I don’t know why I left that porch, that swing, that backyard, that house, that street in Vizag. But they have not left me. I remember more - the Rajus’ dog, Whitey, the overbearingly friendly grocer across the street, the college kids who lounged under the peepal tree at the end of the street, my Sai school right across the street, the cawing of crows in the afternoon, the yarns of our servant maid, Bangaramma in the backyard, the vegetable sellers making their rounds in the hot afternoons, the drone of television, the flourish with which the milkboy delivered, the bhajans in the mandir on Thursdays and Sundays, the colony aunties who exchanged recipes across the walls, the chatter of the servant maids, the well at the bottom of the garden, the whispered secrets under the coconut trees, the Sunday afternoons spent digging for enchanted buried treasure, the milk that I threw surreptitiously into the jasmine creeper, the scaling of garden walls to visit neighbours, badminton on the terrace every morning.
This February, I went back to that house on the acacia tree lined street.
I wish I hadn’t.
There is very little of all that. What remains is an old and unloved house.
And a street in which I cannot even live in without a visa.
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