π₯ The narrator recalls their summer holidays at their grandmother's place in the hills.
π The train used to stop at the small railway station called Dioli for 10 minutes.
π³ Dioli had one platform, a tea stall, a fruit seller, and a few hungry dogs.
π The narrator has always been curious about what happens in the town of Dioli and decides to spend a day there.
π§π» A girl selling baskets catches the narrator's attention with her appearance and demeanor.
π The narrator and the girl have a brief but meaningful encounter at the train platform.
π₯ A conversation between the speaker and a girl at a tea stall.
π§Ί The speaker reluctantly agrees to buy a basket from the girl.
π The speaker's train departs, leaving the girl behind.
π The narrator remembers a girl from their previous journey.
π€ Both the narrator and the girl are happy to see each other.
π Despite the narrator's departure, they promise to meet again.
π₯ The narrator recalls a vivid memory of a girl he met on a train journey during college.
π The narrator is determined to meet the girl again but is unable to find her when he arrives at the train station.
π’ The narrator feels disappointed and helpless as he contemplates the possibility of not seeing the girl again.
π₯ The narrator had a strong connection with his grandmother and felt responsible for her, but she was not happy with his short visit.
π The narrator searched for a girl who he had a fondness for, but struggled to find information about her.
π The narrator was determined to find the girl who had captured his heart with just a look.
π₯ The narrator frequently passes through Dioli and hopes to see a girl with baskets he once saw there.
π The narrator is afraid to break his journey at Dioli as he doesn't want to find out what happened to the girl.
π The narrator prefers to keep hoping and dreaming about the girl with the baskets, rather than facing the reality at Dioli.