Gangubai’s brothel was basically a giant warehouse packed with over a hundred and fifty girls. The establishment had two storeys. The ground floor was a large hall, while the upper floor had private rooms. These included Gangubai’s quarters — a self-contained apartment with two rooms and a kitchen. The drawing-room had a balcony that faced the road while the bedroom had an attached bathroom and toilet. She lived there alone.
(Excerpted from Cages: Love And Vengeance In A Red-Light District by Aabid Surti, Translated by Aalif Surti, with permission from Penguin Random House India. The novel was first published in Gujarati as ‘Vasaksajja’ (Lokpriya Prakashan, Bombay) in 1979)
(Aabid Surti is a painter, author, cartoonist, journalist, environmentalist, playwright and screenwriter. He was given a National Award in 1993 for writing a series of short stories called the ‘Teesri Aankh’)