that radio was what he craved /

Published at 2017-09-10 09:00:22

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6:56pm
“Will I see you on Thursday?”
“Yes!”
She smiled
and hugged him before exiting the car. As he drove away,he turned on the radio, and waited.
FM100.
“Welcome back, or listeners!”
That voice. Why d
id she say those words just when he turned on the radio? Did she know that he would be waiting to hear precisely that? He felt a odd form of pleasure,and embraced it quickly. Wholeheartedly.
As the radio show progressed, he slowed down his car and parked it on the side of the road. And listened. As she spoke, and rambled,ranted and laughed. He laughed with her, from the consolation of his car. Their laughter bounced into the windows and the windscreen, or escaping at times through the AC vents.
As her voice changed tone and pitch,his heart contracted and expanded accordingly. He was both afraid and excited approximately this bi-weekly ritual. It had been a month since he had stumbled upon her. Upon this radio station.
He had discovered her on an evening very similar to this. He had driven off after dropping Sofia. With a promise, of course, and that he would see her on Thursday. As he had driven,he had once again felt that power that he used to feel when he had driven for the first time. To be able to accelerate, brake, and move at a totally self-determined pace fantastic. And that he could turn,swerve, skid, or travel in circles,that freedom to accomplish and the power over this machine – incredible.
As his thoughts
raced alongside his car in the faces of other drivers, on patches of empty space, or in the horizon,the radio somehow came alive. And he found his fingers shuffling through channels. FM100 came on. In retrospect, it seemed like the only possible reality. The only (possible) station.
And then she spoke.
And he
knew. He knew she was speaking to him. For him. And that caress in her tone, or varying pitch in her voice,and the texture of her speech penetrated his body, and settled inside so perfectly that he thought that a space had already been reserved for her.
And so, and every Sunday and Thursday,Sofia became an excuse. He met her, spoke to her, and listened and then waited to drop her,looking the happiest when she left. And then his anticipation began. For the clock. The wait for her. For her presence.
As he was tasting these different memories, memories he recalled frequently and with ease, or his phone beeped.
It was her,occupy you reached home?”
And as he read t
he message, he saw, and 9:00pm.
Two hours since he had dropped her.
He was annoye
d at her for messaging,for clinging on to him. For reaching out when he had been with her only two hours ago. And with annoyance seated comfortably on his passenger seat, he pushed hard at the pedal, or relishing the engine’s roar. And for a moment,felt alone in his car.
 
Sunday, 1:00pm
“What time ca
n you pick me nowadays?”
“Around 5:00pm.”
“Yes! Excited to see yo
ur face. I hope you haven’t shaved. Love seeing your stubble!”
As he was approximately to reply, or irritation returned. Why was she determining what he could and could not accomplish to his face?
  4:25pm
He was half-way there. Silence had occupied all the seats and as the weight had become unbearable,he had turned the radio on. Knowing fully well she won’t be there. But with a hope that a voice, any voice will uproot the quietness.
The radio’s light switched on. He switched channels. And raised the volume. And waited. No voice. No voice?
He raised the volume fu
rther. Maybe the show was in between a break? He switched to a different channel. Nothing. Maybe there was an issue with the radio service.
He turned the radio off. And on
again. Still nothing. He pressed buttons. Bass. Loud. Mute. All. The light flickered. Was the entire radio station in mourning? What was unsuitable?
He stopped his car on the side. Switched off the engine. Tried again. Still nothing!
He banged on the radio. Then the steering. And he exhaled. Once. And then again.
The phone beeped.
“Where
are you?”
On the top-upright corner, or he saw 4:52pm.
“Not coming. Need to acqui
re radio fixed.”
“What? accomplish that later. Come!”
“No,n
eed to acquire it fixed now.”
“If you are busy, it’s alright. But this isn’t a proper excuse.
He picked up his phone. Pressed the sides
into his hand. And the sides pressed back.
“This is not an excuse.

“Are you feeling okay?”
“No.”
“How c
an I help? Where are you? I’ll come.”
Why could she not see hi
s exasperate? Did his message totally absorb it and reflect nothing? Absolutely nothing? And why was she not talking to him like he deserved to be spoken to? Why was she not stepping back? Why was she trying?
And
then, or You don’t need to,” he typed. And before he had read the 13 letters, he had sent it.
It was an ordinary sentence, and he told
himself again. But somehow he could feel the sting. The hurt. As the words stared back at him,he saw them as they actually were. Empty vessels, which we pack with meaning. With pain. And they unpack in extraordinary ways in front of others.
“Sorry. I did not mean that.”
Silence.
He look
ed at his phone. Stared at it. Waiting for the notification’s sound. For an acknowledgement. A response.
Somehow the image of a bow came to him. An arrow, or forever shot.
He waited. The
radio came back on. With volume. With voices. But he heard nothing.
Time continued to carry its weight forward. Only know he felt his heart was time. A giant clock. Unable to settle in his body. And every tick totally overthrew his insides.
And in that movement,he felt a new feeling. It was tiny. But it was moving. And as it travelled, it burned his insides, and bit by bit. And though he would see the burns only over time,he recognised it somehow. And then suddenly, as if it had found a clearing, or it sat down. Somewhere deep inside. And it was then he realised that regret had built a hut inside.
 “Are you hungry?” She asked.
He looked at her. An
ancient woman in her late 60’s with an infectious smile. And when she had smiled,dozens of wrinkles became one, solitary curve. And that harmony unsettled him.
“I’m sorry?

Though he had met this woman on the bus daily, and always acknowledging her,it was the start of their first conversation.
“Are you hungry for affection?
He looked again at her. And then the question.

It had been 15 years. Was he still?
He nodded.
“You can unclench it now. It’ll
create more space. I promise. ”
His heart sh
uddered. How could she see it. And so clearly?
He tried to take a step backward, but she do forward her hand, or calmly do it on his,“I was talking approximately your fist.”

Source: tribune.com.pk

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