The Night Run Page 3
He nodded.
‘Very well – we’ll create a distraction and Arjan can sneak away.’
‘But what if you get caught?’ I said. ‘The police will –’
‘Let me worry about that,’ she told me. ‘I’ll meet you at the barracks in fifteen minutes.’
She walked over to the three horses and unlatched the gate to their pen. The spooked horses grew silent as she ushered them out. Behind them, she found a straw bale.
‘Take this and place it over there,’ she ordered the rescued boy, pointing to the main building.
‘What should I do?’ I asked.
‘Be ready to run,’ she replied. ‘Wait by the gates!’
She took another bale and placed it next to the first. Then she took the kerosene lamp that was lighting the yard and set fire to the bales.
‘Raise the alarm,’ she told the other boy. ‘Now!’
He did as he was told, as the flames started to catch. ‘Come quickly! Fire!’ he yelled.
Heera unlocked the gates and I helped her pull them back. I waited for the policemen to run through the gap and arrest us but they didn’t get the chance. Heera slapped each horse on its hindquarters and they pushed their way through the gap. Smoke began to fill the courtyard.
‘Go!’ she told me. ‘Now!’
I hesitated for just a moment, and then did as she said. In the confusion, the policemen ignored me. They were too concerned about the blaze. One sounded his whistle. Another shouted for help. ‘Bring water!’ he screamed.
I didn’t look back to see where Heera and the teenager were. I didn’t have the time. Instead, I sped off down yet another dark alley, heading for the barracks and the railway station. My mouth felt dry from the smoke and my eyes stung but I didn’t care. All I could think of was my dad.
Chapter Nine
Running Into Trouble
Ihadn’t even considered what I’d do if my dad wasn’t at the police station. I’d convinced myself he’d be there. And now that I knew better, it felt like starting again.
I worked my way north, through the biggest maze of streets in the city. This time, I saw quite a few people too. The deeper I went, the more I saw. They were drunkards and beggars and criminals. I passed small groups of men drinking liquor and playing cards. Down one alley each doorway was open and gaudily dressed women stood calling out from tiny rooms. It felt like another city – a secret place that I wasn’t supposed to know about. I wondered where the police were. Did the curfew not matter in these places?
As I turned a corner and stepped across a sewer, I bumped into a man. He was short and wide, with huge arms and a shaved head, shaped like a cannonball and covered in a giant scorpion tattoo. A thin cigarette hung from his mouth and he squinted at me.
‘You lost, boy?’ he growled.
I shook my head and tried to stop my legs from shaking. A knife scar bisected the man’s ruined left eye, running down his cheek like a fat, pink worm. He scared me.
‘Has someone cut out your tongue?’ he added. ‘Speak before I slap your face off!’
‘I’m just g-going home,’ I stammered.
The man began to laugh.
‘Home?’ he said. ‘You’re either an idiot or a liar. Which is it?’
A meaty hand shot out and grabbed hold of my shirt. I tried to pull away but he was too strong. He dragged me closer, so that I could smell the liquor on his breath.
‘Which is it, boy?’ he asked again.
I gulped down air.
‘I’m lost!’ I protested. ‘I don’t know where I am.’
The man seemed to accept my reply.
‘They call me The Bull,’ he said. ‘And these alleys belong to me. Whatever you see here is mine – man, woman, animal or child…’
The name sent shivers coursing down my spine. Everyone had heard of this man. He was the most notorious bandit in the whole region. I wanted to run away but I couldn’t move.
With his free hand, he pulled a blade from his tunic and held it to my right cheek. ‘You look scared, boy. Is something wrong?’
He sneered at me. I tried to pull away from him. I wanted him to let me go. Time was ticking.
‘Please!’ I begged. ‘My mother will be looking for me.’
The sneer turned into an unkind smile. ‘She is welcome here,’ he said.
I looked away so that he wouldn’t see the anger in my eyes. He was disrespecting my mother and I wanted to hit him. But I wasn’t stupid. I didn’t want to die.
