by Tarquin Hall
She covered the distance that separated the two of them in just a few seconds and tackled the man from behind. He went down flat on his face and, in a flash, she pinned him to the ground, pulling back one of his arms.
The intruder let out a cry of agony and begged to be let go. His pleas brought Jaya running from the kitchen.
“Seema, what are you doing?” she cried. “Have you gone mad? Let him go!”
“No, Jaya, stand back!” insisted Facecream. “This man is dangerous! He killed Munnalal!”
“Dangerous? That’s Dubey! He’s a rickshaw-wallah! He’s my…friend.”
“You’re sure?”
“Of course I’m sure! He wants to marry me.”
Facecream released Dubey and the poor, shaken man stood up. He was still clutching a red rose that he’d brought for Jaya, but it had been badly crushed.
“I’m so sorry. I thought you were…” said Facecream.
But the rickshaw-wallah had taken to his heels with Jaya hurrying after him.
Ten minutes later, Puri stood with Shekhawat next to his Jeep in the driveway. On the backseat, in handcuffs, sat Dr. Chandran. He was glaring with venomous eyes at his captors through the window.
“You think he’ll give her up?” asked the inspector.
“I doubt it,” said Puri. “To do so would be to admit his guilt. He’ll claim he’s been framed, try to buy off or intimidate the witnesses. His trial will go on for years. It takes time to put away a man with his kind of connections.”
“And her? She goes unpunished?”
“Oh no, Inspector. It is all over for her. She might have escaped prison, but no human being ever escapes punishment. One way or another, justice is always served. All of us must answer to the God eventually.”
Puri rubbed his stomach and grimaced.
“Personally I’m now answering for the kachoris I ate at lunch,” he added with a smile.
Shekhawat remained stony faced and aloof. His pride was too badly wounded. And he was not about to admit his mistakes—not here and now, and certainly not in his official report.
“Well, I’ll be going,” he said. “There’s the killer Babua to track down and I’ve got a good idea where to find him.”
“Oh, there’s no need, Inspector,” said Puri airily. “Didn’t I tell you, I’ve got him locked in the trunk of my Ambassador?”
For once, Shekhawat was visibly dumbstruck.
“There?” he asked, pointing to the car, his eyebrows knitted together.
“That’s right, Inspector. One advantage with Ambassadors is they have large secure trunks.”
“But…?”
“I picked him up this afternoon after tracing his mobile phone. Let me show you.”
They walked over to the car and Handbrake opened the back. Inside lay a burly man, bound and gagged, his eyes defiant and angry.
“Allow me to present one Om Prakash, alias Babua,” said Puri triumphantly. “A right bloody goonda if ever there was one.”
Twenty-nine
At the end of every big case, Puri dictated all the details of his investigation to his personal secretary Elizabeth Rani, who could do speed typing.
He did so for two reasons.
Firstly, it was not uncommon for trials to drag on for years, sometimes decades. So it was imperative to keep a detailed record of events, which the detective could refer to when he was called upon to give evidence.
And secondly, Puri was planning to leave all his files to the National Archive because he was certain future generations of detectives would want to study his methods and achievements.
The detective also liked to entertain the idea that someday a writer would come along who would want to pen his biography. He had thought of the perfect title: CONFIDENTIALITY IS MY WATCHWORD. And what a spectacular Bollywood film it would make. Puri’s favorite actor, Anupam Kher, would play the lead, and Rekha would be perfect for the part of Rumpi. Her screen persona would be that of a good, homely woman who also happened to be a talented and alluring exotic dancer.
“Sir, one thing I don’t understand,” said Elizabeth Rani after Puri had finished relating the twists and turns in the Case of the Missing Servant. “Who was the dead girl found on the Ajmer Road?”
Puri’s secretary always asked such elementary questions. But he didn’t mind spelling it out for her. Not everyone could have a mind as sharp as his, he reasoned.
