I turned my car the road that takes me to my office. My car was right behind a tanker, which slowed down as soon as it turned into the road. It came to a standstill within a few metres. I stopped and waited a few seconds before impatience set in. I started cranking my head to the right through the window to see what happened. I could see the nose of a car in front of the tanker. It was not moving and seemed to have broke down in the middle of the road. It was not clear if the tanker had rammed into the car. I did not see any crowding around the scene and so assumed that was not the case. I sat there and waited for a few more seconds nothing happened. I looked out of the window again; everything remained the same - the car's nose was seen ahead of the tanker. My frustration was building. I took out my phone and looked at the set of applications on it. I had looked through almost everything of interest that morning. My finger moved towards the "Temple run 2" application but en route it stopped on top of CNN and pressed it. The application opened and I saw the top news "Teen survives flight to Hawaii in jet's landing gear". "Ah! The American sensationalism" thought my mind. I looked down at the other news, which consisted of a mish-mash of the sunken Korean ship, the Ukraine problem and MH370 search. These had been going on for so long now that my mind had started ignoring them. I looked out of window again to check the status - The tanker's driver was shouting something at the car and its occupant(s). I opened the news on the teen's escapade and glanced through it. A teenager had run away from his home in California; he jumped over the fence at the San Jose airport and roamed around for a few hours before climbing into the landing gear of an aircraft. As soon as the aircraft took off guy passed out. When he woke up, the aircraft had already landed. He got off the landing gear and gave the ground personnel at the Hawaii airport the shock of their lives. He had survived a 38000 feet travel at sub zero temperature with no oxygen. Apparently, he was not the first one to try - since 1947, 105 people have attempted to fly inside the landing gears on 94 flights worldwide with a success rate of around 24%, said the article.
It was a good 10 minutes since I had been stuck at that spot. There were a number of vehicles behind me and a lot of honking filled the air. A traffic police man was running towards the car in front of the tanker. A few people had crowded around the scene by now. Soon, the car started moving. It was a Nano that had stalled in front of the tanker. The occupants of the car were in no hurry to get out of the way. The tanker driver's words hurt their ego and apparently an argument started. The police came by and almost spanked the car's occupants. The owner of the car (I assume) sat comfortably inside while the driver pushed the car towards the other side of the road with one hand while the other held the steering wheel. The tanker started moving and I was on my way to the office.