Page 19 of Sacred Games


  Jojo had built herself a home also, and it had been hard-won. Next to the kitchen sink, in a small floor-level cupboard, they had found a box of tools, and two rows of cans of paint in various colours. She had painted the rooms herself. Inside the fridge, there were plastic containers full of left-over food. Jojo threw nothing away. Despite the extravagance of her shoes, she was frugal. She was energetic too, Sartaj thought. You could see that in the photos. She must have been good at what she did.

  The Delhi-walli came quickly. She was there in twenty minutes, maybe even less, in a black Ambassador. From Jojo’s drawing-room window, Sartaj and Katekar watched the car pull into the building’s compound, fast. There was a fast rat-tat-tat of car doors slamming shut, and barely two minutes later there was a knock on the door.

  Anjali Mathur led her people in, breathing hard. Today her salwar-kameez was dark brown. The man immediately behind her was Makand, who had thrown Sartaj out of Gaitonde’s bunker. ‘Bedroom?’ Anjali Mathur said.

  Sartaj pointed. On the phone, he had already told her Jojo’s name, her profession, her professions, and about the secret niche in the cupboard, about the sister named Mary. The number he had called was a land line, but the call must have been forwarded to the mobile phone she carried in her left hand.

  ‘Could you wait outside?’ she threw over her shoulder as she marched across the room. One of her short-haired flunkies was already holding the door-knob, and Katekar was barely through the door when it shut firmly. He and Sartaj stood in the corridor, too baffled to be angry.

  There was nothing to do but wait, and so they did. ‘Those chutiyas with her were the same ones,’ Katekar said, ‘from that day with Gaitonde.’

  Sartaj nodded. The three men with Anjali Mathur had been at Gaitonde’s bunker, and they all had the same haircut and the same shoes. What shoes did she have on, with her brown salwaar-kameez? He hadn’t noticed, it had all been too quick. Something eminently sensible, he was sure, flat-heeled and sturdy. She was that sort, with her hair tied tightly back and her dupatta efficiently slung and the square brown leather bag with the strong straps, big enough to hold whatever an international agent carried on her missions. The air in front of the lift was stale and very hot, and Sartaj felt the sweat gather on his forearms. He began to breathe deeply, in a rhythm he had developed in a thousand stake-outs. If he could get it just right, heat and sweat would recede, and time would turn inward on itself until it whirlpooled into stillness, and he was relieved of the world while he was still in it. But he had to get it just right. He breathed, and he could hear Katekar on the other side of the door, trying also to find a repose in the pressing stillness. They perspired together, and after a while they were breathing together. Sartaj was floating, veering up and vanishing into rooms of his childhood where with anxious concentration he whitened his keds for PT in the morning, and showed them to Papa-ji, who was a stickler for perfect white, much more than any monitor at school, and who had impressed upon his son the urgent lesson that the best outfit could be ruined in its effect by a sloppy pair of shoes, and an ordinary one made glorious by soft, mirror-shined, deep brown tasselled loafers. What had Ma done with Papa-ji’s shoes, those orderly columns of black and brown in the special narrow cupboard which always stood to the left of the clothes cupboard? And what had become of his suits, of that mothball-tinged wool smell of rain-laden mountainsides? Given away, packed away. Lost now, even a white Filipino shirt that a friend had brought back from Manila, that had set off Papa-ji’s white upturned moustaches and the forward sweep of his beard, that he had worn with an entrancing flamboyance on his sixty-seventh birthday with grey twill trousers and a jet-black turban. Sartaj had burst out laughing in admiration when he had first seen him walking down the gravel path at the front of the house. But later that evening, on the way back from the restaurant, they had climbed up three flights of stairs in a new shopping mall, and Papa-ji had had to stop on the second landing to catch his breath, and Sartaj had faced away, looking steadfastly out of a window at neon signs and had listened to the small alternating, fluttering sound, life still finding itself, working on, and he had been afraid.

  ‘Inspector Singh?’ It was Makand, poking his grey bullet-head into the corridor. ‘Come in, please.’ The invitation was for Sartaj only.

