Tiny Travel Tale – By Parthasarathi Chakrabarti
A cold January morning in Delhi, Thesis was looming and my mind was blank. I had a topic, but “the big idea” eluded me. That’s when I heard the 3rd year students are going for a study trip to Jodhpur. That night I was on the train with them.
With the others I visited Pinjore Gardens and the awe inspiring Mehrangarh fort. But I knew I couldn’t stay on with hardly any cash and very little time. I had to be back soon and wanted to see Jaisalmer. So, that night, I walked out of the hotel and thumbed an approaching car.
“Where do you want to go?”
“I need to catch a bus to Jaisalmer.”
“So why are you going that way? Come, I’ll drop you at the local travel agents’.”
Four o’ clock in Jaisalmer, dawn was yet to break. My heart beat faster with excitement. As I walked into the fort, I saw women washing the yellow stone inclined ramps. The palace was not open yet. So I went to see the Havelis.
At the Patwon-ki-Haveli the large, turbaned, big mustached door keeper was surprisingly elated at the sight of a lonely traveler with a backpack visiting his Haveli that early. He first took me for a foreigner, but when I told him I hail from Bengal, his elation was more than ever. He offered me chai and matthi (that took care of breakfast!) and conspiringly told me that the Palace-on-Wheels visitors are due that morning. Once they leave at one, the entire Haveli will be left open with no other tourists. He would let me take an unhindered tour at my own leisure before he locks it up again.
I went back to the fort. Every nook and corner of that golden stone clad centuries old living city stirred me.
I was hungry but was short on cash. The rupee each bananas saved me the day. At one I was back at the Haveli and had my own no-restrictions private visit.
Later I found a Hotel, who in their own jeep take their guests to Sam for sunset and gets them back. I chatted up the manager and earned a free trip to Sam. The dunes and the sunset beyond left me gasping. The same night I was on a bus to Jaipur.
Next morning in Jaipur, I was left with 75 rupees. The travel agent stared at me incredulously when I asked him to give me a ticket to Delhi for that much. “Bhai, the govt. rate is 80!” I stood ground and told him, I HAVE to get back to Delhi, and I do not have more cash. He relented, gave me a ticket for 70, paid a rickshaw to drop me to the bus, and after half an hour I was dozing off in a bus to Delhi.
That was when I saw in my dreams the building I wanted to and finally did design for my thesis.

