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Chapter 17: The Inked Gift

The Inked Gift of Chitrakshi Sen

Kiaan Roy took a steady breath, the book trembling just slightly in his hands. The weight of the words was no longer just for the audience—it was personal now. The silence in the grand hall had grown heavier, thick with unspoken emotions, as if the very walls leaned in to listen.

He turned another page, his voice calm yet charged with something unnameable.

“My demon, you made me sleepless.”

A few whispers rippled through the crowd, but Kiaan didn’t stop. His gaze flickered toward Bipin Sen, then to Akash Pal, whose expression was unreadable—except for the way his fists clenched ever so slightly.

“The moment I heard the news that we are going to be united in marriage, I felt shy. And I couldn’t look at your face.”

Akash Pal’s breath hitched.

His mind raced back to the days before everything had unraveled. To the way Chitrakshi had suddenly avoided his gaze whenever their families gathered. To the stolen glances, the hidden smiles that she thought no one had noticed.

“It made me more and more sleepless, thinking of the day of our union approaching.”

Akash Pal’s knuckles whitened.

Had she truly felt this way?

Had she really been happy about their marriage?

Then why—why had he found reasons to doubt her?

Kiaan turned another page.

“I wanted to surprise you. I didn’t want to see your face before the wedding. That’s why I am writing all these feelings, in ink, as a gift for our wedding day.”

A hush fell over the room, the significance of those words sinking deep into every listener’s heart.

This book—this book—was never meant to be read like this.

Not in grief. Not in mourning.

Not like a eulogy for a love story that had died before it could begin.

Kiaan took a breath and read the final lines of the page.

“To my demon from heaven… and thanks to my proofreader, Kiaan Roy.”

The moment the name left Kiaan’s lips, Akash Pal felt the floor beneath him shift.

His grip on his phone turned iron-tight. His heart pounded so hard it almost drowned out the gasps from the audience.

Proofreader.

Kiaan Roy had proofread this book.

Kiaan Roy had read her feelings before he ever had.

Kiaan Roy had been a keeper of her secrets.

The storm inside Akash swelled into something violent, something unbearable.

And yet, he stood still. Unmoving. Expressionless.

Because now, everything had changed.

And someone was going to pay.

The book fair was alive with a subdued hum of grief. Visitors huddled around Kiaan Roy, their hands reaching out to pat his back, offering silent condolences for the loss of Chitrakshi Sen. Some wept openly, embracing one another in a tight circle of sorrow, their tears staining the crisp pages of books that surrounded them. The weight of Chitrakshi’s absence hung in the air, thick and suffocating, as though the very world had dimmed in her wake.

Amidst this mourning, Akash Pal stood frozen, his chest heaving with the burden of regret. A cold sweat drenched his body, seeping through his clothes as if his guilt were physically manifesting, consuming him inch by inch. His hands trembled, his fingers twitching, as his mind unraveled the truth he had refused to see.

She had loved him. Only him.

Kiaan Roy had never been a rival, never been the man who took Chitrakshi from him. No, Kiaan was merely a guardian of her words, a keeper of her thoughts. He had not stolen her love; he had preserved it. Chitrakshi had entrusted him with her emotions, her feelings, her silent confessions, sealing them within the pages of a book—words that Akash had refused to read when she had been alive.

And now, he understood. Too late. Far too late.

His breath caught in his throat as his eyes wandered to the center of the fair, where a grand display had been set up. Books stood proudly on polished wooden shelves, illuminated under the soft glow of fairy lights strung across the venue. Among them, two books rested side by side—one titled The Angel, written by Akash Pal, and beside it, My Demon, the last book penned by Chitrakshi Sen.

A bitter smile curled his lips. Irony. Cruel, merciless irony.

She had named her book My Demon. She had written about him—about them. And all this time, he had been blind, lost in his own insecurities, poisoning the love she had so selflessly given. He had misunderstood her intentions, twisted her truth, and, in the end, had become the very demon she had written about.

A strangled sob ripped through his throat as he staggered forward, his vision blurring. His fingers reached into the pocket of his coat, retrieving a small silver flask. He unscrewed the cap with a trembling hand, his pulse a wild drumbeat in his ears.

With a slow, deliberate motion, he tipped the flask, pouring its contents over the books, the scent of alcohol rising into the night air. The liquid seeped into the pages, staining them, tainting them—just as he had tainted her life.

The murmurs around him grew louder, confused whispers blending into gasps as he splashed the remainder of the alcohol over himself.

“Akash, what are you doing?” a voice called out, but it was distant, meaningless. Nothing could reach him now.

His fingers fumbled in his pocket once more, retrieving a small matchbox.

He stared at the books, at the last remnants of Chitrakshi Sen. His Chitrakshi.

She had turned into words. Into pages.

Paper supplied by Gaurav Banerjee’s mill factory.

And if she had become paper, then he would become the flames.

With a flick of his wrist, the match ignited, a tiny flicker of orange against the dark.

“Chitrakshi…” he whispered, his voice cracked and broken.

Then, with a final, desperate cry, he dropped the flame.

“Chitrakshi… Chitrakshi… Chitrakshi!”