  Inside, Anjali Mathur was seated at the dining table. She pointed at the bottle of cold water and glasses on the table. ‘Sorry about keeping you outside. The case is such that we have to be very careful.’

  The rest of her little army was absent from the drawing room. Searching the bedroom, perhaps. Sartaj poured himself a glassful, drank, and waited. The water was deliciously cold. He was content to drink and be quiet because he had no idea what kind of case it was. Anjali Mathur had very direct eyes, very bright, and now she was waiting for him to say something. He poured himself another glass, and drank it slowly this time, sipping. If the case was such, whatever kind of such that was, he had nothing to gain by speaking. He sipped, and looked right back at her, not contesting her stare, but casual and drinking and yet not giving way.

  She shifted slightly, and settled into the faintest of smiles. ‘Do you want to know what the case is?’

  ‘You’ll tell me what I need to know,’ Sartaj said.

  ‘I can’t tell you very much. But I can tell you that it’s very big.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘What do you feel about that?’

  ‘It scares me.’

  ‘You don’t feel excited that you’ve been picked to work on a big case?’

  Sartaj threw his head back and laughed. ‘Excitement is one thing. But big cases can eat up small inspectors.’

  She was smiling broadly now. ‘But you’ll work on it?’

  ‘I do what I’m told.’

  ‘Yes. I’m sorry I can’t tell you much more about it. But let us say that it involves national security, great danger to national security.’ Again, she was waiting for him to say something. ‘You understand what I’m saying?’

  Sartaj shrugged. ‘That kind of thing seems always filmi to me. Usually the most exciting thing I do is arrest local taporis for extortion. A murder here and there.’

  ‘This is real.’

  ‘Okay.’

  ‘And very big.’

  ‘I understand.’ Sartaj didn’t understand much at all, but if it was the right kind of big case, perhaps it wasn’t bad to be attached to it. Perhaps there was credit and commendations to be had from doing small things for a big case.

  ‘We need more on what this Jojo and Gaitonde were doing together. What their business was together.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘You found this Jojo very fast. Shabash. But we need to know more. Press the investigation from the Gaitonde side. Follow up with his partners, his employees, anyone you can find. See what they say.’

  ‘I’ll do that.’

  ‘I’ll have this phone number for this sister checked out by someone in the Colaba station, and when we get a fix on her, you go and talk to her, see what you can get about Jojo from her.’

  ‘I should talk to the sister?’

  ‘Yes.’

  It was impossible to investigate without changing what you were investigating, without the subjects becoming wary. And Anjali Mathur, for reasons she wasn’t about to reveal, wanted very much to have her suspects think that this was a local investigation. Sartaj thought that she had a good investigator’s face, curious but neutral, not giving away anything. ‘Okay, madam,’ he said. ‘I can tell her where the sister died?’

  ‘Yes. See if she knows anything about the sister’s dealings with Gaitonde. And as before, report to me directly. Only to me. On that phone number.’

  And that was it, as far as instructions and clarifications from Anjali Mathur went. Sartaj took the bottle and a glass from the table, and took it into the corridor for Katekar, who was by now quite drenched with sweat from the shoulders down the back. He was much less bothered by summer heat than Sartaj, he thought nothing of walking a c
ouple of miles through a May afternoon, but he sweated much more. Sartaj put this heat-resistant stamina down to a lifetime of conditioning: Katekar had grown up without even fans, and so he survived heatwaves blithely. It was all a question of what you were used to. Katekar drank a glass of water. ‘Are we finished with this now?’ he said with a little tilt of his head over his left shoulder, towards the apartment, Jojo and Anjali Mathur.

  ‘Not yet,’ Sartaj said.

  Katekar said nothing.

  ‘Drink up,’ Sartaj said, grinning. ‘We have lots to do. National security depends on us.’

  There was somebody else who wanted to talk about national security waiting for Sartaj at the station. His name was Wasim Zafar Ali Ahmad, and it was printed in Hindi, Urdu and English on the card that he handed to Sartaj. Under the name there was a title, ‘Social Worker’, and two phone numbers.

