The sun was a white-hot furnace, a merciless eye fixed upon the dusty geometry of the neighborhood. On the terrace, the air shimmered, a viscous liquid of heat that made the concrete hum. Mrs. Talwar sat anchored in her wicker chair, her movements slow and rhythmic, like a priestess performing a forgotten rite. In her lap lay Minu, a creature of silver fur and indignant patience, as the brush moved through her coat with a steady, rasping shush-shush.
It was the dead of the afternoon—that suspended, hollow hour where time curdles and the world holds its breath. Then, the silence was punctured.
From a distant, tinny radio, the first few notes of a sarangi filtered through the heat, thin and ethereal. It was a melody from another epoch, a ghost of celluloid longing. Mausam hai aashiqana... The lyrics of Pakeezah drifted upward, heavy with the scent of jasmine and the weight of Meena Kumari’s kohl-rimmed sorrow. Mrs. Talwar paused, the brush hovering mid-air. A dry, brittle chuckle escaped her throat.
"Romantic weather," she whispered to the cat, her voice like parchment.
She looked out at the horizon. The "weather" was an assault. It was a day of parched throats and sweat-slicked necks, a day that demanded the primal mercy of a cold water tap, not the velvet embrace of a lover. The irony was a sharp, metallic thing. Yet, the song was a siren. It didn't care for the reality of the thermometer but spoke to the subsurface currents of the blood. As Lata Mangeshkar’s voice climbed into that impossible, crystalline register, the white glare of the terrace began to dissolve. The heat remained, but it transformed. It was no longer the oppressive weight of Dehradun in April; it became the feverish, electric warmth of a humid corridor in 1974.
The concrete softened into the red-oxide floors of the university arts wing. The smell of frying samosas from the canteen collided with the scent of old library books and Pears soap.
And then, there was Sameer.
The name itself felt like a secret kept too long under the tongue. To the rest of the girls in the literature department, Sameer was a shared delirium. He was the boy who occupied the periphery of every daydream—a silhouette of lean grace and effortless rebellion. He walked as if the ground were merely a suggestion, and when he ran, the world seemed to lose its breath.
Mrs. Talwar felt a phantom ache in her fingers. She remembered the way his hair—thick, unruly, and the color of roasted coffee—would break ranks and fall over his eyes. It was a calculated disaster, a messy curtain that he would flick back with a jerk of his head, a gesture so casual it felt like a personal insult to anyone watching.
He was a handsome rascal, a man who wore his charm like a loosely knotted tie. But while the other girls giggled in his wake, leaving a trail of perfumed notes and sidelong glances, Sameer had navigated towards her with the steady pull of a compass needle.
She wasn't the belle of the ball but the girl with the ink-stained fingers and the sharp tongue, the one who read Neruda while others read film magazines. Yet, Sameer had seen her. Not as a trophy to be won, but as a riddle he was desperate to solve. There was a specific way he looked at her—a narrowing of the eyes, a turning of the head—that stripped away her carefully constructed defenses. It was a gaze that bypassed the social choreography of college life and landed directly in the quiet, dusty corners of her soul.
She remembered a particular afternoon, much like this one, though the heat then had felt like a catalyst rather than a burden. They were standing by the tall, arched windows of the Seminar Room. The shadows of the Gulmohar trees outside were dancing on the floor.
"You think too much," he had said, his voice a low vibration that seemed to settle in her bones.
"And you don't think enough," she had countered, though her heart was drumming a frantic, syncopated rhythm against her ribs.
He had laughed then—a sound like breaking glass and silk—and for a moment, the distance between them had narrowed until she could smell the faint, masculine scent of tobacco and sun-warmed cotton. She had spent decades wondering: Did he? Was the electricity she felt a mutual current, or was she merely a lightning rod for her own projections? He had treated her with a tender irreverence, a special brand of attention that he gave to no one else.
In the amber-hued theatre of her memory, he was forever leaning against a pillar, watching her with that infuriating, beautiful smirk, his hair perpetually falling over his eyes. The "what ifs" were a gallery of unpainted portraits. If she had spoken. If he had stayed. If the music of their youth hadn't been interrupted by the mundane static of life.
The song on the radio reached its crescendo, the orchestral swell echoing the grand, tragic sweep of a heart that refuses to age. The melody lingered on a final, haunting note, then dissolved into the crackle of a commercial for laundry detergent.
The spell snapped.
The red-oxide floors evaporated. The scent of Pears soap vanished, replaced by the dry, metallic tang of the overheated water tank.
"Meow."
Mrs. Talwar blinked. The world rushed back in—the blinding white light, the stinging sweat at her temples, the ache in her lower back. She looked down. Minu was no longer a silver puddle of submission. The cat was standing on all fours, her back arched, looking over her shoulder with a gaze of profound betrayal.
The hairbrush was stuck.
In her reverie, Mrs. Talwar’s hand had gone still, and the bristles had become tangled in a particularly stubborn knot near the base of Minu’s tail. The cat let out another sharp, demanding cry, a feline summons back to the present.
"Oh, hush, you drama queen," Mrs. Talwar murmured, her voice returning to its earthly register.
With practiced, gentle fingers, she worked the brush free, smoothing the ruffled fur until Minu purred in forgiveness. She set the brush down on the side table and stood up. Her knees cracked—a dry, rhythmic sound that served as a grim reminder of the half-century that had passed since she last saw Sameer.
The terrace was a desert. The sky was a bleached blue, devoid of even the smallest cloud. There was no romance here, only the unrelenting demand of the sun. The "Aashiqana" weather was a lie told by poets and filmmakers, a beautiful deception meant to make the drudgery of existence bearable for three minutes and forty-five seconds.
She looked at her hands. They were spotted with age, the skin translucent like onion paper. These were not the ink-stained hands of the girl who read Neruda. These were the hands that had raised children, buried a husband, tended gardens, and survived.
Yet, as she turned to go inside, a small, stubborn smile played at the corners of her mouth. The song was gone, and Sameer was a ghost trapped in the amber of 1974, but the phantom heat of his gaze still felt more real than the burning concrete beneath her feet.
She picked up the brush and the plastic saucer of water. There was work to do. There were floors to be swept, tea to be brewed, and a life to be lived in the cooling shadows of the interior. But as she crossed the threshold into the house, she hummed a single line of the melody, a quiet defiance against the blazing afternoon.
