bedroom door, looking intensely at a dense circle of two-inch-long wounds in the wood, aboutchest-high. As Sartaj watched, she sighed, raised her hand and stabbed the door again. Shehad to struggle with both hands on the handle to get the knife out.'Mrs Pandey,' Sartaj said.She turned to them, the knife still in a double-handed grip, held high. She had a pale,tear-stained face and tiny bare feet under her white nightie.'Mrs Pandey, I am Inspector Sartaj Singh,' Sartaj said. 'I'd like you to put down thatknife, please.' He took a step, hands held up and palms forward. 'Please,' he said. But MrsPandey's eyes were wide and blank, and except for the quivering of her forearms she wasquite still. The hallway they were in was narrow, and Sartaj could feel Katekar behind him,wanting to pass. Sartaj stopped moving. Another step and he would be comfortably within aswing of the knife.'Police?' a voice said from behind the bedroom door. 'Police?'Mrs Pandey started, as if remembering something, and then she said, 'Bastard, bastard,'and slashed at the door again. She was tired now, and the point bounced off the wood andraked across it, and Sartaj bent her wrist back and took the knife quite easily from her. But shesmashed at the door with her hands, breaking her bangles, and her last wiry burst of anger washard to hold and contain. Finally they sat her down on the green sofa in the drawing room.'Shoot him,' she said. 'Shoot him.' Then she put her head in her hands. There weregreen and blue bruises on her shoulder. Katekar was back at the bedroom door, murmuring.'What did you fight about?' Sartaj said.'He wants me not to fly any more.''What?''I'm an air-hostess. He thinks…''Yes?'She had startling light-brown eyes, and she was angry at Sartaj for asking. 'He thinkssince I'm an air hostess, I keep hostessing the pilots on stopovers,' she said, and turned her face to the window.Katekar was walking the husband over now, with a hand on his neck. Mr Pandeyhitched up his silky red-and-black striped pyjamas, and smiled confidentially at Sartaj. 'Thank you,' he said. 'Thanks for coming.''So you like to hit your wife, Mr Pandey?' Sartaj barked, leaning forward. Katekar satthe man down, hard, while he still had his mouth open. It was nicely done. Katekar was asenior constable, an old subordinate, a colleague really – they had worked together for almostseven years now, off and on. 'You like to hit her, and then you throw a poor puppy out of awindow? And then you call us to save you?''She said I hit her?''I have eyes. I can see.''Then look at this,' Mr Pandey said, his jaw twisting. 'Look, look, look at this.' And he pulled up his left pyjama jacket sleeve, revealing a shiny silver watch and four evenly spacedscratches, livid and deep, running from the inside of the wrist around to the elbow. 'More, I'vegot more,' Mr Pandey said, and bowed low at the waist and lowered his head and twisted toraise his collar away from the skin. Sartaj got up and walked around the coffee table. Therewas a corrugated red welt on Mr Pandey's shoulder blade, and Sartaj couldn't see how far down it went.'What's that from?' Sartaj said.'She broke a Kashmiri walking stick on my back. This thick, it was,' Mr Pandey said,holding up his thumb and forefinger circled.Sartaj walked to the window. There was a group of uniformed boys clustering aroundthe small white body below, pushing each other closer to it. The St Mary's girls were3
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