First Chapter Reveal: The Color of Our Sky by Amita Trasi #suspense
Title: The Color of Our Sky
Author: Amita Trasi
Publisher: Bloomhill Books
Pages: 304
Genre: Women’s Fiction/Suspense
Format:Paperback/Kindle
Author: Amita Trasi
Publisher: Bloomhill Books
Pages: 304
Genre: Women’s Fiction/Suspense
Format:Paperback/Kindle
A
sweeping, emotional journey of two childhood friends—one struggling to survive
the human slave trade and the other on a mission to save her—two girls whose
lives converge only to change one fateful night in 1993.
For More Information
- The Color of Our Sky is available at Amazon.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
India,
1986: Mukta, a ten-year-old girl from the lower caste Yellamma cult of temple
prostitutes has come of age to fulfill her destiny of becoming a temple
prostitute. In an attempt to escape this legacy that binds her, Mukta is
transported to a foster family in Bombay.
There she discovers a friend in the high spirited eight-year-old Tara, the
tomboyish daughter of the family, who helps her recover from the wounds of her
past. Tara introduces Mukta to a different world—ice
cream and sweets, poems and stories, and a friendship the likes of which she
has never experienced before. In 1993, Mukta is kidnapped from Tara’s
room.
Eleven
years later, Tara who blames herself for what happened, embarks on an emotional
journey to search for the kidnapped Mukta only to uncover long buried secrets
in her own family.
Moving
from a remote village in India
to the bustling metropolis of Bombay,
to Los Angeles and back again,
amidst the brutal world of human trafficking, this is a heartbreaking and
beautiful portrait of an unlikely friendship—a story of love, betrayal, and
redemption—which ultimately withstands the true test of time.
First Chapter:
Mumbai, India
June 2004
The memory of that moment hit me like a surging
ocean wave—drawing me into it—the sour smell of darkness, those sobs erupting
like an echo from a bottomless pit. I had tried to break away from it for so
long I had forgotten that places can have memories too. I stood in the dimly
lit corridor outside my childhood home and tried to unlock the door. The keys
rattled in my hand and fell to the floor. This was proving to be more difficult
than I had thought. One deep breath and you will find the courage Papa
used to tell me when I was a child. Now, in my mid-twenties, here I was,
standing outside this locked door, feeling like a child once again.
I picked up the keys and tried again. The doors
creaked as I managed to push them open. The apartment was dark. Outside, the
sky thundered and rain rammed the rooftops. A stray slant of sunlight fell on
furniture that had gathered dust over the years, and I stood in that unlit room
looking at the old cobwebs crowding the corners of what had once been my home.
I switched on the lights and wiped the dust off my writing desk with a smooth
stroke of my hand. It is just an apartment, I told myself. But there
were so many things from my childhood here—my writing desk where Papa had sat
down next to me, teaching me how to write, and the couch where we had watched
television together as a family.
In my bedroom, my bed stood neatly covered, just
the way I had left it. I could hear the
sound of our laughter, smell my childhood—the food Aai used to cook and
lovingly feed me—that wafting floral smell of saffron in the pulao,
turmeric perfumed dal, the sweet rasgullas. There wasn’t any such
smell of course, not anymore. All that was left was just a musty odor from
closed doors, from buried secrets.
A cloud of dust erupted as I parted the curtains.
Outside, the rain was falling softly, leaves cradling the raindrops. The scene
was still the same as when Papa and I had moved away to Los Angeles eleven
years ago: the zooming in and out of traffic, the honking of rickshaws and
cars, the distant barking of stray dogs, the sprawled slums in the distance.
Standing here, my suitcases lonely in the doorway, I understood why Papa had
never tried to sell or rent this apartment. After making a home in America for
eleven years, he had hoped to return one day to search for Mukta. After all,
this was where she was kidnapped.
It is said that time heals everything. I don’t
think that’s true. As the years have gone by, I’ve found it odd how simple
things can still remind you of those terrible times or how the moment you try
so hard to forget becomes your sharpest memory.