The fire roared to life, devouring the books, the words, the love he had forsaken. The heat licked at his clothes, at his skin.

The moment the fire ignited, a wave of horror rippled through the crowd. Gasps turned into shrieks as flames erupted around Akash Pal, licking at his clothes, curling over his arms, his chest, his legs. The acrid scent of burning fabric and paper filled the air, sending a shockwave of panic through the book fair.

People rushed toward him, hands outstretched, desperate to put out the fire. Some grabbed their coats, ready to smother the flames. Others screamed for water. But Akash did not wait for salvation. He did not want it.

With the burning copy of My Demon clenched tightly in his hand, he bolted.

The flames crackled, eating through his flesh, yet he did not waver. His steps were frantic, desperate, as he ran through the fair, his body an inferno against the night. His vision blurred with smoke and agony, but his heart saw only one thing—Chitrakshi Sen.

She was everywhere. In the words that turned to ashes in his grip. In the embers that rose to the heavens like lost whispers. In the pages that burned just as his love for her had burned, untamed and misunderstood.

Shouts followed him.

“Stop him!”

“Somebody help!”

“Akash! No!”

But they did not know. None of them knew.

None of them understood that it was he who had killed her—not with his hands, but with his cruelty, his blindness, his unwillingness to believe in the purity of her love.

The pain scorched through his nerves, but it was nothing compared to the torment that had hollowed him from within. He ran as though he could outrun his sins, as though he could escape the man he had become—the demon she had written about.

He stumbled forward, his body faltering under the weight of the fire. The edges of My Demon crumbled in his grip, its pages curling and blackening, disintegrating into the wind. His breath came in ragged gasps, his lips parted in silent screams of agony, of regret.

He wanted to burn.

He deserved to burn.

Chitrakshi had turned into pages. She had become a book—her heart, her soul, her love bound between ink and paper. And now, he would turn into fire.

He would not let anyone save him from this inferno of regret.

He would not let them douse the flames of repentance.

If she had been reduced to words on a page, then he would become nothing but ashes beside her.

The fairgrounds blurred around him, the screams of the crowd fading. The world dissolved into fire and pain, into sorrow and remembrance, into a love that had died before it could be understood.

And as he collapsed to the ground, the flames roaring around him, the last of My Demon vanishing in his grasp, he whispered her name—one final time.

“Chitrakshi…”

And then, the fire consumed him whole.

Chapter 16: The Book No One Knew About

The Book No One Knew About

The night was drawing to its peak. The air inside the grand hall of the Chitrakshi Book Fair was thick with emotion, woven with both grief and admiration for the woman whose absence had left a void in so many hearts.

At the center of it all, Kiaan Roy stood upon the dais.

The microphone hummed softly as he adjusted it, his face solemn yet steady. He had always been a composed man, but tonight, a deep sadness sat behind his eyes. He scanned the room—Bipin Sen and his family, still struggling to carry their loss with dignity; Akash Pal, standing among the guests, watching with an expression unreadable.

Kiaan took a deep breath.

“I stand here today not only as a friend of Chitrakshi Sen but as someone who knew a side of her that perhaps few did,”he began. “She was more than what the world saw—more than a daughter, a fiancée, or a businesswoman. She was a thinker, a dreamer… and a writer.”

A murmur rippled through the crowd.

He hesitated for a moment before lifting a small, elegant book bound in deep blue leather.

“No one knows this, but Chitra—Chitrakshi Sen—wrote a book.”

The silence deepened. Even Bipin Sen, lost in his grief, lifted his gaze toward Kiaan.

Akash Pal’s fingers twitched at his side.

“I am the only one she ever told about it,” Kiaan continued, his voice quieter now. “I never read it. I don’t know what’s inside these pages. But I do know to whom it was addressed. And I want that person to know…”

His eyes scanned the room, lingering just briefly on one man.

“This book is all about him. And only him.”

A slow hush fell upon the audience.

Akash Pal’s heartbeat quickened.

Me?

His grip on his phone tightened, the messages from Chitrakshi and Kiaan still fresh on the screen. The words blurred in his mind, colliding with the sudden weight of this revelation.

He had to hear it. He had to know.

Kiaan, standing firm, turned the first page.

His voice, steady and clear, filled the hall.

“My demon… I have seen you in sweat, in rage, and I have sensed your fighting and revolting spirit. I have heard the richness of your words as they fell into my poor ears, and I have pondered over them. Yes, my demon, I have pondered them again and again.”

Akash Pal inhaled sharply.

“The words that fell into my ears—‘You rich people are jealous of people like us. You fear us, fear what we might become if given a chance”

The exact. Same. Words.

His fingers curled around the phone, gripping it like a lifeline, yet it felt like a noose tightening around his throat.

How?

The words Kiaan was reading aloud from Chitrakshi Sen’s book—words that should have only existed in ink, buried within the pages—were appearing, line by line, in the backup messages extracted from her phone.

His mind raced.

Did she write these words first in the book? Or had she sent them to someone—perhaps Kiaan Roy—before immortalizing them in print?

And why had Kiaan known about the book when Akash had not?

