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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Chapter 17 - Night Bus

 

17

 

            Winter had finally arrived without making any formal announcement.

 

            No drums.  No thunder.  No dramatic storm.  Only a slow change in the air.

 

            The bus windows had started gathering thin layers of fog. Passengers rubbed circles on the glass with their palms to look outside for a few seconds before the mist returned again like memory. Shawls appeared on shoulders. Old men folded their hands under armpits while sleeping. Tea vendors at bus stands suddenly became more important than politicians.

 

            That evening, I boarded the night bus after sunset.

 

            The conductor shouted destinations with tired authority while people climbed in carrying blankets, bags, sleeping children, and invisible worries. A faint smell of peanuts, diesel, woolen clothes, and cold iron floated inside the bus.

 

            Winter nights always make buses feel different.

 

            In summer, passengers talk loudly.  During monsoon, they complain.  But in winter, silence travels too.  Everyone shrinks into themselves.

 

            The bus started moving through the dark highway. Outside, fields had disappeared into blackness. Only occasional trees appeared for a second in the headlights before vanishing again like forgotten thoughts.

 

            I took my usual window seat.

 

            The glass was cold enough to remind me that time does not stop for anyone. I rubbed the fog away with my sleeve and looked outside.

 

            Far away, scattered across the darkness, tiny windows glowed.  Yellow lights.  White tube lights.  A flickering bulb somewhere in a distant village.  A blue television glow inside a small house.  Each window floated alone in the darkness like a separate world.

 

            And suddenly a strange thought entered my mind…Behind every small light exists an entire unseen universe of arguments, dreams, illnesses, meals, and secrets.

 

            The bus kept moving.  The windows kept appearing.  One light after another.  One life after another.  And I realized how little we actually know about the people whose homes we pass every day.  From the road, every house looks peaceful.  But walls never reveal the full story. 

 

            Inside one glowing window, a mother might be waiting for her son to return from another country.  Inside another, a husband and wife may be eating in silence after a terrible argument.  Inside one room, somebody may be studying for an examination believing success will rescue the entire family.  Inside another room, someone may have already given up on life but is pretending to smile before everyone else.

 

            From outside, all windows shine equally.  Pain never changes the brightness of bulbs. 

 

            The bus crossed a small village.

 

Near a roadside tea stall, a few men stood around burning wood. Their shadows danced behind them on the wall. I watched them disappear behind us.

 

            Human life is strange.

 

            Some people spend entire lives trying to become visible to the world, while others quietly survive in unnoticed corners carrying stories heavier than history books.

 

            A child sleeping beside me suddenly leaned toward his mother. She adjusted his cap and covered him properly without even waking fully herself.  Mothers develop a different kind of awareness.  Even in sleep, they continue protecting.  Perhaps motherhood is the only job where retirement never comes.

 

            The bus entered a long stretch of darkness now. No shops. No houses. Only cold fields and fog.

 

            Inside the bus, passengers had become silent islands.

 

            One young man scrolled endlessly through his phone. A man slept with his head shaking against the window after every pothole. Two girls whispered softly beneath a shawl. Somewhere at the back, somebody coughed continuously.

 

            I looked outside again.

 

            Another lit window appeared far away.  Then another.  Then another.  And suddenly those windows no longer looked like buildings.  They looked like heartbeats.  Proof that somewhere, someone is still awake.

 

            Winter nights create a strange loneliness. They make people remember things they successfully ignored during daytime.  Perhaps darkness is honest.  Daylight distracts us with activity.  Night forces us to meet ourselves.

 

            I remembered my army days.

 

            Winter nights during duty had their own silence. Soldiers standing with rifles beneath cold skies often think deeper thoughts than philosophers sitting in warm libraries.   Because loneliness sharpens observation.

 

            I remember once during posting in a remote area, I saw a small light glowing inside a distant hut at midnight. Snow surrounded everything. The entire region looked dead except that tiny yellow light. 

