The Red Line
The Red Line Denzil Jayasinghe 3 min read · Just now On the 138 — that long, asthmatic contraption that objected audibly to every incline — it took nearly an hour to reach Duke Street. The bus did not so much travel as negotiate with the road. An hour is ample time for dread to mature properly. I would sit by the window and watch Colombo assembling itself for commerce — shutters lifting, tea kettles steaming, bicycles wobbling into purpose — while imagining the Instruments Room already awake and alert, its supervisors poised like minor deities awaiting sacrifice. My shifts began at 8 a.m., 2 p.m., or — with moral offence — 8 p.m. The 2 a.m. to 8 a.m. shift I avoided with quiet determination. I was not built for sanctity. I preferred being home early, sitting cross-legged with friends, discussing matters of enormous irrelevance before adulthood imposed its disciplines. Some men pursued rank. I pursued conversation. Most mornings I arrived precisely on time. Occasionally — catastrophical...