Believe me, she’d murdered the sturdy man with her own hands. What a woman, Sahib! Whenever I recall that night every hair on my body stands on end. The heartless woman showed me the braided electric cord she had used to strangle Girdhari. She had attached a piece of wood to the cord and twisted it over and over again with such force that the poor man’s tongue and eyes had popped out. It only took minutes to finish him off, she told me.
She removed the piece of cloth and showed me Girdhari’s face, and I froze down to the marrow of my bones. What a woman! There, in front of her dead husband, she hugged me. I swear by the Qur’an. I immediately felt as though I’d become a dud forever. But, Sahib, the minute her body rubbed against mine and she gave me a strange sort of kiss, I was revived like never before. I’ll remember that night for the rest of my life. Oblivious of the corpse lying in front of us, Rukma and I were deeply absorbed in each other.
In the morning we hacked Girdhari’s body into three pieces. That was no trouble; the poor man’s tools came in handy. Yes, we made a lot of banging noise, but people must have thought that Girdhari was working. Well, now, you might ask: Why did you participate in such a gruesome deed? Sahib, if you want the truth, she’d made me her slave in just one night. Had she asked me, I would have had no trouble making short work of fifteen men. Remember, I’d told her as much.
The big problem now was how to dispose of the chopped-up body. Rukma, regardless of her pluck and nerve, was a woman after all. I told her, ‘Darling, don’t you worry. Let’s just dump the pieces in the trunk for now. I’ll carry it out at night and get rid of them.’ As luck would have it, a riot broke out that day and a lot of fighting and killing took place in five or six areas of the city. A thirty-six-hour curfew was imposed. I told myself, ‘Abdul Karim, you must dispose of the body today no matter what.’ So I got up at two in the morning and hauled the trunk out of her kholi. God, it was heavy! I was afraid of running into a khakiturban any minute somewhere on my way and be arrested for breaking the curfew. But, Sahib, no one harms him whom God wishes to protect. Every single bazaar I passed through was deathly still. I spotted a small mosque near one bazaar. I opened the trunk, threw the pieces inside the mosque’s courtyard and went back.
Oh, wouldn’t a man sacrifice his life to the Lord’s absolute power! Come morning it was discovered that Hindus had set fire to that mosque. Girdhari must have been burned up with it, I imagined. Now, Sahib, there was no impediment. I advised Rukma to let it be known in the chawl that Girdhari had gone out with his toys. I would visit her about two-thirty in the morning and we’d have action. She said, ‘Abdul, let’s not be hasty. Let’s not meet at all for a fortnight.’ That made sense. I kept quiet.
Seventeen days passed. Girdhari stole into my dreams to frighten me, but I told him, ‘Saala, you’re finished, dead. You can’t do a thing to me now.’ On the night of the eighteenth day, as I was sleeping at the foot of the stairs as usual, Rukma came, woke me up and led me to her quarters. It must have been around twelve, or at most one.
She stretched out naked on the mat and said, ‘Abdul, my body is aching. Come, give me a massage.’
I quickly took some oil and started rubbing it over her body. I was out of breath within half an hour and a few drops of my perspiration dripped on to her clammy body. But would she ever say, ‘You can stop now, you must be tired’? Eventually, I had to say, ‘Rukma, that should do it.’ She smiled, and what a smile it was! After catching my breath I sat down on the mat. She got up, turned off the light, and snuggled up to me. I was so exhausted from the hard work of massaging her that I couldn’t think straight. I just put my arm on her breast and dozed off.
At some point I woke up with a start, feeling confused. I felt something hard digging into my neck. The thought of that twisted electric cord ran through my mind. Before I could free myself from the tightening noose, she had already mounted my chest. She pulled the cord with such force that my throat began to make cackling sounds. I tried to scream, but my voice couldn’t leave my throat. After that I passed out.
I believe it must have been around four when I slowly came to. My neck was hurting badly. I stayed put and started unravelling the cord around my neck slowly. Suddenly I heard noises. Holding my breath with my eyes wide open, I probed the pitch-dark room but saw nothing. The noises gave the impression that two men were wrestling. Rukma was gasping. Breathless, she said, ‘Tikka Ram, turn on the light!’ A frightened Tikka Ram peeped feebly, ‘No, no. Rukma, no.’ She said in a mocking tone, ‘So timid! How will you cut him up and carry the pieces out in the morning?’ My body froze stiff. I have no idea what Tikka Ram‘s response was.
God knows at what point the light suddenly came on. I sat up, rubbing my eyes. Tikka Ram let out a scream, hurriedly opened the door and took off. Rukma quickly closed the door behind him and latched it securely. Sahib, how can I ever tell you about my state then. Although my eyes were wide open and I was seeing and hearing everything, I had absolutely no strength to move.
Tikka Ram was not somebody I didn’t know. He often came to our chawl hawking mangoes. I have no idea how Rukma managed to hook up with him.
She was gaping at me as if she didn’t believe her eyes. She thought she had killed me. But there I was, alive and breathing right in front of her. She was about to pounce on me when there was a knock at the door followed by a crescendo of voices. She quickly grabbed my hand and dragged me into the bathroom. Then she opened the front door. The people outside were all chawl-wallahs. They asked her, ‘Is everything all right? We just heard a scream.’ ‘Everything is fine,’ she replied. ‘It’s just that I have this habit of walking in my sleep. When I opened the door and came out, I dashed against the wall. I panicked and screamed. That’s all.’ The people felt satisfied with her explanation and left.
Rukma shut the door and latched it tightly. I was worried sick thinking of what lay in store for me. Believe me, sir, the thought that the wretch wouldn’t spare me produced a burst of energy in me, spurring me to fight her with all my might. In fact, I decided to hack her to pieces. When I managed to get out of the bathroom and saw her peering out of the big window, I rushed over to her, lifted her rear end and pushed her out. All this happened in a blink. I heard a heavy thud, quickly opened the door and cleared out. Lying on my cot, for the rest of the night I kept rubbing oil on my badly frayed neck to sooth it — here, you can see the bruises. None of the neighbours would have a clue about what happened, I thought with satisfaction. Didn’t she herself tell them that she walked in her sleep? Her corpse lying on the other side of the chawl would convince them that she must have been sleepwalking and had fallen out the window. Dawn broke, taking all the time in the world. I wrapped a kerchief around my neck to hide the bruises. Nine o’clock, and then twelve, but nobody was talking about her dead body. She had landed in a long, narrow space wedged between two tenements with a door at either end to stop people from using it as a toilet. Still quite a heap of trash tossed out of the windows of the two buildings collected here and the sweeper woman carried it away every morning and evening. Perhaps she hadn’t come to collect garbage that day, I thought, for if she had, she would have noticed Rukma’s dead body as soon as she entered and would have made quite a hullabaloo. What the hell was going on? I wanted people to know about it without delay. By two o’clock, I couldn’t hold back any more. I opened the door and peeked. I was stunned. No dead body, no garbage either. Wonders! Where the hell had Rukma disappeared? I swear by the Qur’an, if I ever walk away from the hangman’s noose a free man, it won’t surprise me more than her inexplicable disappearance. I’d pushed her from the third floor on to the cobbled ground below. How could she have survived? But then who had carried her corpse away? Reason refuses to accept it, but who knows, Sahib, the kind of woman she was, she might have walked out alive. Chawl-wallahs think that some Muslim either made off with her or killed her. Good for him if he killed her, but if he’s keeping her in his house, you can imagine what end he’ll come to. God save him, Sahib.
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