And I had wondered then too…Who is awake inside?  An old man?  A sick child?  Someone writing a letter?  Someone crying quietly?  Someone waiting?

 

            Strange how small lights attract tired souls.  Perhaps because human beings themselves are temporary lamps fighting endless darkness.

 

            The bus stopped near a roadside dhaba.

 

            Passengers stepped down rubbing hands against cold air. Steam rose from kettles like wandering ghosts. Tea glasses clinked continuously.

 

            I also stepped down.

 

            Winter tea tastes different during journeys.  Not because of ingredients.  Because cold weather teaches gratitude.

 

            I stood near the fire where a few strangers warmed their hands. Nobody knew each other. Nobody asked names. Yet for a few minutes, all of us shared heat like relatives.

 

            Travel teaches temporary humanity.

 

            A truck driver standing beside me said softly, “Winter has started properly now.”

 

            I nodded.

 

            His face looked exhausted. Eyes red. Beard carrying dust from long roads.  Yet he smiled while sipping tea.  Poor people often smile more honestly than successful people.  Because survival itself becomes their achievement.

 

            The bus horn called us back.  We resumed our journey.  Now fog had thickened. The driver slowed down. Headlights created a white tunnel ahead of us.

 

            Outside, the glowing windows appeared softer now, blurred by mist.  They looked beautiful.  But beauty from distance can be misleading.  Many houses that glow warmly at night carry unbearable coldness inside relationships.  And many broken houses contain extraordinary love.  Human beings spend too much energy decorating walls while neglecting conversations.  One silent dinner can make a luxurious home feel empty.  One genuine laugh can make poverty look rich.

 

            I saw one brightly lit house standing alone near fields. Through the curtain gap, television light flashed rapidly. Shadows moved inside.  And I imagined the possible stories there.  Perhaps a family was watching a comedy show together.  Or perhaps only the television was creating noise because nobody talked anymore.

 

            Modern homes are becoming quieter emotionally while louder electronically.  We know passwords of phones but not sadness of people sitting beside us.

 

            The bus moved further.

 

            Somewhere in the darkness, a dog barked continuously.  In another house, colorful decorative lights blinked outside a balcony. Maybe a wedding preparation. Maybe a celebration.  And suddenly I smiled remembering an old incident.

 

            Years ago, while traveling during winter, our bus had broken down near a village late at night. Passengers became irritated. Some cursed the driver. Some complained about delays.  But one villager nearby invited a few of us inside his small house to sit near the fire until another bus arrived.  I still remember that house.

 

            Mud walls.  Simple bedding.  Steel utensils hanging quietly.  A small television.  Children half-asleep beneath blankets.  The family itself looked poor.  Yet they served tea without hesitation.

 

            That night I understood something important…Some houses are physically small but spiritually enormous.  And some mansions remain emotionally vacant forever.  The richest warmth in this world still comes from human intention.

 

            Outside the bus, another row of windows passed by.  Some lights switched off as we watched.  People sleeping.  Another day finished.  Another page closed in countless private stories.

 

            Every night, millions of people go to sleep carrying unfinished battles nobody else knows about. 

A shopkeeper worrying about debt.  A daughter hiding heartbreak.  A father calculating expenses.  A student fearing failure.  A widow talking silently to memories.  An old man waiting for a phone call that may never come.

 

            Yet morning still arrives for everyone.  Life does not pause for emotional weather.

 

            The conductor walked through the aisle collecting fares from late passengers. His woolen cap covered half his forehead. He looked tired beyond words.  People rarely notice workers during winter nights.  Drivers. Conductors. Guards. Tea sellers. Sweepers. Nurses.  While others sleep beneath blankets, some people remain awake so society can continue functioning by morning.  The world rests on invisible shoulders.

 

            I looked outside again.

 

            Now the villages had become fewer. Mostly isolated homes appeared at long distances from each other. Each glowing window looked lonely.  And suddenly the darkness between houses felt meaningful too.

 

            Human life is not connected continuously.  We all travel through long silent distances before finding another light.  Maybe that is why kindness matters so much.  Because nobody truly knows how much darkness another person has crossed before reaching us.

