"Keep going," said Kiran. "Tell me more."
They were on the riverbank in the cool of the evening, the wide Krishna
river sliding past in sheets of pink and orange. All afternoon Thatha had
been listing wonders — the way Krishna does in the Gita — and Kiran, who
loved superlatives more than sweets, could not get enough.
"The biggest mountain," Thatha had said. "The brightest star. The widest
river. The oldest tree."
"More!" Kiran had begged. "What's the greatest of the birds? The greatest
of the snakes? The greatest of the fishes?"
And Thatha had answered each one, smiling, while the sun sank lower.
Now Kiran flopped onto his back in the warm sand and stared up at the
darkening sky, where the first stars were pricking through. "Don't stop,"
he said. "There must be more. The greatest of the... of the... clouds! The
greatest of the smells! The greatest of the songs!"
Thatha laughed — a great, kind, rolling laugh that startled a heron into the
air.
"Kanna," he said, settling back against a rock, "do you know what Krishna
himself says, right in the middle of his own list?"
"What?"
"He stops. He turns to Arjuna and says: *there is no end to my glories.*
Everything I have named is just a hint. A few examples. If I tried to name
them all, we would be here forever and never reach the bottom of the basket."
Kiran thought about that. Above him, more and more stars were coming out —
ten, fifty, a thousand, more than he could ever count, scattered across the
whole sky like spilled rice. He tried to count them and gave up almost at
once.
"So if we listed all night..." Kiran said slowly.
"We would not finish."
"And all week?"
"We would not finish."
"And our whole *lives?*"
"Not even close, kanna." Thatha's voice was soft and full of wonder. "And
that is the most beautiful part. The glory of the One isn't a box you can
fill up and close. It pours and pours and never empties. Every single thing
you will ever love, your whole life long, is one more drop from a spring
that has no bottom."
Kiran lay very still, looking up at the uncountable stars, and felt
something open up inside him as wide as the sky.