Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick…


He walked into the meeting room, followed by his men. Some stayed outside guarding the door, while others accompanied him inside. The table in the center of the room was already full except for the chair at the head of the table, which he took immediately. Putting his elbows on the table, he ordered

‘Let’s start’

A few people at the table scrambled to load the slides on the main screen. He was not interested in the preliminary briefing. He looked up at the wall in front of him at the clock.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

He told them to jump directly to the numbers, which his team did immediately. Proud smiles on their faces. There were just two numbers on the slide.

70,000 killed.
33,000 children.

He moved his elbows from the table and relaxed his back on the chair. A smile entered on his lips. He looked away from the slides. But his eyes went back to the clock.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

He forced the sound aside, adopted a business-like tone and addressed the men at the table.

‘These are very good numbers. Better than what we planned for the week. Well done! How is the media being handled?’

‘Contained, Sir’, said a man in the suit, ‘Their silence already bought. ‘ A few voices here and there, but we are successful in numbing them down with crap’.

He looked towards his foreign minister and raised his eyebrows

‘The usual, Sir, ’ he said, smiling. ‘All governments are compliant. Controlling protests, condemning us in public, giving us thumbs up in private, ’ he raised both thumbs as he said it, his two front teeth jutting out like a rabbit’s.

Ugly, thought the man. But good at his job.

The man was happy and looked satisfied. But the clock, he noticed, kept on ticking.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

He forced the sound aside again and smiled to his team.

‘Someone said that they had a surprise for me’

Everyone looked at each other and smiled. Sir, a special video for your birthday. Someone clicked on the remote and a video started playing.

Soldiers were firing at civilians. Men, women, and children were falling like dead leaves. Finally, when no civilian was remaining, a soldier bravely walked up to one of the corpses and dragged a child out of his dead mother’s protective arms. The child was alive. The child tried to run. But another brave soldier timely shoots at his feet. The child fell but started to drag himself towards safety, which didn’t exist. The brave soldier who had released the child from his mother’s arms walked up to the child, and puts a gun to the child’s head, and looked bravely into the child’s eyes. The child didn’t know what was happening or was going to happen. The brave soldier solved the puzzle and shot him twice. Life went out of the child’s body like a cool breeze blowing from east to west.

The man at the head of the table started clapping.

‘Bravo. Bravo,’ he yelled. As if his favorite team had just scored a goal.

Everyone in the meeting room started clapping with him. As the clapping died down, the man sat back on his seat. He felt powerful. And no one, no one was able to stop him.

‘No one will ever be able to stop me, ’ he thought to himself. He sat back on his chair.

‘A job well done, gentlemen. But this isn’t over. Next week, I want these numbers doubled’

Everyone nodded excitedly as they started to leave the room and prepare for the next week.

The room grew silent. He looked at the clock again.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

“What are you looking at?” he asked the clock mockingly. Then he smiled cruelly. “The most powerful man in the world?”

“No,” said the clock. “You are not.”

He looked up slowly.

“Oh? And who, exactly, stands more powerful than me today?”

“It is I. Your humble friend. Time. The most powerful. Today. Yesterday. Tomorrow. I am the most powerful being God has created in this world”

“You?” He gave a short laugh. “You hang on a wall all day.”

“True,” said the clock. “That is probably why men like you spend their whole lives pretending I am not there. Until I am the only thing left.”

His smile remained, but only barely.

“What do you mean?”

The clock took the shape of a man and began walking slowly towards him. The man panicked. He was about to call for his guards when the clock spoke.

“Don’t call them. They will only think you have gone mad. And then your end will come sooner than you think. I will not hurt you. Not yet, anyway.”

“I am not afraid of you,” the man said, his palm turning into a fist. “I control you.”

“No,” said the clock, tilting its head. “You don’t.”. And then it leaned closer.

“I. Control. You. And many men like you.”

The clock walked up to him, patted him lightly on the head, then on the shoulder. Then it pulled out a chair and sat beside him, close enough for the man to hear the ticking from inside its chest. The same dreaded ticking he has been trying to force away from his mind.

“See, you are a proud man. Cruel, yes. But proud. You are pleased with yourself because you have killed thousands. But tell me, do you know how many I have killed? Millions.

Millions upon millions.

