The high-pitched, accelerated vocals matched the tachometer needle climbing toward the red zone. Hikmət wasn't just driving; he was chasing ghosts. Every street corner in Baku triggered a memory, but at this speed, the memories couldn't stick. They flashed by like the trees on the roadside.
He ejected the tape, flipped it over, and let the original, slow tempo fill the air. This time, he didn't drive. He just sat and remembered. HikmЙ™t Aslanov KohnЙ™ Dostlarim Speed Up
As he reached the edge of the Caspian Sea, the wind whipped through the cracked window, smelling of salt and oil. The song reached its crescendo—a dizzying whirl of synthesizers and chipmunk-speed vocals. Hikmət gripped the wheel, a bitter smile touching his lips. They flashed by like the trees on the roadside
He remembered the tea house where they once sat for hours, discussing dreams that felt too big for their small pockets. He remembered the laughter that used to echo in the narrow corridors of their old neighborhood. Now, the tea house was a glass-fronted boutique, and his friends were scattered across time zones and tax brackets. He just sat and remembered
He popped the tape in. The hiss of the magnetic strip filled the cabin for a second before the melody kicked in. But this wasn't the slow, nostalgic ballad he remembered from his youth. He had modified the playback. It was the "Speed Up" version—a frantic, high-energy pulse that turned the melancholic lyrics into a desperate race against time.
The tape ended with a sharp click . The sudden silence was deafening. Hikmət slowed the car, pulling over to the shoulder. He looked at the cassette, then at the empty passenger seat. The "Speed Up" version had given him the rush he needed, but as the engine ticked while cooling down, he realized some things were meant to be listened to slowly.