‘Please!’ I said again, my voice just a whine.
He let me go and put away the knife.
‘Run along,’ he told me. ‘Quickly – before I forget to be kind!’
I sighed with relief and sprinted away. Behind me I could hear him laughing. Several more men, all bandits, watched me pass by. I didn’t look at them, praying they would leave me be.
At the end of the alley, I came to a junction. My run-in with The Bull had confused me. I’d lost my bearings. As I tried to work out where I was, one of the dangerous men approached me. He was tall and skinny and his teeth were rotten. He was drunk too and held a half-full bottle of whiskey.
‘Drink!’ he ordered, grabbing hold of my shoulder.
I shrugged him off and went left.
‘Come back!’ he shouted after me. ‘Be a man!’
I started to run as someone stepped from the shadows ahead. I didn’t see the punch until it was too late.
* * *
When I came to, I was lying on a mattress in a dimly lit room. I tried to get up but a shooting pain lanced through my head. I winced before vomiting onto the wooden floor. My mind was spinning and I felt groggy. My face throbbed. I lay back and tried to gather my thoughts. I remembered running from The Bull and the drunken man and then…
I stood slowly and shook my head. Then I went to the door. It was locked and there was no key. The window was shuttered but I tried it anyway. When it didn’t budge, I got angry and punched it. I had no idea how long I’d been out, but I knew then that I had missed my chance to save my father. I cursed the bandits and the policemen and the soldiers. I had failed and my father was on his way to Lahore to die.
Chapter Ten
Kidnapped
Maybe an hour later, the door opened and a young girl walked in with water. She looked about my age but her eyes were hard and she scowled at me. Her expression almost hid how pretty she was.
‘This is for you,’ she said in an unfriendly manner.
‘Who are you?’ I asked. ‘Where am I?’
The girl shook her head. Her eyes were jet black and shone, and her hair fell in greasy curls to her shoulders. She wore a gaudy red outfit, like the women I’d seen on the streets. Her hands were covered in henna tattoos.
‘It doesn’t matter,’ she told me. ‘Once they get you, they don’t let you go. Not unless someone pays your ransom.’
I felt suddenly faint. The bandits…
‘I’ve been kidnapped?’ I asked.
‘Clever, aren’t you?’
‘But my mother has no money,’ I began to shout. ‘And my father is…’
‘What?’ she asked.
‘He’s probably dead.’
The girl’s expression softened a little. ‘Probably?’ she asked, almost teasingly. ‘Aren’t you sure?’
I shook my head and tried not to cry. ‘The British took him,’ I explained. ‘They said he was a rioter. He’s on his way to Lahore on the train. They’ll hang him for sure.’
The girl nodded. ‘My parents were killed. The bandits raided my village and took me away to serve them. My dad tried to fight but The Bull stabbed him. Then they…’ She turned her head away and didn’t finish her sentence.
‘Help me,’ I said to her. ‘Please?’
When she turned back to face me, her expression was hard again.
‘Why should I?’ she asked. ‘Who are you to me?’
‘I’m just like you,’ I told her. ‘These men are evil. Come with me – we can run away.�
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The girl was about to reply when I heard a familiar coarse voice swearing from the hallway.
‘Have you fallen down a sewer, you little pig?’ yelled The Bull.
He stepped through the door and smiled at me. It was another evil grin. ‘I thought you’d gone,’ he said, but I knew he was playing with me. ‘Did you change your mind?’
My hand went to the swollen bruise underneath my right eye. ‘Your men stopped me,’ I told him, although he already knew that.
He eyed my clothes before stepping closer. Grabbing my hands, he studied them too.
‘Not a rich boy, then?’ he said, looking annoyed.
‘My parents have nothing,’ I said. ‘You’re wasting your time. They won’t pay a ransom.’
Although my father worked, some days we barely had enough to eat. The British had enforced strict laws and the price of everything was going up. No matter how many hours he worked, things never changed. We weren’t starving exactly, and we had a roof over our heads, but things were hard. And now that he was gone…
‘Do you know how many lads in my gang were just like you?’ The Bull asked.