You kill with a button. From a distance. Most of your victims do not even see you coming. They do not even have time to understand their pain.

Except that poor child, perhaps, who had just a few seconds.

But I am not like you. I do not kill in an instant. I wait. I watch. I take things away slowly. Your strength first. Then your sleep. Then your pride. Then your mind.

You will beg for death. But death will not obey you. Death will look towards me, its master, and ask me, ‘Is it time?’

You may put a gun to your head and pull the trigger. You may swallow every pill in your palace. But even then, it will not be you who decides. I will choose when you die. Me.”

The man was visibly shaken, but he forced out a nervous laugh.

“You are just a clock,” he said. “Tick. Tick. Tick. That is all you can do.” He tried to look brave. But he knew. Somewhere deep inside, he knew.

“Ah,” said the clock. “There it is. The brave face.” It leaned closer.

“But I can see behind it. I can see your eyes. Your heart. Your mind. Even the darkness in your soul.” The clock paused.

“I can smell the fear in your sweat. I can see it in your trembling hands, in your pinched brow, in the way your breath catches before every word.” It smiled.

“You are afraid. Terribly afraid.

And you should be.”

“Why should I be afraid?” he asked, trying to sound relaxed.

“Because you know your end very well,” said the clock. “You are a literate man. You have read history. You know what happens to men like you. One day, you will retire. Or you will be removed. Surely you will be replaced. And then you will lose everything.

Soon, another man will sit in this chair. Another man who will believe that he is the most powerful man in the world. Perhaps he will come for you. Perhaps he will not.

But I will.

I will come for you, my dear friend. In fact, I will never leave you. You will be sitting with your family. Playing with your children. Bathing. Swimming. Eating. Laughing. Even making love. Whatever you are doing, I will be there. With you. Inside you. Inside your brain.

Ticking. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Slowly at first. Then louder and louder. You will try to silence me. But fail. You will try to fight me. But fail. You will try to drown me, in drink, in drugs, in anything that can cloud your mind. But fail.

I will keep ticking. I will keep eating you from inside. You may escape the courts. You may escape the mobs. You may escape the men who hate you. But you will not escape me. Because I am your friend.

Little by little. I will take your strength. Then your sleep. Then your peace. I will dim your eyes. Dull your ears. Crack your bones, one by one. I will make every breath feel borrowed. And when the end comes near, you will know it. Because you would be able to see them.

‘Who?’ he asked, trying to drink water from the glass in front of him, but the glass was empty. His throat was dry.

All the ones you have killed. They will begin to visit you. Eager. Waiting. Almost joyful. At first, only in dreams. And then, outside of them. They would be right there in front of your eyes. No one else can see them except you. They will stand there, looking at you, straight into your face, into your eyes”

“I did what I need to do.”, he said, growling.

“Oh, and surely I will do what I need to do,” said the clock.

“I will command death to become an itch inside your body. You will scratch and scratch, but you will not be able to reach it. You will feel helpless. Just like that child. And then, then you will see them.

Dark men, with dark faces, and dark shadows – making everything dark around them. Everything inside and outside of you will become sombre and black.

And then they will pull your soul from your body. It will feel like wet wool caught in thorns being dragged through your veins. You will scream, but no one will hear you. You will weep, but no one will see your tears. And then do you know what will happen?”

“I will die. ‘Everyone has to die. And so will I’”

“No,” said the clock. “No. No. No. That is where all of you are wrong.

You will not die.

Your death will die.

Do you understand that? Your death… will die!

You, on the other hand, will live forever and ever. People will mourn your passing. Perhaps they will give you a grand funeral. Perhaps they will write your name in history. But you will not be dead. You will be alive. More alive than you have ever been. And then your punishment will begin.”

The man looked nervously at the clock.

“Death will not end your pain. In fact, your suffering will only begin. Dark forces will come and beat you until there is almost nothing left of you. Then you will be made whole again. Not as mercy. But so the pain can begin again. They will beat you again. You will feel every blow. You will cry. You will scream. You will beg. But they will say, ‘Didn’t you know? Did no one tell you?’. And you will say…”

‘Yes. I will say Yes’

‘Good boy, ’ shouted the clock in glee and triumph, patting him on his back. ‘You will say yes. YES! Yes, my dearest friend, who was there with me from the time I was conceived till the very end, TIME, had told me. Showed me all the signs. But…’ the clock turned his fist into a mic and placed it in front of his mouth.

