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 Crocodile Tears
Anthony Horowitz  2010.03.31. 13:51 
Ravi Chandra was going to be a rich man. 
It made his head spin to think about it. In the 
next few hours he would earn more than he had 
managed in the last twenty years: a fantastic sum, 
paid in cash, right into his hands. It was the start 
of a new life. He would be able to buy his wife the 
clothes she wanted, a car, a proper diamond ring 
to replace the flimsy band of gold she had worn 
since they were married. He would take his two 
young boys to Disneyland in Florida. And he would 
travel to London and see the Indian cricket team 
play at Lord’s, something he had dreamt about all 
his life but had never thought possible. 
Until now. 
He sat hunched up beside the window of the 
bus that was taking him to work, as he had done 
every day for as long as he could remember. It 
was devilishly hot. The fans had broken down 
once again and of course the company was in no 
hurry to replace them. Worse still, this was the end 
9 
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10 
CROCODILE TEARS 
of June, the time of year known in South India 
as Agni Nakshatram – or Fire Star. The sun was 
un forgiving. It was almost impossible to breathe. 
The damp heat clung to you from morning till night 
and the whole city stank. 
When he had money, he would move. He would 
leave the cramped, two-room flat in Perambur, the 
busiest, most crowded part of the city, and go and 
live somewhere quieter and cooler with a little 
more space to stretch out. He would have a fridge 
full of beer and a big plasma TV. Really, it wasn’t 
so much to ask. 
The bus was slowing down. Ravi had done this 
journey so many times that he would have known 
where they were with his eyes closed. They had left 
the city behind them. In the distance, there were 
hills – steep and covered, every inch of them, with 
thick green vegetation. But the area he was in now 
was more like a wasteland, with just a few palm 
trees sprouting among the rubble, and electricity 
pylons closing in on all sides. His place of work 
was just ahead. In a moment, they would stop at 
the first security gate. 
Ravi was an engineer. His identity badge with 
his photograph and full name – Ravindra Manpreet 
Chandra – described him as a plant operator. He 
worked at the Jowada nuclear power station just 
three miles north of Chennai, the fourth largest 
city in India, formerly known as Madras. 
He glanced up and there was the power station 
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11 
in front of him, a series of huge, multicoloured 
blocks securely locked inside miles and miles 
of wire. It sometimes occurred to him that wire 
defined Jowada. There was razor wire and barbed 
wire, wire fences and telephone lines. And the 
electricity that they manufactured was carried all 
over India by thousands more miles of wire. How 
strange to think that when someone turned on 
their TV in Pondicherry or their bedside light in 
Nellore, it had all begun here. 
The bus stopped at the security point with its 
CCTV cameras and armed guards. Following the 
9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, nuclear 
power plants all over the world had become recognized 
as potential terrorist targets. New barriers 
had been added; security forces had been enlarged. 
For a long time it had all been a damned nuisance, 
with people ready to jump on you if you so much as 
sneezed. But people had got lazy. Take old Suresh, 
for example, the guard at this outer checkpoint. 
He recognized everyone on the bus. He saw them 
at the same time every day: in at half past seven, 
out at half past five. Occasionally he’d bump into 
them, strolling past the shops on Rannganatha 
Street. He even knew their wives and girlfriends. 
It wouldn’t have occurred to him to ask for ID or 
to check what they were carrying into Jowada. He 
waved the bus through. 
Two minutes later, Ravi got out. He was a short, 
skinny man with bad skin and a moustache that 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
sat uncomfortably on his upper lip. He was already 
wearing overalls and protective steel-capped 
shoes. He was carrying a heavy toolbox. Nobody 
asked him why he had taken it home. It was quite 
possible that he’d had to fix something in the flat 
where he lived. Maybe he’d been moonlighting, 
doing some jobs for the neighbours for a few extra 
rupees. Ravi was always carrying a toolkit. It was 
as much a part of him as an arm or a leg. 
The bus had come to a final halt beside a brick 
wall with a door which, like every door at Jowada, 
was made of solid steel, designed to hold back 
smoke, fire or even a direct missile strike. Another 
guard and more television cameras watched as the 
passengers got out and went through. On the other 
side of the door, a blank, whitewashed corridor led to 
a locker room, one of the few places in the complex 
that wasn’t air-conditioned. Ravi opened his locker 
(there was a pin-up of the Bollywood star Shilpa 
Shetty stuck inside the door) and took out a safety 
helmet, goggles, earplugs and a fluorescent jacket. 
He also removed a bunch of keys. Like most nuclear 
power stations, there were very few swipe cards or 
electronic locks on the doors at Jowada. This was 
another safety measure. Manual locks and keys would 
still operate in the event of a power failure. 