A slow, insidious dread crawled up Akash’s spine. His throat felt parched, his fingers numb.

His phone vibrated once more.

Words That Cut Deeper Than a Blade

Kiaan Roy turned the next page, his voice unwavering as he continued reading from the book no one had known existed until tonight.

“My demon… I saw a nerve on your forehead when you stood like an armed man who fights for his future.”

The air in the grand hall seemed to shift. The murmurs of the audience dimmed into a hush, their attention locked on Kiaan’s every word.

Akash Pal, standing rigid among them, could feel the blood in his veins turn to ice. His fingers twitched, his grip tightening around the phone that had just received the same lines—forwarded from Chitrakshi Sen’s recovered messages.

He swallowed hard, but his throat was dry.

“I want to see the same nerve when he feels that the love of his life slips from his hands into another’s.”

Akash’s breath stilled.

The words hit him like a dagger—sharp, deliberate, meant to wound.

He could see it, as if time had rewound itself: the moments when he had stood before Chitrakshi, his jaw clenched, veins pulsing in anger, his forehead furrowed in determination. She had seen him like that. She had memorized him like that.

But the last part—“when the love of his life slips from his hands into another’s”—it burned.

Had she been testing him? Had she wanted to see if he would fight for her? If he would rage against the idea of losing her?

Did she expect him to battle against Kiaan Roy for her affection?

Akash’s jaw clenched, his breath shallow.

And then, another terrible thought crept into his mind.

Had she been speaking of him at all?

Chapter 15 : The Night of the Fair—A Family’s Resurrection


The Night of the Fair—A Family’s Resurrection

When the day arrived, the grand venue stood gleaming under the city lights. Banners of the Sen Publishing House lined the streets, welcoming readers and literary minds from across the country. The opening ceremony was solemn yet powerful. There was no escaping the absence of Chitrakshi Sen—her name was spoken with reverence, her memory honored in every speech.

But the message was clear.

The Sen family was here. They were wounded but not broken.

And as the night went on, as the books were unveiled, as the speeches were made, one thing became evident—this was not just a book fair.

This was a declaration.

A declaration that grief had knocked them down, but it had not destroyed them.

They had risen.

A Stage for Words, A Stage for Lies

The grand venue of the Chitrakshi Book Fair was bathed in golden light, illuminating the rows of bookshelves, the sea of literary enthusiasts, and the dignitaries who had come to witness the legacy of the Sen family.

Bipin Sen and his family arrived dressed in elegant yet somber attire, their presence dignified despite the shadows of grief still clinging to them. The fair was not just an event—it was a statement. They were here. They were standing.

Kiaan Roy, standing at the center of it all, adjusted the lapels of his post blazer, straightened his shoulders, and exhaled. He had spent weeks together ensuring this fair would be nothing short of spectacular. I cannot let them down. The Sen family had lost too much already. He would not allow failure to be added to that list.

Then came Akash Pal.

He stepped into the hall with the air of a man who belonged there—polished, poised, and draped in a sharp three-piece suit that gave no hint of the storm within him. Tucked inside his inner blazer pocket was a rich, glistening can of alcohol—his silent companion for the night. He was not yet drunk, but the knowledge of its presence steadied him. A lifeline for when the weight of his own deception became too much to bear.

The stage was set. The microphone gleamed under the lights, waiting for the man of the hour.

A polite applause rippled through the audience as Akash Pal stepped forward. He adjusted the mic, his fingers tightening around the podium.

“Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. To the esteemed Sen family, to the readers, the dreamers, and to those who believe in the power of words—thank you for being here.”

His voice was steady, rich with emotion, perfectly measured.

“Tonight, I stand before you not just as an author, but as a man who has lost something precious. This book—” he lifted the elegantly bound copy, “The Angel”—was written for someone who can no longer read it. But perhaps, through these words, she still speaks.”

A hush fell over the hall.

Akash turned the pages with slow reverence and began to read:

“She was the light in the room, the poetry in my silence. Where others saw the world, she created it anew with her dreams. She was never just a person—she was a presence, an eternity wrapped in the fleeting beauty of now…”

His voice wavered—perfectly timed, beautifully orchestrated. His eyes glistened with unshed tears, and when he blinked, one slid down his cheek.

The audience was spellbound. When he closed the book and looked up, the room erupted in applause.

People rose to their feet, clapping, patting him on the back, whispering words of admiration.

“Brilliant.”
“A true masterpiece.”
“What a tribute to Chitrakshi Sen!”

And in that moment, Akash Pal was not a man with blood-stained hands. He was a grieving lover, a literary genius, a man who had captured hearts.

They believed him.

And just as they added their own tears to his performance, far away, in the shadows, his plan unfolded.

The Messages Begin

While the fair carried on, a phone screen flickered.

Akash Pal’s friend, operating in secrecy, had completed the task assigned to him—one that would either confirm Akash’s suspicions or put them to rest forever.

From the digital grave of Chitrakshi Sen’s phone, the old messages were extracted, backed up, and now, one by one, forwarded to Akash Pal.

His phone buzzed.

The first message appeared.

Then another.

And another.

