But till that time, IPS officer Danesh Rana tells us in his debut novel, for the ordinary people caught on the knife's edge of strife there is only one seeming inevitabiity, to someday have "red kernels of maize instead of yellow,... So much blood will seep through our land".
In a grim portrait of a conflict he has seen from close as an officer of the Jammu and Kashmir cadre, the author sets out in "Red Maize" (HarperCollinsIndia) to "depict the painful nuances of a colossal human tragedy of our times".
That visit is soon followed by another one, by jawans from the local army camp, where Major Rathore is desperate for Shakeel's scalp as that will be his ticket to a posting to a peace station, and marriage. This initial exchange sets the tense mood for the plot as a cat and mouse game of sinister machinations ensues against the backdrop of "Firdous", the heavenly vale of Kashmir.
"She had become a metaphor for Kashmir... She was the battle between the mujahids and soldiers... She was victim and aggressor, terrorist and soldier, jannat and jahanum, Firdous and Shakeel," that is Kausar Jan's fate as the book sombrely flows on to its chilling denouement.