I stepped out of my apartment that day determined
to find answers. The taxi drivers stood in a queue, waiting, hoping, begging
you to take a ride from them. There was something about this city that I would
never forget. I could see it everywhere, smell it, hear it—the dreams that
lingered on people’s faces, the smell of sweat and grime, the sound of distant
chaos in the air. This was where it had happened—where walls had blown apart,
vehicles had blown away, simple shards of glass had splintered lives, and our
loved ones had become memories. Standing here, an image of Aai floated before
my eyes, waiting for me somewhere, her kohl-lined eyes tearing up as she took
me in her arms. It was different before the blasts had come and taken her away.
“Madam, I
taking you anywhere you wanting to go,” a taxi driver called out.
“No here, here . . .” another taxi driver waved.
I nodded to one of them and he hurriedly got
behind the wheel. It began drizzling as I stepped inside. The rain fell softly
around us.
“Take me to the police station in Dadar,” I told
him.
“Madam, you coming from foreign, no? I
understanding from the way you speaking. I taking you to the bestest hotels in
Mumbai. You will—”
“Take me to the police station,” I repeated,
sternly.
The driver
was quiet the rest of the way, humming quietly to the tune of Bollywood music
roaring through the speakers in his taxi. Outside, the slum dwellers and street
children picking through garbage rolled past us. Heat hovered over the city
despite the drizzle, and the wind smelled of smoke, curry, and drains. People
still walked dangerously close to the speeding traffic, rickshaws sputtered
alongside, and beggars knocked on my taxi window asking for money. The
footpaths still housed many of the poor who lived in makeshift tents, women
haggled with hawkers in the bazaars, and men loitered in corners giving vacant
stares. Behind them, Bollywood movie posters on walls announced the latest
movies.
When I was a child, Papa had taken me for a walk
on these very streets. Once I had accompanied Aai to the bazaars and haggled
with shopkeepers alongside her. And there was a time I had sat in the backseat
of a taxi with Mukta next to me while Papa had taken us to the Asiatic library.
How excitedly I had shown her the sea, the garden, and introduced her to my
world. How many times had she walked with me to my school, carrying my
schoolbag, or sat with me on the park bench slurping iced golas? Now,
sitting in the backseat of this taxi, my stomach churned. These moments seemed
to paralyze me; I was unable to breathe, as if the crime I had committed was
slowly strangling me. I pressed my face closer to the open window and forced
myself to breathe.
“Here madam, that’s the police station,” the
driver announced as he pulled over.
It was raining very hard when the taxi came to a
stop, the wipers whipping wildly against the windshield. I stepped into
ankle-deep water as I got down, the rain beating against my umbrella. I paid
the taxi driver. In the distance, near the garbage cans, children in raincoats
splashed water on each other, their giggles coming in waves.
At the station, I found a place on the bench in
the corner and dropped my purse in my lap. Eleven years ago Papa and I had sat
on one such bench in this police station, waiting for hours, to understand what
had happened to us, trying to make sense of it all. Now, as I sat straight,
sandwiched between strangers waiting their turn, I wished Papa were sitting
beside me. In a way, I still carried him with me—his remains—his ashes, capped
tightly in a bottle in my purse. I had brought them here to disperse in the
river, something I needed to do, something that was in accordance with his last
wishes.
A constable
sat at a table nearby, his head behind a mountain of files; another sat
behind him at another table, listening to complaints and noting them in a
register, while yet another sat on a chair not far away, his head buried in a
newspaper. A chaiwala rushed past us carrying chai, placing the
glasses of brown liquid on every table. Outside, police sirens pierced the air,
and the policemen dragged two handcuffed men inside.
The woman before me sobbed and urged the constable
to find her missing son. He yawned, scribbled something in the register, and
then shooed her away. When it was my turn, I sat in front of him. He rubbed his
eyes. “What is your complaint now?” he asked, sounding bored.
“I want to speak to your senior inspector.”
He looked up from his register and narrowed his
eyes, “About what, madam?”
The wooden board behind him had a chart of the
number of murders and kidnappings this year and the cases they had solved.
