Authors: Vikram Chandra
âSo you fought?' Sartaj said.
âYes.'
âAbout what?'
Kamala laughed at his obtuseness. It was an ugly sound. âWhat do you think?'
Of course. They had quarrelled over Umesh. There had once been sisterly love, maybe years of it, and then the beautiful Umesh had come between them. âRachel was your best friend?'
âYes.'
âThen?'
âWe met Umesh together. At a party.'
âAnd Rachel liked him?'
âArre, boss,' Umesh interjected, a hand reaching across the table. âI never even did anything with that woman. I met her a few times with Kamala, and God knows what all this Rachel assumed.'
What Umesh thought was not of any consequence, given the circumstances. âWhat did Rachel feel?' Sartaj said to Kamala.
âShe liked him.'
âFrom the beginning?'
âYes. We talked about him after the first time at that party. She kept saying what a perfect man he was. Masculine, but sensitive.' This last with a roll of her eyes.
âAnd then?'
âWhat had to happen, happened.'
âWhen did you tell Rachel?'
She remembered exactly when. âOne Sunday two months later. I came back from a flight and went straight to her house. I just couldn't stand it any more.'
âAnd?'
âShe told me to get out. She never spoke to me again.'
âShe was that angry?'
âShe had been divorced two years before that. And had never liked anyone.'
âTill Umesh.'
âTill Umesh.'
To his credit, Umesh wasn't smug about this, about his fatal charm that caused women to hate each other. He was anxious, and disbelieving.
âStill,' he said, âit's hard to believe that someone like Rachel would come so low in the world. I mean, blackmail like thisâ¦'
âShe is the only one who knows about us,' Kamala said dully.
Yes, Kamala knew more about anger, about the rotting remnants of friendship stored at the back of almirahs, old photographs and shirts given as gifts and souvenirs carried back from winter holidays in lovely Singapore, all of it curdling into black bitterness that burned through the day, morning and night, so that finally the only relief would be the blackmail. Not because it would yield money, but because it would cause humiliation and pain. Money was good, but healing and peace would come from elsewhere. Yes, Kamala understood. There was motive, and opportunity. Not enough to prosecute, but certainly enough to investigate.
âGive me Rachel's information, please.'
Kamala wrote swiftly, all from memory, in her pretty looping hand.
âAll right,' Sartaj said. âI will investigate. Your mobile number, please, Mr Umesh?'
âThat's all?'
âIt's enough for now.'
âI thought you would want to know lots of things.'
âIf I have any questions, I'll call you. Number?' Sartaj wrote down Umesh's number, snapped his notebook shut. âRemember what I told you,' he said to Kamala. âListen, just listen. And don't be afraid of them. They may act tough, but they need you. I'll be in touch.'
âSo now you'll investigate those calls?' Umesh said. âFollow them up at the calling numbers?' He was thrilled by the investigative process, by the potential pleasures of the story, even though it involved him directly.
âSomething like that,' Sartaj said. âYou like detective movies?'
âOnly Hollywood movies. Our Indian ones are so badly made.'
There was no denying that. âThat's true,' Sartaj said. âBut sometimes the Indian ones get things right also.'
Umesh plainly didn't believe this, but he let it pass. âWhy don't you just have Kamala tell them that she's going to pay, and then arrest them when they come to collect?'
âBecause they expect that, and already are working against it. That's why they sent the chokra to get the money from her the first time. These boys are being careful. It's too risky. No use tipping them off.'
âThey're that good?'
âGood, but not that good,' Sartaj said. âWe'll get them. Let us work on it.'
Umesh looked sceptical. Sartaj raised a hand in farewell, and left them
sitting together, uncomfortable together but well-matched. Outside, he put his dark glasses on against the low late-afternoon sun. The glasses were quite out of style, he realized suddenly, by at least two years, maybe more. Maybe it was time to buy new ones. But he felt affectionate towards this old, battered black pair. They'd been through a lot together, and there was something to be said for the old and familiar and comfortable. Style was hard work, and expensive besides. He had got too old and too poor to work at it. Sartaj grinned at himself â what a boring, aged budhdha you've become â and drove on.
