They arrived in Tokyo carrying the smell of salt, sweat, and old paper. Some had crossed oceans. Some had crossed borders that no longer existed on maps. A few had crossed nothing more than the narrow circumference of their own fear. Yet when they stood together on the parade ground, boots aligned, shoulders squared, they looked remarkably alike, young men shaped by hunger, purpose, and a promise they could not yet fully articulate.
The Unseen Witness watched them from the edge of the field. He had been assigned to keep records, not names that history would later recognise, but numbers, dates, weights, hours flown, hours failed. He wrote neatly, carefully, as though precision itself might offer protection. The paper smelled faintly of ink and dampness, a reminder that nothing here was permanent, not even memory.
The Tokyo air carried a different discipline. Even in the early mornings, before the city fully stirred, there was movement. Trains whispered past. Flags stirred softly. Somewhere, always, an engine coughed awake. The cadets rose before dawn, their bodies learning the rhythm of command, their ears tuning themselves to whistles and shouted instructions delivered in clipped syllables they barely understood. They learned quickly. They had to.
Among them was Arjun Mukherjee, barely twenty, his hands still carrying the softness of someone who had once turned pages more often than tools. He had grown up in a narrow lane in Shyambazar, his nights filled with borrowed books and distant tram bells. He had never imagined the sky as anything other than an abstraction, something poets wrote about, and kites flirted with. Now the sky waited for him every day, vast and demanding.
Training was relentless. They learned the language of machines, the delicate balance between trust and control. The aircraft were temperamental, unforgiving, their metal skins cold to the touch. The smell of fuel clung to everything, hair, clothes, skin, a scent that followed them into sleep and settled into dreams.
The instructors were precise, their expectations unyielding. Mistakes were corrected sharply, not out of cruelty, but necessity. War did not forgive hesitation. Gravity did not negotiate.
At night, the cadets gathered quietly in the barracks. Someone always read aloud. Letters from home, fragile with distance. News clippings folded until the edges frayed. Sometimes a poem, remembered imperfectly, recited anyway. The sound of voices filled the space where courage was still learning how to sit comfortably. The Unseen Witness listened.
He listened to the tremor in certain voices, the bravado in others. He listened to the silences after bad news, when no one knew which words were safe. He wrote nothing of this down. Some records were not meant for paper.
One evening, Netaji came to see them. There was no grand announcement. No flourish. He walked onto the ground as he had walked onto ships and into rooms before, with economy, with awareness. The cadets straightened instinctively, a collective tightening of spines and resolve.
He spoke to them without notes. He spoke of discipline, not as punishment, but as freedom from doubt. He spoke of the sky, not as conquest, but as responsibility. He spoke of India, not as an idea, but as people whose names he would never know, whose lives would nonetheless be altered by choices made here, now. He did not promise survival. He promised meaning.
Arjun felt the words settle somewhere deep, quieter than excitement, heavier than fear. He realised then that he was no longer training to become a pilot. He was training to become a decision.
The days grew harder. Accidents happened. A misjudged landing. A stall recovered too late. The sound of impact carried across the field like a crack in the world itself. Training paused, then resumed. There was no other way. Grief was folded into routine, carried forward without ceremony.
The Unseen Witness stood with the others during the brief moments of silence. He noticed how the cadets listened differently afterwards, how they respected the machines more, how laughter became rarer but sharper, edged with urgency. He wrote the date. He closed the ledger.
Letters home changed in tone. They grew careful, reassuring. Details were omitted. Bravery was framed as normalcy. Mothers were told of meals eaten, of friendships formed, of weather patterns. Fathers were told of progress, of competence, of pride. No one wrote about the sound of engines failing mid-air. No one wrote about the weightlessness that felt briefly like peace before panic took hold.
Arjun wrote anyway. Not everything. Just enough. He wrote about the sky at dawn, how it blushed before yielding to blue. He wrote about the way clouds looked solid until you passed through them, then dissolved into nothing. He wrote about learning that some things could not be held, only trusted.
The Unseen Witness read these letters before they were sent. Not to censor, but to ensure they arrived. He learned to recognise the cadence of hope shaped to survive distance. He returned the letters sealed, untouched in appearance, though he carried their echoes with him long after.
As months passed, the cadets grew leaner, sharper. They moved with a confidence that had been earned, not assumed. Their laughter returned, quieter now, threaded with understanding. They spoke of the future in fragments, never whole sentences. Superstition was not discussed, but practised.
One night, Arjun confessed his fear to the Witness. Not of death. Of forgetting. “I am afraid,” he said softly, “that if I do not return, I will become a footnote. A number. A line someone else reads without knowing my face.” The Witness considered this. “You are already more than that,” he replied. “Because you are choosing.” Arjun nodded. He did not look convinced, but he slept afterwards.
When deployment orders arrived, they were read aloud. Names echoed in the hall, each one landing differently. Some were met with clenched jaws, others with bowed heads. There was no cheering. No applause. Only the sound of paper being folded, of boots being laced with deliberate care.
Netaji did not attend the send-off. He did not need to. His presence lingered in the discipline, in the language of purpose the cadets now spoke fluently. He had given them what could not be reclaimed, a reason that did not depend on outcome.
The morning they left, Tokyo was unusually quiet. Mist clung to the airfield. Engines warmed slowly, their growl restrained, respectful. The cadets lined up, their uniforms crisp, their expressions composed. The Unseen Witness stood back, notebook closed. Arjun turned once, searching the crowd. Their eyes met. No salute was exchanged. No gesture. Just recognition.
