eFiction India eFiction India Vol.02 Issue.09 | Page 36
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STORIES
workers sing, sing of rebellion, workers
rebel, they get shot down.
Whine whine zip
(pause)
(pause)
Let it suck
Let it drink deep
Slap! And he got it. He had done it.
He removed his hand from the spot. It flew
away, as soon as he removed his hand.
Whine whine whiiiine
The mosquito laughs from a distance. Red
hot iron rods with blunt, flat ends, burst out
through his belly and forehead and fumed
venomously in the air.
Despair and rage.
He would have driven these burning rods
through each and every sinew of the mosquito’s body, would have made it swallow it.
The rods grew longer and longer and longer.
They broke and dropped on the ground like
shells with a heavy thud. One thud after
another, he began to cry.
A mosquito does not have an easy life. Its
knowledge is narrow and pin-pointed. It
knows where to go, what to do. Its life can
end in the time it takes for a spit-ball to
land on the pavement. But in that short a
life, the mosquito moves like an intelligent
bullet headed only for the target. It cannot
miss, it can only be stopped. And that is
what happened to this mosquito. The more
blood it consumed, the heavier it became.
The heavier it became, the closer it flew to
his death.
eFiction India | June 2014
The conception of humans starts with a race
of sperms. It’s a phenomenon with such
ferocious purpose and movement. Even
after a human is born, the movement continues. But something happens to certain
people, and they are left thinking throughout their lives. Unable to swim with the
motion. Thinking about motion, thinking
about the reasons to move and the random
possibility of crashing. They find themselves
lost in the randomness of the crash and thus
the meaninglessness of motion. People
move, cars move, planets move; sometimes
things crash, sometimes they don’t. Certain
people cannot comprehend this random
chaotic nature. They cannot understand the
dual existence of both moving and crashing.
The mosquitoes are lucky in this respect.
He was sitting down now. Everything was
quiet. Nothing stirred, nothing moved, but
it didn’t matter to him now. One sharp and
calculated slap by his hand, and the mosquito was no more. He picked up its dead
body from his left arm, squeezed the body
between his thumb and finger to make sure
that it was dead and he flicked it away.
To move was tiring, but to remain still was
even more tiring. There were hot, wholesome cooking pots over his eyelids, swirling
an exotic and colourful brew, with a simple
yet beautiful aroma. He closed his eyes and
the brew splashed into his eyes, taking him
to wonderful places where he worked till
the day he died with a happy family and
group of friends, without questioning or
doubting anything.
His sleep was disturbed by a collection of
different shouts. One sharp and calculated
slap from an explosive shell, and he was
no more.