Threads of conversation between Chitrakshi Sen and Kiaan Roy, long buried, now resurfacing. Private exchanges—words spoken in confidence—poured onto Akash’s screen, each notification tightening the grip of rage in his chest.

His fingers trembled slightly as he scrolled. His breath grew heavier.

What the hell is this?

A sickening wave of suspicion washed over him, turning into a cold, hard realization. He read faster, eyes darting across the words, his mind racing to connect the dots but he couldn’t properly. They were encrypted to his eyes of rage and anger.

Chapter 14 : Rising from the Ashes

Rising from the Ashes

The burial took place the very next day, swift and sorrowful, as per Hindu tradition. The body—unclaimed by identity yet claimed by grief—was laid to rest under the weight of a thousand unspoken questions. The Sen family had no choice but to accept what was given to them. The priests chanted their final prayers, the flames of incense swirled in the air, and Chitrakshi Sen—at least in name—was returned to the earth.

The mansion of Bipin Sen remained draped in mourning. It was not just the home of a wealthy, renowned family; it was now a house of sorrow, filled with voices that alternated between quiet sobs and sudden wails of agony. Grief came in waves—sometimes silent, sometimes deafening.

Through it all, Akash Pal stood among them, the picture of a broken man. They embraced him, pitied him, whispered about how unfair life had been to him. They believed he had lost the love of his life, and so they comforted him, unaware that the only weight he carried was the burden of his deception.

For a full week, both families—Akash’s and Chitrakshi’s—stayed under one roof. They leaned on each other, exchanged words of encouragement, and tried, in vain, to lift the unbearable weight off one another’s hearts. Kiaan Roy visited them every single day. At first, he came with the intention of offering strength, trying to make them smile, to remind them of life beyond grief. But as the days passed, as he witnessed their suffering, something inside him broke too.

He no longer tried to bring joy; instead, he wept with them. His presence was no longer that of a visitor, but of a man who had also lost something irretrievable.

The rituals continued—day after day, night after night—performed with utmost devotion, as if each prayer, each offering of sacred fire, could ease the ache in their hearts. But nothing could erase the truth of their loss.

Time moved forward, but they remained stuck in the same moment, unwilling to let go, unable to move on.

The Mega Book Fair—A Postponed Legacy

The Sen family had been pillars of the literary world for decades. Their name was not just a brand; it was a legacy, a symbol of Kolkata’s rich literary culture. Every year, their publishing house hosted the grand Mega Book Fair, an event awaited by authors, readers, and scholars alike.

This year, the dates had been set, the arrangements made. But after Chitrakshi’s death, everything came to a standstill.

Kiaan Roy was the first to bring it up. He approached Bipin Sen gently, hesitantly, understanding the weight of his request.

“Sir, I know this is not the time… but the book fair—”

Bipin Sen looked at him, his weary eyes hollow.

“Not now, Kiaan. Not yet.”

Kiaan nodded, accepting the inevitable postponement. But he did not give up.

Every week, he returned with the same request. “We should not let this moment define us.” “She would have wanted us to go on.” “Let the world know the Sen family still stands.”

And every week, the answer was the same. “Not yet.”

The world waited. The book fair was postponed once. Then again. Then again. Whispers began to spread—would it ever happen this year? Had the loss of Chitrakshi shaken the foundation of their empire? Was the Sen family slipping into an abyss they could not climb out of?

Then, one day, Bipin Sen gathered his family. His voice, hoarse from weeks of silence, finally spoke with conviction.

“It is time.”

The preparations resumed, subdued at first but gathering momentum. The Sen family did not just want to hold the book fair; they wanted to send a message. To the industry. To their rivals. To the world.

They would stand back up.

The Chitrakshi Book Fair—A Tribute Etched in Ink

The machines at Sen Publishers roared back to life, pressing ink onto crisp white pages, binding spines that would soon hold stories in their embrace. The scent of fresh paper and hot ink filled the air—a scent that had once been routine in their printing house, now carrying the weight of both grief and determination.

Every book rolling off the presses had been carefully chosen, scrutinized, and approved by the Chamber. The Sen family’s publishing empire had long been known for its literary excellence, but this time, every page held something deeper—a tribute to a lost daughter, a silent promise that she would never be forgotten.

A New Name, A New Beginning

One evening, as the preparations for the book fair were in full swing, Bipin Sen sat in his study, staring at the invitation cards. The words Mega Book Fair were printed in bold at the top—an event that had carried their name with pride for years. But this time, it didn’t feel right.

His fingers traced the letters absentmindedly before he reached for a pen. With slow, deliberate strokes, he crossed out the title and wrote something new.

Chitrakshi Book Fair.

His wife, seated across from him, looked up with teary eyes. Kiaan Roy, who had come to check on the final arrangements, saw the change and nodded.

“This is perfect, Sir,” he said softly.

Bipin exhaled, his chest tightening. Yes. It had to be this way.

His daughter had loved literature, had grown up surrounded by books, had dreamed of taking the family publishing house to even greater heights. If she could no longer be part of their future, then her name would be.

And so, the Mega Book Fair ceased to exist. From that moment on, Kolkata would know it as the Chitrakshi Book Fair, an event not just of literary grandeur, but of remembrance.

