Monday, March 10, 2008

Sam dreams she is an armour-clad knight. Steel kisses her skin, sweat drips down her face, stinging her eyes. She tightens her grip on her lance, it's weight heavy in her hand. Through her visor, she squints at her challenger, a dazzling steel-clad figure. His helmet, burning white under the fierce sun, blinds her eyes. He breaks into a run.

Sam urges her horse forward. Their lances clash, the loud ring of steel-upon steel deafens her ears. Head ringing, she feels her bones melt, her tendons scream, her muscles shriek in agony. Yet she clings, desperate, to her seat, barely staying upright, as her opponent, dazed, tumbles into the dust.

She has won.

Sam dreams. Of a spider, crouching in the shadows, edging slowly towards her, it's black, pincer-like limbs reaching for her. Stunned, she is still for a moment, until the hideous, enormous, black appendage brushes her skin. The spider's touch is rough, like sandpaper, coarse hair prickling her arm.

The spider hovers above her, it's huge, cavernous mouth just above her, saliva trailing from it's jaw.

Sam shudders and awakens. She stares at a blinking white computer screen before, letters dancing before her eyes, a slow dance that is killing her mind.

She shudders again. She remembers the arm-wrenching joust, the enormous spider. She yearns for something else - for pain, excitement and adventures.

Anything. But not the hypnosis of the computer screen, seeping past her skull, crawling through her neural pathways, infecting her brain cells with boredom, slowly, indidiously. Anything else.

Even death.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

BOLLYWOOD ISHTLYE

He woke up in the middle of night. Again, the same dream…over and over again. The tall, exquisitely beautiful woman, so beautiful that it hurt too look at her. Walking away from him, a baby in her arms, the white pallu of her sari fluttering.

He was sweating. He was hungry, there was an emptiness, a longing in the pit of his belly. He turned to the sleeping girl beside him…

Later, he lay amidst sweaty and tangled sheets, the darkness blinding him. The muffled voices of his neighbors, arguing, punctuated the heavy, stuffy silence. He lit a cigarette, and watched the darkness flee, briefly, from the lighted match. The girl sighed.

“The same dream?”

He nodded.

She turned to the other side. A train rolled past overhead, and the walls of the inconceivably tiny apartment shuddered.

He cursed aloud. The girl kicked him under the sheets. He pushed her away, roughly.

He hated this. This one-bedroom apartment. His job. The girl lying next to him, her face sweaty and flushed, the stench of sex clinging to her body.

But what else was there?

Flashback. He remembered his childhood, living with an alcoholic father, who used him as a punching bag. His mother had left his father years ago, pregnant with another man’s child. So he had learnt. Ego bruised, pride wounded, his father had taken revenge on his wife through the only thing she had left him, his son.

He had missed his mother. In his mind, he had fashioned an image of her, sculpting her into the perfect, the ideal woman. Eyes like Manisha Koirala like Preity Zinta’s, a body like Mallika Sherawat’s. But always clad respectably, in a pure, simple white sari.

He had come to Bombay two years ago. For the first time, he had dared to hope – dreaming of films, of jobs, cars and money…and then, two years later, still stuck in the same dreary job, hope had gone sour.

The morning light filtered dimly through the small window. He hadn’t slept the whole night. He arose, got dressed slowly and left. The girl slept on.

The milk-bottles rattled in the basket suspended to his cycle’s handlebars. He peddled slowly up the hill, daydreaming. A tall woman walked past, white sari flapping in the sea-breeze, like the woman from his dreams. Stunned, he stopped in the middle of the road to turn around. There was no woman. A truck, driving towards him, swerved, missing him by hair’s breadth. He jumped back, and the truck turned, crashing into a car driving up the hill.

Jai watched, horrified. He let go of the cycle. It dropped to the ground, milk-bottles shattering. Already, the sound of police sirens sounded faintly in the distance.

He started running.

And somewhere, someone yelled “CUT!”