"You know they are tearing it down," Arohan said.
In the heart of Agartala, where the chaos of auto-rickshaws and the scent of monsoon orchids mingled in the air, stood a building that did not belong to the 21st century. It was the Agartala Musical Hall, a pale yellow edifice with Corinthian pillars and arched windows that watched the street like tired, knowing eyes. agartala musical hall
But a strange thing happened.
It lasted only a second. Then it was gone. "You know they are tearing it down," Arohan said
As the workers tore through the stage, they found the Steinway piano. The wood was splintered, but when a worker accidentally brushed against the keys, a single note rang out—middle C. Clear, bright, and impossibly loud. But a strange thing happened
Arohan had been a boy the first time he entered the hall. It was 1962. His father, the hall’s previous keeper, had taken him to see a performance of Rabindra Sangeet. The air was thick with the scent of jasmine and expensive attar. The royal chandelier, a cascade of Belgian crystal, rained light upon the audience.