It is a scorching May in Delhi. The air is hot and gritty, a napping dragon바카라™s exhalÂaÂtions. Our bodies have become sweat machines. The leaves of the gulmohar have charred at the edges, flowers flaking like cigarette paper in our palms. Suddenly, the sky turns into a chameleon, camouflaging from blue to brown to black, gobbling up the fireball of a sun. A tepid rain soon follows. The soft rumÂble of rain turns into a sudden pounding바카라”or, perhaps, as Salinger said, falling in buckets바카라¦like a bastard. I am stranded in the library, feeling the city pulse with a sudden relief and vigour바카라”skidding bikes, rushing cars, a bunch of people darting towards the shaded chai-tapri.