Read The Accidental Apprentice Online
Authors: Vikas Swarup
I introduce myself and then ask him the million-dollar question. âSunil, do you still love Babli?'
âOf course I do,' he says.
âThen why don't you marry her?'
âHa!' He gives a bitter laugh. âDon't you know what the
khap
did to me? Three months ago, they humiliated me by parading me through the village with a shoe in my mouth. Then they forced me out of the village, threatening to kill not just me but also Babli if I ever return.'
âWell, now they have gone a step further. They are marrying Babli off to Badan Singh tonight.'
âNo!' He lets out a wail which cackles over the line like static.
âListen, Sunil. If you can come to the village right now, we can still prevent this wedding. I've spoken to the police; they will help you and Babli.'
âI wish you had told me this yesterday.'
âI kept trying your number but it was switched off. It's still not too late. It'll take you just a couple of hours to get here from Ghaziabad.'
âYes, but right now I'm in Chennai, two thousand kilometres away.'
âOh, no!'
âDon't worry, I'll take a plane. I'll come as fast as I can. I'll do anything for Babli.'
âGood. I'll wait for you. Just call me on this number when you reach Chandangarh.'
âThanks,' he says and, after a moment's hesitation, adds â
didi
', instantly forging a relationship with me.
Even before I have finished the call, the outline of a plan has begun to take shape in my mind. The first thing I need for the plan to work is a getaway car.
âIs there any place I can rent a car?' I ask a villager crossing the bridge.
He looks at me as if I were from outer space. Obviously, the last thing to expect in a village like Chandangarh is a car-rental service.
âDo you know anyone who owns a motorcycle at least?'
He nods. âBabban Sheikh mechanic has a Hero Honda.'
âHow do I get in touch with him?'
âCome, I will take you to his garage,' he says. âIt's in Uttar Pradesh, on the other side of the river.'
We cross the bridge and I find myself in a Muslim colony. There is a small cluster of houses, and a gaggle of shops. A few bearded worshippers are milling around an old mosque.
The garage is little more than a tin shack. Babban Sheikh is a short, muscular-looking man in his mid-forties, with a pockmarked face and watchful eyes. Dressed in greasy overalls, he is attending to a broken-down Bajaj Pulsar when I arrive. He also has a helper, a boy of fifteen or sixteen, dressed similarly but with his hair dyed a light brown, who is busy tuning a Kawasaki Ninja.
âEr ⦠Babban Bhai, can I have a word with you?' I address the older man.
Babban Sheikh puts down the spark plug he is cleaning, wipes his hands on a rag and looks up. âYes, madam, what can I do for you?'
âI am told you own a Hero Honda.'
âYes, that's right.'
âWell, there is this wedding tonight andâ¦'
He hears my plan and then shakes his head. âWe run an honourable business here. We are not gangsters who spirit away young brides. I cannot help you.'
âA girl's future depends on this,' I implore, but he is unmoved.
The young helper seems more sympathetic. âThis lady is right, Abbu,' he intercedes, revealing that he is Babban's son. âWe should stop that wedding. I know Salim Ilyasi would. He saved Priya Capoorr just as she was being married off to that scoundrel Prakash Puri in
Love in Bangkok.
'
The father would have none of it. âSo you have started watching films again, eh? Don't you know Imam
sahib
has imposed a complete ban on watching Hindi movies and listening to their dirty songs?'
âI know, Abbu, but what to do. I just can't control myself the moment a new Salim Ilyasi movie is released.'
âThese films are the root cause of all the ills in our society. You see one more film and I will report you personally to Imam
sahib.
Then you will spend the rest of your days cleaning carpets in the mosque,' Babban admonishes his son before noticing that I am listening in. âWhat are you still doing here?' He turns on me. âYou've wasted enough of our time. Now be on your way.'
Dejected, I slowly trudge back to the bridge, feeling the day's disappointments press down on me like a giant thumb. The sun is at its peak, but my heart is at its lowest ebb, sinking with remorse at having failed Babli.
Just as I am crossing the bridge, a motorcycle sputters to a stop near me. It is the Kawasaki Ninja, being driven by the young mechanic. âI am sorry for my
abbajan
's outburst. I will help you,' he says with a ready smile.
âAnd what about your father?'
