The kejdi tree is shaved of leaves. At regular intervals through arid Shekhawati, the kejdi, with the primeval awkwardness of its form, stands stalwart, its branches above its head in a sort of writhing, stunted ambition. The landscape seems both quiet and restless, the geography &ldquoobscured by the wind blown overburden&rdquo. It is like watching a film with the sound off. The dogs here are slower, their reflexes unfit yet easily roused by motorbikes and strangers. There are camels and asses on the streets and peacocks in every mud-paved yard. Huge havelis emerge out of the dust, their green and silver shutters shut tight against the red sandstone of their façades. Where there is no water, wells stand on high platforms, and where there is irrigation, startlingly lush fields worry the eye now accustomed to dust. Everything else is twigs. There are few cars and the only horn comes from a van carrying that most precious of things the heritage tourist.