“She’s just one of dozens upon dozens of personages who go missing across India every year,” he explained. “No doubt we’ll never know her name. So many girls are leaving the villages and traveling to cities these days. And so many are never returning. Just they’re turning up dead on railway tracks, in canals, and getting raped and dumped from vehicles. With their near and dear so far away, no one is there to identify the bodies. I tell you, frankly speaking Madam Rani, it is an epidemic of growing proportions.”
Elizabeth Rani moved her head from side to side mournfully.
“Such a sad state of affairs, sir,” she said. “Thank the God there are gentlemen such as yourself to protect us.”
“Most kind of you, Madam Rani!” Puri beamed.
The two of them were sitting in the detective’s office: he behind his desk; she in front of it with a laptop computer. Elizabeth Rani saved the document in which she had typed his dictation and closed the screen.
“Sir, one other thing,” she said as she stood from her chair to leave.
“Yes, Madam Rani,” said Puri, who had been expecting more questions.
“You said Mary got pregnant, sir. But what happened to the baby?”
“Sadly, she lost it on the train to Ranchi.”
“That poor girl,” commiserated Elizabeth Rani. “How she has suffered. Is there any hope for her and Bobby?”
“Sadly, there is no Bollywood ending. Mary refused to see him. Most likely, it is for the best. Too much hurt is there, actually. The poor girl has suffered greatly. This morning we brought her to Delhi, Rumpi and I. We’ve made arrangements for her to start work with Vikas Chauhan’s family. Ajay Kasliwal has also promised to pay for her dowry so she might one day go the marriage way. He’s being most generous and appreciative, I must say.”
“And Bobby, sir?”
The detective rubbed the end of his moustache between his fingers in a contemplative fashion before answering.
“Seems like he and his mother will never speak again, Madam Rani,” said Puri sadly. “He’s sworn he’ll not so much as be in the same room with the woman.”
His secretary sucked in her breath and said, “Hai, hai.”
“Mrs. Kasliwal’s actions were certainly deplorable. Which one of us could forgive her in our hearts? But Bobby’s actions, although innocent, were hardly decent. Such a well brought up and educated young man should have known better, actually. There is a right and proper place for physical relations and it is between husband and wife only. When young people go straying outside those boundaries, there can only be hurt and misfortune.”
“Quite right, sir,” said Elizabeth Rani.
Puri tucked a pen he’d been using into the outside pocket of his safari suit next to two others.
“India is modernizing, Madam Rani, but we must keep our family values, isn’t it? Without them, where would we be?”
“I hate to think, sir,” she said.
“Well, Madam Rani, that will do for now. Place the file in the ‘conclusively solved’ cabinet. Another successful outcome for Most Private Investigators, no?”
“Right away, sir.”
Elizabeth Rani returned to her desk, closing the door to his office behind her.
Puri leaned back in his chair and looked up at the portraits of Chanakya and his father on the wall, both of them wreathed in garlands of fresh marigolds. Putting the palms of his hands and fingers together, he respectfully acknowledged them both with a namaste.
With Diwali, the festival of lights, the biggest holiday in the Hindu calendar, due to begin the next day, Puri gav
e his staff the afternoon off and asked Handbrake to drive him to the airport to pick up his youngest daughter, Radhika.
He could hardly contain his excitement as he waited outside the arrivals hall. It had been three months since he’d seen his chowti baby, the longest they’d ever been separated. He’d missed her sorely.
As the other passengers emerged from the building, pushing trolleys piled high with baggage, and taxi-wallahs vied for their custom, the detective stood up on his toes, trying to peer over the heads of the crowd gathered around the exit.
When he finally spotted Radhika, her young, eager face searching for his among the banks of strangers, he felt a lump form in his throat and cried out his nickname for her: “Bulbul! Bulbul!”
“Hi, Papa!”
Grinning from ear to ear, she skipped forward, flung her arms around him and gave him a kiss and a big hug.
