Dairyman Bhagat
Kishan Singh wanted Bhagat to take up some job and not do anything to attract the police attention. Bhagat Singh understood the compulsions of the new situation. He could imagine what his father must have gone through to raise the money for his bail. He could not fail his father.
Kishan Singh raised some more money and got a dairy started for Bhagat to run.

Bhagat was also determined to give no reason to the police to suspect him of being involved in any illegal business. He applied all his energies and mind to make his dairy a success. The dairy prospered. In the beginning he had just one helper. He worked day and night feeding, tending buffaloes, cleaning the shed, washing and milking. Later he had to employ more helping hands. He had become a complete dairyman. A stage come when a number of his men were selling and supplying milk to shopkeepers and households.
Kishan Singh was a happy father now.
The case dragged on in the court. At last, in 1928, the case against Bhagat Singh was withdrawn and the charges dropped. He became a free man. And with that Bhagat lost interest in dairy business and paid little attention to it. Consequently the dairy started incurring losses.
For Bhagat, dairy was now a writing workshop. Sitting there he would write articles for newspapers and magazines. He collected pictures of revolutionaries and martyrs and made slides. At Young India Forum’s meeting the slides were shown by magic lantern and related sagas of the heroes were revealed to the viewers. Revolutionary comrades would walk into the dairy to discuss plans and programmes.
After ‘Kakori Train Robbery’ the police had cracked down hard on the members of Hindustan Republican Association. Most of its members were in the police custody.
Only Chandra Shakhar Azad was free and elusive. He had spent some time in jungles, then wandered around as sadhu, worked as a driver in Jhansi, become a porter at Bombay docks and no trace thereafter.
Bhagat Singh and a companion went to Kanpur to pick up the threads. The organisation was in shambles. They wanted to resurrect the organisation. But how? Then, an old contact informed them that Azad had come back to Kanpur. He had his current address.
When Bhagat Singh and his comrade arrived at the small room Azad was staying in they found their comrade in melancholy mood sitting under the photographs of his comrades who were hanged in Kakori case. He looked completely shattered. But the sight of Bhagat Singh and another comrade revived his spirits. After months and months he felt hope surging in him. He realised that the battle was not over yet and with dedicated comrades like Bhagat Singh he could raise the army again and pose a fresh challenge to the British.
One day, all three even went to the house of the mother of Azad. The overwhelmed mother fed them and the three departed melting into the darkness of the night. The police was always on their heels.
Bhagat Singh returned to Lahore with a definite agenda to revive the revolutionary organisation on a big scale to launch a final challenge to the alien rulers and their stooges.