‘But I didn’t listen. I was proud. I wanted to feel powerful. I wanted people to envy me. Fear me.’

‘Every moment after that’, said the clock somberly, ‘your torture will only increase. The pain, the anguish, the anxiety, and most of all the sorrow. The sorrow of what you have done. The price that you have to pay for your deeds. The sorrow will eat you bit by bit. You will shout. And you will beg mercy. But no one will listen to you for centuries and centuries. Till one day, a window will open.

That child will look down at you from the skies, from among endless green gardens, a green so rich you have never seen its like before. And do you know what he will say?

He will say, “You thought you ended me.”

The clock leaned closer.

“But you did not. You thought you killed me. But I am alive. You thought you Won!. But you lost!

The child will say that from the day you snatched me from my mother’s dead arms was the day my trial ended and your fate was sealed. Since then, I have had nothing but peace and you nothing but anguish, sorrow and pain. I have my mother. My father. My brothers. My sisters. We eat what we want. We have all that we need. We know no fear. No hunger. No pain.

You did not destroy me. You only destroyed yourself.

The man was shaking terribly now. His throat was dry.

“You will beg them for mercy. For forgiveness. But the window will close. And you will return to the same dark fate.”

The clock leaned back in its chair. The man looked at it. But the chair was empty now.

He turned towards the front wall. The clock was there again, hanging in its place. Looking at him. Smiling at him.

“Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick,” it said.

Then it whispered, “I will catch up to you.”

The man broke. He pulled out his gun and fired. Once. Twice. And then again and again till the chamber was empty. His hands were shaking, but every shot struck the clock. The glass exploded. The frame cracked. The hands twisted. Pieces flew across the room and scattered over the table and floor.

His men rushed in at the sound of the gunshots. They found him standing there, breathing hard, his gun still raised. His face was pale. His shirt clung to his back with sweat. In the few minutes they had been outside, he seemed to have aged a hundred years. They looked from him to the shattered clock. Pieces of it lay on the floor. Pieces lay on the table. A broken part still hung from the wall.

“Sir? Is everything all right?”

The man did not answer. There was nothing that he could say. There was nothing that he could ever say again. He lowered the gun, pushed past them, and hurried out of the room. His men followed. Silently, he told himself he had killed it. At the very least, he had stopped that mocking tick-tock of the clock.

But then, from somewhere deep inside his brain, it returned. Clear. Slow. But getting louder.

Tick.

Tick.

Tick.

Tick.


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Kensington Station, Platform Nine

I remember how I enjoyed writing poems when I was growing up. After almost 30 years, I thought to give it a try again 🙂

Kensington Station, platform Nine 
Alone she stood in a crowd 
Though her lips pasted a smile 
Her eyes cried out aloud 

She talked as women talk 
About her husband, kids, and home 
Her pet bird a lonely hawk 
And How she never felt alone 

She looked at her watch 
As trains passed her by 
Passengers board one by one 
Waving her Goodbye 

Alone now, she sat silently 
A silence words can never fill 
She thought about her dead family 
Their graves under the dark hill 

Kensington station, platform nine 
Full of tragedies untold 
Stories different from yours and mine 
Stories now dead and cold 



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Flash Fiction: The Most Horrible Book Of the Century

The Most Horrible Book of the Century

For many years, Ernst Kane Williams had been featured as the ‘The Most Horrible Writer’ in his local bookstore. His nomination was done by a committee of 10 avid readers and writers who were also the patrons of the bookstore. His name and picture would appear on one of the plaques on the wall. He had never complained, as he knew that his writing skills were way below par. He had been writing since he was 17 and had written hundreds of books in the past 40 years. All his books competed with each other on being the most horrible book ever! But this had never stopped him from writing and publishing as he loved doing it.  

Yesterday, at the bookstore, the owner had told him that tomorrow they would be announcing the ‘most horrible book of the century’ and he had a good chance of winning that title as well.

