The glacial lake out burst

 Ansar Anjum, the shepherd, woke to the sun painting the peaks above Tali Das a fierce orange. For months, he, Najma, and their son Rohan lived among the sheep in these high meadows, a temporary home nestled beneath the sky-mirroring glacial lakes. Villagers in Raosing spoke of melting ice, of ‘global warming’ as a distant whisper, a threat only ever heard on crackling radios. But up here, the glaciers were a living, breathing presence, their ancient blue-white bulk both supplier of life and a silent, towering enigma.

happy moments before disaster
Rohan chased a lamb, his laughter echoing against the vast silence. Najma stoked the morning fire, the scent of woodsmoke mingling with dew-kissed grass. “Baba, look!” Rohan pointed to a distant hawk circling. A low growl rumbled through the earth, not from the hawk, but from deep within the mountains. It started as a tremor, a vibration through Ansar Anjum’s bare feet, then deepened into a groan. The sheep scattered, bleating a frantic chorus.
Ansar Anjum’s eyes snapped to the highest lake, a sapphire jewel cradled by ice. A fissure, a jagged tear, ripped across its surface. The groan intensified, a sound of stone grinding against stone, of ancient ice screaming as it buckled. “Najma! Rohan! Now!” His voice, usually calm, ripped through the morning air. “Leave everything! Run!” Najma grabbed Rohan’s hand, her face white. “What is it? The sound…” “The lake!” Ansar Anjum pointed. A dark line, a sudden, violent crack, split the glacial wall. Water surged through the rupture, a white torrent spewing from the mountainside. *CRACK! BOOM!* The sound ripped the sky, a thousand thunderclaps in one.
The glacial lake

“It’s bursting! The water! It’s coming for the village!” Ansar Anjum scooped Rohan onto his shoulders, pushing Najma ahead. “Down! Follow the riverbed, but higher ground! Move!” They scrambled down the rocky slope, the ground shuddering beneath their feet. The roar of the unleashed lake grew, a monstrous, hungry sound. He could already picture the wave, tearing through the valley. “Tali Das! They need to know!” Najma gasped, her breath ragged. Ansar Anjum reached the edge of the meadow where the path turned sharply down towards the village. He cupped his hands around his mouth, drawing a breath that burned his lungs. “Listen! Tali Das! The lake has burst! Run! The water is coming!” He screamed the words until his throat was raw, his voice a desperate, lonely cry against the growing roar of the flood. “Escape! To the high ground! Now!”
a shout of the shepherded who saved the people from disaster

A few figures emerged from the distant cluster of homes below, tiny specks of confusion. They had heard the rumble, perhaps, but hadn’t understood. “What’s he shouting about?” A voice, faint but clear, drifted up. “The lake? It’s just Ansar Anjum, playing his tricks.” “No tricks! Run, fools! Save yourselves!” Ansar Anjum’s voice cracked, but he kept screaming, a solitary warning against the inevitable, the rushing, tearing force of the mountains. He could see the leading edge of the water now, a churning, brown wave already swallowing trees in the upper valley. He turned, pulling Najma and Rohan further up the slope, away from the path the water would surely take. The roar filled the world, obliterating all other sound.
Condition after glacial lake outburst


Comments

Anonymous said…
The story you have written is very nice
Anonymous said…
nice story pali
Anonymous said…
Great job nashmia
Jannat said…
Well-done keep it up nashmiya

Popular posts from this blog

The Brave Mountain Goat and Her Kid – A Folktale from Gilgit-Baltistan

Shorti and Borti’s Adventure: A Tale of Two Clever Mice

🐜The Baby Ant and the Apricot Rain: A Lesson in Teamwork