  ‘I was surprised, inspector saab,’ he said, ‘when I heard that you had been twice to Navnagar and had not contacted me. I thought that maybe it was difficult to find me. I am usually not at my home. I move around a lot, for work.’

  Sartaj turned the card over with his fingertips and laid it down. ‘I went to Bengali Bura.’ They were sitting at his desk, across from each other.

  ‘Which is very much in Navnagar. I do a lot of work there.’ He was about thirty, this long-named Ahmad, a little plump and a little tall and very confident. He had been waiting for Sartaj at the front of the station and had followed him inside, his card ready. He was wearing a black shirt with small white embroidery at the cuffs, spotless white pants and a determined expression.

  ‘Do you know the boy who was killed?’ Sartaj said.

  ‘Yes, I had seen him sometimes.’

  Sartaj had seen Ahmad too, he was sure of it. He looked familiar, and no doubt he came and went from the station, social workers often did. ‘You live in Navnagar?’

  ‘Yes. On the highway side. My family was one of the first ones there. That time, it was mostly people from UP, from Tamil Nadu. These Bangladeshis, they came later. Too many of them, but what can you do? So I work with them.’

  ‘And you knew the apradhis? And this Bihari fellow who was their boss?’

  ‘Only by face, inspector saab. Not enough to say hi-hello. But I know people who know them. And now this murder they have done. It is very bad. They come from outside and do bad things in our country. And they spoil the name of good people who are from here.’

  He meant Indian Muslims, who suffered broad-brushed slander and hatred put abroad by Hindu fundamentalists. Sartaj sat back, rubbed at his beard. Wasim Zafar Ali Ahmad was definitely interesting. Like most so-called social workers, he wanted to move ahead, to become a big man in the area, a man with connections who would attract a clientele, a man who would be noticed by the political parties as a local organizer and volunteer and finally a potential candidate. Social workers had become MLAs and even MPs, it took a long time but it had been done many times. Ahmad had the politician’s gift of mouthing clichés without sounding ridiculous. He looked intelligent enough, and maybe he had the drive and the ruthlessness. ‘So,’ Sartaj said, ‘for the sake of the country and good citizens, you want to help me with this case?’

  ‘Of course, inspector saab, of course.’ Ahmad’s happiness at being understood came from his belly, his whole body. He put his elbows on the desk and leaned forward towards Sartaj. ‘I know everyone in Navnagar, and even in Bengali Bura I have lots of connections, I work with those people, I know them. So I can quietly ask, you know. Try to find out what people are saying, what people know.’

  ‘And what do you know now? Do you know anything?’

  Ahmad chortled, ‘Arre, no, no, inspector saab. But I have no doubt I can find out something here and there, some little thing.’ And he sat back, chubby and self-contained.

  Sartaj gave in. Ahmad wasn’t stupid enough to give away good tips for nothing, or his sources. ‘Good,’ Sartaj said. ‘I will be grateful if you can render any assistance. And is there anything I can do for you?’

  They understood each other now. ‘Yes, saab, actually there is.’ Ahmad put away his charm and stated his terms quietly, plainly. ‘In Navnagar there are two brothers, young boys, one is nineteen, another is twenty. Every day they bother the girls when they are leaving for work, they say this and that. I have asked them to stop, but then they threatened me. They have openly said that they will break my arms and legs. I could take action against them myself, but I have restrained myself. But when the water starts to rise above one’s head, inspector saab…’

  ‘Names? Age? Where do I find them?’

  Ahmad already had the particulars neatly written out in his diary, and he tore the page out for Sartaj with fastidious care. He supplied descriptions and details of the family, and then excused himself. ‘I have taken up enough of your time, saab,’ he said. ‘But please call me any time, day or night, if you need anything.’

  ‘I’ll call you after I see to these two,’ Sartaj said.

  ‘The citizens of Navnagar will be very happy, saab, if you can rescue their sisters and daughters from this daily trouble.’