The planes lifted one by one, cutting through the mist, dissolving into the sky that had claimed them long before any order did. The sound lingered after they were gone, a fading roar that settled into silence. The Unseen Witness remained. He recorded departures. He waited for returns that came unevenly, if at all. He learned the language of absence, the way it shaped space without occupying it.
History would later speak of the Tokyo Cadets as an audacious footnote, a dream interrupted by surrender and circumstance. It would measure success narrowly, outcomes harshly. It would not speak of dawn briefings whispered in broken Japanese and Bengali. It would not speak of hands shaking before first solo flights. It would not speak of letters read aloud in dim barracks, voices steady because they had to be. But the sky remembered. And so did those who learned to trust it. The Unseen Witness closed his notebook for the last time. Somewhere far away, engines faded into memory. And the young men who had learned to fly carried India with them, not as territory, but as breath, held carefully, until the very end.
Other stories in this series of six stories sorrounding the life and time of Netaji Subhash Changda Bose:

5th Story: The Tokyo Cadets: They arrived in Tokyo carrying the smell of salt, sweat, and old paper…
Copyright © 2026 TRISHIKH DASGUPTA
This work of fictionised history, written by Trishikh Dasgupta, is the author’s sole intellectual property. It draws inspiration from documented wartime training efforts, the little known story of the Tokyo Cadets, and the young Indian lives shaped by Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s call during the Indian freedom movement. While this story can be read and experienced independently, it also forms the fifth part of a six story narrative arc, where each piece stands alone yet together deepens the understanding of Netaji’s legacy as it passed from vision to voice, from journey to inheritance. Some characters, incidents, places, and facts may be real, while others are imaginatively reinterpreted.
All rights are reserved. No part of this story may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including printing, photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, send an email to the author at trishikh@gmail.com or get in touch with Trishikh on the CONTACT page of this website.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Trishikh Dasgupta
Adventurer, philosopher, writer, painter, photographer, craftsman, innovator, or just a momentary speck in the universe flickering to leave behind a footprint on the sands of time... READ MORE





Dear William, thank you for liking the story. The first comment to my story is always very special, and I am indebted to you for it. I like war stories too, unfortunately they have so much to teach us. More than the action, which is exciting at times, I feel the human emotions, decisions, and consequences of war time are something worth studying. They give us a rare glimpse into the human mind.
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ah thats my kind of scene, a war story, and almost feeling it was real.. well done pal..
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Thank you William for liking the story. I treasure your constant appreciation for my stories.
I love war stories too. Yes the action is always interesting, but I am really intrigued by the human emotions that come out during war time. All wars are unfortunately sad and devastating no matter what results they bring.
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Well save this one for later
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Thank you. I am sure that you would love this story too.
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Did those cadets fight for India, or for the Japanese? Did they all die? How did Indian soldiers getting involved in fighting on that side help free India.?
This powerful post moved me inside that tension, mixed with duty, perhaps some excitement and fear that all soldiers must feel. And these pilots had to also count on the planes to be reliable. We’ll done.
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Thank you, Katelon, for asking this so thoughtfully. Your questions sit right at the heart of the tension the story tries to hold, and they deserve a careful, honest response rather than a simple one.
The cadets you read about, often referred to historically as the “Tokyo Boys,” were trained in Japan under the aegis of the Indian National Army (INA). Their declared allegiance was to Azad Hind and to the idea of an independent India, not to Japan as a nation or to Japanese imperial ambitions. However, in practical terms, their training, equipment, and movement were made possible only because the INA operated in alliance with Imperial Japan. That reality creates an unavoidable ambiguity: while their intention was India’s freedom, the machinery that enabled them belonged to another empire altogether.
Not all of these cadets died. Many were still in training when the war ended and were taken prisoner after Japan’s surrender. Several survived, returned to India or neighbouring regions, and went on to live civilian lives or even serve in post-independence institutions. Their story is often remembered as one of preparation and promise rather than battlefield combat, which is part of why it remains less visible in popular history.
As for whether their involvement “helped” free India, the answer lies more in politics and psychology than in military success. The INA, including these cadets, did not defeat the British militarily. The campaigns faltered, resources were stretched thin, and the odds were overwhelming. But the very fact that Indian soldiers were willing to fight the British crown under an alternative flag deeply unsettled the moral authority of the Raj. The INA trials, the public response to them, and the unrest they triggered within the British Indian armed forces played a significant role in hastening the end of colonial rule. In that sense, their impact was indirect but profound.
What moves me most, and what you sensed so clearly, is the human weight of their position. These young men lived inside overlapping pressures: duty, excitement, fear, nationalist idealism, and the very real risks of unreliable machines and uncertain futures. They did not know whether their actions would bear fruit or vanish into obscurity. That willingness to act without guarantees, to accept that history might forget them even as they risked everything, is where their courage truly lies.
Your reading touches exactly that space, where duty and doubt coexist, and where history’s clean summaries fail to capture what it felt like to stand there, young, trained, hopeful, and unsure. I am grateful that you stepped into that tension with the story and allowed it to remain unresolved, because that is where its truth lives.
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Thank you for such a detailed answer. I appreciate learning more about history through your lush and emotional way with language and the sensitive way you write Trishikh.
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You are most welcome Katelon. It is my honour to share the little bit that I know. This question of your’s demanded a longer answer.
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