It was only at the end, when his voice would fray into something raw and weary, that the meaning would claw its way to the surface:  

“You think I’m a school-bus driver?” he’d snarl, the stick trembling in his grip. “That I should drop your cattle at your doorstep like spoiled children? You can’t even manage two beasts, and I—I have the whole herd to answer for.”

And just like that, the fight would drain out of him. His shoulders would slump, his head would bow again, and he would turn away—back to the cattle, back to the meadow, back to whatever silent understanding he had with the land that the rest of us could never share.  

Every morning, behind the mosque, the earth remembered violence.

It began with a shift in the air—a restless snort, a hoof scraping dirt like a blade being drawn. Then two bulls would lock eyes, their massive flanks trembling with coiled fury. When they collided, the impact shuddered through the crowd like an electric current. The villagers erupted—curses, whistles, laughter—a cacophony that only fed the beasts’ frenzy. The dust would rise in ochre clouds, the spectators’ faces contorted into masks of glee, their voices raw as the bulls rammed horns, their muscles glistening with sweat and defiance.  

Then came the day the orchard bled.  

The fight spilled beyond the trampled circle, the bulls crashing through the frail fence like it was parchment. Apples rained down, their flesh bursting against the soil. A woman, her hands still caked with earth from tending the saplings, let loose a scream that cut through the chaos. She cursed the crowd, the owners, the very bloodline of the beasts, her voice a serrated edge of grief. But the villagers only grinned wider. What were a few broken trees to them? The spectacle was worth the cost.  

Only Rahman Kak could unravel the madness.  

A single whistle—low, dissonant, more vibration than sound—and the bulls froze as if yanked by invisible chains. Their rage dissolved like smoke in the wind. The herd, moments ago a seething mass, now stood eerily still, ears twitching toward that sound. Even the dust seemed to settle in reverence.  

Then he would emerge—or rather, the dust would release him. Some days, the swirling grit swallowed him whole, leaving only the faint outline of his stick, a scythe cutting through the haze. The stench of dung and heat never seemed to cling to him; it was as if the particles themselves feared to invade his lungs. Had the dust fossilized inside him over the years? I wondered. Did his veins run with silt instead of blood?  

His rituals were unvarying. Under the willow trees, their branches trailing like skeletal fingers, he’d take his lunch—always alone, always in silence. But first, he’d lead the herd to the stream that ribboned the meadow’s edge. The cattle drank with an almost ceremonial slowness, as though the water carried whispers only they could hear.  

And it was there, in the dappled shade of those ancient willows, that I first spoke to him. The air smelled of damp bark and something older—something like patience, or perhaps resignation. He didn’t smile at my greeting. He only stared, his teary eyes reflecting the leaves above, as if he’d already seen this moment, and every moment after, and found them all equally fleeting.  

When the weight of the world grew too heavy, I would slip away to the willow nursery, a book clutched under my arm like a talisman. There, even the most corrosive philosophies—Cioran’s bile against existence, his elegies for a godless universe—softened into something almost tender, as if the land itself whispered counterarguments through the sighing leaves. The meadow became a self-contained cosmos, the distant hills pressing close like protective shoulders. Time dissolved. The breeze was a perpetual murmur, threading through the willows’ restless branches, a sound so constant it seemed the trees were breathing.  

Birds were the only calendar the place acknowledged. Winter’s grip might lock the stream in ice, but never silenced them—their songs simply changed key, trading summer’s bright trills for the sparse, crystalline notes of survival. Over fifteen years, I’d memorized the willows not just by sight, but by touch: the gnarled one near the stream whose bark split like an old man’s knuckles; the young sapling that bent as if listening. When loneliness gnawed at me, I’d recite to them—Lear’s ravings into the storm, Whitman’s barbaric yawps—and their leaves would shiver in response, a standing ovation of shadows.  

Then came the day Rahman Kak spoke.

The sun hung white-hot overhead, the meadow shimmering like a mirage. His wife arrived as always, her spine curved under the wicker basket balanced on her head. She served his lunch beneath the willows—flatbread, a smear of curd, the clay bowl emptied in one practiced tilt of his throat. I watched from my usual perch, a dog-eared copy of German Idealism splayed across my knees (a relic scavenged from Srinagar’s Sunday Market, its pages smelling of damp and disregard). When she retreated to gather firewood, I seized my chance.  