Â
Kamala Pandey had a good head for detail, but the blackmailers had been very careful. The phone calls were spread out over the northern suburbs, both east and west, and there was only one call from each number. The only pattern Sartaj could pick out was that the calls came either early in the morning, between eight and ten, or after six in the evening. Which meant that the blackmailers had jobs. They were taking care of this business around the work of making a living.
âThese are all PCOs,' Kamble said. âI'm sure.'
âI know,' Sartaj said. He had recruited Kamble into the investigation that evening, once he had figured out exactly how much legwork was going to be involved. Kamble was quite willing to be recruited, for a price: forty per cent of the take. But working with Kamble also meant drinking with him at the Delite Dance Bar, and playing alibi for him with his girlfriends. Sartaj had already lied, as instructed, to two dancers about where Kamble had been earlier that evening. Sartaj said to him now, âThere's only one call from each place, so it's not likely that the operators will remember who made a call. But we'll cover the PCOs, starting with the most recent calls first. You want west or east?'
âWest, boss.' Kamble was staring hungrily at the three dancers on the floor, who were spinning languidly to â
Aaja gufaon mein aa
'. The sequined blue and pink and green of their ghagras was gorgeous to watch, Sartaj had to admit. They were young. But it was early in the night, and the Delite was nearly empty, and they weren't being very energetic in their seductions. Kamble looked like he wanted to liven them up, by any means necessary. No doubt he would.
âAll right,' Sartaj said. âI'll take east. See you tomorrow.'
âArre,' Kamble said, âstay.'
âTomorrow will be an early day. Extra work to do.'
âEvery day is an extra-work day. Just have another drink with me.'
âHad my limit.' Sartaj got up.
âYou need to get some sex in your life.'
âWith whom?'
âAny of these.'
âNo chance.'
âWhat, you think they won't like you? Boss, don't worry. They'll eat you up.'
âExactly that.'
âToo easy? Then go for the one that doesn't want you. But you need to get back into the game, Mr Singh.'
âI do? Why?'
âWhat else is there?'
Indeed. What else was there? Retirement, or retreat? Ma had her religion, but that was only after a full lifetime with Papa-ji. Could you step out of the game at an early age, like some sanyasi who gave up everything and set off for the hills? No, Sartaj knew he couldn't do that. But he was going to get out of Delite for now. He was very tired, and he just wanted to go home. He raised his glass, emptied it. âThanks,' he said. âTomorrow, then.'
Kamble wasn't satisfied, but he gave in gracefully. He bared his big, toothy smile. âTomorrow,' he said. âTomorrow we'll see.'
Â
Sartaj called Iffat-bibi that night, just before sleep. She had phoned him soon after Katekar's death, to express her condolences. She knew that they had been working together for a long time, but she also somehow knew about Katekar's young children, and had offered a nicely medium-sized sum of money to help the family. Sartaj had turned her down again, but after that they had spoken often on the phone. She was cunning, funny, and had endless stories to tell about apradhis and policemen from the past. She offered him little bits of intelligence, rumours and locations and names, and asked for nothing in return but that Sartaj make it easier, if he could, for any of her company's boys who went through his lock-up to meet their families. The information she provided was accurate and useful, but never concerned big cases or notorious apradhis. It was all comfortably small-time, and Sartaj felt their trade was fair, with no obligation left over on either side. And it was somehow restful to listen to her talk about Papa-ji. Papa-ji had talked to her about all his cases, it seemed, and Sartaj was getting a slowly emerging portrait of the old man that he could not have found anywhere else. Papa-ji, it turned out, was not so simply foppish as he may have looked, with his passion for double-
breasted coats and custom-made shoes. He was vain, but without ego in the matter of his job. He knew his beat, and he had an instinct for what both apradhis and victims would do next. His arrests were not spectacular, but they were frequent, and they were steady and real, not fluff-jobs conjured up to bulk out an annual report. He was respected, despite his sartorial extravagances. But his vanity kept him mostly honest, at least in the big ways that made a difference to his career. He could not stand the thought that he, Sardar Tejpal Singh, was to be bought like a loaf of bread sitting on a shelf, like a packet of cigarettes. His pride kept him from being obsequious to his seniors: he was willing to ask for a favour, but he stopped at that. He found it impossible to persuade, wheedle, beg or bribe.
