Do the arthropod dream?
The heat wave was spreading. Biting
wind scrapped the skin dry extorting moisture and spiraling into nothing. This was
climate of no mercy. A dog panted in the shade of lone tree next to barracks of
single room homes along the lone railway track. The dust storms assaulted the
homes every now and then, increasing its frequency and intensity as the glassy sun
climbed to the top. The light blue weathered plastic barricades in the
courtyards fluttered and fought vainly. With each gust of untiring wind the
women in the homes groaned their curses “Hell be with you” “It’s better to die” “The
day is hottest hell”. Children wailed. By afternoon homes have quietened in its
own exhaustion. They slept lulled in the drone of water cooler and buzzing
houseflies. The boy was awake and he caught a fly. He cusped it in his little
fingers, the fly pounding on his flesh as if to tell him that this is a
mistake. He netted his fingers to dexterously grab the fly on its belly. The two
large compound eyes and three small simple eyes stared him in waves of perplexed
purple yellow tinge. He took out the broken blade hid under his tongue while
held the fly on to the floor, and with a little jerk behead it. The proboscis
flickered before stilling. He collected the head in a match box. The boy barely
into his teens squeezed his tiny body through the pliable bars of half opened
window. The sun was relentless but that didn’t dissuade him. The dog attempted
to sway its tail but on being ignored it went back on its chin and was mildly
aware. The boy climbed the tree, he knew where the moths blend into the bark. He
knew when the butterflies flicked the flowers and bees waggle its secret. He knew
the pattern that held them enchanted. The world was mysterious. So he drilled
the eyes to search for the sight and the brains for the thoughts. What he found
left him disappointed. It was always some inexplicable sticky gel. Not even the
smell carry any memory or recognition of past. He searched for the blister beetles
and the lady birds. The dragon flies were of special interest as he dissected them
with renewed vigor. The mantis eyes pendulate its dark spot like a dying cathode
screen. The arthropod heads hurtled against each other as the boy buoyant in
his search climbed the fencing onto the open field across the railway track. The
heat wave had sedated the little lives, they desperately clung on to some shade
and try lull their senses. The boy liked the summer. The earth burned, the
trees burst and the air carried the scent of soot. He looked at the dog that
had followed him, it squirmed and tucked its tail. He patted it. “Nice boy” he
said as he felt it’s skull under the skin while the dog licked his fingers. Later
that day he told his parents that he loved dogs and would like to have them as
pet.
Late into the night, he got under
the bed and opened the match box. The decapitated heads have come alive, they float and make
soft buzzing noise as if taking care not to awaken anyone, flickered into little ember
and wisped into the darkness.