‘You mean, I am not the only one?’, he had asked 
‘No Kane, there are more horrible writers than you’, the owner replied.  
‘Interesting…’, he said.  
‘You will know by tomorrow, 11:00 AM’ 

Now Kane started wondering if there could be a more horrible writer than him. He could hardly wait. The next day, as soon as it was 11:00 AM, he rushed to the bookstore. He was almost certain that he would win the title. But it was not to be! The award for the most horrible book of the century was given to ‘Salty But Nice’ By EeeTee Smith. Surprised, Kane rushed to the counter and asked to buy the book.  

‘But why?’, asked the teenage girl behind the counter genuinely surprised that anyone would buy this book.  
‘Because, my dear child, I want to know whose writing can be worse than mine.’ 

The girl just shrugged her shoulders, as her generation usually does, and sold the book to him.  

Kane rushed to his home and immediately entered his library. After putting the ‘Do Not Disturb’ sign he closed the door.  

He sat on his chair by the fireplace and started reading the book. He couldn’t believe his eyes! It was indeed the most horrible book that he had ever read and he was enjoying every bit of it! Nothing was right in this book. The sentence structure, the punctuation, and sometimes even the spelling. The plot didn’t make any sense. And the writer had almost forgotten that there are things called ‘character arcs’.  

By the end of the book, Kane was laughing and clapping. Such a horrible book, he told himself. No story arc, no surprises, no plot twists. He simply loved the fact that someone could be a more horrible writer than him. Suddenly, he had an urge to find out about the writer EeeTee Smith. He flipped through the pages to see if the writer had introduced himself somewhere. He finally found one small note on the last page of the book.  

About EeeTee Smith (Me) 
I am 17 years old. I love to write. This is the first of many books that I promise to bring to this world.  

p.s. EeeTee Smith is my pen name, my real name is Ernst Kane Williams.  And I can be reached at …



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Dust

Bahrain Fort

It was around 4,000 years ago that I walked on a curvy dusty path toward a booming market right in the shadows of a tall, towering fortress. My body was sweating from places that I didn’t know existed, still, I took wide steps with my chest out and chin high, confident even though I was entering a centuries-old market.  

Markets

No matter what period of human history we are in, markets have always been a meeting place of two parties; the buyers and sellers. The sellers always try to compete for the buyer’s attention using various methods like thunderous calls, bold and colorful signage, or, in the case of bakers and fishermen, the enticing aroma of their products. The buyers are always busy evaluating the various products on display while the sellers are busy evaluating the buyers; their social status, their buying power, and their overall interest in the products they sell. Some merchants called out to me, but I was not there to buy anything. Nothing, for me, was attractive enough to buy in this centuries-old marketplace.  

The Naughty Wind 

And then, amongst all the hustle and bustle, there was the naughty wind. Completely free from any sense of urgency or responsibility. Blowing around without any pattern or design, just like a small child who runs around aimlessly all day round. The wind was playing with tiny dust particles when it saw me and decided that I was ready to play – with a gush it tried to blow my hat, but I caught it in time.  

‘Well, if it wanted to play then let the games begin’, I told myself.  

I stretched my arms, telling the wind to bring it on. After a few light gushes, I gave the wind a mocking smile. Angry, it desperately tried to increase its intensity but there were just too many people and shops, who resisted the wind and supplied cover to me. Finally, the wind gave up. I smiled and confidently walked deeper into the market.  

The Old Man with Penetrating Eyes.  

A few meters inside the market I noticed an old man. He was sitting on the edge of a cabin, his legs hanging over the edge while his arms supplied support. His cabin had some sort of spices, but he didn’t look very keen on selling them. His face had an unkempt beard and a blank expression. I tried to look away from him, but there was something familiar about him. Maybe it was his eyes. Dark, murky but shining, telling his life story and the things he had done. Things he could have avoided but didn’t. Things he would probably do again if he had power in his limbs. He looked scary but I knew that he could do me no harm. Confident, I walked up to him and pointed towards the fortress asking for its entrance. He pointed towards his right and then looked away from me.    

The Entrance and the Enchanting Arches 

The fort was surrounded by a deep moat all around its strong impenetrable walls.  A wooden bridge took me over the moat and into the fortress. Inside, I could see many crowded passages and openings, except for one passage which had diamond-shaped arches made from stone bricks. The arches had a pointed tip, pointing towards the blue sky. Its artistic nature looked odd in an otherwise box-shaped fortress; a fortress probably built to protect rather than amuse.  