“It is about a kidnapping that happened eleven
years ago. A girl was kidnapped. My father filed a report then.”
“Eleven years?” The constable raised his eyebrows.
“And you want to search for her now?”
I nodded.
He looked at me curiously and sighed. “Okay, you
wait,” he said, then walked to a closed room and knocked on the door. An
inspector opened the door; the constable pointed to me and whispered
something. The inspector gave me a glance and then walked toward me.
“Inspector Pravin Godbole,” he said, shaking my
hand and introducing himself as the senior inspector of the station.
“I have . . . I am . . . looking for a girl who
was kidnapped. Please, you have to help me. I-I just arrived after a long
flight from America.”
“Give me a
few minutes please; I have someone in my office. I can review your case after
that.”
The constable escorted me to his office
after some time. Inspector Godbole had sharp, intelligent eyes that I hoped
would be able to see what others had been unable to see. He asked me to take a
seat. His hat with the emblem Satyamev Jayate—truth alone triumphs—sat
on the desk.
“What can I do for you?”
I sat down, opened my wallet, and teased out the
photograph. How young we looked then—Mukta and I—standing outside the Asiatic
library. He took it from my hand and looked at the photograph.
“I am looking for her, for the girl in the
photograph,” I said.
“Which one?” he asked, squinting at the
photograph.
“The one on the right, that’s me. The other
one—she was kidnapped eleven years ago.”
His eyebrows angled upward. “Eleven years ago?”
“Uh . . . yes. She was kidnapped from our home
just after the 1993 bomb blasts. I was in the room with her when it happened.”
“So you saw the kidnapper?”
I paused.
“No . . . not really,” I lied.
The inspector nodded.
“Her name
was . . . is Mukta. She was a girl . . . an orphan my parents fostered.”
I explained, “My Papa was a kind man. He used to work with many NGOs and
orphanages in his spare time to find a home for abandoned children. Sometimes
he brought them back to our apartment. He rescued street children or poor kids
from villages—one or two at a time—and let them stay in our home. They slept in
the kitchen, ate food Aai made, and then in a few days Papa found them a place
at one orphanage or another. Papa did good any opportunity he got. With Mukta .
. . he tried so hard. Something happened to her back in her village. She just
didn’t speak for a long time. She—”
“I see, I see,” he interrupted. “We’ll try to find
her.”
I wanted to tell him that, unlike the other kids
who had lived with us for barely a week or two, Mukta had been with us for five
years. And that she was a good friend. I wanted to tell him how she liked
reading poems and was afraid of the rain . . . and that we had wanted to grow
up together.
“Ms. Tara?”
“My . . . my father had filed an FIR back then . .
. of . . . of the kidnapping.”
The inspector took a deep breath, scratched the
stubble on his chin, and brought the photograph close to his face, staring at
the picture. The photograph was worn out and wrinkled by age like a precious
memory frozen in time, both of us smiling at the camera.
“Ms. Tara, this was such a long time ago. She will
be . . . older now. And we don’t have a recent picture. It will be very
difficult to search for someone without a recent picture. But let me have a
look at her file. I will have to contact the missing person’s bureau. Why look
for a poor village child after all these years? Has she stolen something
precious from your home? Like an heirloom or something?”
“No. No . . . it’s just . . . Papa worked so hard
to give the other children a home. I suppose Papa thought Mukta was the only one
who slipped through the cracks . . . someone he couldn’t protect. He never
forgave himself for that. At the time the police told us they had searched for
her. Papa told me she was dead. Maybe a police inspector told him that. I don’t
know. Papa took me to America after that. I . . . I didn’t know she was alive.
I found some documents in his drawer after his death. He had been searching for
her. And all this time he had been looking for her, I thought she was dead.”
“Nobody looks for such children who have
disappeared madam. Look at all the children living in the slums—there is no one
to take proper care of them, let alone worry how they are doing if they
disappear.”
