‘Nice trick,’ I said, turning back. ‘I must remember it, if I ever lose my balls.’
‘You can lose your motherfucking balls right here and now,
gora
,’ a thin man with a pencil moustache said, showing the blade of a knife he hid in his sleeve.
I looked into his eyes. I read a very short story, told by fear and hatred. I didn’t want to read it again. The leader raised an exasperated hand. He was a heavy-set man in his late thirties, and a quiet talker.
‘If you don’t get in the car,’ he said quietly, ‘I’ll shoot you in the knee.’
‘Where will you shoot me if I
do
get in the car?’
‘That depends,’ he replied, regarding me evenly.
He was magazine dressed: hand-tailored silk shirt, loose-fitting grey serge trousers, a Dunhill belt, and Gucci loafers. There was a gold ring on his middle finger that was a copy of the Rolex on his wrist.
The other men looked around at the flow of traffic and pedestrians in the gutters of the road. It had been a fairly long silence. I decided to break it.
‘Depends on
what
?’
‘On whether you do as you’re told or not.’
‘I don’t like being told what to do.’
‘Nobody does,’ he replied calmly. ‘That’s why there’s so much power attached to it.’
‘That’s pretty good,’ I said. ‘You should write a book.’
My heart was racing. I was scared. My stomach dropped like a body thrown in a river. They were the enemy, and I was in their hands. I was probably dead, whichever way you looked at it.
‘Get in the car,’ he said, allowing himself a little smile.
‘Get to the point.’
‘Get in the car.’
‘If we play it out here, you go with me. If I get in the car, I go out alone. Arithmetic says we should do it here.’
‘
Fuck
it!’ the pencil moustache snapped. ‘Let’s kill this
chudh
, and get it over with.’
The heavy-set leader thought about it. It took a while. My hand was still on my knife.
‘You’re a logical man,’ he said. ‘They say you argued philosophy with Khaderbhai.’
‘Nobody argued with Khaderbhai.’
‘Even so, you can see that your position is irrational. I lose nothing by killing you. You gain everything by staying alive long enough to find out what I want.’
‘Except for the part about you being dead. I’d lose that. And so far, that’s the best part.’
‘Except for that,’ he said, smiling. ‘But you’ve seen how much trouble I went to, just to talk to you. If I wanted you dead, I’d have run over your motorcycle with one of my trucks.’
‘Leave my motorcycle out of this.’
‘Your bike will be safe, yaar,’ he laughed, nodding at the thin man with the moustache. ‘Danda will ride it for you. Get in the car.’
He was right. There was no other logical choice. I let my hand fall from my knife. The leader nodded. Danda stepped forward at once, started the bike, and kicked back the stand. He gunned the engine, impatient to leave.
‘You hurt that bike –’ I shouted at him, but before I could finish the threat he tapped the bike into first gear, and roared off into the stream of traffic, the motor screaming in protest.
‘Danda has no sense of humour, I’m afraid,’ the leader said as we watched Danda sway and skid through the traffic.
‘Good, because if he hurts my bike, he won’t find it funny.’
The leader laughed, and looked me hard in the eyes.
‘How could you exchange philosophies with a man like Khaderbhai?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘I mean that Khaderbhai was insane.’
‘Sane or not, he was never boring.’
‘What
doesn’t
bore us, in the long run?’ he asked, getting into the car.
‘A sense of humour?’ I suggested, getting in beside him.
They had me, and it was just like prison, because there was nothing I could do about it. He laughed again, and nodded to the driver, whose eyes filled the soft rectangle of the rear-view mirror.
‘Take us to the truth,’ he said to the driver in Hindi, watching me closely. ‘It’s always so refreshing, at this time of day.’
Chapter Ten
T
HE DRIVER BULLIED HIS WAY THROUGH TIGHT,
midday traffic, reaching a warehouse in an industrial area in minutes. The warehouse was freestanding, with a screaming space between it and the nearest buildings. Danda was already there. My bike was parked on the gravel driveway in front.
The driver parked the car. A roller door opened to a little over halfway. We got out, stooped under the door, and a chain clattered noisily as it rolled shut again.
There were two big worries. The first was that they hadn’t blindfolded me: they’d allowed me to see the location of the warehouse, and the faces of the eight men inside. The second worry was the supply of power tools, torches and heavy hammers arranged on benches along one wall of the warehouse.
It took an effort not to stare. Instead, I focused on the long low chair standing alone in the open space near the back wall of the small warehouse. It was a piece of pool furniture: a banana lounge, upholstered in strands of acid-green and lemon vinyl. There was a wide stain under the chair.
Danda, the skinny moustache with short-story eyes, gave me a thorough pat-down. He took my two knives and passed them on to the leader, who examined them for a moment, before putting them down carefully on the long bench.
‘Sit down,’ he said, turning to face me.
When I refused to move, he folded his arms patiently and nodded to a tall, powerfully built man who’d been with us in the car. The man came for me.
Hit first, and hit hard
, an old con used to tell me.
As the big man stepped in quickly, swinging out with an open-handed slap to the right side of my head, I rolled with the blow, and hit him with a short, sharp uppercut. It good-luck connected with the point of his chin.
The big man stumbled back a step. Two of the men drew guns. They were old-fashioned revolvers, military issue from a forgotten war.
The leader sighed again, and nodded his head.
Four men rushed forward, pushing me onto the green and yellow lounge chair. They tied my hands to the rear legs of the chair with coconut-fibre ropes. Slipping another length of rope under the front, they tied down my legs.
The leader finally unfolded his arms and approached me.
‘Do you know who I am?’
