Imagine the days when Delhi had not one but three red-light areas – Chawri Bazar, the square opposite the Red Fort and Kashmere Gate! This is what Pandit Ramchandra of Ravi Brothers furniture firm used to say in 1964. He was over 90 years old then with vivid memories of the British times when the sexually starved Tommies made merry, particularly near the fort and in Kashmere Gate. When New Delhi came up, no provision was made for a red-light area in it because Lord Hardinge, the Viceroy, thought that after the closure of the two in North Delhi, the one in Chawri Bazar was enough because of its proximity to Connaught Place and the Tommies safely entrenched in the new Cantonment. But there were enough girlfriends for them in the weekend clubs, among whom the four Hamilton sisters were the foremost. Panditji recalled that he used to swim to school from Qudsia Ghat during the monsoon when the Tommies came there for fishing on Saturday afternoons.