Read The Perplexing Theft of the Jewel in the Crown Online
Authors: Vaseem Khan
Tags: #Fiction / Mystery © Detective / International Mystery © Crime, Fiction / Mystery © Detective / Police Procedural, Fiction / Mystery © Detective / Traditional, Fiction / Mystery © Detective / Cozy, Fiction / Urban, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
The clerk hesitated. âSir, Inspector Garewal is under special warrant. I have instructions from Warden Sahib that he is to speak to no one without Warden's express permission.'
âIs the warden higher than the Chief Minister?' roared Chopra. âShould I go back and tell him that I have been prevented from carrying out my duties by some white-shirted flunky? By some jumped-up adminwallah?'
The clerk grinned queasily. âWarden Sahib has gone out to a meeting. He will be back shortly. If Sir would care to waiâ'
âWait?' bellowed Chopra. âDo you think important matters of state can wait? Have you any idea what is going on, you oaf? The Prime Minister himself is breathing down the CM's neck. The CM needs answers now, not when some dolt with four pens in his front pocket decides he should have them.'
The clerk paled. âCome this way, sir.'
They moved through the whitewashed administrative building and out into the prison's main compound. Chopra squinted as the hard sun beat down against his face and onto the parched, dusty ground.
The jail was just as he remembered from his last visit.
Directly to his left was the holding cage for undertrials waiting to be transferred to the courts â a number of prisoners looked out between the bars, their expressions listless and grim. At the rear of the compound were the four large barracks that housed the bulk of the prison's inmates; white, box-like buildings that reflected the sun and shimmered with lost hope and decaying dreams. In the far right corner lay the hospital, woefully under-staffed and under-resourced. A form of relative sanctuary was afforded to a lucky few by the twin buildings set before the hospital, the canteen and laundry, where prisoners fought for work. A few yards from the canteen, Chopra's eyes alighted on the notorious Barrack No. 3, fiefdom of jailed members of the Chauhan gang.
His brow darkened.
He had dealt with Chauhan gang thugs in the past and considered them to be nothing less than vicious animals. Even Mumbai Central Prison was too good for them.
He completed his survey of the compound by looking to where the Anda Cell was located on his right, a brand-new nine-cell solitary confinement unit designed for the prison's VIP guests â the maximum-security prisoners.
Chopra followed the clerk to the Anda Cell, which was surrounded by a high, wire mesh. The interior of the unit was laid out like a giant cake with nine slices. A narrow corridor led to a circular anteroom at the very centre of the cake where a bored guard sat behind a steel desk reading a copy of the
Marathi Times
.
The clerk spoke to the guard who reluctantly rose and led them to Cell 7. The guard punched a code into the keypad installed in the steel-plated door. It swung open and Chopra entered the cell, the door shutting automatically behind him.
The cell was dimly lit and it took a few seconds for his sun-blasted eyes to adjust to the gloom.
The room was spacious and, in comparison to the rest of the prison's facilities, opulent. The floor was marbled and a generous-sized single bed was bolted against one wall. There was even provision for a private bathroom. A number of posters of Bollywood film actresses adorned the wall above the bed. Chopra suspected that they had been left behind by the previous incumbent.
He had never been inside the Anda Cell. He knew that it was where the top criminals were lodged â the dons of the underworld or those suspected of terrorist bombings. An exposé earlier in the year had revealed that through bribery and intimidation such men lived a life of ease inside the Arthur Road Jail. This image had enticed at least one man to attack the guards stationed outside the prison in the hope that he would be arrested and thus be able to enjoy the âluxurious life of a convict instead of struggling like a beggar on the streets'. The prison's superintendent â the warden â had been arrested on bribery charges the previous year. He had been released on bail and remained in post, awaiting a trial date that would take years to arrive.
Slumped on the bed with his head in his hands was Inspector Shekhar Garewal.
Chopra had not seen Garewal in years.