  With that, Wasim Zafar Ali Ahmad placed a hand on his chest and made his exit. He had invoked the people of Navnagar, but both he and Sartaj knew that the two brothers had to be disciplined because Ahmad wanted it so. This was the first offering in their deal, this test of trust and goodwill. Sartaj would pick up the roadside Romeos, whose main offence was undoubtedly not their harassment of passing women but their disrespect towards Ahmad. Sartaj would see to them, and Ahmad would give him some information. Ahmad would then be seen in the basti as a man who had police connections, and his name would be heard and more people would arrive at his door, seeking his patronage and help, and in turn inflate his influence. If all went well for him, maybe in a few years, Sartaj would be the one calling him ‘Saab’. But all that was a long while away, and first there was this little task of the chastisement of the Eve-teasing brothers. All great careers began with these little exchanges and were sustained by them. Mutual interest was the lubricating oil that ran the great and small machinery of the world, and Sartaj would use it to send criminals skidding into captivity. He felt excitement prickle up his neck and through his forearms, that old thrill which came to him when he felt a case opening up. Good, good, this was good. It was foolish to expect success, but Sartaj couldn’t help savouring the anticipation. He would find the killers, he would catch them, he would win: the thought of victory sparked in his chest like a tiny burn, and he took energy from it all day.

  That evening, over a glass of Scotch, Sartaj told Majid Khan about his new long-named source. Majid wasn’t a drinker, but he had a bottle of Johnny Walker Black for Sartaj. Sartaj drank from it every time he came for dinner, and this evening he was depending on it a little too much, gulping it down greedily. He was telling Majid about Wasim Zafar Ali Ahmad while Majid’s kids put plates on the table and their mother rattled spoons in the kitchen.

  ‘Yes, I know him, this Ahmad,’ Majid said. ‘Actually, I know his father.’

  ‘How?’

  ‘I found him during the riots, just next to the highway in Bandra. I was going to Mahim with four constables. From far away, I saw these three bastards standing over something. The streets were completely empty, you know, and there was just this empty road and these three. So I told the driver, go, go. And we sped up, and as soon as they saw the jeep, the three chutiyas ran off. Now I saw this man lying on the ground. You know, grey beard, clean white kurta, white topi, just an old Muslim gentleman. He had tried to run, they had caught up with him, pushed him down. He was very scared, but he wasn’t hurt.’

  ‘He would have been. If you hadn’t saved him. Dead.’

  ‘Arre, I didn’t save him. We happened to come along.’ Majid wasn’t being falsely modest, he was stating flat facts. He scratched at his chest, and drank from his glass of nimbu pani. ‘Anyway, we put him in the back of the jeep, took him along. He couldn’t speak for an hour. Bu
t ever since then, he comes every Bakr’id to my office, he brings some gosht, I touch it and send him back with it. But he comes without fail. Nice old fellow.’

  They were standing on the balcony of Majid’s eighth-floor apartment, leaning on the parapet. There was a perfectly round moon hanging low over the staggered oblongs of the rooftops, over the dark rim of watery lowlands and the row of tin-roofed kholis and the sea beyond. Sartaj couldn’t think of the last time he had seen this round moon. Maybe, he thought, you needed to be up this high to see it, high above the streets. ‘His son never came with the old man? To thank you and ask you for help?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Smart fellow.’ Ahmad was demonstrating his intelligence by not presuming on the thread of gratitude that bound his father and Majid, tugging on it. He was proceeding in the proper manner, going through Sartaj, the local inspector. If Ahmad could make Sartaj and the constables happy, they would recommend him to Majid, who perhaps would make it possible for Ahmad to gain influence and conduct activities of questionable legality, bringing prosperity and further advancement.

  ‘Yes,’ Majid said. ‘He’s not an innocent like his father.’

  ‘Innocents have very good luck sometimes, no?’

  ‘Sometimes. The father said they had some relative who was killed in the riots. Cousin brother.’

  ‘Close cousin?’