He narrates the story of the tusker in an exaggerated and dramatic manner. The story is told with vivid descriptions of the tusker as a huge, mad elephant that escaped from the timber yard and caused destruction by stamping on bushes, tearing up wild creepers, and breaking branches freely. The tusker then enters a school ground, creating chaos, frightening everyone who tries to escape. Iswaran, the narrator, heroically confronts the tusker by grabbing a cane from a teacher, hitting the elephant's third toenail, and claiming to have used a Japanese art to control the beast, which then collapses. However, the plausibility of this story is doubtful. It is considered highly implausible and difficult to believe that a young child could control or subdue such a powerful and mad elephant just by hitting its toenail. The narration appears to be more of an entertaining tale with exaggerated elements than a plausible account of events.