Many moons ago they had worked together on a joint taskforce hunting down the suppliers of a new designer drug that had entered the city, working its way from the fashionable southern zones to the impressionable suburbs. Ultimately the taskforce had been successful and a number of unsavoury individuals with links to organised crime had been apprehended. Major shipments of the drug had been seized, and both Chopra and Garewal had been felicitated by their seniors. But since then the two officers had lost touch. Chopra had remained at the Sahar station, content to serve in the locality where he had spent most of his adult life. Garewal had moved on to better things.
Chopra remembered him now as an intensely ambitious man, one willing to cut corners when the need arose. For this reason he had never quite thought of Garewal as a friend.
Finally Garewal lifted his head from his hands and rose to face his visitor.
My God, what has happened to him? thought Chopra.
Garewal was wearing the standard uniform of the Indian penal system â white with black chevrons. His eyes were sunken and bruises had swollen his face, which seemed far older than his years. His short, greying hair was dishevelled. Garewal had never kept a moustache but a drunkard's day-old stubble now darkened his chin.
Garewal stared at Chopra and then stepped forward to clasp him in a desperate embrace, sobbing uncontrollably into his shoulder.
Eventually the astonished Chopra found his voice. âGet ahold of yourself, Garewal,' he said, perhaps more gruffly than he had intended. âWhat exactly is going on?'
Garewal stepped back, passing a sleeve across his face.
âThey've got me, Chopra. They've well and truly got me this time.'
âStart from the beginning,' said Chopra. âDon't leave anything out.'
Garewal nodded, his eyes hollow. âIt was my own fault. If I hadn't asked my uncleâ¦'
Chopra waited. âIf you hadn't asked your uncle what?'
âSix months ago when they made the announcement about the Crown Jewels I knew that whoever got the job would be set for life. The post of in-charge for the security of the jewels, I mean. I knew that if somehow I got it I could write my own ticket afterwards. So I asked my uncle â you know, the one who works for the Chief Minister? â to put in a good word for me. Of course, I promised to pay him one lakh rupees to show my gratitude. And another lakh for the CM, of course.
âThe next thing I knew I was given the assignment. I thought all my Diwalis had come at once. It wasn't as if I had to do too much thinking myself, you understand. There were all sorts of security experts to advise me. And the CM himself assigned the Force One brigade to the job. All I had to do was sit back and coordinate the operation. It was a dream gig.'
Garewal turned red-rimmed eyes to Chopra. âAnd now that the whole thing has blown up in my face, they're blaming me. They're saying I masterminded the whole show. That I stole the crown and with it the Koh-i-Noor!'
Chopra took a deep breath. âDid you?'
Garewal's face was pained. âHow can you ask me that? On the life of my children, I had nothing to do with it.'
âThen why do they think you did?'
âI don't know. They say I knew all the security procedures and how to get around them. They say I asked for the job. That I've been planning this from the very beginning.' Garewal looked ready to sob. âIt's a set-up, Chopra. They need a scapegoat and I am the goat. They're going to black warrant me for this!'
âNonsense. You're accused of theft, not murder. They can't black warrant you.'
âYou don't get it, do you? This is an international scandal. They need to show that they're doing something. They'll say I'm the mastermind and then they'll arrange it so I'm silenced in here. A knife in the back. Or maybe a convenient suicide. They'll never let me out of here, never. I am a dead man walking. Unless someone finds the real culprit.'
âWhat makes you think
they
won't?'
âBecause they've already nailed their colours to the mast. Oh, they'll
look
all right, but as each day passes the pressure will mount. Sooner or later they'll quietly drop it and announce to the world that all their enquiries have confirmed I am the one. And then I'm done for.'
âBut if you didn't do it, they won't get the crown back by pinning it on you.'
âBut at least they'll have a culprit. And that's why I won't make it out of here alive. Once they publicly confirm me as the thief, I'll have to be silenced. Even if they find the real thief later, they'll say I was his accomplice. You know I'm telling the truth.'
Chopra allowed Garewal's words to sink in, then said, âWhy did you call me?'
âWho else could I call? No one on the force will help me. They won't even allow me a lawyer â they say my constitutional rights have been suspended because this is a case of national security. You are the only one who can help me now, Chopra. You are a private investigator. I've gambled my life on you. Do you know I had to promise that guard outside a thousand rupees just to use his mobile phone to call you? If you don't help me, I am a dead man.'
