The historic, gas-light-like-looking street lamp threw an orange orb into the drab half-light of the thickly cloud-covered winter afternoon. Lit up, the snowflakes drifted down slowly in a side-to-side motion like a piece of paper that doesn't fall straight because it's so light and has so much surface. The flakes were like dime-sized pieces of torn cotton. The unusually empty NYC, devoid of cars and pedestrians, made him watch the snowflakes dance. It calmed Nirvaan's soul down as his Hyundai idled on the east side of Central Park.
"Yo, it's XBox time! Bring a Thali from Bengal Tiger. Quit working already!"
"Sorry, bro! I can't afford the toll over the bridge. I need a fare to take me back to Queens."
Nirvaan tossed his phone back on the dash after the text. He looked out on the usually busy 5th Avenue. After an initial struggle of melting, as soon as the first layer of snow had managed to stay frozen, a two-inch high carpet of white had quickly built up. A single yellow cab barreled down the pristine white slope. The backside broke out. The driver hit the brakes. The cab slid sideways. Before coming to a stop, the driver accelerated with spinning tires - snow flying from the tires and a sharp whine from the slick thread sliding without gripping. The cab carried on.
A single 50-year-old woman hurried down the sidewalk with a big, formal, grey coat and four overfilled grocery bags. All three phones in Nirvaan's car beeped the shrill emergency message alarm again. He scrambled to turn off the assault on his ears.
"Extreme weather! One in one hundred year blizzard! Prepare with blankets, light, food, and water. You may not be able to leave until sanitation services can clear your front door. Stay inside."
The Uber heatmap was pale, almost no color, everywhere. Around midtown, there was a slight tinge. Nirvaan put the car in drive and slowly rolled onto 5th Avenue. At around 15 mph, the tires seemed to not slide badly yet but also had enough momentum to not get stuck. There was a boyish joy in marking the first track in the snow. Left and right, he had empty lanes that would give him plenty of safety to slide to a stop should something go wrong.
The light hue on the heatmap was slowly moving over to the East Side. The Lyft app showed no heat at all. On 57th street, he dared swinging a left. He slowed down to 10 mph. He pulled the steering wheel. The whole car started turning. He hit the gas. This got stopped the spin but kept him sliding sideways. He was going to miss the intersection. He passed the first lane, second, third, and then the tires gripped to send him forward into the street. Phew! Not like back home in India.
The Uber app flashed him a rider: 4.95 stars, cute face. Out of habit, he swiped down the reviews. It had always been interesting to find the review that caused a near-perfect rider to have lost the points. After a long row of 5-star reviews with no comment, here it was: "1 star - Typical entitled white bitch. Called me Punjab. Bossed me around. I'm Mexican!"
Nirvaan kept scrolling down her review list of no comment 5-star reviews until he found the next: "1 star - Came soaking sweaty in my car. Told me the whole ride how good her Barre class was and that I must try it. She left a wet imprint of her body on the seat. I had to scrub the seat and put air fresher up to get the stink of wet skunk out."
Curiosity getting the better of him, Nirvaan kept scrolling. He knew that he should accept the ride before anyone could snatch it, but after he accepted, he wouldn't be able to see the reviews anymore. "1 star - came slobbery drunk into my car. Threw up within minutes but managed to get most of it out of the door while driving. The worst part was her crying after that - terrible, worst squeal I've heard my whole life. Then she started yanking on my seat, begging me to sing away her sorrows."
"Well, it's a short ride only, but I might as well make some money until I get a ride to take me home," thought Nirvaan and tapped the accept button.
When he arrived in front of the Blakely Hotel, only one figure was standing on the sidewalk with a large, mulberry-colored carry-on and backpack. She was a short woman in her early twenties with auburn hair, curled and balayaged under a stylish knit cap. With prim and proper posture, she raised her hand high in the cab-hailing fashion. "Anna?" asked Nirvaan through the rolled-down window before he got out and put her luggage in the trunk.
On their way, Nirvaan checked her out through the rearview mirror. The felt fabric of her coat had the brand new shine on it. The brand wasn't a luxury brand like Versace. She seemed to dress very well with the means of a middle-class income. Her knees were crossed and hands rested on top of each other on the knee like she was posing to look refined. Her chin was a little pushed up like she wanted to emanate cosmopolitan woman in the big city while she looked out of the window with poise and purpose.
Nirvaan liked to categorize his rides. Some oversaw him as a merely functional piece to get them from point A to B. Some wanted to be his best friend. And some were like Anna, they felt like they had to play a role from him. They were keenly aware of him and tried to portray the right thing. He felt partially demeaned by the divide between them that those people acted out. And he felt a little bit charmed by someone feeling so compelled to put on a show for him.
"Switching hotels before the big blizzard," Nirvaan made the obligatory conversation to get a five-star rating.
"Actually, I'm hotel hunting. My plane got diverted from Boston Logan to JFK. The last two hotels have been booked out because lots of travelers got stranded. I'm trying to visit my parents in New Haven before winter break is over," replied Anna.
"Oh, I also study. I study finance at Baruch," replied Nirvaan.
"That's a great value school," replied Anna. Nirvaan sneered at the comment. It sounded like she was saying he went to a cheap school. Sure, his ability to afford to pay for it was the major factor, but it was also the best city college. Especially, he didn't like the implication in her tone of voice that she was above having to consider the cost of college. He didn't even want to hear which school she went to.
She was waiting for him to ask her which school she went to. It seemed simply reciprocal to exchange. And telling people about her school always made her happy and filled her with pride about where she had made it in life. Showing school pride was her way of thanking all her peers and professors for making the place as special as it was. This driver was very rude, not friendly at all. Her eyes fell on the license placard above the glove compartment.
"Didn't you say your name was Nirvaan? It says John Bennett on the license!" asked Anna.
"Oh, I'm driving my brother's car," replied Nirvaan automatically.
"Your brother is black?" asked Anna, surprised.
Nirvaan took a look at the license placard. A big-faced, bald guy twenty years older than him looked back at him.
"Oh, I forgot. We traded cars because ours is in the shop," replied Nirvaan. Silently to himself, he thought, "Fucking bitch is going to give me a 1-star review." His rating was low enough to be close to where Uber would cut him off.
She thought, "What a fucking slum dog! I caught him on his lie and he's only lying more. He probably doesn't even know how to drive. He definitely won't know how to drive on snow. I hope I make it alive out of this!"