“By God, let me look at you,” he said, holding her by the shoulders and giving her a fond, appraising look. “So thin you’ve become, huh! They’re not feeding you at that college or what? Come! Mama’s making all your favorites and she can’t wait to see you. Mummy-ji’s at home, also. Both your sisters are arriving tomorrow.”
He took hold of her trolley and they headed into the car park to find Handbrake and the Ambassador.
“So, all OK?” he asked.
And from that moment until they reached the house, Radhika regaled him with everything that had happened to her in the past few months.
“Papa, you know we’ve been learning…”
“Papa, you’ll never guess what my roommate Shikha said…”
“Papa, something amazing happened…”
“Papa, did you know that…”
Puri sat basking in her youthful enthusiasm and innocence, succumbing to her infectious laughter. Occasionally, he reacted to her anecdotes by saying things like, “Is it?” and “Don’t tell me!” and “Wonderful!” But for the most part, he just sat and listened.
By the time they pulled up in front of the gates and Handbrake honked the horn, he felt that the weight he’d been carrying on his shoulders—the weight he’d become so used to—had vanished.
Like millions of other Hindu, Sikh and Jain households across India, every inch of Puri’s house had been cleaned ahead of Diwali. In the kitchen, all the cupboards had been emptied and the shelves wiped down. The marble floors had been scrubbed and scrubbed again. Dusters had swished away cobwebs. Special lemon and vinegar soap had left all the taps, sinks and mirrors gleaming. And all the wood in the house had been lovingly polished.
The exterior wall that surrounded the compound had been whitewashed and a cracked tile on the porch replaced.
Rumpi had also been busy making preparations for entertaining all the family members and friends who were expected to visit them over the next few days.
Gift boxes of dried fruit, almonds, cashews and burfi had been packed and wrapped, and then stacked in one corner of the kitchen. Monica and Malika had been preparing huge pots of chhole and carrot halva, and deep frying batches of onion and paneer pakoras. And Sweetu had been sent to the market to buy bagfuls of “perfect ice,” savoury matthis and oil for the diyas.
Puri’s remit (he knew it only too well but Rumpi reminded him more than once) was to buy all the liquor, firecrackers and puja offerings—in the form of coconuts, bananas and incense—that would be made to Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth.
It was also his responsibility to pick up new decks of playing cards and some poker chips. No Punjabi Diwali could be complete without a bit of friendly gambling. And if this holiday was anything like last year’s, they were in for at least one all-night session of teen patta.
After dropping Radhika at home, Puri went to the nearest market. He found it packed with people rushing around buying last-minute items. The shops were decked with colored lights and tinsel decorations. Devotional music blared from the temples. Every few seconds, bottle rockets whizzed and exploded overhead.
He returned after dark to find Rinku’s Range Rover—license plate 1CY—parked in the driveway.
Before entering the house, Puri gave Handbrake his Diwali bonus and enough money to get an auto to Old Delhi railway station. By mid-morning the following day, he would be home with his wife and baby daughter in their village in the hills of Himachal.
“Thank you, sir,” said the driver, beaming with happiness. “But, sir, one thing you promised me. The first rule of detection. What is it?”
Puri smiled. “Ah yes, the first rule,” replied the detective. “It is quite simple, actually. Always make sure you have a good aloo parantha for breakfast. Thinking requires a full stomach. Now you’d better be off.”
Puri saw Handbrake to the gate and made his way inside the house.
“So we’ve got out first visitor, is it?” he shouted as he stepped into the hallway.
He found Rumpi, Mummy and Radhika sitting with Rinku having tea and sharing platefuls of pakoras.
“Happy Diwali, Chubby!” Rinku said, greeting Puri with a hug and the usual matey slap on the back.
“You too, you bugger. Let me fix you something stronger.”
“No, no, I’ve got to be off,” said Rinku. “The traffic to Punjabi Bagh will be murder.”
