Sid, most of us know how a screw and screwdriver work. You have probably not done any DIY work to date but now that you have an airgun, I suggest you start learning. It is not rocket science and it is very gratifying to be able to do one's own gunsmithing.if you know how to put it back properly, i shall have no problems
Since Abhijeet wants to have a look at the trigger, I suggest you use this opportunity to let Abhijeet show you how to threadlock the stock screws. Take along some removeablethreadlock, acetone / surgical spirit / alcohol (to degrease the threads), some ear buds (to put the degreaser on) and the appropriate size screwdrivers. I would prefer you guys do the threadlocking business after you finish shooting, so as to let the threadlock set properly. Or at the very least give it 20 to 30 minutes to set.
Also, take along some oil such as 3-in-1 or Singer or even Vaseline. Put a bit on a clean lint free cloth and apply it to the underside of the action before it is placed back into the stock. Do NOT let the oil trickle into the compression chamber aka cylinder. Do NOT squirt oil into the trigger unit.
Abhijeet, it's probably nothing more than an IHP 35 trigger unit with the sear faces stoned, which may or may not have been case hardened. If it's the latter, the rifle is potentially dangerous as the knife edge on the sear will wear off quickly. If so, keep the trigger release pressure higher rather than lower (assuming it can be adjusted), because it is possible to release such a sear without much effort - an airgun going off when the barrel is slammed shut or the rifle is bumped against a hard surface being a common examples.
I'd use this opportunity to run through the gun safety rules as well.