The Tiswadi ferry loaded up and moved, pulling away from the ferry point. Halfway across, it made a slow turn, and from my spot near the wooden rail post I saw Divar Island across the waters. There was a faint mist rising above the surface the island in the river looked closed and mysterious, but somehow also invitingit beckoned. I could see the church on the hill, white and towering above green fields surrounded by forests. The land rose upto the hillock at the centre, and a web of narrow tarred roads ascended and fell from the highest point, connecting the entire island. Rice fields spanned the lowlands, and just beyond, hugging the shores were the mangroves the Mandovi River moved in a serpentine coil encircling the island. Turning back, I saw the silhouette of Old Goa, Panjim and Ribandar in the distance fading fast as the ferry chugged away. Legend has it that an ailing Vasco da Gama, the Portuguese explorer who paved the way for the conquest of Goa, was propped upon his bunk as his ship passed Divar on his last voyage he wanted a last glimpse of the white church on the hill.