I shook my head.
‘Nearly half of them,’ he told me. ‘They were kidnapped and their parents couldn’t pay so I kept them. Well, I kept the smart ones.’ He touched his tunic, right where he kept his knife. ‘Those who complained didn’t get so lucky. There’s many an undiscovered grave out in the fields.’
He grabbed the girl by her hair. I could see she was in pain, but she didn’t cry out or make a fuss.
‘And this little wench,’ he said. ‘She is like the other women downstairs. I own them too.’
I felt sick but said nothing in reply. I didn’t want him to get angry and hurt her. Inside, however, I felt rage burning. He was a monster.
‘Now try and rest and I’ll be back soon,’ he added. ‘Then you can tell me where you live and I can pay your mother a visit. See if she wants her little boy back.’
‘What if I don’t tell you?’ I asked.
He touched his ruined left eye.
‘Oh,’ he said softly, ‘you’ll talk. My guests always talk.’
He pulled the girl from the room by her hair and shut the door. I heard the key turn in the lock and felt the air leave my chest. How had things gone so wrong?
Chapter Eleven
Shanti
I sat and waited for The Bull to return, but next time the door opened, it was the girl again. Her left eye was bruised and her lip split.
‘Did he hit you?’ I asked her.
She shrugged. ‘He always hits me. It’s nothing – not any more. I’m used to it.’
She put a cup of water on the floor. ‘What’s your name?’ she asked, without looking at me.
‘Arjan. What’s yours?’
She went over to the window and leant against the shutters. ‘I’m Shanti.’
‘Why do you stay here?’ I asked her. ‘Why don’t you leave?’
She looked down at her grubby clothes. ‘Where would I go? At least I have a bed and food here. Out on the streets, I would starve.’
‘But you must have family – uncles, aunts…?’
She shook her head. ‘I would never go back to them. There is too much…shame. The bandits have ruined my life. Now I’m theirs.’
I stood and went to her. ‘What about the police?’
‘You have a lot to learn,’ she said. ‘There is a curfew but no policemen or soldiers come here. Why is that, do you think?’
She was right – I didn’t know anything about such a life. I didn’t want to know.
‘He bribes them all,’ she explained. ‘And they come here for the women and the…’ Again, she failed to finish, and this time she was crying.
‘Come on,’ I whispered to her. ‘We can escape and you can come with me. My mother is kind and lovely, and my neighbours too. We will take care of you.’
I didn’t know if that was true, but I had to get out. And if I did escape, I couldn’t leave her behind. She was a child, like me. Living with bandits was no life for her.
‘Why would strangers care about me?’ she asked, full of suspicion. ‘I am nothing to them.’
I shook my head and put a hand on her shoulder. I remembered something Heera had said, and wondered where she was. I doubted that she’d made it out of the police station, but I couldn’t be sure. There was something different about her. Something special.
‘We’re not all the same,’ I told Shanti. ‘I mean humans. Not everyone you meet at night is evil.’
She gave me a sad look as I heard The Bull shouting. ‘Must I take my belt to you again!’ he barked from below. ‘Get back here and do your chores, wench!’
I looked into her eyes.
‘Is this what you want?’ I said. ‘Truly, with all your heart, for the rest of your life?’
I gave her a hug. She smelled of fried spices and cinnamon sticks and earth. I could feel bones through her clothes.
‘Shanti?’
She nodded before wiping her eyes. ‘I must go,’ she said. ‘I’ll be back soon, though. My master will go and check on the women soon. When he does, I’ll release you.’
‘And come with me?’ I asked, my spirits rising.
She nodded again.
‘But we must escape,’ she added. ‘If he catches us, we will die.’
I thought about my father and felt my determination rise again. I couldn’t save him, but I would not fail Shanti. I would not leave her to slavery.