A Book Never Meant to Be Read—But Now It Must Be

Among the many books set to be unveiled at the fair, there was one that had not been meant for public eyes.

A book written by Akash Pal.

He had poured his heart into those pages, crafting words he had once intended as a wedding gift for Chitrakshi Sen. A love story. A testament to their bond. A future that had crumbled before it could begin.

The wedding never happened. The bride was gone. The book remained.

One evening, as Bipin Sen and Kiaan Roy reviewed the final list of books for display, Kiaan stumbled upon the manuscript. He picked it up carefully, his fingers pressing against the paper as if it held a piece of the past.

“We should print this,” Kiaan said, looking up at Bipin Sen.

Bipin hesitated. It was a personal work—something Akash Pal had never intended for public reading.

“Are you sure?” Bipin asked.

“He wrote it for her. Let the world see it,” Kiaan replied. “Let it be part of her memory.”

That night, they called Akash Pal.

He sat before them, silent, his face unreadable as they placed the manuscript on the table.

“We want this book printed,” Bipin Sen said. “For her.”

Akash looked down at the words he had once written with hope, now nothing more than remnants of a love that had never reached its destiny. His throat felt dry, his hands cold.

Would he be able to bear it? Seeing those words in print, displayed for the world to read?

But then he saw the name of the book fair— Chitrakshi Book Fair.

A tribute. A remembrance.

He closed his eyes, drawing in a slow breath. Then, he nodded.

“Print it.”

And so, the book he had written for his bride-to-be—his lost love, his greatest deception—would now stand among the grand titles at the Chitrakshi Book Fair. A book meant for one heart, now open to many.

And only Akash Pal knew the bitter truth buried beneath every word.

Chapter 13 : Search for the heiress 

Bipin Sen started their Search for the heiress 

The night stretched long and heavy with silence, broken only by the occasional ring of a phone or the muffled sob of a worried heart. Chitrakshi Sen had not returned home. Her absence had begun as a mere concern, but as the hours passed, concern twisted into anxiety, and anxiety into a growing sense of dread.

Her family tried reaching out to everyone they could think of—close friends, distant relatives, even acquaintances she had barely spoken to in years. But the answer was always the same: No, she hasn’t come here.

Akash Pal, ever the picture of a devoted fiancé, stood amongst them, his expression carefully composed. In front of her grieving parents, he dialed number after number, pretending to search as desperately as they were. Each call, each sigh of frustration, each shake of his head—he played his part to perfection, ensuring no one would think to suspect him.

No one ate that day. No one returned to their homes. The Sen mansion, usually filled with laughter and chatter, now felt like a mourning house before death had even been confirmed. People sat together in silence, exchanging glances filled with unspoken fears. Some patted each other’s backs, whispering feeble words of encouragement— She’ll be back soon. She’s fine. You’ll see. But the unspoken fear weighed heavily upon them.

Some, especially the older family members, held back their tears, their pride forbidding them from showing weakness. Their worries weren’t only for Chitrakshi’s safety but also for the whispers that would follow if news of her disappearance spread. A bride vanishing just days before her wedding—what would people say? What would society think? The dishonor, the humiliation—it would stain their family’s name forever.

But as the hours dragged into another sleepless night, even pride had its limits.

At last, Akash Pal took a decisive step, his voice firm but laced with subtle suggestion. He turned to Kiaan Roy, looking him in the eye.

“We can’t just sit here waiting. We need to act.” A pause, then, with the perfect touch of concern, he added, “Lodge a police complaint. They need to start searching for her.”

Kiaan Roy hesitated, as if the words made Chitrakshi’s absence feel all the more real. But the moment of reluctance passed, and he nodded. Without wasting another second, he grabbed his coat and drove straight to the police station.

There, under the harsh fluorescent lights of a dimly lit office, he filed the report, his voice steady despite the storm raging inside him. The officers took down every detail, questioning everyone—her parents, her closest friends, and, of course, Akash Pal.

Yet, despite all the questions, the police found themselves at a dead end. There were no valid leads, no clear suspects. No ransom note, no signs of a struggle. Chitrakshi had simply disappeared, as if swallowed by the night itself.

But as the investigation deepened, two names kept circling back to the officers—Akash Pal and Kiaan Roy. One was her fiancé, the other the man she had last been seen with. Both had reasons to care for her. Both had reasons to hide something.

And so, the real search began.

The Deception Beneath the Waters

At dawn, when the mist still clung to the surface of the Hooghly River, a lone fisherman cast his net into the water. His weathered hands, accustomed to pulling up the river’s bounty, trembled as he reeled in something unexpected. The bloated, half-devoured corpse surfaced, tangled in the net like an omen of death.

The man staggered back, his throat tightening as he took in the sight—mangled flesh, missing limbs, and what remained of a once-human face, now barely recognizable. His terrified cries echoed across the riverbank, drawing others to the scene. Soon, word spread like wildfire, reaching the ears of the local police.

