The price of a rooster
They stopped him above Tista where the road curved up into the vicious climb called Kaazimaan-ko-ukkaalo: each armed with a long curved knife and the tallest dangled a black revolver from languid fingers. Are you, they asked him, the one that killed the rooster this morning?
The rooster. Funny how, after all these years, he automatically avoided calling it a cock. A knee-jerk reaction, he wryly acknowledged, acquired during his school days when the inadvertent double entendre had often made him the butt of ribald jokes. The red rooster had been poised for flight on the far side of the road, safely out of his path. He had seen it well in time but had been concentrating on bringing the Royal Enfield fast down the steep incline, its big four-stroke engine a threnody in second gear. The nervous bird, a picture of indecision, decided to dodge across the road at the last – and worst — possible moment. Brakes. Slight skid. Bike lurching, straight again. A squawk. And then it was gone. Leaving a note of querulous agony pegged on the staves of the warm morning air.