* * *
After much time passed, I thought perhaps Shanti had changed her mind. But then the key turned in the lock and she entered. She wore trousers and a pale blue shirt, and had wiped the make-up from her face. Her hair was held in a cap. She had nothing else with her.
I checked my waistband but couldn’t feel the weapon I’d brought from home. My matches were still in my pocket though.
‘They found your knife,’ she told me. ‘My master took it.’
I shrugged. ‘I don’t care about that.’
‘Will your mother really be kind to me?’ she asked, sounding like a little girl.
I nodded, and my heart grew heavy as I thought about my father and the baby that he would never see.
‘My mother is full of love,’ I told her. ‘She is the best mother in the world. She won’t turn you away. With my father gone, it will be difficult, but she won’t let us down. Maybe we can find your family.’
We worked our way down some dangerously rotten stairs and into a dark corridor. Four doors opened into dimly lit rooms, and I could see men passed out on the floor.
‘They keep a potion,’ Shanti told me, nodding at the sleeping men. ‘They use it to drug women or to kidnap people.’
I raised an eyebrow and Shanti smiled.
‘I put the potion in the whiskey,’ she explained. ‘My master’s too.’
Despite my sadness, I grinned at her clever thinking.
‘We’ll still have to be careful,’ she added. ‘The streets here are very dangerous.’
‘Tonight the whole city is dangerous,’ I replied. ‘Come on!’
I set out again, wondering what was in store. So far I’d faced and avoided angry soldiers, helped set fire to a police station and been taken by bandits and escaped them. I had failed in my quest, and my heart ached for my father, but I wondered how many other twelve-year-olds had experienced such a night. Surely there were no more surprises left.
Chapter Twelve
Night Train
The journey to the barracks was shorter this time. Barely ten minutes after leaving the bandits’ lair, we were watching soldiers at a checkpoint. There were two of them, with bright red turbans and waxed moustaches. They looked bored. Behind them sat an arched entrance and another checkpoint. More soldiers strolled around the perimeter.
Even if I had been on time, there was no way I could have saved my father.
We walked on, careful to remain hidden, and stopping every few moments. The ai
r was chilly now, and Shanti shivered. At a junction between two main roads, we waited to let a patrol pass. They were leading two handcuffed men, the sort of thugs we’d just left behind.
Once the road was clear, we crossed and I found an alleyway that led behind a clothing shop I knew. A man called Gulbaru Singh owned it. He was a nasty piece of work.
I found the rear entrance, and I tried the door. It was locked but rattled in its frame. I pulled three or four times and the tiny lock broke.
‘What are you doing?’ asked Shanti. ‘We aren’t thieves.’
I led her inside and found a shawl. Next to it was a box of firecrackers. I pocketed a handful. They might be useful later, if we needed a distraction.
‘You’re cold,’ I told her. ‘Besides the man that owns this place is horrible. He beats homeless children and cheats his customers.’
Shanti took the shawl without any more argument and wrapped it around herself. As we left, I was reminded of Heera. I wondered what had happened to her and the teenage boy she’d taken from the police cells.
We crossed another, smaller junction, and walked on to where the road ended at a barrier. Beyond was the track, and to the left, the railway station. The homeless people I’d mentioned in the shop were huddled together along the sides of the tracks. Here and there, one of them stirred and watched us pass. Would this be where my family would end up, I wondered, now that my father was gone?
We passed a few small railway buildings, offices where they kept records and counted the ticket money. After these were bigger warehouses, some of them open and full of more homeless. Finally, we reached the stationmaster’s house and, close by, the main entrance to the station. It was always open, even though the trains didn’t run all night. We stepped between sleeping families, and on into the ticket hall.
A poster had been tacked to the wall. A meeting would take place on a piece of common land called Jallianwalla Bagh. It was set for April 13th – the Sikh festival of Vaisakhi – just a few days away. The city would be filled with people from surrounding villages, coming to celebrate the holy day at the Golden Temple. Underneath was another poster. This one said that all gatherings were banned until further notice. It was from the British.