âHe thinks I am out delivering this bike to the customer. You don't worry about him. I know how to handle him. But how will we handle the girl's father? What if he chases me?'
âWell, then you will just have to be faster. And I will pay you for your trouble.'
âNo, I will not take any money for this,' he declares, aping the studied nonchalance of Salim Ilyasi. âTo protect
muhabbat
â love â Aslam Sheikh will even give his life.'
The young mechanic offers to drop me back to Kuldip Singh's house, and I accept gratefully. This time the villagers stare at me with open-jawed astonishment, wondering who this woman is, riding pillion on a scooter one minute, and a motorcycle the next.
I get dropped off a little distance away from Kuldip Singh's house, not wanting to arouse his suspicion. But it turns out to be a needless precaution. Word of my indiscretions has already reached the household. The patriarch is in a foul mood and lashes out at me the moment I step in through the door. âWe called you here to tell us how to operate a washing machine, not wash our dirty linen in public. Sultan Singh has told me everything. Please leave immediately. There is no place in our house for a troublemaker like you.'
âKuldip Singh-ji, you are misunderstanding me,' I say, trying to reason with him. âBabli will never go through with this marriage. She'll rather die than accept Badan Singh as her husband.'
âCome what may, she will marry Badan Singh. And, if she wants to die, she'll die in her husband's house, not ours.'
âWhat kind of father are you, willing to sacrifice your daughter for the sake of a regressive custom?'
âEnough!' he bellows. âGet out of my house this very instant or I will have you thrown out.'
âI will leave, but not alone. Babli will also leave with me.'
âHave you lost your mind completely? Babli is my daughter. She will do what I tell her to do.'
âThen why don't you ask her?' I challenge him.
He accepts the challenge readily. âLet's settle this right now,' he says, and calls out, âBabli's mother! Bring our daughter here.'
Babli enters the courtyard, trembling like a leaf, held tight by her mother. She stares at her feet, unable even to meet my gaze. Kuldip Singh jerks a thumb at me. âTell me, Babli, do you want to go with this woman?'
Babli shakes her head slowly. Then, bursting into tears, she covers her eyes and runs back to her room.
âThere, you got your answer.' Kuldip Singh twirls his moustache, smirking like an evil magician. âNow get out.'
âI don't know whether to despise you or pity you,' I say as a parting shot, and walk out of his house.
I make my way back to the Amba Temple, my crisis headquarters. The next five hours are the longest of my life. I keep trying Sunil but his cell appears to be switched off once again. Despondency looms over me like a dark shadow across my heart. I wish Karan were here to comfort me, lift my spirits. The temple priest offers me some fruit. I sit with him on the stoop, watching the afternoon fade.
As the dusk settles in, the air begins to vibrate with the cacophony of a wedding brass band. There are multiple trumpets blaring, and a nasal singer crooning â
Aaj mere yaar ki shaadi hai
' (âToday is my friend's wedding') to the noisy accompaniment of trombones, tuba, saxophones and dhol. It is Badan Singh's
baraat,
on its way to Kuldip Singh's house, which is lit up with twinkling lights.
That is when my cell phone beeps with an incoming message. It is from Sunil, informing me he has reached the village. I SMS him back to come straight to the temple.
Sunil Chaudhary impresses me on first sight. He is a young, presentable man of twenty-four, with a gentle face and soulful eyes. An engineering graduate, currently working for a software firm in Noida, he is a bit shy, a bit awkward and unsure of himself, but there is no mistaking his love for Babli. I know he will do anything to make her happy, anything to keep her safe.
âI flew down from Chennai and took a taxi all the way from Delhi. I just saw a wedding procession enter Babli's house. Am I too late?' he blurts out, his face a mask of worry and fear.
âWe'll find out soon enough. Come with me.'
I explain my plan to Sunil as we hurry towards our destination. We stop in our tracks on seeing uniformed men patrolling outside Kuldip Singh's house, before realising that they are not armed guards but members of the brass band. Their work over, they are now relaxing, waiting for the dinner to commence. We peep in through the open door. Babli and Badan Singh are seated under the
mandap
with a priest lighting the sacred fire in the centre. The wedding is about to commence. In Hindi films this is the moment when the hero enters and declares, â
Yeh shaadi nahin ho sakti
' (âThis wedding cannot be solemnised'). He can do so because he has the full protection of the director. In real life, if Sunil were to try this stunt, he would be instantly lynched.
