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Small Town
The man who runs the sports goods store
that also sells old unopened books and board games in faded boxes, sits with his tattooed arms folded in the sun. He drinks a lot of beer and doesn’t ask stupid questions. His friends loiter around small music shops all morning, in slippers, with their shirt-tails out. The distant air lights up the furrowed edges of the hills. Sometimes he wants to describe the smell of brown oaks ageing in the sun and bakeries where boys in dirty aprons lit their ovens in the early summer morning. But the tattooed man dozes on when his friends talk and the sun whitens the spines of pale detective novels and books full of blond-bodied girls and cross-stitch designs. When a man is killed in the afternoon, knifed and left to die with his face down in a drain, the tattooed fellow has an opinion. But he shuts the door and sleeps on a wooden plank behind the counter that smells of cigarettes and stale tea, till rain cools the streets. All the farthest sounds of the city wake him up slowly, till he hears the rain on his own window and thinks of the dirty water running below the dead man’s face. In the evening when the rain lets up for a bit his friends might return and joke about it. He switches on the lights at five. People drift in With damp trouser-cuffs and notice the Chinese dragons on his arms. They talk and again the cool air outlines each noisy car and softened tree. It’s Saturday. He rests his elbows on the cracked glass counter and watches a girl across the street, scrubbing a couple of neat stone steps till they gleam in the clear blue evening. |
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© 2006, Anjum Hasan From: Street on the Hill Publisher: Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi, 2006 ISBN: 81–260–1793-7 |
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