Within hours, officers arrived, their faces hardened against the horrors they had seen before, yet still uneasy at the gruesome discovery. They examined the wreckage—an overturned car, its windows shattered, its interior soaked with river water. The stench of decay mixed with the sharp, pungent scent of alcohol. Empty bottles lay scattered inside, their labels peeling from moisture. It told a simple story: a reckless driver, a night of drunken misjudgment, a fatal plunge into the river.

But the body—what remained of it—was beyond recognition. The fish had done their work, stripping away the features that once made it human. There were no identifying marks, no distinguishing scars, just a nameless corpse pulled from the depths.

The lead officer, a middle-aged man with a lined face and weary eyes, exhaled heavily. He reached for his radio and sent out a message to all stations.

“Check for any missing persons reported. If there’s one, they’ve just been found.”

And just like that, fate played into Akash Pal’s hands.

The response came swiftly. A woman—young, engaged, from an influential family—had gone missing two days ago. The Sen family had been waiting, hoping for a miracle. But now, their hope was about to be drowned in grief.

The police wasted no time. The car’s registration matched. The circumstances fit. No further investigation was necessary. The pieces fell into place as if guided by an unseen hand. It was an accident, a tragic case of drunk driving that had claimed the life of Chitrakshi Sen.

At the Sen Mansion—

When the call came, the world shattered.

Bipin Sen collapsed into his chair, his body wracked with silent sobs as the words sank in. His wife, trembling, clutched her chest as if trying to hold her heart together. Relatives, friends, and house staff—all frozen, all struggling to accept the unbearable truth.

Their beloved daughter was gone.

When the body arrived, draped in white cloth, the house filled with wails of sorrow. Though unrecognizable, no one dared to say it wasn’t her. Who else could it be? The police had confirmed it, the circumstances matched, and the grief in their hearts refused to let them question fate any further.

Akash Pal stood amongst them, his face a mask of devastation. He played his role flawlessly—his hands shook as he reached for the body, his shoulders trembled with quiet sobs, and when he finally let himself break, he wailed as any heartbroken fiancé would. His cries of anguish blended with the family’s sorrow, convincing everyone of his devastation.

No one doubted him. Not even for a second.

He mourned, he consoled, he stood beside them as the final rites were planned. But deep within, beneath the veil of his carefully crafted grief, only he knew the truth.

This was not Chitrakshi Sen.

Her body was still out there, beyond the reach of the living.

And the police? They had closed the case, sealing it in their records as a mere accident.

Drunk driving.
A tragic end.
Case dismissed.

And Akash Pal?

He walked away unscathed. A man who had buried not just a body, but the truth itself.

Chapter 12 : The Silent Descent

The Silent Descent

The night was thick with mist as Akash Pal gripped the steering wheel, his knuckles white against the leather. The rhythmic hum of the tires on the deserted road filled the silence, the city’s distant glow fading in his rearview mirror. He had driven far from the bustling streets of Kolkata, seeking a place where solitude ruled, where darkness swallowed secrets whole.

Beside him, belted into the passenger seat, sat Chitrakshi Sen’s substitute. Motionless. Lifeless.

Akash had planned this carefully. Every detail, every movement, every possible outcome had been rehearsed in his mind. This wasn’t just a cover-up; this was an execution of deception, designed to erase suspicion.

As he neared the Hooghly River, he found the perfect spot—a stretch of road where the city’s watchful eyes did not reach, where the waters ran deep and slow. The river, dark and infinite, stretched ahead like an unmarked grave.

He pulled over, his heart hammering in his chest. The weight of what he had done—what he was about to do—pressed down on him, but he forced himself to move with precision. He reached into the backseat, retrieving the empty alcohol bottles he had brought along. The sharp scent of whiskey clung to the air as he opened one and poured it over the dead body. He soaked her hands, let the liquid seep into the fabric. Then, carefully, he filled a glass and pressed it to her lips, tilting it just enough to let the liquor stain her mouth and fill her stomach.

An accident. That’s what they would believe.

A tragic, reckless night—a bride-to-be drinking herself into oblivion before swerving off the road into the river.

Stepping out of the car, he glanced around. No headlights in the distance, no signs of unwanted company. The river remained still, waiting. He placed the car in neutral, released the brake, and with one final push, he sent it rolling forward.

The vehicle crept toward the edge, gravity pulling it down the embankment. The moment the front tires met the river, the water swallowed them hungrily. Within seconds, the car tilted forward, plunging into the depths. A loud splash shattered the silence, ripples spreading across the dark surface as the car disappeared beneath the current.

Akash stood there for a moment, his breath steady. He watched as the last traces of metal vanished, the river reclaiming what he had given it.

Then, without another glance, he turned on his heel and walked away, leaving behind nothing but the quiet whisper of the water and the secret it now held.

No body to doubt.

No trail to follow.

Just an unfortunate accident.

A tragic fate.

There would be no hints.

No traces.

Nothing.

And just like that—Chitrakshi Sen ceased to exist.

The night stretched long and silent, cloaked in an eerie stillness that weighed heavy upon the Sen household. Chitrakshi had not yet returned home. It was unlike her. The hour had grown late, and though they had initially dismissed their unease, anxiety soon crept into their bones like a slow, unrelenting tide.