“Just one peg! Come on!” insisted Puri.
“OK, just one,” replied Rinku who never needed much convincing when alcohol was on offer. “But you’re going to get me into trouble.”
“Then we’ll be even!”
The detective poured both Rinku and himself generous glasses of Scotch, and soon they were telling Sardaar-ji jokes and splitting their sides with laughter.
Forty minutes and several more pegs later, Rinku stood to leave.
“Baby Auntie, have you seen my car?” he asked Mummy, his eyes twinkling.
“No, I must see what everyone is talking about,” she answered, gamely. “Just I’ll fetch my shawl. Such cold weather we’re having, na?”
Rinku said good-bye to the rest of the family at the door and he and Mummy stepped outside.
“I’ve taken care of Chubby’s little problem,” he said in a hushed voice as they walked over to his Range Rover. “Those two gentlemen won’t be troubling him again.”
“I heard Inspector Inderjit Singh is suspended pending an inquiry into illegal activities,” said Mummy.
“And it seems his friend has dropped plans for building a new office block,” added Rinku.
“Just they’re saying the market is doing slowdown, so it is best, na,” said Mummy.
Rinku stooped down to touch her feet and wished her a happy Diwali.
“You too,” she said. “And, thank you, beta. I’m very much appreciative.”
She waved him off and returned to the house.
“What were you two talking about, Mummy-ji?” asked Puri, who had been watching them closely from the doorway. “It can’t be such a long chat about a car?”
“Just I’ve been discussing one investment proposition.”
“With Rinku?” The detective laughed. “What’s he trying to sell you? The President’s Palace?”
“Don’t do sarcasm, Chubby. Rinku has given me one hot tip. Just some land is coming up and we’re in discussion.”
“You watch your back, Mummy-ji. He’s a slippery fellow,” said the detective, closing the door behind them.
“Oh, Chubby, when will you learn, na? Just I can take care of myself. Now, come. Let’s play cards. Tonight I’m feeling very much lucky!”
Glossary
AACHAR
a pickle. Most commonly made of carrot, lime, garlic, cauliflower, chili or unripe mango cooked in mustard oil and spices.
“ACCHA”
Hindi for “OK,” “good” or “got it.”
ADIVASI
literally “original inhabitants.” These Indian tribals comprise a substantial indigenous minority of the population of India.
AGRAWAL
a community in India, traditionally traders.
> ALOO PARANTHA
flat Indian wheat bread stuffed with a potato and spice mixture, pan-fried and served with yogurt and pickle. Often eaten for breakfast.
ANGREZ
Hindi for “English” or “British.” Also means “Englishman” or “Britisher.” Angrez noun, Angrezi adjective.
ASHRAMAS
the four phases of a Hindu’s life.
AUTO
short for autorickshaw, a three-wheeled taxi that runs on a two-stroke engine.
AYAH
a domestic servant role that combines the functions of maid and nanny.
“AY BHAI”
Hindi for “hey, brother.”
BAGHA-CHALL
a strategic, two-player board game that originates in Nepal. The game is asymmetric in that one player controls four tigers and the other player controls up to twenty goats. The tigers “hunt” the goats while the goats attempt to block the tigers” movements.
“BHAANCHHOD”
Punjabi expletive meaning “sister fucker.”
BABA
father.
BABU
a bureaucrat or other government official.
“BADIYA”
Urdu word for “wonderful,” “great.”
BAKSHISH
a term used to describe tipping, charitable giving and bribery.
BAHU
daughter-in-law.
BALTI
a bucket.
BANIA
a trader or merchant belonging to the Indian business class.
BARSAATI
from barsaat, meaning rain. A barsaati is a room at the top of the house used for storage or servant’s quarters that bears the brunt of the falling rain. Today, barsaatis in posh Delhi neighborhoods rent for hundreds of dollars per month.
BASTIS
colonies of makeshift houses for the poor.