 

            A quote quietly formed in my mind…“People are not difficult because life is easy for them. Most rough voices are carrying invisible winters.”

 

            The bus heater was not working properly. Cold air entered through window gaps. Passengers adjusted shawls tighter.  A young boy near the front seat slept on his father’s shoulder. The father himself remained awake despite exhaustion.  Fathers often sleep later than everyone else.  Not because they have less tiredness.  Because responsibility itself becomes insomnia.

 

            The highway curved toward another town.

 

            Here the houses were closer together. Balconies carried hanging clothes motionless in cold air. Television lights flickered behind curtains. Somewhere a pressure cooker whistle echoed briefly into the night.  Ordinary sounds.  Yet deeply beautiful.  Because they prove life continues.  We underestimate ordinary evenings too much.  A family eating together.  Someone waiting at the gate.  Children finishing homework.  Tea being poured into steel cups.

 

            These moments look small while happening.  But one day memory turns them sacred. 

 

            The bus crossed a hospital building.  Several windows glowed there too.  Hospitals at night always feel different from hospitals during daytime.  During the day, hospitals look administrative.

At night, they look emotional.  Behind those windows, someone may have just survived surgery.  Behind another, a family may be praying desperately.  Somebody may be entering the world.  Somebody may be leaving it.  Hospitals remind us that human beings are fragile lamps pretending to be permanent suns.

 

            I watched the hospital lights fade behind us slowly.  Then came darkness again.

 

            Long.  Silent.  Cold.

 

            Inside the bus, most passengers had fallen asleep now. Only the driver, conductor, and a few restless souls remained awake.  I was one of them.  Some journeys are not meant for sleeping.  They are meant for observing.

 

            The fog on the window returned once more. I wiped it absentmindedly and looked outside again.  Another tiny glowing window appeared far away in the fields.  Only one light.  Nothing else around it.  Yet somehow it looked hopeful. 

 

            And I realized perhaps life itself is exactly this…A small light surrounded by enormous darkness, still refusing to switch off.

 

            The bus moved ahead steadily beneath the winter sky.

 

            Behind us, thousands of windows had already disappeared into darkness again.  Thousands of untold stories.  Thousands of private universes.  And tomorrow morning, the same people inside those homes would wake up, sweep floors, prepare tea, argue, laugh, worry, work, love, hide pain, chase dreams, and continue living as if their small glowing windows were not extraordinary.

 

            But they are.  Every lit window at night is proof that humanity is still breathing.  And perhaps wisdom begins the day we stop seeing houses merely as buildings and start seeing them as containers of invisible human battles.

 

            Near midnight, I rested my forehead lightly against the cold glass.

 

            Outside, another distant window glowed quietly in the dark.

 

            For a few seconds, it looked less like electricity…and more like courage.

Chapter 16 - The Patient in the Bus

 

16

 

            The bus had become quieter after noon.

                       

            Morning passengers usually carry urgency. Afternoon passengers carry tiredness. By evening, buses become full of silence. People stop speaking because the day itself has exhausted their emotions.

 

            Outside the window, wheat fields moved backward slowly. Electric poles appeared and disappeared like unfinished thoughts. A tea stall passed. Then a tractor overloaded with sugarcane. Then children bathing near a canal. Then silence again.

 

            At one small town stop, the bus halted with its usual tired sigh.

 

            Three people entered.  First came an old woman carrying a cloth bag full of medicines. Behind her walked a thin man supporting another weak man whose body seemed unable to trust its own legs anymore.  The sick man climbed slowly.  One hand held the railing.  The other held his chest.

 

            For a moment it felt as if even the bus became patient with him.  Passengers looked once and then looked away.  That is how society usually reacts to pain:  one glance of acknowledgement,  followed by immediate return to personal comfort.

 

            The conductor adjusted people slightly and somehow created space for them on the long back seat. The weak man sat near the window. His breathing looked uneven. His face carried that strange colour sickness gives…neither pale nor dark, but emptied.