Her father, Bipin Sen, paced the length of the grand living room, his fingers gripping the armrest of his chair every time he sat, only to rise again, restless. Her mother had tried calling her several times, but each attempt was met with the same cold response—her phone was out of network coverage. The hollow silence on the other end of the line made her heart pound with worry.

They knew where she was supposed to be that evening. Chitrakshi had planned to meet Kiaan Roy, a dear friend.

With growing concern, they reached out to Kiaan Roy. He answered swiftly, his voice tinged with confusion and alarm.

“She met me uncle Bipin Sen while we were in the meeting room, Akash Pal and Chitrakshi Sen went out,” he told them. “I think they planned for a date before their wedding as bachelors”

A frown etched deep lines into Bipin Sen’s forehead. Without hesitation, he dialed Akash Pal’s number. The call connected after a few rings.

“Hello?” Akash’s voice came through, calm, unhurried.

“Akash beta, was Chitrakshi Sen with you? She hasn’t come home yet,” Bipin Sen asked, struggling to mask the tremor in his voice.

“Yes, Uncle,” Akash replied smoothly. “We went to a pub for a while, and then I dropped her off at your house.”

The words hit Bipin like a sudden gust of cold wind. A sickening churn twisted in his stomach. If Akash had dropped her home, where was she? He opened his mouth to press further, but hesitated. What could he say? That his daughter had vanished into the night? That something felt disturbingly off?

“Okay, beta,” he said instead, forcing a weak assurance into his tone. “Maybe she went to a friend’s house.”

Akash responded with a polite hum and ended the call. The moment the line went dead, a smirk curled his lips. He set his phone aside, stretching his arms behind his head as he lay back against the plush pillows of his bed. His rage from the earlier betrayal, the seething fury that had consumed him, had finally cooled. That gnawing wrath had settled into something far more satisfying. Revenge. Sweet, silent revenge.

He closed his eyes, letting himself drift into slumber, unbothered by the storm he had left behind.

The next morning, sunlight streamed through the curtains, illuminating the phone beside him. The screen was filled with a flurry of missed calls—Bipin Sen, Kiaan Roy, and an assortment of unknown numbers. He let out a slow breath, rubbing his temples before picking up his phone and calling back. His voice, ever so measured, carried no hint of worry.

“Hello?”

“Akash!” Bipin Sen’s voice rang through, tight with fear. “Did Chitrakshi come home after you dropped her off?”

Akash frowned as if he, too, was concerned. “No, Uncle, I thought she did. She hasn’t come home yet?”

“No, beta. We have no idea where she is.”

There was a long pause, filled with heavy silence.

“I’ll come over right away,” Akash said, his tone layered with urgency.

Within the hour, he arrived at the Sen mansion, stepping through its grand doorway with calculated ease. His expression was one of deep concern, his movements deliberate. Every sigh, every furrow of his brow, every glance around the house carried the weight of someone deeply affected by the young woman’s disappearance.

The family, though distraught, felt a small sliver of comfort in his presence. If there was one thing they did not suspect, it was him. And that, Akash Pal knew, was his greatest advantage.

Chapter 11 : The Drive Into Darkness

The Drive Into Darkness

Akash Pal slipped his hand into Chitrakshi Sen’s purse with ease, retrieving the keys to her car before she could protest. Without a word, he opened the driver’s side door and slid in, as if it was the most natural thing in the world.

Chitrakshi hesitated for a second, then walked around the car and took the passenger seat beside him. Her hands rested on her lap, her gaze flickering toward him, searching for a trace of emotion—anger, pain, even betrayal.

But there was nothing.

Not a single twitch of the jaw, not a single flicker of rage in his eyes.

The silence between them stretched, suffocating and thick.

The car purred to life under his hands.

Without looking at her, without a single word, Akash pressed down on the accelerator, the tires rolling onto the empty Sunday roads.

Chitrakshi kept staring at him, waiting, testing.

But he did not react.

She exhaled softly, then shifted her focus elsewhere. Pulling out her phone, she became engrossed in whatever she was scrolling through, just as she always did.

That was when something inside Akash snapped.

His fingers tightened around the steering wheel, his knuckles turning white. His foot pressed down harder on the accelerator.

And then—

HONK!

The sharp, deafening blare of the car horn shattered the silence.

Again.

HONK! HONK!

The sound echoed through the empty streets, sharp and jarring.

Chitrakshi jerked her head up, startled. “Akash, what—”

But he didn’t stop.

HONK! HONK! HONK!

The horn blared through the deserted roads, though there was no traffic, no pedestrians, nothing. Just them.

Chitrakshi’s fingers curled around the edge of her seat. “Akash, stop it!”

But he wasn’t listening.

His face was impassive, his foot steady on the pedal, his grip unrelenting on the wheel. The car sped forward, cutting through the lifeless streets like a phantom in the night.

Then, without warning—

CRASH!

The car slammed into the rusted iron gates of Gaurav Banerjee’s paper mill.

The impact sent a violent shudder through the vehicle, metal screeching as the old gate swung open with a forceful clang.

Chitrakshi lurched forward, catching herself against the dashboard. Her breath came in quick, sharp gasps as she turned to him, her voice a mix of anger and alarm.