“Do they ever speak back?” I asked, nodding to the willows.  

Rahman Kak’s head snapped up. His bones seemed to shift under his skin, quick as a snake’s musculature. For a man so gaunt, his energy was unnerving—a live wire barely insulated by flesh. He studied me with those sunken, liquid eyes, and for a heartbeat, I feared I’d crossed into some unmarked territory. Then he wiped the curd from his beard with a slow, deliberate swipe.  

“You hear them too,” he said. Not a question. An indictment.  

The air between us thickened. Somewhere in the branches above, a bird let out a cry like a laugh.  

“This place has an amazing ambience.” My voice sounded too loud against the willow’s whispering leaves. “It would be so gratifying to pray here, away from the villagers. Tell me, Rahman Kak—do you ever pray beneath these trees?”

The hookah gurgled between his knees as he leaned back against the willow’s ribs, its bark etching grooves into his spine. “No.” A blunt word, sharp as the snap of a twig. “Too many things crowd my mind. Or perhaps—” he puffed, the tobacco’s ember flaring crimson, “—I’ve simply grown accustomed to absence.” 

Thick smoke unfurled from his lips, curling into the dappled light like phantom prayers. His eyes—small, black, glinting with some indefinable victory—never left the burning bowl. It was as if he’d long ago scorched away all capacity for self-reproach.

“When one knows a thing is good,” I ventured, “shouldn’t he strive to change? Even habits can be unlearned.” The words tasted hollow. The willow above us shuddered, as if amused.

Rahman Kak exhaled slowly. “Prayer is good. Like water. Like air.” His calloused fingers traced the hookah’s stem. “But to make a thing your lifelong companion? That requires habit. And habit—” his teeth flashed in something not quite a smile, “—is the cruellest jailer of all. It takes a catastrophe to break its chains.”

“You mean… only a tragedy could make you pray?”

For the first time, his gaze flickered—not with sorrow, but with the cold precision of a man who’d measured his own abyss. “What greater tragedy remains for me?” The hookah bubbled, a wet sound like distant weeping. “Only her death. My wife. If she goes first, the silence at lunchtime will kill me faster than hunger.” 

He tilted his face toward the branches, where sunlight and shadow waged their eternal war. “Better we die together. Right here. No graves, no separation—just the willows to cover our bones.”

The horror of it should have wrung tears, cries, fists against the earth. But Rahman Kak merely tapped the hookah’s ashes onto the roots, as if feeding the tree his regrets. His tone was that of a man discussing crop rotation. 

Yet in that moment, I understood: his love was fiercer than faith, deeper than devotion. And it terrified him. 

“I heard you had quite the shouting match with Karim Kak last evening,” I said, steering the conversation toward safer ground—if village feuds could ever be called safe. “What sparked it this time?”  

Rahman Kak’s lips curled around the hookah’s mouthpiece, sucking in a long, seething drag before answering. “See, boy, my life is a parade of petty tragedies—none worth changing my habits for. But the greatest tragedy of all?” He exhaled smoke like a dragon dispensing wisdom. “The bottomless stupidity of these villagers. They treat me like some school-bus driver, expecting me to deliver their precious cows to their doorsteps. Yesterday, Karim’s cow trampled his neighbour’s turnips, and who gets the blame? Me. That man’s a gifted idiot. If angels descended to teach him, he’d argue with them about the colour of their wings.” He barked a laugh, the sound rough as a saw on wood. “The calves in my herd have more sense than him.” 

His lampooning was a performance—boisterous, venomous, yet strangely joyful. It was as if he relished the absurdity of his tormentors.  

“But this village stubbornness—it’s a habit too, isn’t it?” I pressed. “Doesn’t it take something catastrophic to break collective stupidity?”  

“Nothing will break them,” he said, waving a gnarled hand. “Their minds are like warped timber—no carpenter could straighten them. You know the saying: A dog’s tail stays crooked, even if you bury it in gold.” Then, with sudden sharpness, he curled his finger into his mouth and let out a piercing whistle. The herd, which had begun to stray, froze as if yanked by invisible reins.  

“But the cattle obey you like soldiers,” I marvelled. “Have you ever… taught them this way?” 

A slow, knowing grin spread across his face—the first real smile I’d ever seen from him. “Ah. Now that’s a story.” He leaned back, the willow’s shadow striping his weathered skin. “But I don’t know if you’ve the patience for old men’s tales.”  

