The Architecture of Now
Devika Ramkissoon grew up in a house where time was a deity. Even beyond the Divali holiday, her mother lit a diya every evening at six, the wicks pulling coconut oil toward a flame that had been burning symbolically for generations. Her father recited the Ramayana not from memory but from inheritance, the verses passing through him like blood. The land they gave her, two acres in central Trinidad, was not just soil. It was a promise. "You build a home here," her mother said on her wedding day, pressing a small bag of sacred earth into Devika's palm. "You raise children. You keep the parampara alive." Devika nodded. She meant it. She also knew, somewhere deep, that she would disappoint them. Her husband, Rohan, was a gentle man who repaired air conditioners and asked very little of the universe. When Devika said, on their first night as newlyweds, "I don't want a house," he did not flinch. "What do you want?" he asked. "An apartment ...