 

            The old woman opened the medicine packet carefully, checked something written on a prescription, and placed the medicines back again as if they were precious jewellery.

 

            The bus moved.

 

            Nobody spoke to them.  One passenger was watching comedy videos loudly on his phone.  Two college boys were discussing government jobs.  A labourer slept with his head shaking against the window glass.  Someone argued about land prices.  Someone cursed politics. Someone laughed loudly.

 

            Life continued inside the bus exactly the way traffic continues outside a hospital.

 

            But the sick man was not looking outside.  He was looking at people.  Not continuously.  Not strangely.  Just quietly.  His eyes moved from face to face as if searching for something invisible. 

Perhaps concern.  Perhaps recognition.  Perhaps proof that his suffering existed somewhere beyond his own body.

 

            There are moments when illness does not merely weaken muscles.  It makes a human being emotionally homeless. 

 

            A sick person sometimes stops asking, “Will I survive?” and begins asking, “Does my survival matter to anyone except these two relatives beside me?”

 

            The bus crossed a marketplace.

 

            Shops were crowded.  Children were eating ice cream.  Motorcycles rushed past recklessly.  A marriage palace stood decorated for some evening function.  And suddenly an old memory returned like lightning striking inside silence.

 

            A hospital room.  Second floor.  A weak body standing near the window after surviving both a heart attack and paralysis attack.  Outside that hospital window, the main road had remained frighteningly normal.  Cars moved.  Vendors shouted.  People bought fruits.  School children laughed.  Someone carried wedding clothes.  Someone argued with an auto driver.

 

            Inside the hospital room, death had just returned empty-handed after standing very close.

 

            But outside?  Nothing had changed.  The world had not paused for even one second.  And that realization had felt heavier than illness itself.

 

            “If I had died today,” the mind had whispered quietly,   “would even these vehicles slow down for a moment?”

 

            No.

 

            Roads do not stop for private tragedies.  The world has its own timetable.  Somebody dies while somewhere else someone cuts a birthday cake.  Somebody loses a son while another family celebrates a promotion.  Somebody receives a medical report while another person buys new shoes.

Somebody says final goodbye while a nearby cinema hall erupts with laughter.

                       

            Existence is simultaneously cruel and innocent.  Cruel because it does not stop.  Innocent because it cannot.

 

            The bus jumped slightly over a broken road.  The patient adjusted himself with difficulty.  Again his eyes moved slowly across passengers. 

 

            And suddenly a strange thought appeared:  Maybe sick people do not only fear death.  Maybe they fear disappearance. 

 

            Illness slowly teaches humans an uncomfortable truth:  the world can continue perfectly without any individual.

 

            A government office replaces an employee within days.  A classroom replaces a student next year.Markets reopen the next morning.  Seats in buses never remain empty for long.  Life moves with brutal efficiency.  That is why humans secretly desire remembrance.  Not immortality. Just remembrance.

 

            A small proof that their existence disturbed the universe even slightly.  Perhaps that is why people build large houses, write books, plant trees, raise children, donate money, or carve names onto walls.  Human beings are terrified of becoming unnoticed dust.

 

            The sick man kept staring quietly.  And something about those eyes felt deeply familiar.  Not because of disease.  Because of helpless awareness.  Only those who have returned from near death understand a certain loneliness.  After surviving a serious illness, people expect the world to suddenly become meaningful and compassionate.  Instead, they discover something shocking: most people are too busy surviving their own problems to deeply notice somebody else’s suffering.

 

            Not because they are heartless.  Because everybody is already carrying invisible burdens.  The laughing passenger may have unpaid loans.  The conductor may be worried about his daughter’s marriage.  The labourer sleeping near the window may not have eaten properly since morning.  The student scrolling endlessly on his phone may secretly fear failure.

 

Every passenger inside the bus was fighting a private war invisible to others.  And perhaps that is why humanity misunderstands itself.  We judge expressions without reading wounds. 

