Part 1

If she weren't tall I wouldn't have noticed her. It is funny how her

height shaped my life.

If she had been four inches shorter, my eyes may never have met

hers and everything would have been different. If I had not been

bored and arrived at the basketball court an hour earlier, it would have

been different. If someone had not missed a pass and the ball had not

come out of the court and hit me on the head, I would have had a

different life.Tiny bumps in time shape our lives, even though we

spend hours trying to make long-term plans. I had no plan to meet the

love of my life on a basketball court. I was there only to kill time and

because I had nowhere else to go.

A small crowd of students, mostly men, had gathered around the

Stephen's basketball court. Girls'sports trials always garnered an

audience—-there was no better excuse to check them out. Everyone

spoke in English. I didn't speak at all. I straightened my back and

stared at the court with a sense of purpose, mainly to come across as if

I belonged there. As ten girls came on to the court, the crowd cheered.

Five of the girls belonged to the existing college team; the other five

had applied for admission under the sports quota.

Piyush came to the centie of the court, ball in hand and whistle in

mouth. As he blew it, the girls sprang into action.

Five feet, nine inches is tall for an Indian girl. It is tall even for a

girl in a basketball team. Her long neck, long arms and long legs held

every guy's attention. She was a part of the sports-quota applicants'

team. She wore black fitted shorts and a sleeveless sports vest with 'R'

printed in yellow at the back. She collected the ball within seconds.

She wore expensive Nike ankle-length sneakers, the kind I had seen

NBA players wear on TV. Her diamond earrings twinkled in die sun.

She dribbled the ball with her right hand. I noticed she had long,

beautiful fingers.

'Ten points for looks, coach,

' a senior student called out as R