A shikra is a light-built hawk, ashy blue-gray on the top and rusty brown underside. It loves open, meagerly wooded country. It’s a swift flier, almost incredibly elegant, with quick strokes of wings ending in a glide. It flies close to the ground and shoots upwards to grab a perch upon a branch with solitary sovereignty. Hereafter, it gives a desiccating look for any mice, small bird, lizard or squirrel who, perchance, lowers its guard for a moment that may allow it to sire a successful hunt. It may seem to carry a kind of effeminate nonchalance for a hawk but its birdie persona is interspersed with enough skill to dispense with the life of any little rodent that turns careless even for a moment.
The
predator gives a piercing, harsh, challenging call. Well, now it eyes a
love-struck pair of garden lizards in the branches of the curry leaf tree
basking at the peak of heat with its exotic elegance. Tiny clusters of whitish
flowers leave aromatic pools of air around the couple. There are honeybees and
butterflies enjoying the feast even in the noontime heat setting up a lifeful
rhythm. Tiny guys expertly, uncomplainingly facing life’s gubernatorial
challenges. The bees, the butterflies and the in-love garden lizards make it
festively buoyant. A melding interface of food, love, death; the elements
juxtaposed so nearby, side by side. I muse with a stoic smile: a circumstantial
texture peppered upon the small tree; dismal indices of smallish ironies; and
God’s inherent instinct of eternality above and beyond all this.
The
noon is meticulously bright. Swathed in the distressing pools of longing, the
male lizard is bright orange around its torso, she a shy soft pink. Hypnotized
by the jingling placations of love-lust combo, they are perfectly oblivious to
the hawk eye peering at them through the leaves from a top branch in the tree.
Then the hawk falls through the branches like it has been shot dead, a free
fall. They are lucky that the tree has enough leaves left on it to make it a
noisy fall. The sexual energy quickly transforms into panic and they forget the
tentacles of love and take onto their heels, individually, separately, for
life. They become invisible. The hawk changes many look-out positions to spot
the runaway couple. They are not to be seen. Changing colors in league with the
times, a nice tactic to dupe and survive.
I
have seen them a few times earlier also, enjoying the moments of togetherness; looking
out for a healthy moment to join their bodies for the full fruition of
love-lust combo. Seeing them together is almost mirth-exuberating spectacle. Looking
at the way he has to change many colors, I feel that he is forever trying to
deal with fresh tantrums from her bountiful books. As a dandy lizard, the male
carries a lot of confidence of cosmic magnitude, a sort of self-assured,
heraldic march, especially when its girlfriend is around. It raises its head
and stares at you head-on. I have no doubt that it wants to impress her with a brave
stance against we humans. I have faced situations where he has stared at me
with gutsy posture from just a few feet away. Comfortably ensconced in a
successful love’s saddle, anybody would give the impression of a king feeling robustly
positive and on top of this world after self-coronation. Aaah, the heat,
follies and dew-moistened rosy auguries of love, or maybe lust, maybe both
together, sometimes one over the other and sometimes the reverse! In fact the
combo is highly shapeless to define it in a particular way. But I’m happy that
it didn’t repeat the same folly while facing the hawk and showed a clean pair
of crawling paws, otherwise the lady would have lost her love necessitating her
to go seeking love again after a few sad moments.
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