I looked at
him, not saying anything. There hasn’t been a moment in the last eleven years
that I haven’t wanted to wander back to that summer night, to that split second
when I could have done something to stop it. I knew who the kidnapper was; I
had always known. I had planned it after all. But I didn’t tell the inspector
this, I couldn’t. There would be way more things I would have to reveal than
just that.
He flicked the photograph in his hand and sighed
loudly. “Give me a few days. I will look through the files. We are backlogged
with many cases now. You can give the constable all the details.” He signaled
to him and asked him to escort me outside.
“Thank you very much,” I said, standing up.
At the door I turned to him again. “It would be
great if you can help me find her.” He lifted his head momentarily and gave me
a slight nod before going back to his work. It took the constable a few minutes
to take down the details.
I left the station and stood on the porch watching
the police jeeps parked outside, constables carrying files, people waiting
impatiently, and suddenly it seemed futile to have come to this place, to have
asked for their help. They hadn’t even asked the right questions: Did I
remember the day when it happened? What were the sounds I heard before I knew
what was happening? The exact time on the bedroom clock? Why did the kidnapper
not kidnap me instead? Why did I not scream? Why did I not wake up Papa who was
sleeping in the next room? If they had asked me those questions, I was afraid
the truth would come spilling out of me.
I lit up a cigarette, took a couple puffs, and let
the smoke drift through my nostrils. The two women constables standing on the
porch gave me a dirty look. I smiled to myself. Not many women smoked here. My
first cigarette had been in America with Brian when I was eighteen. Brian, my
fiancé, had once been the love of my life, and I had conveniently left him
behind in Los Angeles. If things hadn’t changed, Brian and I would be lolling
lazily on a beach right about now, watching the waves surge and recede. I
sighed as I noticed the lack of a ring on my finger, threw the cigarette butt
on the floor, and squashed it under my foot.
A cold wet breeze hit me as I walked outside onto
a noisy street. A six-year-old girl in tattered clothes scurried toward me,
unmindful of her soiled and bleeding feet, spread out her palm, and looked at
me pleadingly. I looked into her hopeful eyes for a second. She held my gaze. A
team of child beggars watched me curiously from a distance. I searched my purse
to find some rupee notes and handed them to her. Within seconds all the beggars
enveloped me, begging for money. I distributed some notes between them. The
children whooped and screamed in joy as they darted away.
“Is there a restaurant nearby?” I asked one of the
beggar boys. He smiled; his pearly whites shone against his dark skin.
“There madam, the best chai . . . very
good, very zhakas” he said, and waved me a goodbye.
The
restaurant wasn’t very busy this time of the day. I plopped my luggage on a
chair and ordered a sandwich and tea. Ten to twelve-year-old boys were wiping
the tables. Flies lingered on the damp surfaces. A waiter brought me a glass of
chai. Outside the sky was clearing, the clouds making way for the clear
blue. When Mukta had first arrived I had often found her sitting in our dark
and dingy storage room, gazing out the window, staring at the stars in the sky
as if seeking something in them. I remember a night when my parents had been
asleep and I had tiptoed to her room to find her looking at the sky. She turned
to me, surprised that I had appeared in the dark.
“What do you look for in the sky?” I had asked.
“Look,” she pointed to the sky, “you can see for
yourself.”
I entered her room, sat beside her, and looked at
the stars sparkling like diamonds in the night sky.
“Amma used to say that when we die, we become
stars. She said when she died she would become a star and watch over me. But
you see, there are so many of them. I don’t know which one of them is Amma.
Probably if I look hard enough, I will be able to see. She may send a signal to
me. You don’t believe it?”
I shrugged. “I don’t know. If you believe it, it
might be true.”
“It is true,” she whispered. “You just have
to look hard enough.”
We sat there for some time, watching the stars in
the cloudless night sky.
I sat with her late that night and for many nights
after that one. For many nights over the years, we sat under the moonlight in
that dark dingy room talking about our lives. It became our way of escaping the
world. It was Mukta who taught me the sky was like a stage where clouds formed
characters, morphed into different shapes, and drifted toward each other. It
told us more stories than we could have ever read, more than our imaginations
could afford.
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