Still clutching his toolbox, Ravi set off down 
another corridor. When he had first come to work 
here, he had been amazed how clean everything 
was – especially when he compared it with the 
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street where he lived, which was full of rubbish, 
and potholes with muddy water, and droppings 
from the oxen which lumbered along pulling 
wooden carts between the cars and the motorized 
rickshaws. He turned a corner and there was the 
next checkpoint, the final barrier he would have to 
pass through before he was actually in. 
For the first time, he was nervous. He knew 
what he was carrying. He remembered what he 
was about to do. What would happen if he were 
stopped? He would go to jail, perhaps for the rest 
of his life. He had heard stories about Chennai 
Central Prison, about inmates buried in tiny cells 
far underground and food so disgusting that some 
preferred to starve to death. But it was too late to 
back out now. If he hesitated or did anything suspicious, 
that was one sure way to get stopped. 
He came to a massive turnstile with bars as thick 
as baseball bats. It only allowed one person in at 
a time and then you had to shuffle through as if 
you were being processed like some sort of factory 
machine. There were also an X-ray scanner, a metal 
detector and yet more guards. 
“Hey – Ravi!” 
“Ramesh, my friend. You see the cricket last 
night?” 
“I saw it. What a match!” 
“Two wickets down and we still came back. I 
thought we were finished!” 
Cricket, football, tennis … whatever. Sport was 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
their currency. Every day, the plant operators passed 
it between them and Ravi had deliberately watched 
the match the night before so that he could join 
in the conversation. Even in the cool of the corridor 
he was sweating. He could feel the perspiration 
beading on his forehead and he wiped it away with 
the back of his hand. Surely someone would stop 
him and ask him why he was still holding on to his 
toolbox. Everyone knew the correct procedure. It 
should be opened and searched, all the contents 
taken out. 
But it didn’t happen. A moment later, he was 
through. Nobody had so much as questioned him. 
It had gone just as he’d hoped it would. Nobody 
had lifted off the top tray of the toolbox and 
discovered the ten kilos of C4 plastic explosive 
concealed underneath. 
Ravi walked away from the barrier and stopped 
in front of a row of shelves. He pulled out a small 
plastic device that looked like a pager. This was 
his EPD – or electronic personal dosimeter – which 
recorded his own radiation level and warned him if 
he came into contact with any radio-active material. 
It was set with his personal ID and security clearance. 
There were four levels of security at Jowada, 
each one allowing access to areas with different 
risks of contamination. Just for once, Ravi’s EPD 
had been set to the highest level. Today he was 
going to enter the heart of the power station, the 
reactor chamber itself. 
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This was where the deadly flame of Jowada 
burned. Sixty thousand uranium fuel rods, each 
one 3.85 metres long, bound together inside the 
pressure vessel that was the reactor itself. Every 
minute of the day and night, twenty thousand 
tonnes of fresh water were sent rushing through 
pipes. The resulting steam – two tonnes of it every 
second – powered the turbines. The turbines produced 
electricity. That was how it worked. In many 
ways it was very simple. 
A nuclear reactor is at once the safest and the 
most dangerous place on the planet. An accident 
might have such nightmarish consequences that 
there can be no accident. The reactor chamber at 
Jowada was made out of steel-reinforced concrete. 
The walls were one and a half metres thick. The 
great dome, stretching out over the whole expanse, 
was the height and breadth of a major cathedral. 
In the event of a malfunction the reactor could be 
turned off in seconds. And whatever happened in 
this chamber would be contained. Nothing could 
be allowed to leak through to the outside world. 
A thousand safeguards had been built into the 
construction and the running of Jowada. One man 
with a dream of watching cricket in London was 
about to blow them apart. 
The approach had come six weeks before at the 
street corner closest to his flat: two men, one a 
European, the other from Delhi. It turned out 
that the second man was a friend of Ravi’s cousin 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
Jagdish, who worked in the kitchen of a five-star 
hotel. Once they had recognized each other, it 
seemed only natural to go for tea and samosas – 
particularly as the European was paying. 
“How much do they pay you at Jowada? Only 
fifteen thousand rupees a month? A child couldn’t 
live on that amount, and you have a wife and 
family. These people! They cheat the honest worker. 
Maybe it’s time they were taught a lesson…” 
Very quickly the conversation was steered the 
way the two men wanted it to go; and that first 
time, they left him with a gift, a fake Rolex watch. 
And why not? Jagdish had done them favours in 
the past, giving them free food which he stole 
from the kitchen. Now it was their turn to look 
after Ravi. The next time they met, a week later, 
it was an iPhone – the real thing. But the gifts 
were only a glimpse of all the riches that could be 
his if he would just agree to undertake a piece of 
business on their behalf. It was dangerous. A few 
people might be hurt. “But for you, my friend, it 
will mean a new life. Everything you ever wanted 
can be yours…” 
Ravi Chandra entered the reactor chamber of 
the Jowada nuclear power station at exactly eight 
o’clock. 