The entrance to the passage was manned by two guards in smart red and brown uniforms, spears in their hands and armor on their chests. I walked up to them, but they pointed me towards another passage which felt like nothing but a dark tunnel. I was not amused as I wanted to see the arches from a closer range. I looked inside the dead eyes of the guards till a soft voice called out to them. I couldn’t recognize the language, but it was unmistakably that of a young lady asking the guards to let me in. As I stepped inside, my eyes fell upon the gracious figure who had allowed access to me. 

She sat gracefully on one of the stone recesses, draped in a regal purple and white gown. A small canvas rested on her lap, her skilled fingers busy sketching the intricate outlines of the very arches that rose above me. I marveled at the geometrical symmetry of the arches and their timeless beauty. Upon seeing my amazement her expression radiated with pride, and I couldn’t help but wonder if she had been its designer.  

I pointed towards the arches and then gently towards her, raising an unspoken question.
She responded with a nod, her lips curved in a proud, confident smile.
I tilted my head to the right and gave a gesture of admiration.
In response, her smile widened acknowledging my praise.

Centuries would pass but people would still admire these diamond-shaped arches.  

Me & The Wind

I walked through the passage and climbed a few stairs and was on the top of the eastern wall of the fortress. There were many guards there, but none bothered to stop or question me. Probably only royalty could have passed through these stairs, so they didn’t bother.

I stopped for a breather on the eastern wall when the naughty wind recognized me and came swishing around me with all its force. In one swift motion, my hat was dislodged from my head and away it went. I laughed and tried to catch it, but every time I came near my hat, the wind would come back and blow it a few more inches, away from me.  

Seeing me playing in one of the more secure passages, a guard called me out. I stopped in my tracks. The wind, too, stopped, as if realizing like a naughty boy that something had gone amiss, and punishment was on the way. Like a remorseful child, the wind returned my hat which I quickly put on my head. Three guards moved towards me from each side intending to arrest me. I didn’t actually understand what the fuss was about, and I was not afraid. As they moved towards me, I looked towards them. They stared back at me with their dead eyes. I smiled and snapped my fingers which made them vanish into thin air.  

I looked around, I was all alone on the eastern wall. The calm waves moved from one part of the enticing blue sea towards the shore. A few boats were docked on the shore far away.  I returned my gaze to the emerald blue sea where the sun was setting, casting a wonderful reflection. A view that never ceases to marvel no matter how many times you have seen it.  

The ‘Nobility’ 

After spending a few moments on the eastern wall, I took a flight of stairs into a narrow passage, which then opened into a wide courtyard. The courtyard was full of small but richly designed shops, neatly arranged in columns and rows, with enough room to walk. It looked like an orderly and organized version of the marketplace outside. This probably was the market for the rich and elite. The merchants too looked sophisticated and well-mannered. They greeted their patrons with a short slow bow and a smile.  

 Besides the rich merchants and the lavishly dressed nobility, there were many slave men and women, busy with various tasks, which they carried out with serious and humorless expressions. At the far end, I could see a worker bringing a heavy sack of spices through a flight of stairs. Towards the right of the courtyard, a slave woman struggled to hold a naughty child, while the child’s mother, unconcerned, walked a few meters ahead. Suddenly, the child broke from the stranglehold of his nanny and ran straight towards the worker carrying the heavy sack of spices. It was inevitable. He crashed into the worker who lost control of the heavy sack. The sack was about to fall on the child, when the worker, just in time, pushed it away from the child. The child was saved but the entire content of the sack was spilled on a man dressed in nobility. The entire market paused for a while and then started laughing at the sight; delighted that the prompt action of the slave had saved the child but had turned a man of nobility into a canvas of multiple colors.  

However, the ‘noble’ man didn’t like what had happened and in order to keep his pride, he started shouting at the worker. It was quite clear that nobility is not in clothes, privilege, or wealth. But very few noble people realize that. Anger, when not checked on time, can lead to catastrophes, as was about to happen. The begging worker and a few merchants trying to diffuse the situation, could not stop the nobleman from pulling out his dagger. He raised his dagger and was about to spill blood to quench the thirst of his pride when I snapped my fingers and made his dagger disappear. Surprised, the man looked towards me. The worker was still begging for forgiveness but now the entire market was looking at me; the merchants, the slaves, the royalty – even the nanny and the child. I looked towards my feet and swooshed my hand. As I looked up, the entire market and everyone inside of it had disappeared.  

