rolled out of bed?) clutched Malikâs wrist; he smelled of sweat and gutka.
The smell of sweat had become Malikâs relentless companion in the past month, in the heat of Delhi, in his small cell that he shared with ten others.This is the difference between being free and not. Freedom (at least temporarily) from the sweat of others.
Everyone in the courtroom fell silent. The hustle and bustle of the judgeâs various assistants died down, and only the judgeâs voice and the stenographerâs thwacks could be heard. The judge made a few remarks and read a list of charges against the men. Malik and the others stood in front of the judge, facing him, but all Malik could think about was his hunger. He had been fed his breakfast at six a.m. as usual, but had been given his âlunchâ at seven thirty a.m. That was because you could not eat outside the jail. He was dying of thirst and hunger. âBarbarous actions  . . . Civilization  . . . The killing of innocents,â the judge said.
âBread. Pizza. Chow mein,â Malikthought.
MR. AND MRS. KHURANAâS RESPONSE TO TERROR
1996â1997
CHAPTER 6
D eepa and Vikas and Sharif and Afsheen were in the crowd.
When they had heard about the arrests, theyâd been excited, passionately angry, each person exercising his or her fantasy of murder and revenge. Deepa imagined scalding the terroristsâ faces with cooking oil. Vikas smashed their heads with blunt metal rods. Afsheen thought, improbably, of delivering injections to their eyes. Sharif, who, in person, was the most bad-tempered of the lot, was the most subdued in his imagination. Slitting their necks quickly would do the trick, he thought.
But when the four victims, or kin of victims, sat in the court and saw the terrorists, observed the state of the room in which they were being processedâthe cobwebs blousy in the corners, the guano dissolving the floor, the twitchy fan above barely containing the fire of the afternoonâthey became dispirited.
Vikas put his arm around Deepaâs narrow frame and pressed her bones. She sat next to him on a plastic chair, tense and perched forward. She had been a good, diligent student and he half-expected her to bring out a notebook and sublimate her rage with flowering handwriting.
The menâbearded, gaunt, fair, dressed in sports windbreakers (as if theyâd come from cricket practice)âlooked middle-class, harmless. Unlike the criminals the Khuranas had seen in the court complex, they were not even handcuffed. Each man was held at the wrist by a paunchy policeman. One of the prisoners seemed to be on familiar terms with his escort and was laughing and showing his yellow teeth.
Were these the people who had killed her children? Deepa wondered. Their personalities did not add up to a bomb.
She became thoughtful and pensive, confused, shouted back to reality. She was aware, suddenly, that the death of her children was not a metaphysical event, but a
crime
. A firecracker set off by uncaring men in a market. She did not trust the government or the courts to do anything.
After the adjournment, the Khuranas and Ahmeds rose and went out into the heat. âIf the next hearing is in September, how long does that mean the case will go on?â Deepa asked. The court complex pressed on them from all sides. In tiny huts sat lawyers amid alcoves of dusty tomes, cracking jokes. Tall British buildings hogged the sky. Men of various sizes and speeds threw their legs along the winding medieval streets, chatting, exchanging information.
Sharif, strolling plumply in slippers, said, âIn the past these cases have gone on for five, ten years.â
âBecause the blast was in Delhi, itâll be faster,â Vikas said quickly.
âIâve had a lot of experience with the justice system,â Sharif said. âItâs all about un-law and un-care.â
âThe important thing is that theyâve
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