Five other engineers went in with him. They 
had to go in one at a time through an airlock – a 
white circular corridor with an automatic sliding 
door at each end. In many ways it looked like 
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something out of a spaceship and its purpose was 
much the same. The exit wouldn’t open until the 
entrance had closed. It was all part of the need 
for total containment. The five men were dressed 
identically, with safety helmets and goggles. All of 
them were carrying toolboxes. For the rest of the 
day they would carry out a series of tasks, some 
of them as ordinary as oiling a valve or changing 
a light bulb. Even the most advanced technology 
needs occasional maintenance. 
As they emerged from the airlock into the 
reactor chamber they seemed almost to vanish, so 
tiny were they in these vast surroundings, dwarfed 
by the bright yellow gantries and walkways overhead, 
by electric hoists and cables, soaring banks 
of machinery, fuel rod transportation canisters and 
generators. Arc lamps shone down from the edges 
of the dome, and in the middle of it all, surrounded 
by ladders and platforms, what looked like an empty 
swimming pool plunged twelve metres down, with 
stainless steel plates on all four sides. This was the 
reactor. Underneath a one hundred and fifty tonne 
steel cap, millions of uranium atoms were splitting 
again and again, producing unimaginable heat. 
Four metal towers stood guard in the chamber. If 
they were shaped a little like rockets, they were 
rockets that would never fly. Each one was locked 
in its own steel cage and connected to the rest 
of the machinery by a network of massive pipes. 
These were the reactor coolant pumps, keeping the 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
water rushing round on its vital journey. Inside 
each metal casing a fifty-tonne motor was spinning 
at the rate of fifteen hundred revs per minute. 
The pumps were labelled north, south, east and 
west. The south pump was going to be Ravi’s primary 
target. 
But first of all he crossed to the other side of 
the reactor chamber to a door marked EMERGENCY 
EXIT ONLY. The two men had explained everything 
very carefully to him. There was no point attacking 
the reactor cap. Nothing could penetrate it. 
Nor was there any point in sabotaging the reactor 
chamber, not while it was locked down. Any blast, 
any radiation leak, would be contained. To achieve 
their aims an exit had to be found. The power of 
the nuclear reactor had to be set free. 
And there it was on the blueprint they had 
shown him. The emergency airlock was the Achilles 
heel in the fortification of Jowada. It should never 
have been built. There was no need for it and it 
had never been used. The reason for a passageway 
between the reactor chamber and the back 
of the turbine hall, where it opened onto a patch 
of wasteland close to the perimeter fence, was to 
reassure the workers that there was a fast way out 
if it should ever be needed. But what it also provided 
was a single pathway from the reactor to the 
outside world. In one sense it was the barrel of a 
gun. All it needed was to be unblocked. 
Nobody noticed Ravi as he strolled over to the 
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emergency door; and even if they had, they wouldn’t 
have remarked on it. Everyone had their own worksheet. 
They would assume he was just following 
his. He opened the inner door – a solid metal plate 
– and let himself into the corridor. About halfway 
along, there was a control panel fixed high up in 
the wall. Standing on tiptoe, Ravi unscrewed it, 
using one of the few real tools he had brought with 
him. Inside, there was a complicated mass of circuitry 
but he knew exactly what to do. He cut two 
separate wires, then spliced them together. It was 
quite easy, really. The exit door slid open in front 
of him, revealing a patch of blue sky beyond a wire 
fence. He felt the sluggish air roll in. Somewhere, 
perhaps in the control room, someone would notice 
what had happened. Even now a light might be 
blinking on one of the consoles. But it would be 
a while before anyone came to investigate, and by 
then it would be too late. 
Ravi went back into the reactor chamber and over 
to the nearest of the four reactor coolant pumps. 
This was the only way that wide-scale sabotage 
was possible. What he was aiming for was known in 
the nuclear industry as a LOCA – a loss of coolant 
accident. It was a LOCA that had caused the catastrophe 
at Chernobyl and had almost done the same 
at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania, America. The 
pump was locked in its cage, but Ravi had the key. 
That was one of the reasons he had been chosen 
for this job. The right man in the right place. 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
He stopped in front of the cylindrical wall that 
rose more than twenty metres into the air. He 
could hear the machinery inside. The noise was 
constant and deafening. His mouth was dry now 
as he thought about what he was going to do. Was 
he mad? Suppose they traced this back to him. But 
at the same time, there was cricket, Ajala – his 
wife – Disneyland, a new life. His family were not 
in Chennai today. He had sent them to friends in 
Bangalore. They would be safe. He was doing this 
for them. He had to do this for them. 
