Page 126 - Train to Pakistan
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came bouncing down the river. The men moved up towards the bridge to see
some corpses which had drifted near the bank.
They stood and stared.
‘Lambardara, they were not drowned. They were murdered.’
An old peasant with a grey beard lay flat on the water. His arms were
stretched out as if he had been crucified. His mouth was wide open and showed
his toothless gums, his eyes were covered with film, his hair floated about his
head like a halo. He had a deep wound on his neck which slanted down from the
side to the chest. A child’s head butted into the old man’s armpit. There was a
hole in its back. There were many others coming down the river like logs hewn
on the mountains and cast into streams to be carried down to the plains. A few
passed through the middle of the arches and sped onward faster. Others bumped
into the piers and turned over to show their wounds till the current turned them
over again. Some were without limbs, some had their bellies torn open, many
women’s breasts were slashed. They floated down the sunlit river, bobbing up
and down. Overhead hung the kites and vultures.
The lambardar and the villagers drew the ends of their turbans across their
faces. ‘The Guru have mercy on us,’ someone whispered. ‘There has been a
massacre somewhere. We must inform the police.’
‘Police?’ a small man said bitterly. ‘What will they do? Write a first
information report?’
Sick and with heavy hearts, the party turned back to Mano Majra. They did
not know what to say to people when they got back. The river had risen further?
Some villages had been flooded? There had been a massacre somewhere
upstream? There were hundreds of corpses floating on the Sutlej? Or, just keep
quiet?
When they came back to the village nobody was about to hear what they had
to say. They were all on the rooftops looking at the station. After several days a
train had drawn up at Mano Majra in the daytime. Since the engine faced
eastward, it must have come from Pakistan. This time too the place was full of
soldiers and policemen and the station had been cordoned off. The news of the
corpses on the river was shouted from the housetops. People told each other
about the mutilation of women and children. Nobody wanted to know who the
dead people were nor wanted to go to the river to find out. There was a new
interest at the station, with promise of worse horrors than the last one.
There was no doubt in anyone’s mind what the train contained. They were