Chopra thought Garewal would begin weeping again.
âThey beat me all last night,' Garewal whispered, his eyes dropping to the floor. âI think tonight they will use the electrodes.'
Chopra thought about what he would do in Garewal's position. He knew only too well the brutality with which his fellow officers often interrogated prisoners. And when the stakes were this high, who knew how far they would go.
He thought of Garewal's children. A boy and a girl. The boy would be ten by now and the girl nine. How would they fare if their father never came home again? How would they live under the shadow of a father accused of a crime that would never be forgotten?
âHow did you know I would take the case?' he asked finally.
Hope flared in Garewal's eyes. He stepped forward and stood under the room's single light fixture. The light threw shadows across his haggard features. âDo you remember that time we chased Arun Ganga up onto the roof of the old warehouse in SEEPZ?'
Chopra recalled the chase. In the dead of night Garewal had got a tip-off. He had roused Chopra and together they had gone into the industrial quarter known as SEEPZ, the Santacruz Electronic Export Processing Zone. The team had split up and, before Chopra knew it, he and Garewal were chasing the wanted serial murderer Ganga into a derelict warehouse.
âDo you remember, on the roof, you had Ganga in your sights? You could have shot him then and no one would have known. He was not the kind of man anyone would have shed tears over and I would never have told anyone. So why didn't you shoot him?'
Chopra was silent.
âYou always do the right thing, old friend,' said Garewal. âWell, now I need you to do the right thing by me. I need you to save my life.'
Chopra turned as the door to the cell swung open and two men barged into the room.
âChopra! What the hell are you doing here?'
The words exploded from the short, portly man with bulging cheeks, pomfret eyes and a pencil moustache that looked as if it had been drawn on by a child. He was dressed in the khaki of an Indian police officer, though Chopra had never considered him worthy of the uniform.
Suresh Rao had once been the Assistant Commissioner of Police in charge of three suburban police stations including Sahar. For many years he had been Chopra's commanding officer; for many more years, he had been Chopra's personal nemesis.
The two men had never seen eye to eye. Rao represented everything that Chopra loathed in the Indian police service. A man who donned the uniform to serve himself rather than the public who had placed their trust in him.
Following the scandal of the human trafficking ring he had heard that Rao had been hauled off by the Criminal Bureau of Investigation as part of a thorough enquiry into all those allegedly involved. But, in the perverse way of such things in Mumbai, far from having the stars ripped from his shoulder as Chopra had felt the man deserved, Rao had ended up being promoted into that same CBI unit and given the responsibility to investigate fellow officers accused of corruption.
Only in India, Chopra had thought darkly when he had heard the news.
Behind Rao towered a white man, one of the largest he had ever seen. His broad shoulders spread the width of the doorframe and a venomous paunch extended into the room. The man's face was thick and red, and above it the great dome of his skull gave way to a short skirt of peppery brown hair around a terrific island of baldness. A bristling moustache â streaked with grey and resembling a horse brush â sat under a bulbous nose. His eyes were gemstone blue and shaded by magnificent eyebrows.
The man was dressed in brown cavalry twill trousers, black oxfords and a starched white shirt with the sleeves rolled up. A linen jacket dangled from one massive fist. A crumpled black tie stamped with a prominent red and yellow crown hung loosely around his mottled neck. Saddlebags of sweat radiated from under his arms. The man's face was flushed and lathered. In fact, he was perspiring so heavily that even his sweat seemed to be sweating.
Chopra watched as the man lifted a sodden handkerchief to dab at his forehead.
âI asked you a question, Chopra.' Rao had moved closer so that the top of his own head was now level with Chopra's chin.
âI am here to see my client,' Chopra said woodenly.
âClient? What the hell are you talking about?'
âGarewal here has requested my help.'
Rao looked from Chopra to the stricken figure of Inspector Shekhar Garewal. Chopra saw that a cloud of terror shadowed Garewal's expression. With a burst of anger he understood that it was Rao who had inflicted the punishment manifest on his former colleague's face.