Monday, October 26, 2015

Autumn

 We were walking through the dilapidation of an old city. A city that stood like wisps of a dream forgotten upon awakening. I cannot recollect the name of the city. Perhaps its name had withered off with age.

 I was there looking for something. Old cities attracted me like forbidden love affairs. I had not even the slightest inkling of finding you there. Not in at a time like that. But we ran into each other. It was autumn and we took long walks. We walked a lot. Talked little. Sat on ruins with the sun frolicking on our faces. Climbed debris with the moon clinging to our backs. Sometimes our shadows were behind us, sometimes they were before us. Some of the architecture was still holding in that city of ruins. We discovered those crumbling walls, caved in roofs, overgrown gardens. During the afternoons, I often read myself from Hosseini's A Thousand Splendid Suns. Something about the book resembled this city.This was once a place where warm laughter wafted out of wooden windows. This was once a place where food simmered on fire while children abandoned their play to come running into the house, the smell of food arousing curiosity in them. This was once a place that bustled with the conundrum of a marketplace. Now tourist guides stampeded through the silence that had settled on the city like a shroud, parading camera-clad tourists, feeding them made-up stories. 


 We were headed for a magic show. It was nothing fancy. Just an ordinary tent and an alcoholic magician who showed card tricks and had a tired looking crystal ball standing on a three-legged stool at his side. He claimed that he could hypnotize people into a perpetual state of stupor. Not many people came there to watch him at his antics that day. Perhaps they being locals were tired of his old tricks. By the end f the 'show', he flashed us a gap-toothed smile and told us that he could hypnotize us into a dancing couple inside a glass dome. You smirked, tossed him an extra coin and grabbed my hand. We were standing outside the tent now. A weak moon hung over the cloudless sky.Crumpled into a tiny ball was the slip of paper that had sufficed as our ticket. I wanted to know how that perpetual state of stupor felt. The meagre smattering of people slowly dissolved into the night. You kissed me then. The flap of the opening of the tent was fluttering in the night breeze. 


  Kissing you was like loving autumn. It was melancholy. Heady. Intoxicating. Yet I knew the leaves of autumn were the fallen ones.