The autorickshaw
wallah forcefully sucked on his bidi
and then flicked it away. He grabbed a large, black lever by his feet and
pulled it forward with zeal, starting the tiny engine. The autorickshaw
emanated a high-pitched buzzing sound, as if it was being operated by thousands
of angry honeybees. Without glancing at the vehicles racing past him, he
swerved madly into traffic.
Divya
grabbed onto her suitcase and began praying.
No wonder they say you become more spiritual in India, she
thought fearfully.
Within a few minutes, Divya was experiencing her first traffic jam. She instantly found herself preferring the
reckless speeds to sitting idly in the poisonous haze of carbon monoxide and
other toxic gases. She began coughing and feeling light headed from the
suffocating traffic fumes. The autorickshaw driver
lit another bidi.
Cars, buses, horses, dogs,
trucks, bicycles, cows, autorickshaws, and
innumerable scooters and motorcycles jammed the intersection. Each vehicle
seemed to rumble with impatience, and the drivers revved their engines as they
slowly inched forward, filling whatever little space remained, as if they were
at the starting line of a Formula One race.
Divya
found the persistent honking from the vehicles overwhelming, and she covered
her ears in a futile effort to minimize the auditory assault.
The autorickshaw
driver pulled out a newspaper and finished reading his article. He cursed in
Hindi. Divya
leaned forward. He was reading the
previous night’s lottery numbers.
I guess he didn’t win, she thought smugly, pleased at his
unhappiness.
The police officer standing in
the center of the intersection motioned the traffic forward, and her smile
transformed into a look of fear as the autorickshaw wallah took out his frustration by driving even more
wildly.
The autorickshaw
lurched forward and the driver somehow fit into spaces that Divya
did not think existed. He drove so close to some vehicles that she could have
pulled the hair off the other driver’s arms.
By a sheer act of God, the autorickshaw avoided crashing into any vehicle, animal, or
person, and clearing the intersection, raced down another pot-holed street.
The autorickshaw
driver suddenly swerved into oncoming traffic, playing chicken with an enormous
truck that was rumbling toward them.
Divya
was too terrified to scream, certain her life was over.
The autorickshaw
driver jerked his handlebars to the left, and pulled to the curb beside an
irritable elephant being painted with intricate colors by a half-naked,
malnourished looking man in a loincloth. The elephant trumpeted with
displeasure.
It took her a moment to realize
that she was alive and that they had not reached their destination.
“W-Why have we stopped?” she
asked uneasily.
The autorickshaw
driver jumped out of the front of the three-wheeler and reached towards her.
Oh my God, he’s going to rape me in broad daylight? she thought, all sense of reason abandoning her.
The autorickshaw
driver grabbed something behind her head and pulled it out. She noticed that it
was a water bottle filled with fuel. He went to the back of the autorickshaw and opened the fuel tank.
“Oh shit, we’re just out of gas,”
she sighed with relief, placing her hand over her racing heart.
The autorickshaw
driver cursed and tossed the empty water bottle into the gutter. He impatiently
motioned her to lift her