Here's a travel short story I did recently, set in Bangalore, India when I was there a couple of years ago. I'm in Morocco at the moment - I get about, hey! More of that next time.
Breakfast in India.
I looked up and down the dusty street - it was hotting up. The cooler early morning mist had lifted and the sun was beginning to burn. I was wearing a thin loose cotton shirt, over knee-length, tan cotton trousers, because as the day wore on, I couldn’t bear anything but loose cotton next to my skin. My cotton army surplus hat shaded my face and dark sunglasses kept the glare away from my eyes. Crate laden horse drawn carts vied on the two way street with beat-up cars, vans, a few SUVs and bright yellow tuk-tuks, their tourist passengers hanging on grimly as they swerved through the traffic. I knew how it felt - like one more swerve and you’d tumble out from the wide open sides. Horns honked and blasted, men shouted, crates rattled. India is rarely quiet and in the towns and cities it’s a mad cacophony of constant noise.
Breakfast in India.
I looked up and down the dusty street - it was hotting up. The cooler early morning mist had lifted and the sun was beginning to burn. I was wearing a thin loose cotton shirt, over knee-length, tan cotton trousers, because as the day wore on, I couldn’t bear anything but loose cotton next to my skin. My cotton army surplus hat shaded my face and dark sunglasses kept the glare away from my eyes. Crate laden horse drawn carts vied on the two way street with beat-up cars, vans, a few SUVs and bright yellow tuk-tuks, their tourist passengers hanging on grimly as they swerved through the traffic. I knew how it felt - like one more swerve and you’d tumble out from the wide open sides. Horns honked and blasted, men shouted, crates rattled. India is rarely quiet and in the towns and cities it’s a mad cacophony of constant noise.
I went to cross the road and jumped back to avoid
the large milky-brown cow,with long curved horns, that I hadn’t seen emerging
from behind a van. Sacred cows wandered the streets and traffic untouched and
whether you were a pedestrian or vehicle they’re another hazard to watch out
for.
I could see
the street stall on the corner. He sold
fried eggs and chapatti. He was fat,
brown and smiley, wearing a grubby white vest that he wiped his hands on here
and there. I could see him breaking an egg onto the hot, round griddle in front
of him and pouring some floury white mix like a pancake, beside it. He spread
the chapatti mix as thin as paper on the griddle and then expertly he flipped
it over to brown the other side. Then the egg – breaking the yoke and swirling
it with his spatula and flipping that over too.
A thin man wearing a blue and white dhoti and green shirt was waiting
patiently. I approached – I love Indian
food, but the thought of another dhal curry and rice for breakfast – again …. I
stepped over a big round splat of cow dung on the road side – you didn’t want
to tread on one of those in sandals or you’d be watching the rich brown dung
squirting in between your toes – and the aroma – phew!
I nodded to him and he nodded back – he knew what I
wanted – I wanted that sizzling fried egg wrapped in a roti with the grease
running down my bare arm as I bit into it –all for the equivalent of 25 pence.
I could smell the hot chapati and egg being handed to the man in front
of me, who was holding out a few rupees.
I smiled, as he broke MY egg and dumped a spoonful of the floury mix
onto the hot plate which he was now spreading with his spatula. His face was
impassive. My turn I thought my eyes
fixed on the griddle.
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