Looking into the well, they see mostly wall

‘Ushbhackt’ is a single breath; a soldier, after months of training, travelling, watching and waiting, finally finds himself in the midst of battle. Unexpected emotions surprise. He realises he has never yet killed and that when he does his innocence will be irretrievably lost. In this moment, with futility raging about him he questions the society which encouraged him to serve. He grapples for a definition of honour.

‘Affair at Fabyan’ takes place in a small town close to the site of the Bretton Woods conference in 1944. One of the chaps at the conference has found himself a lover in the next town and ducks out for extra shenanigans. As he runs towards the home of his lover he is buoyed up by the beauty of his surroundings, the passion he is experiencing, and the visionary nature of the conference. He is high on hope. He is not worried that he is missing the most important negotiations of the conference. He is sure that everything will work out just fine.