Page 34 - Half Girlfriend
P. 34

‘You made friends here?’ she said.

                ‘Not really,’ I said. ‘You?’
                ‘I have some classmates from school in Stephen’s. Plus, I am from
           Delhi, so have many friends outside.’

                ‘I hope I can adjust,’ I said. ‘I feel I don’t belong here.’

                ‘Trust me, nobody feels they do,’ she said. ‘Which residence did
           they give you?’

                ‘Rudra,’ I said.‘How about you?’
                'They don’t give one to Delhiites. I’m a day-ski, unfortunately,’ she

           said, using the common term for day scholars.
                We reached my classroom. I pretended not to see it and kept

           walking until she reached hers.
                ’Oh, this is my class,’ she said.‘Where’s yours?’

                'I'll find out, go ahead,’ I said.
                She smiled and waved goodbye. I wanted to ask her out for coffee,

           hut couldn’t. I could shoot a basket from half-court three times in a

           rmv but I could not ask a girl to come to the college cafeteria with me.
                ‘Basketball,’ I blurted out.
                ‘What?’

                ‘Want to play sometime?’ I recovered quickly.

                ‘With you? You’ll kick my ass,’ she said and laughed. I didn’t
           know why she felt I would kick her rear end or why she found the

           phrase funny. I joined her in the laughter anyway.
                ‘You play well,’ I said as we stood at her classroom door.

                ‘Okay, maybe after a few days, once we settle into classes,’ she
           said. She walked in for her first English lecture. The joy at the

           possibility of meeting her again made me forget I had a class. I wanted
           to dance in the garden.

                The bell for the first period rang. ‘This isn’t sociology, right?’ I
           asked a clueless English student as he arrived late for his own class.

                                                            ♦
                ‘You are good. Really good,’ she said as she wiped her face with a

           towel.
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