The assassin and his lover

Afsan Chowdhury is a Bangladeshi liberation war researcher, columnist and journalist.

Published on

On the fork where the Patan roads meet
Before walking to the bridge which lies over a comatose Bagmati, where the roads sleep broken and muddy,
crawling with indifferent slime, where the roads twist and turn like a woman in shimmering pain, whispering desperate groans that don't make it to Kathmandu Post or Nepali Times,
he stood like a sage weeping tears of deaths and dimes screaming in pain at his own desperate prophecy. Near the feet of an unknown martyr, standing in a rumpled garden,
scattered by dust and fumes of reluctant dinosaurs pretending to be buses from Patan Dhoka,
the shops stand lined up like well-mannered deaf and dumb kids waiting for their school bus in the pale winter sun.

The shops sleep or lazily wink on holidays,
the seedy shadowy street tea shop where mobikes and men come to rest and drink beer and lime, chatting with girls lazing or resting on the brawny arms of souped up two stroke machines,
next to the shop which sell sad pizzas in the dark, for customers haunted by fast food come-ons.

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