‘A critic?’ I suggested, trying not to show the scared that I was feeling.
He frowned, looking me up and down.
‘It’s okay,’ I said. ‘I know who you are. I know a Scorpion when I see one.’
The leader nodded.
‘They call me Vishnu,’ he said.
Vishnu, the man Sanjay spared after the war that cost so many, the man who came back with a gang called the Scorpions.
‘Why do so many gangsters name themselves after gods?’
‘How ’bout I name you
dead
, you
bahinchudh
!’ Danda spluttered.
‘Come to think of it,’ I said thoughtfully, ‘Danda’s not a god. Correct me if I’m wrong, but Danda’s just a demigod. Isn’t that right? A minor deity?’
‘Shut up!’
‘Stay cool, Danda,’ Vishnu soothed. ‘He’s just trying to keep the subject off the subject. Don’t let him bait you.’
‘A demigod,’ I mused. ‘Ever asked yourself how often you get the short stick around here, Danda?’
‘Shut up!’
‘You know what?’ Vishnu said, stifling a yawn. ‘Fuck him. Go ahead, Danda. Fuck his happiness, if you want.’
Danda rushed at me, swinging punches. As I moved my head quickly, left and right, he only connected with one in every three. Suddenly he stopped. When I held my head still long enough to glance up, I saw the big man, the man I’d hit on the point of the chin, pulling Danda away by the shoulder.
The big man punched at my face. He was wearing a brass ring on his middle finger. I felt it crunch along the curves of my cheek and jaw. The big man knew what he was doing. He didn’t break anything, he just made it unwell. Then he changed tactic, and smacked me hard on the sides of the head with open-handed slaps.
If you beat a man with your fists for long enough, your knuckles will shatter, or the man will die, or both. But if you break him up a little with your fists, to make sure that a good, hard slap is filled with pain, you can go on beating him all day long with an open hand.
Torture. It’s heavy and flat in that space. There’s a density to it, a centripetal pull so strong that there’s almost nothing you can take from it; so little you can learn that isn’t dark all the way through.
But one thing I came to know is that when the beating starts, you shut your mouth. You don’t speak. You keep your mouth shut, until it ends. And you don’t scream, if you can help it.
‘Okay,’ Vishnu said, when the month of two minutes ended.
The big man stepped back, accepted a towel from Danda and wiped his sweat-soaked face. Danda reached up to rub the big man’s shoulders.
‘Tell me about Pakistan,’ Vishnu demanded, holding a cigarette to my lips.
I drew in the smoke with dribbles of blood, and then puffed it out. I had no idea what he was talking about.
‘Tell me about Pakistan.’
I stared back at him.
‘We know you went to Goa,’ Vishnu said slowly. ‘We know you picked up some guns. So, I will ask you again. Tell me about Pakistan.’
Guns, Goa, Sanjay: it was all coming home with one turn of the karmic wheel. But there’s a voice inside my fear, and sooner or later it says,
Let’s get it over with
.
‘A lot of people think the capital of Pakistan is Karachi,’ I said, through swollen lips. ‘But it’s not.’
Vishnu laughed, and then stopped laughing.
‘Tell me about Pakistan.’
‘Great food, nice music,’ I said.
Vishnu glanced at the tip of his cigarette, and then raised his eyes to the big man.
And it started again. And I limped through thick mud as each new slap on the side of my head smacked me closer to the fog.
When the big man paused, resting his hands on his thighs, Danda seized the moment to flog me, with a thin bamboo rod. It left me soaking wet with suffered sweat, but woke me up.
‘How are your balls
now
,
madachudh
?’ Danda screamed at me, kneeling so close that I could smell mustard oil and bad-fear sweat in the armpits of his shirt.
I started laughing, as you do sometimes, when you’re being
tortured.
Vishnu waved his hand.
The sudden silence that followed the gesture was so complete that it seemed the whole world had stopped for a moment.
Vishnu said something. I couldn’t hear him. I realised, slowly, that the silence was a ringing in my ears that only I could hear. He was staring at me, with a quizzical expression, as if he’d just noticed a stray dog, and was wondering whether to play with it or kick it with his Gucci loafers.
Another man wiped the blood from my face with a rag smelling of petrol and rotting mould. I spat out blood and bile.
‘How do you feel?’ Vishnu asked me, absently.
I knew the survivor’s rules.
Don’t speak. Don’t say a word
. But I couldn’t stop anger writing words, and couldn’t stop saying them once they were in my head.
‘Islamabad. The capital of Pakistan,’ I said. ‘It’s not Karachi.’
He walked toward me, drawing a small semi-automatic pistol from his jacket pocket. The star sapphire in his eyes showed a tiny image of my skull, already crushed.
The entry door of the warehouse opened. A chai wallah, a boy of perhaps twelve, stepped through from the bright light of the street, bringing six glasses of tea in one wire basket, and six glasses of water in another.
‘Ah, chai,’ Vishnu said, a sudden wide smile smoothing out wrinkles of rage.
He put the pistol away, and returned to his place near the long bench.
The chai boy handed out glasses. His ancient street-kid eyes drifted over me, but showed no reaction. Maybe he’d seen it before: a man tied to an acid-green and lemon-yellow banana lounge, and covered in blood.
The gangster who’d smeared some of the blood from my face untied my legs and hands. He took a glass of chai from the boy, and handed it to me. I struggled to hold it in both numbed hands.
Other gangsters took their glasses of chai, courteously working their way through the ritual of refusing, so that others could drink, and then accepting the compromise of half-shares, spilled into emptied water glasses.
It was a polite and convivial scene. We might’ve been friends, sitting together at Nariman Point, and admiring the sunset.