âSuch a stubborn man,' Iffat-bibi said now, âbut he kept his head up like he wanted. Not that it did him much good.'
âCome on now, Bibi,' Sartaj said. âNot everyone wants to earn a turnover like your Bhai's. How much is it?'
âSome newspaper said yesterday, eight thousand crores.'
âThat's the newspaper. What do you think?'
She snorted. âBachcha, I'm an old woman, I don't do accounts. But it's enough.'
âEnough for what? What does anybody do with eight thousand crores?'
âEveryone needs a little extra. Not just for the things you need. For the things you want. Even your Sardar Saab.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âArre, nothing, I was just talking like that.'
A shiver of unease moved over Sartaj's shoulders. He sat up. âNo, you were not. Tell me what you mean.'
âNothing at all.'
âNo, tell me. Iffat-bibi, don't try and fool me. What is it?'
âBeta, you are making a big noise about very little. I promised him I wouldn't tell anyone.'
âWhat is it? Was it a woman? Women?'
âArre, you dirty-minded bastard, no!'
âThen what? Tell me.'
âYou are making a big fuss over a very small thing.'
âWhat?'
âHe liked to gamble.'
âGamble?'
âYes, yes. He loved horses. He liked to place bets on horses at the races.'
âHe went to the racecourse?'
âNo, never, someone might have seen and told your mother. I had one of my boys make the bets for him.'
Yes, Ma-ji, with her refugee's frugality, would never have stood for gambling in her household. She refused to buy lottery tickets because, she said, they were a complete waste of money, and anyone who thought they could get a crore by putting in one rupee was a complete jhalla. And here was Papa-ji, a regular money-scattering, gambling fool. But then, he did love horses. One of his great regrets was that he had never learned to ride. At the breakfast table, he would smooth out the newspaper with great care and point to a sports-page picture of a horse and say, âLook, how beautiful,' and Sartaj and Ma never commented or replied or even noticed, because he had been saying it for ever. So instead, outside home, he had had a secret life, or at least a secret side. Sartaj coughed, to clear the congestion in his throat, and asked, âDid he lose much?'
âLose? No, he never bet that much to start with. He had a limit of fifty rupees, and then later he raised that to a hundred. But he was good at reading the racing forms. He won more than he lost. Actually a lot more.'
Papa-ji won. He had this other universe, with its own rules and systems, its particular histories and tragedies and triumphs, and here he was a winner. He had beaten the chances, he had vanquished the game. A bittersweet flood of affection and nostalgia and regret came into Sartaj's mouth and nose and eyes, and he had to hold the phone away a bit, to keep the sounds of his sentimentality from Iffat-bibi.
âSartaj?'
âYes, Bibi. I was just thinking, the old man was quite a character.'
âComplete namoona. But, listen, don't tell your mother, all right?'
âI won't.'
Later that night, Sartaj wondered if Ma knew already. She and Papa-ji had had their difficulties, their silences which Sartaj could never decipher. He had heard raised voices behind closed doors, and one of their quarrels had lasted three days, but Sartaj never knew why it started and how it ended. All this was normal enough for any wife and husband, and these two had been devoted to each other for more than forty years. Maybe Papa-ji had his horses, and kept quiet about them, and Ma knew but refused to know. Maybe that's how they had been happy together. But did she wonder that day, Sartaj's birthday, when Papa-ji had brought in the biggest and most expensive Meccano set that anyone had ever seen? Papa-ji had put Sartaj on his shoulders, and Sartaj had echoed Papa-ji as
he went around saying his Hello-jis, and everybody had laughed and been happy. Maybe one of Papa-ji's horses had won that day. He and Sartaj sat up late that night, building a red and green house with a big wall around it, and Ma had crouched next to them, showing them where a courtyard should go in, and the proper location for the main gateway. Papa-ji wanted to put a flagpole on the roof, but Ma said that would make it look like a government building, not a home. Papa-ji and Sartaj worked hard, putting in the final touches, an actual swinging gate, a small shed for the chowkidar, and Ma let Sartaj finish the whole thing before she took him off to sleep.