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The Bicycle Repair Shop

Story

The signboard outside Gopal Kaka's shop had lost most of its paint years ago. Only three letters still held colour — the "C," the "L," and the "E" — so the children of Ratangarh called it simply "the CLE shop."

Inside, the walls were lined with tyres of every size, hanging like black bangles from rusted nails. A single bulb swung from the ceiling, and under it, from morning till dusk, sat Gopal Kaka — seventy-one years old, spectacles held together with copper wire, hands permanently stained the colour of engine grease.

He fixed everything. Punctures, broken chains, bent handlebars, spokes that had given up trying to stay straight. But it was what he did not do that the town remembered him for.

He never overcharged.

Not once. Not even when a customer, in a hurry, pressed extra notes into his palm and said, "Keep it, Kaka, no need for change." Gopal Kaka would count the coins slowly, place the exact balance back into the customer's hand, and say the same four words every time.

"This is not mine."

There was a boy, Bittu, who came to the shop the summer he turned nine. His bicycle chain had snapped clean on the road outside the school, and he had wheeled it in with his eyes fixed on the ground, already knowing what he would say.

"Kaka, I don't have money today."

Gopal Kaka did not look up from the chain in his hands. "Did I ask you for money?"

He fixed it in eleven minutes. Bittu counted, because he had nothing else to do while he waited, sitting on an upturned oil drum, watching the old man's fingers move like they had done this a thousand times before — because they had.

When the chain was back on, oiled and gleaming, Gopal Kaka opened a small tin box on the shelf. Inside was a cloth-bound notebook, its cover soft from handling. He wrote something on a fresh line and closed it again.

"What's that book, Kaka?"

"My Trust Book," he said. "Not a debt book. I don't write what you owe me. I write your name, so I remember you came."

After that day, Bittu found reasons to be at the shop. He came after school with nothing to do, and Gopal Kaka put him to work — sorting nuts and bolts into old tins, holding a wheel steady while it was trued, learning which spanner fit which nut before he was old enough to be trusted with the oil. Some evenings he stayed until the bulb overhead was the only light left on the street, listening more than talking.

By the time he was sixteen, Bittu could fix a puncture faster than customers expected of a boy his age, and he did it the way he had been taught — never rounding a bill upward, never letting a coin go unreturned. Gopal Kaka would watch from the doorway, saying nothing, but the tin box came down off the shelf a little more often now, and it was Bittu's hand that reached for it first.

Bittu did not understand it then. He understood it later, when he was nineteen** and Gopal Kaka's hands had begun to shake too much to hold a spanner steady. The old man called him to the shop on a Tuesday evening and placed the Trust Book in his palm along with a ring of keys.

"The shop is yours now, if you want it."

Bittu did want it. But the first month he ran it alone, a man came in with a school bicycle, its tyre burst beyond repair, and asked for a new tube.

"Two hundred rupees," Bittu said — the market price, fair by any shopkeeper's standard.

The man paid without complaint. He left. And Bittu stood there with the crisp note in his hand, feeling something he had never felt in this shop before — the itch of profit, the small, quiet voice that said he would have paid three hundred and never known the difference.

He opened the Trust Book that night. Page after page, decades of names, some crossed through, most simply left as they were — a record of every time Gopal Kaka had chosen to be poorer than he needed to be.

The next morning, a girl walked in with a punctured tyre and three crumpled ten-rupee notes, all she had. Bittu fixed it, and did not ask for the difference. He wrote her name on a fresh line, under the last entry his grandfather figure had ever made.

The signboard outside still says "CLE." Bittu has never repainted it. But if you walk past the shop on any evening, you will see a boy on an upturned oil drum, waiting for his bicycle, and an old tin box open on the shelf, its pages slowly filling again.

Worksheet

1. Vocabulary (Write the meaning of each word in your own words)

  1. Overcharge
  2. Steady
  3. Inheritance
  4. Crumpled
  5. Habit

2. Match the Words (Match each word to its correct meaning)

Word Meaning
1. Overcharge A. Something passed down from one person to another
2. Steady B. Calm and unshaking
3. Inheritance C. Asking someone to pay more than a fair price
4. Crumpled D. Something you do so often it becomes automatic
5. Habit E. Folded or crushed out of shape

3. MCQ (Choose the correct answer)

  1. What did the children of Ratangarh call Gopal Kaka's shop? a) The Bicycle Bazaar b) The CLE shop c) Kaka's Corner d) The Tyre Shop
  2. What did Gopal Kaka say every time he returned extra money to a customer? a) "Keep it for luck" b) "This is not mine" c) "I don't need it" d) "Come back tomorrow"
  3. What did Gopal Kaka call his notebook? a) The Debt Book b) The Trust Book c) The Customer Book d) The Old Book
  4. How old was Bittu when his bicycle chain first snapped outside the shop? a) Seven b) Nine c) Twelve d) Sixteen
  5. What did Bittu do when the man paid 200 rupees without complaint? a) He gave the money back b) He felt tempted to overcharge people c) He closed the shop early d) He called Gopal Kaka

4. True/False

  1. Gopal Kaka wrote down what each customer owed him. (True/False)
  2. Bittu started helping at the shop only after he turned nineteen. (True/False)
  3. Gopal Kaka's hands began to shake as he grew older. (True/False)
  4. Bittu overcharged the girl with the punctured tyre. (True/False)
  5. The shop's signboard was repainted after Bittu took over. (True/False)

5. Fill in the Blanks (Word bank: steady, habit, inheritance, crumpled, overcharge)

  1. Bittu's hands stayed __________ as he worked on the wheel.
  2. The girl had three __________ ten-rupee notes.
  3. Gopal Kaka never let anyone __________ a customer.
  4. Returning the correct change had become a __________ for Gopal Kaka.
  5. The Trust Book felt like more of an __________ than the shop itself.

6. Short Answer (Answer in 1-2 sentences)

  1. Why did Gopal Kaka call his notebook the "Trust Book" instead of a debt book?
  2. How did Bittu spend his afternoons at the shop as he grew older?
  3. What tempted Bittu on the first month he ran the shop alone?
  4. What did Bittu do after reading through the Trust Book that night?
  5. What has stayed the same about the shop even after Bittu took over?

7. Creative Thinking

  1. Imagine you are Bittu, holding the crisp 200-rupee note. Write down what you might be thinking in that moment.
  2. If the Trust Book could talk, what do you think it would say to Bittu on his first day running the shop alone?

8. Character Reflection Gopal Kaka never once said the word "honest," yet Bittu learned it from him anyway. Think of someone in your own life who has taught you something important without ever saying it directly. Write a few lines about them.

9. Creative Writing Write a short scene (6-8 sentences) set ten years later, where a child Bittu once helped for free returns to the shop as an adult. What do they say to him?


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