Built To Last 

It was a hot and humid day. I was standing in the middle of the ruins of a once-impregnable fortress. All around me were crumbling walls desperately trying to hold up the weight of history and intrigue. In a matter of seconds, I had traversed a chasm of 4,000 years. Traveling through imagination is remarkably swift and endlessly enjoyable. Beyond the now-empty courtyard, I could see the towering fortresses of the modern era.

Just like the crumbling fortress I stood on, were they too ‘Built to last?’

I strolled through the remains of the grand fortress; the courtyard, the diamond-shaped arches, the thick walls desperately held up by steel bars, the doors, the passages, and the moat. Once, the fortress would have hosted nobles, the elite, and the merchants. Slaves would have walked through its passages and the guards would have secured its walls. It would have witnessed bustling markets, melodious songs, joyous dances, and lively festivals. It would have seen politics, conflicts, and wars. Yet, today, it lay in ruins.

Perhaps its architects and builders would have told their patrons that the fortress was built to last. Yet, the relentless passage of time had reduced its impregnability to a captivating array of ruins.  

The Old Man with the Penetrating Eyes

I walked out of the fortress. The old marketplace had vanished leaving behind crumbling ruins. I rounded a corner, and a gentle cool breeze caressed my neck and back. Unlike the naughty wind from my imaginary world, it didn’t try to blow my hat away. I was enjoying the nice breeze when I noticed him walking towards me; the old man with the wild, penetrating eyes from the old market. He walked a determined stride with an expression conveying urgency and intensity, prompting me to ask myself.  

How did this man survive, when I had swished everyone away? 

I snapped my fingers, clapped my hands, and blinked my eyes desperately; trying to make him disappear. Yet, he persisted, steadily drawing nearer. He grasped my shoulders firmly, his eyes ablaze with purpose. In that moment of intense closeness, I realized who he truly was – me. The face behind the wrinkles and the beard, the protruding cheekbones were all mine from a few years in the future.  

His voice echoed with a sense of urgency as he repeated multiple times.  

‘Don’t you see? Don’t you realize?’ 

I asked, my voice hesitant and meek, “What?” even though I already knew the answer that my future self sought. The impending weight of the answer was already pressing down upon me.

‘From dust everything was created, to dust everything would return. Everything! Even you! Even you’, he said and vanished into thin air.  

I stood there, immobilized, as if under an enchanting spell. The cool wind still blew around me, yet its touch felt distant and insignificant. Past, present, and future, all danced before my eyes in a haunting symphony. In a fleeting moment, I confronted an epiphany that had eluded me for years. I had walked on dust all through my life with an unwavering confidence; chest out, chin high. Yet, just like these crumbling walls, I too would turn into dust – walked upon by men with unwavering confidence; chests out and chins high… 


As I walked through the crumbling walls of the Bahrain Fort, I couldn’t help but imagine how strong this fort would once have been. I moved, with the help of my imagination, 4,000 years back when the fort would have stood in all its newly-built glory. Strong and impregnable. Maybe a bit similar to how I think of myself, today. But like this fort, I too, would one day crumble and vanish. Even my traces will be forgotten. I thought to write about it as flash fiction. Hope it helps as I pray that it will help me. Do write in comments about similar experiences you might have had.


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Flash Fiction: Back from the dead?

I knew she was dead. She had died a few years ago. Still, I was not surprised to see her. I was standing with my friends when I saw her. Her clothes were torn and full of sand. Her hair spread over her shoulders, disheveled and dirty. I had never seen her like this before. She hurriedly entered the compound and went to her apartment. I wondered why was she in such a state? I was missing her since so many days. Would she stay? Would she go back? I don’t want her to. But can I stop her, can I make her stay? Do humans have the power to give life to their dead.

A few moments later, she came out, all neat and dressed in her white saari, full of grace and humility. She was with her son, who opened the door of his car for her. She entered the car and her son drove her off. She would never come back now. At least not in this state.

I knew she was dead, still, I was not surprised to see her. Because in my dream, I knew I was dreaming.


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