In summer afternoons, Dalanwala would gather an air of
full-bellied somnolence, draw its curtains and go to sleep in darkened rooms.
You could hardly discern the movement of its breath. When we would return
from school at about 2.30, and trudge trudge to our homes from the bus stop, an
intense blue sky would be pouring yellow sunshine on a silent world of
impossible peace. We walked down a silent road, crickets the only sound. The
boundary walls of houses on both sides were low, moss covered, a secret world
in themselves. Behind the walls, the homes were hardly visible from among the heavy
litchi, jackfruit, guava, apricot, or mango trees. Old silvery Eucalyptus stood
like patient elephants teaching the riotous red and yellow flowers in the lawns
to shush for a while, people are sleeping. We picked their fallen leaves, and
inhaled the lemony scent.
At this time of the day the lawns would be content just
being green. The houses themselves, low and bungalow-style, separated from each
other by acres of land, asleep. Their windows asleep, curtains asleep. The odd
stray dog on the road, her pups gathered around her, also asleep. Only the
bumblebees brought life to the portrait, weaving along their drunken
trajectories, their buzz and drone holding up the summer afternoon.
When I reached home I would open a small black gate. To my right, a lawn with two bottlebrush trees, to my left a
small mango tree, and in front a generous bougainvillea creeper going up the
pale yellow house wall. The house was clearly well settled, full of rice, daal
and raita, and dead to the world. I would scrunch my way on crushed pebbles
towards the porch which sheltered the old grey family fiat. On one side of the
car, the giant Bhotia we had – more hound than dog – would open exactly one
lazy eye, move its tail sufficiently to make place for, say, a friendly ant,
and go back to sleep. On the other side of the car, the orange cat would be
magnificently uncaring, and would manage to show it with equal efficiency, using closed
eyes or a direct basilisk glare. From beneath the car, two protruding human
feet would welcome me. Chacha’s voice would emerge with absent-minded affection
as he tinkered with the car’s undersides – the only human awake for miles – “Arre,
tu aa gayi?”
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