“Try me,” I said, shifting closer. “I’m listening.”  

He nodded toward the far edge of the meadow, where a towering wall of poplars stood sentinel. “See those trees? They weren’t there when I first brought cattle to this meadow decades ago. Beyond them lies another field—larger than this one—where the next village’s herd grazed. A narrow canal marked the boundary, and for years, neither herd crossed it. Their caretaker would bring his animals to our stream at noon to drink, and for years, it was peace. Then one day…”  

His voice dropped, and the air itself seemed to lean in.

“Then came the unlucky day.” Rahman Kak’s voice dropped to a gravelly whisper. “A bull—black as a storm cloud, horns like scimitars—charged into my herd. Not for territory. Not for dominance. For her.”  

His knuckles whitened around the hookah stem. “He’d caught the scent of a cow in heat, and madness took him. My cattle scattered like leaves in a gale. I ran after him, my stick cracking against his spine—thwack! —like striking iron. When I finally drove him off, he turned. Looked at me.”

Rahman Kak’s eyes glazed over, seeing it again. “No animal’s gaze should hold that much hate. It was human. Demonic.”  

“The next morning,” he continued, “he came for me.” 

A dry laugh escaped him. “I was young then—fast as a hare. But that bull? He was vengeance on hooves. I barely reached the willows in time. Clung to the branches like a sinner to prayer as he raged below.” His fingers mimicked the bull’s horns, gouging the air. “Tore up the earth like he wanted to uproot the very tree. And that… that became our ritual.”  

The hookah’s ember pulsed as he inhaled, painting his face in hellish light. “Every. Damned. Day. That caretaker laughed—said the bull had ‘spirit.’ Spirit!” He spat the word like poison. “I stopped sleeping. Lay awake, sharpening sticks, plotting. A noose? Too slow. Poison? Coward’s way. Then—”  

He leaned forward, the willow’s shadow slicing across his face. “—I remembered the old story. The one about the djinn who haunted these meadows long ago. They say he took the form of a bull when the moon was dark.”  

A chill skittered down my spine. “You don’t believe that… do you?”  

Rahman Kak’s smile was a blade. “Belief doesn’t matter. Only survival. So, I made a plan.”  

“That night, the idea came to me—clear and sharp as a knife,” Rahman Kak said, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial growl. “The next morning, I enlisted a band of cricket-playing boys to haul a river-smoothed boulder to the willow. It took all of us—grunting, heaving—to wedge it between the branches, a sleeping vengeance waiting to fall.”  

His eyes gleamed with the memory as he mimed the act, fingers splaying open. “When the bull came, I let him rage beneath me, let him gouge the earth like a fool. Then—” He brought his fist down in a swift arc. “The rock fell. A thud like the sky splitting. His horns—those cursed crescents—shattered like clay. For a heartbeat, he swayed, dazed. Then he fled, not like a beast, but like a thing unmoored from this world.” 

A guttural laugh burst from him—short, sharp, more bark than mirth. He seized his stick and drove it into the earth, once, twice, as if hammering the bull’s defeat into the soil. The hookah’s coals flared as he prepared it anew, the smoke twisting into the willow’s leaves like escaping spirits. The gurgle-gurgle of the waterpipe filled the silence, a sound that always made me wonder: How could lungs that breathed such darkness still house such life? 

“The next day?” He exhaled, triumphant. “That demon hid his face in the herd. When I stepped close, he ran—like a coward, like a man.” His grin was a sickle-moon. “Animals learn. But villagers? Their minds are rot.” 

He stood abruptly, hookah still dangling from his lips, his spine unfolding like a rusted hinge.  

“You smoke too much,” I blurted as he turned to leave.  

He paused, glancing back. “Worried about my lungs, eh?” A chuckle. “Every puff of smoke is met by a thousand breaths of this meadow’s air. Balance, boy. Like all things—” He tapped his temple. “—it’s habit.”  Then he was gone, his figure dissolving into the golden haze, an old Kashmiri tune trailing behind him—words half-swallowed by the wind, as if the land itself refused to let them go.  