 

            The bus slowed near a red light.

 

            Outside stood a beggar with one damaged leg dragging himself between vehicles.  Most drivers avoided eye contact.  Human beings have strange reactions to suffering.  Sometimes we avoid looking at pain because it reminds us of our own future fragility.

 

            Healthy people secretly believe illness belongs to “others.”

 

            Until one medical report changes the grammar of life forever.

 

            A single phone call from a doctor can divide existence into two halves: before diagnosis and after diagnosis.

 

            The patient coughed softly.  The old woman immediately touched his shoulder with concern.  That small touch carried more humanity than many speeches.

 

            Real love often appears in unnoticed forms: someone waiting outside ICU rooms,  someone adjusting pillows at midnight,  someone checking medicines twice,  someone staying awake beside another person’s pain.  Grand declarations are easy.  Daily care is sacred.

 

            The bus moved again.              Fields stretched endlessly outside like unfinished prayers.

 

            And another thought emerged quietly:  Perhaps buses resemble life more truthfully than roads do.  Nobody stays forever.  People enter.  People leave.  Some travel together for long distances.  Some disappear after one stop.  Some sit beside us silently yet leave permanent memories.  Some make noise and are forgotten immediately.  No passenger knows exactly where another passenger’s journey began.  No passenger fully knows where another passenger will finally get down.  Still, for a few hours, strangers share the same shaking vehicle beneath the same uncertain sky.

 

            Isn’t that what human civilization really is?

 

            A temporary travelling companionship between mortal strangers.

 

            The patient closed his eyes briefly.

 

            Maybe due to weakness.  Maybe due to exhaustion.  Or maybe because sometimes tired souls need darkness more than light.  Outside, evening slowly began spreading across the villages.  Smoke rose from kitchens.  Farmers returned home.  Birds crossed orange skies in scattered formations.

 

            The bus lights turned on dimly.

 

            Faces became softer in yellow light.  And suddenly a painful realization surfaced:  Most people are remembered properly only after death.  While alive, their suffering feels ordinary.  After death, the same suffering becomes “a story.”

 

People say:

“He struggled a lot.”

“He was a good man.”

“He suffered silently.”

 

            But when that person was alive, the world was often too occupied to notice.  Human beings distribute flowers more generously at funerals than during difficult years of living. 

 

            The sick man opened his eyes again.  This time they met another pair of eyes for one brief second.  No words were spoken.  But some silences contain recognition.  Not pity.  Recognition.  The recognition that every human being walking normally today is only temporarily healthy.

 

            The strongest body eventually negotiates with weakness.  The fastest legs eventually slow down.

The sharpest eyes eventually search for spectacles.  The loudest voice eventually becomes breathless.  Time defeats everybody patiently.  Perhaps wisdom begins the day humans stop seeing sick people as “different.”

 

            Illness is not a separate country.  It is the future homeland of almost every body.

 

            The bus finally neared another town.

 

            Passengers started preparing to leave even before the bus stopped full…that strange human habit of impatience continuing till the end of life.

 

            The relative helped the patient stand again.  Very carefully.  As if lifting not merely a person,

but somebody’s remaining hope.  The old woman picked up medicines.  They slowly moved toward the bus door.

 

            Nobody clapped for them.  Nobody made emotional speeches.  Nobody even properly noticed when they stepped down.

 

            Within seconds new passengers entered.

 

            Seats filled again.  Conversations restarted.  Life resumed its ordinary rhythm immediately. 

 

            But long after the bus moved ahead, one thought remained sitting silently beside the window:  Maybe the patient was not looking at passengers at all.  Maybe he was searching for one small assurance …that he still existed in the eyes of the world.  And perhaps every suffering human being secretly searches for the same thing.

 

Not solutions.

Not miracles.

Not immortality.

 

            Just a little human acknowledgement before the journey ends.

 

            Because sometimes the deepest fear is not death itself.

 

            It is the possibility that the world may continue exactly the same without ever realizing we were here.