The radio was playing his favorite song that
evening, 'Sing Me to Sleep’. But his mind was too preoccupied to notice
the melodiously haunting tune. The first thing he noticed through his
windshield was the evening sky which now was a light
shade of purple instead of the mellow red he was accustomed to. He
always wondered looking at it how much it resembled the red that her
face became whenever she grew angry at him. He wished for the day the anger
would vanish, once and for all. He knew he would
hit the ground soon but his thoughts kept wandering to the good old
memories he had treasured in the depths of his heart.
He could see his baby hands tracing the laugh lines
on his mother’s face. Those serene eyes that lit up every time she saw
him as though it had been years since she saw him last. He never had
been able to do justice to the love with which
she held him as her own. Some things were simply not meant to be, or
perhaps as a step mother she was just the scape goat for his own fears,
cliques and self-righteousness. He never had come to a conclusion about
it. He knew the feeling of never being able
to bear a child, your own blood, and cradling it in your arms, wouldn’t
be much different than missing the warm embrace of your own mother. But
life moves on and he had got used to the routine of lovingly hating her
from a distance.
He felt the warmth of the sun on his face and it
made him remember his father’s back. Not the one that had been turned on
him since the last few years, the time since he had abandoned his
teenage son into the care of a woman he had once
fallen in Love with and then out of, but by the way it felt when he, as
a kid, had hugged him tight while riding pillion on his Harley. The
reassuring warmth that would make him feel safe no matter how fast his
father drove. The bike rides had grown shorter
and then fewer over the years, until all that remained were the
memories of the sour taste of adrenaline in his dry mouth.
The wind rushing through the open windows of his
car, blew the hair off his face, with the same zest that his best friend
used to ruffle them playfully. He always had cribbed about having to
tidy them up again, but she never gave it a second
thought. She never minded his complains and neither did he ever mind
her bashfulness, rather secretly relished it, but we all keep up
appearances and so did he. As the car rushed downhill he felt the same
weightless feeling that he had experienced so often,
among his buddies, drunk over bottles of whiskey and rum. He chuckled
as he realized that he had managed to find that same feeling, which his
friends had debated he would never find in anything else. The only
regret he had within those 8 seconds of descent
was that he wouldn’t be able to tell them what he had discovered.