*********

Years unspooled like a fraying rope. I won admission to university, and the willow forest—with its dappled light and whispering leaves—slipped from my daily rhythm. Occasionally, in the sterile buzz of lecture halls, I’d wonder: Was Rahman Kak still herding cattle beneath those same trees? Did his hookah smoke still curl into the branches like unanswered prayers? A friend assured me he lived, though age had gnawed at him. “Thinner. More bent. But the stick still swings,” he said.  

Then, in my second semester, the call came.  

Autumn had painted the meadows gold when my brother’s voice crackled through the phone: “Rahman Kak is dead. Found in the woods.” The line hissed with static, or perhaps my own held breath. I left campus without a word, the bus ride home a blur of tunnelled vision.  

The village had already gathered. Men washed his body behind the mosque, their hands moving with ritual gentleness over the sunken ribs, the furrowed forehead now smoothed of its storms. But it was the cattle that undid me—their lowing that day was a sound I’d never heard: not hunger, not fear, but grief. Some refused to graze. Others vanished into the forest shadows and didn’t return by moonrise, as if they’d gone to mourn in ways we couldn’t fathom.  

Time, indifferent, marched on. I earned my master’s degree, traded ink-stained notebooks for a teacher’s chalkboard. Meanwhile, Kashmir fractured. The air thickened with rumours—boys crossing borders to clutch rifles, midnight raids dragging sons from their beds, the Ikhwan’s boots kicking in doors. In the schoolyard where I taught, children played hopscotch over cracks shaped like gun barrels. At night, mothers counted heads at dinner tables, their silence louder than the curfew’s sirens.  

And through it all, I’d catch myself staring past the classroom window, toward the distant haze where the willows once stood. Rahman Kak’s stories had died with him, not with a bang, but with the slow suffocation of a people too besieged to listen. His stick, his hookah, his bull’s revenge—all swallowed by an age where even the land seemed to hold its breath, waiting for a deliverance that never came.  

Two more years. The conflict had teeth now.

It gnawed through everything—homes, orchards, the very bones of the village. The Ikhwanis ruled like feral kings, their guns rewriting laws written in the soil for centuries. No one dared approach the willows anymore; their once-sacred shade now sheltered only the click of rifle bolts and the acrid stench of boot-polish and fear.  

Then came the morning they felled them.  

I woke to the news like a gut-punch: The willows—every last one—cut down by Ikhwani saws and axes, sold for lumber or firewood or some petty warlord’s vanity. A witness described the meadow afterwards—naked, shivering, the stumps oozing sap like open wounds. The earth, they said, looked betrayed.  

Years later, the army came. 

They erected a fortress where Rahman Kak once whistled his cattle home—watchtowers of corrugated iron, coils of concertina wire blooming like razor-flowered vines. The meadow, where children once sent cricket balls sailing into the golden light, now bore the tread of combat boots and the sour tang of gun oil.  

Last month, I persuaded a friend to go with me.  

We walked the familiar path, my mind thick with ghosts—the whisper of leaves, Rahman Kak’s hookah bubbling, the thwack of his stick against the bull’s spine. But when we crested the hill, the sight stole my breath: A wasteland.

The land itself seemed to recoil from the barracks’ iron grip. Where the great willow nursery once stood, only hard-packed dirt remained, studded with the pale scars of roots ripped untimely from the earth.  

Then—movement. A soldier burst from a bunker, his beard wild as a thicket, rifle levelled. “No cricket here anymore,” he barked, as if the very idea of joy were contraband.  

We turned back. Behind us, the wind scoured the empty meadow, carrying nothing—no birdsong, no laughter, no stories—just the dull clang of a gate swinging shut on a past that no longer belonged to us.  

Ghulam Mohammad Khan was born and raised in Sonawari (Bandipora); an outlying town located on the wide shores of the beautiful Wullar Lake. Ghulam Mohammad believes that literature is the most original and enduring repository of human memory. He loves the inherent intricacies of language and the endless possibilities of meaning. In his writing, he mainly focuses on mini-narratives, local practices and small-scale events that could otherwise be lost forever to the oblivion of untold histories. Ghulam Mohammad considers his hometown, faith, and family to be the most important things to him. His short stories have appeared in national and international magazines like Out of PrintKitaabIndian LiteratureMuse IndiaIndian ReviewInverse JournalMountain Ink and more. His short story collection The Cankered Rose is his forthcoming work. Presently, he teaches as an Assistant Professor at HKM Degree College Bandipora, Kashmir.

You can find more of Dr Ghulam’s work here on Ink Pantry.