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Dhaka, congested roads, and daily morning crowds
yells, shouts, screeches
they fill the dust smothered air.
glaring red of
warning lights pierce through the fog of
sand and smoke.
the honking, crying, howling of
mud covered second hand cars and bikes
infiltrate our windows.
in our little safe haven
in the form of an air-conditioned
shiny, white Corolla
your hand flies to the armrest
knuckles white, muscles tight,
pupils blown out wide
Thud. Thud.
a man with a hollow face
stares blankly into our car
opened mouth with drips of saliva
falling.
his hands
they crumble
as they reach out towards us
in desperation
Honk. Honk.
A motorbike carrying a
family of four;
kids have cheeks crusted with grey pollution
the mother shoulders a torn bag
the father’s bloodshot eyes penetrate
the window of our car.
it’s okay. keep your eyes straight.
but that doesn’t change the fact that
the colony of people are all
staring
at us
and our shampooed hair
and our Adidas jackets
in our air-conditioned car
(am I a bad person for feeling so afraid?)
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