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Three cars are parked by the clearing I find, every night under the faint light of the dim street lamps. Two of them, sedans, red and black, while the other's a hatchback, white in colour. All dusty and faded before the occasional wash. The wheels of the white car have dug into the mud after the puddles caused by rains cleared. And flowers and twigs garment it. I thought they were a big family but, one, they own  a small car, and two, they seem to use it sparse? The red sedan, always parked reverse, is sometimes gone suddenly away and at other times, stays parked for weeks. I've seen him in and out; does he have work out-stations? Good car, I must say though, for he's young and single. The black one is gone most days, and sometimes, for days together, to return covered in bird droppings. They moved recently, this quiet couple who prefer to keep to themselves. May be they go on long weekend drives out of the city? I wonder, gazing at them, sipping my tea, by the window, late every night. 'Why don't you just go speak to them', says my wife, tired of my speculations. 'Hmm...not today, bit tired. Tomorrow, May be', I say, as I jot down these lines.
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Jan 16, 2013
Jan 16, 2013 at 7:41 AM UTC
Tomorrow, may be...
Three cars are parked by the clearing I find, every night under the faint light of the dim street lamps. Two of them, sedans, red and black, while the other's a hatchback, white in colour. All dusty and faded before the occasional wash. The wheels of the white car have dug into the mud after the puddles caused by rains cleared. And flowers and twigs garment it. I thought they were a big family but, one, they own  a small car, and two, they seem to use it sparse? The red sedan, always parked reverse, is sometimes gone suddenly away and at other times, stays parked for weeks. I've seen him in and out; does he have work out-stations? Good car, I must say though, for he's young and single. The black one is gone most days, and sometimes, for days together, to return covered in bird droppings. They moved recently, this quiet couple who prefer to keep to themselves. May be they go on long weekend drives out of the city? I wonder, gazing at them, sipping my tea, by the window, late every night. 'Why don't you just go speak to them', says my wife, tired of my speculations. 'Hmm...not today, bit tired. Tomorrow, May be', I say, as I jot down these lines.
Notes on our modern life - too busy for a friendly neighbuorhood chat - the tomorrows follow in succession, while we are happy to live on what we guess about others!
prabhu-iyer
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Jan 16, 2013
Jan 16, 2013 at 7:41 AM UTC
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