by Pallavi Tripathi, Durg
She dodged behind a point of support, her camera prepared.
It wasn’t the man from the train. It was another person — a young man, no more seasoned than 16, conveying a massive sack. He put the pack under the extension and left rapidly, looking behind him. Shruti’s heartbeat enlivened. What was taken care of? Drugs? Weapons?
She held on until the kid was far away prior to moving toward the pack. As she unfastened it, a foul smell hit her. Inside were piles of money, yet they were absorbed blood. Her stomach stirred, and she immediately zipped the pack back.
Before she could choose what to do, she heard voices. Two men were drawing closer, their tones quieted yet tense. Shruti took cover behind a heap of flotsam and jetsam, grasping her camera firmly.
“Why here? It’s excessively dangerous,” one man said.
“The manager needs the cash cleaned and moved,” the other answered. “No errors this time.”
Shruti looked out carefully, snapping a photograph of the men. One of them was the man from the train. The other was stocky, with a tattoo of a cobra on his arm. They got the pack and vanished into the evening.
Shruti’s psyche dashed. This wasn’t simply a modest racket; it was a greater thing. She concluded the time had come to get the police in question.
The following morning, Shruti reached Monitor Raghav of the Mumbai Wrongdoing Branch. She showed him the photographs and described what she had seen. He listened eagerly, his appearance becoming horrid.
“We’ve been following a tax evasion organization working out of Dharavi,” he said. “Your photographs may be the leading edge we want.”
Raghav set up a sting activity, utilizing Shruti’s data to design a strike. Shruti demanded being important for it — this was her story, all things considered.
The activity was set for the next night. Shruti, dressed subtly, joined the group as they invaded Dharavi. The labyrinth of back streets was bursting at the seams with risk, each shadow a possible danger.
They arrived at the calfskin studio where the man from the train had vanished. Inside, they found a secret room loaded up with cash-counting machines, counterfeit travel papers, and heaps of money. The men were there as well, alongside a few others.
As the police burst in, disorder emitted. The suspects attempted to escape, yet the limited rear entryways neutralized them. In no time, they were stifled. The man from the train frowned at Shruti as he was driven away, his scar curving into a growl.
“You’ve committed an error,” he murmured. “You don’t have any idea who no doubt about it.”
The result was a haze of police proclamations and media free for all. Shruti’s photographs and declaration were hailed as instrumental in breaking the case. In any case, she was unable to shake the man’s admonition.
After seven days, as she boarded the 8:14 Churchgate quick, she felt a bizarre feeling of disquiet. The train was bizarrely calm. As she subsided into her seat, she saw a collapsed piece of paper got into her sack. Her blood ran cold as she unfurled it.
“You halted us once, however the shadows are continuously watching. Be cautious, Shruti Thapar.”
Her heart beat as the train thundered into the dimness, the city’s bedlam covering the quiet danger that waited.
(Imagenary story)