For a few brief seconds greed and fear hung in 
the balance, but then the scale tipped. He knelt 
down and placed the toolbox against the metal 
casing, opened it and removed the top shelf. The 
inside was almost filled with the bulk of the plastic 
explosive but there was just room for the timer: 
a digital display showing ten minutes, a tangle of 
wires and a switch. 
Ten minutes. That would be more than enough 
time to leave the chamber before the bomb went 
off. He would exit the same way he had come in, 
and once he was on the other side of the airlock, he 
would be safe. If anyone questioned him, he would 
say he needed the toilet. After the blast, there 
would be panic, alarms, a well-rehearsed evacuation, 
radiation suits for everyone. He would simply 
join the crowds and make his way out. They would 
never be able to trace the bomb to him. There 
wouldn’t be any evidence at all. 
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People might die. People he knew. Could he 
really do this? 
The switch was right there in front of him. So 
small. All he had to do was flick it and the countdown 
would begin. 
Ravi Chandra took a deep breath. He reached 
out with a single finger. He pressed the switch. 
It was the last thing he did in his life. The men 
from the street corner had lied to him. There was 
no ten-minute delay. When he activated the bomb, 
it went off immediately, almost vaporizing him. 
Ravi was dead so quickly that he never even knew 
that he had been betrayed, that his wife was now 
a widow and that his children would never meet 
Mickey Mouse. Nor did he see the effect of what he 
had done. 
Exactly as planned, the bomb had torn a hole in 
the side of the coolant pump, smashing the rotors. 
There was a hideous metallic grinding as the entire 
thing tore itself apart. One of the other plant 
operators – the same man who had been chatting 
about cricket just a few minutes ago – was killed 
instantly, thrown off his feet and into the reactor 
pit. The other engineers in the chamber froze, their 
eyes filled with horror as they saw what was happening, 
then scattered, diving for cover. They were 
too late. There was another explosion and suddenly 
the air was filled with shrapnel, spinning fragments 
of metal and machinery that had been turned into 
vicious missiles. The two closest men were cut to 
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22 
CROCODILE TEARS 
pieces. The others turned to run for the airlock. 
None of them made it. Sirens were already sounding, 
lights flashing, as the machinery disintegrated. 
Everything in the chamber turned into a black and 
red hell. A cable whipped down, trailing sparks. 
There were three more explosions, pipes wrenching 
themselves free, fireballs spinning outwards, and 
then a roar as burning steam came rushing out like 
an express train. The worst had happened. Jagged 
knives of broken metal had smashed open the 
pipes, and although the reactor was already closing 
down, there were several tonnes of radioactive 
steam with nowhere to go. One man was caught 
in the full blast and disappeared with a single, 
hideous scream. 
The steam thundered out, filling the entire 
chamber. Normally the walls and the dome would 
have contained it. But Ravi Chandra, in almost the 
last act of his life, had opened the emergency airlock. 
Like some alien stampede, the steam found it 
and burst through, out into the open air. All over 
the Jowada power station, systems were being shut 
down, corridors emptied, emergency safety measures 
put into place. But it was already too late. 
The people of Chennai saw a huge plume of white 
smoke rise up into the air. They heard the alarms. 
Workers at Jowada were calling their relatives in 
the city, warning them to get out. The panic began 
at once. More than a million men, women and 
children dropped what they were doing and tried 
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to find a way through traffic that had come to a 
complete standstill. Fights broke out. There were 
collisions and smash-ups at a dozen different junctions 
and traffic lights. But it had all happened 
too quickly and not a single person made it out of 
the city before the radioactive cloud, blown by a 
northerly wind, fell onto them. 
The story appeared that night on television news 
all around the world. 
It was estimated that at least a hundred people 
had died in the hour following the explosion. 
There had been casualties within the Jowada 
power station itself, but curiously far more were 
killed in the mad crush to get out of Chennai. 
By the following morning the newspaper headlines 
were calling it A NUCLEAR NIGHTMARE – in 
capital letters, of course. The Indian authorities 
were adamant that the steam cloud would have 
contained only low-level radiation and that there 
was no need for panic, but there were just as 
many experts who disagreed. 
Twenty-four hours later, an appeal was made to 
help the people of Chennai. Further casualties were 
being reported. Homes and shops had been looted. 
There were still riots in the streets and the army 
had been called in to restore order. The hospitals 
were full of desperate people. One British charity 
– it called itself First Aid – came forward with a 
comprehensive plan to distribute food, blankets 
and, most important of all, potassium iodate tablets 
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CROCODILE TEARS 
for every one of the eight million people of Chennai 
to counter possible radiation sickness. 
As always, the British people were unfailing in 
their generosity, and by the end of the week they 
had raised one and a quarter million pounds. 
Of course, if the disaster had been any greater, 
they would have raised much, much more. 
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