Aslam Sheikh is lurking in the shadows of the nearby alley, his motorcycle growling softly, primed for flight. He smiles and gives me a thumbs-up sign. I introduce him to Sunil and then make my way stealthily towards the back of the house.
I reach the cowsheds without any difficulty. The cows and buffaloes are busy chewing cud, supremely unmindful of the noisy wedding celebrations going on next door.
The storage hut is in darkness when I enter it. I hit the light switch and bright white light floods the room, reflecting off the glazed surfaces of the appliances that are exactly where I had left them. I plug in the TV and turn it on. Then I do the same for the DVD player, the music system and the fridge. The tube light begins flickering alarmingly, unable to withstand the load. The moment I switch on the washing machine, it emits a soft pop and shuts off. Simultaneously the entire house is plunged into pitch darkness, just as I anticipated.
I leave the hut and race back to the alley, where Aslam is waiting on his motorcycle.
Moments later, the drowsing band members are startled into wakefulness by the Kawasaki Ninja that zooms past them down the road with four people on it, including a runaway bride. We can hear voices shouting behind us and some people giving chase, but they are on foot and we are on a 250cc bike.
Sunil, Babli and I hold on to each other and to dear life as Aslam expertly navigates the rutted lanes of the village. The cold winter air bites and whips my face like a studded glove. Mercifully, we reach the police station in just five minutes. Aslam drops us off, makes a theatrical bow, and zooms away, his mission accomplished.
Babli and Sunil embrace each other like there is no tomorrow. âThe moment the lights went out and someone grabbed my arm, I knew it was you,' Babli says, tears streaming down her face, smudging her makeup. But she still looks radiant in her flaming red lehenga and brocade blouse. Sunil gently wipes her tears with his fingers. I expect them to break into a filmy love song any second.
However, when we enter the police station, we find SI Inder Varma singing a different tune entirely. âWhat you have done is very wrong. I will book you for unlawful confinement. You have spirited away a girl,' he threatens Sunil.
âYou said bring the girl. Well, I have brought the girl,' I interject, before turning to the bride. âBabli, why don't you tell him?'
âYes.
Didi
and Sunil have saved me from a forced marriage,' Babli says defiantly. Sunil's presence has infused her with a new boldness. âI don't want to marry Badan Singh. I only want to marry Sunil.'
âListen, this is not a marriage registrar's office. This is a police station,' Varma admonishes, wagging a finger in her face. âFirst of all, show me proof that you are above eighteen years of age.'
âProof? You can see my high school mark sheet. It lists my date of birth.'
âThen produce it. Do you have it with you?'
âHow can I have it with me? I am coming straight from a
mandap,
not a school.'
âThen there is nothing I can do. I am going to treat this as a case of kidnapping of a minor girl. Ram Kumar,' he calls out to his head constable. âTake this boy into custody. Call the girl's father. Tell him to come and take away his daughter. And also inform Sultan Singh-ji.'
âYou can't do this,' I cry. âThis is gross injustice. We trusted you.'
He grins through his paan-stained teeth. âNever trust a policeman.'
âIf you call my father, God will not spare you,' Babli says, tears streaming down her face again.
âInside this police station
I
am God.'
âLook, Inspector
sahib,
' I try again. âThis is a simple case of a boy and a girl deeply in love, both adults, who want to marry. Instead of threatening them, you should be helping them.'
âNothing is simple in life, and definitely not in marriage,' he says. âYou keep out of it, otherwise I'll also put you in with the boy as an accomplice to kidnapping.'
All our pleas fall on deaf ears. This wanton abuse of authority fills me with disgust. I feel the impotent rage of the powerless, denied their rights by an arrogant, arbitrary dictator. That is when I remember Shalini Grover. Taking advantage of the inspector's preoccupation with Sunil and Babli, I scurry into the ladies' toilet and quickly dial the investigative reporter on my cell phone. âShalini,' I whisper to her, âyou were investigating the case of a couple murdered on the diktats of a
khap.
I'm at Chandangarh police station, where a young couple might be murdered right now for going against the
khap.
Can you come here immediately? Only you can save them.'