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Chapter 3 - House No. 13

**Scene Name: "The Sugar and the Shadow"** 

 **Scene 1: The House Breathes** 

The Sulemans return to House No. 13 at dawn, their meager possessions piled on a rented donkey cart. The morning sun glares off the cracked windows, giving the house a jaundiced leer. 

**Amina** (clutching her rosary): 

"*Mashallah*, it's spacious. We'll plant marigolds by the door." 

**Haris** (sniffing the air): 

"Smells like… *burnt sugar*. As if someone torched a *mithai* shop." 

**Zain** (unloading bundles): 

"Old pipes, maybe. Or rats nesting in the walls." 

The donkey brays suddenly, backing away. Its eyes roll white as the cart tilts, spilling pots and pans onto the dirt. 

**Zain** (gripping the reins): 

"*Shaitaan ka sawaar hai kya?* What's gotten into you?" 

The donkey bolts, leaving the family stranded. The house creaks, its front door swinging open. 

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**Scene 2: The Landlord's Visit** 

**Mr. Zaidi**, the landlord, arrives at noon—a gaunt man in a threadbare suit, smelling of mothballs and regret. He avoids stepping inside, lingering on the threshold. 

**Mr. Zaidi** (avoiding eye contact): 

"Rent's due every Friday. No extensions. And… *the attic's locked*. Don't pry." 

**Haris** (narrowing his eyes): 

"Why? What's up there?" 

**Mr. Zaidi** (backing away): 

"Nothing. *Nothing at all*. Just… respect the rules." 

He flees, nearly tripping over a loose cobblestone. Amina watches him go, fingers worrying her rosary beads. 

**Amina** (to Zain): 

"He's hiding something. Maybe treasure!" 

**Zain** (dry): 

"Or bodies." 

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 **Scene 3: The Attic's Whisper** 

The family explores the house. The ground floor is cavernous, its high ceilings strung with cobwebs. The walls bear ghostly outlines where paintings once hung. 

**Haris** (tapping a wall): 

"British-era construction. Solid, but—" 

A muffled *thud* echoes from above. All three freeze. 

**Zain** (staring at the ceiling): 

"The attic." 

They climb the staircase, its steps groaning. At the top, a rusted padlock secures a warped wooden door. The air here is colder, the burnt sugar stench overpowering. 

**Amina** (producing the rusted key): 

"Should we…?" 

**Haris** (grabbing her wrist): 

"*Nehi!* That fool Zaidi said—" 

**Zain** (noticing scratches): 

"Look. Claw marks." 

Three parallel gashes score the door's base—too large for a cat, too precise for rats. 

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 **Scene 4: The Scorched Toy** 

In the overgrown backyard, Haris clears weeds for a vegetable patch. His spade strikes something hard. 

**Haris** (digging): 

"Amina! Come see!" 

He unearths a **charred porcelain doll**, its face melted into a scream. One glass eye remains, reflecting the house's windows. 

**Amina** (crossing herself): 

"*Khuda ki panah…* Burned alive, poor thing." 

**Zain** (examining it): 

"Old. Pre-Partition, maybe. British-made." 

**Haris** (dropping the doll): 

"Toss it. Bad luck." 

The doll's head cracks as it hits the ground. A **blackened rupee coin** rolls out. 

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**Scene 5: The First Night** 

Nightfall brings a suffocating silence. The family huddles in the parlor around a kerosene lamp. Amina hums a Sufi *kalam* to ward off the dark. 

**Zain** (sharpening a knife): 

"I'll fix the locks tomorrow. And patch the roof." 

**Haris** (stoking a feeble fire): 

"We need wood. That neem tree outside—" 

A child's giggle cuts through the room. High-pitched, playful. 

**Amina** (standing): 

"Who's there?" 

Silence. The lamp flickers. 

**Haris** (gruff): 

"Wind in the pipes." 

But Zain's knife gleams in his tightened grip. 

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 **Scene 6: The Shadow at the Threshold** 

At midnight, Amina wakes to a *scraping sound*—like nails dragging across floorboards. The kerosene lamp has died. Moonlight bleeds through cracks in the shutters. 

**Amina** (whispering): 

"Haris? *Jaanu?*" 

No answer. Haris snores beside her. 

The scraping intensifies. A shadow looms in the doorway—too tall, too thin. Its head tilts at an unnatural angle. 

**Amina** (praying): 

"*La ilaha illallah…*" لا الہ الا اللہ 

The shadow recedes. The smell of burnt sugar lingers. 

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**Scene 7: Flashback – The Previous Tenants (1947)** 

*Intercut with the present, a hazy memory unfolds:* 

- A British officer's wife, **Margaret**, arranges tea in the parlor. Her son, **Oliver**, plays with the porcelain doll. 

- Margaret opens a carved box (the same one Amina will find). She writes: *"Keep my husband safe in Calcutta."* 

- That night, riots erupt. A mob sets the house ablaze. Oliver's screams echo as Margaret's wish twists—her husband returns, but as a charred corpse clutching a *stolen rupee*. 

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**Closing Scene: The House Accepts** 

At dawn, Amina finds the doll reassembled on the windowsill, its cracked face turned toward the attic. The blackened rupee sits beside it. 

**Amina** (to herself): 

"*Allah tests those He loves.*" 

She pockets the coin. Above, the attic door groans. 

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