“That’s the secret of the Chandoba book,” Baba said, gently taking it. “It is not a book to be read . It is a book to be entered . Each story is a door. My grandfather entered it. I entered it. And now you. It chooses those who have forgotten how to dream.”
Aarav hesitated. He didn’t know any stories. He only knew facts, data, and video game cheat codes. But then he remembered: his mother’s lullaby. The clatter of the vegetable vendor. The time he fell off his bike and Baba kissed his scraped knee.
As he read the words aloud, the room changed. The walls of the veranda melted away. He was standing on a black, silent beach. The sky was starless. The ocean was still, like a sheet of polished obsidian. And in the distance, a little girl sat on a rock, sobbing.
They found the flute inside the mouth of a sleeping, giant clam. But the clam would only open if someone told it a story it had never heard before. Rani, who only knew the story of the moon, wept in despair.
Aarav blinked. He was back on the veranda. The power had returned, but he didn’t notice. The Chandoba book lay closed in his lap. Outside his window, the real moon hung like a silver coin, brighter than he had ever seen it.
Aarav, his heart thumping, turned to the first page. A single line appeared: “The night the moon forgot to rise.”
His grandfather, Baba, was the opposite. Baba was a retired librarian with foggy glasses and a voice like a creaky wooden cart. He spent his days on a swing in the veranda, reading an ancient, battered book bound in faded red cloth. On its cover, embossed in peeling gold leaf, was the image of a crescent moon and a single word: Chandoba (Marathi for “Little Moon”).
Aarav nodded, his throat tight. “Baba… the book took me inside.”