“Akash! Are you okay?!”

He didn’t answer.

He simply threw the car into park, yanked the keys from the ignition, and stepped out.

Before she could react, his hand shot out, fingers curling around her wrist.

“Come.”

His voice was low, firm.

Without giving her a chance to resist, he pulled her out of the car, his grip unyielding.

The night air was heavy with the scent of damp paper and wood pulp. The factory loomed before them, dark and silent. Not a single worker in sight. No whirring machines, no voices. Just an abandoned space, swallowed by stillness.

And they were alone.

Akash pushed open the factory doors, leading her inside with determined steps.

The office room of Gaurav Banerjee stood at the far end, its glass panels reflecting the dim moonlight seeping in through broken windows.

With one final step, Akash pushed open the door and led her in.

The room was empty.

Just the two of them.

Chitrakshi swallowed, her heart pounding.

For the first time that night—she was afraid.

A Night of No Return

The factory stood silent, the stale scent of wood pulp and damp paper lingering in the air. The dim light from the lone bulb above flickered slightly as Akash Pal reached for the switch, bringing the ceiling fan to life. Its slow, rhythmic hum filled the room, mingling with the uneven breaths escaping Chitrakshi Sen’s lips.

She stood before him, draped in the black saree that clung to her curves, her guarded eyes searching his face. But there was something different in the way Akash looked at her tonight—an intensity that felt both familiar and foreign.

Then, without warning, she felt his fingers—light as a whisper—trailing the back of her neck. A shiver ran down her spine as his warm breath fanned against her skin.

“Akash…” she murmured, her voice hesitant, questioning.

But he said nothing.

Instead, his lips pressed against the soft skin at the base of her neck, slow and deliberate, tracing a path downward with lingering, feverish kisses. Chitrakshi inhaled sharply, her body betraying her mind, melting into the sudden, overwhelming passion.

The black fabric of her saree loosened under his touch.

She barely registered how he undid the pleats, how the delicate fabric pooled at her feet as he lifted her onto the sturdy wooden table in the center of the room. His hands moved over her body with a hunger that was both possessive and desperate, as though he were reclaiming her—owning her.

The warmth of his lips against her skin sent shivers through her, a slow descent into desire. For a moment, for just a fleeting moment, she forgot everything.

Then darkness.

A silk scarf slid over her eyes, blinding her.

She let out a small laugh, breathless and unaware.

“You want to play like this, huh?” she teased, her lips curving into a smirk.

Akash didn’t respond.

The only sound in the room was the faint rustling of paper and the soft whir of the ceiling fan above.

Then—

A sudden, sharp clank.

A machine roared to life, its deep mechanical groan cutting through the still air. Chitrakshi’s ears twitched at the unfamiliar sound, her senses tingling with a sudden, inexplicable unease.

“Akash…?” she whispered.

Her body tensed, but before she could remove the blindfold, she felt his arms wrap around her.

Strong. Firm. Unyielding.

But something was wrong.

“Akash, what are you—”

Before she could finish, the world tilted.

Her body lifted off the table, cradled in his arms. But the embrace was no longer tender—it was forceful. Panic surged through her veins as she felt herself being carried toward something—something she couldn’t see.

Then, before she could even scream—

He hurled her forward.

A sudden, gut-wrenching drop.

The fabric of the blindfold flew off, just in time for her to see it—

The monstrous, gaping mouth of the paper-making machine.

A deafening shriek tore from her lips as her body hit the conveyor belt, her limbs flailing, desperate to grasp onto anything—anything—to pull herself back.

But Akash stood above her, watching.

Unmoving. Unforgiving.

“AKASH! NO! PLEASE—!”

The machine’s metallic teeth lurched forward, grabbing at her, dragging her in.

Her screams sliced through the air, raw and desperate.

Then—

A sickening crunch.

The machine swallowed her whole, the sharp whirring of blades drowning out the final, bloodcurdling echoes of her voice.

Akash stood motionless as the conveyor belt carried her remains deeper into the infernal machine. Flesh, bone, and fabric shredded into nothingness, mixing seamlessly with the damp wooden pulp.

Within moments—she was gone.

Just another raw material.

Another part of the process.

Akash let the machine run, his breathing steady, his expression void of emotion. The room smelled of something different now—a grotesque blend of copper and cellulose.

He moved swiftly, collecting her belongings—the black saree, her mobile, her purse. Not a single sign of hesitation crossed his features as he erased every trace of her presence.

With calculated precision, he exited the factory, locking the doors behind him. The city lights flickered in the distance as he slid back into the driver’s seat of her car.

Then, he drove.

Straight to Bipin Sen’s house.

He let the car linger under the watchful eyes of the security cameras, its unmistakable silhouette a silent testament to Chitrakshi’s return. Then, after a few minutes, he eased the vehicle back onto the road.

His next stop—the mortuary.

The scent of decay clung to the air as he stepped inside, his presence undetected by the lone, disinterested guard who dozed off in the corner.

A fresh corpse awaited him, the body of a woman whose death had already been signed away by the world. Without a moment’s hesitation, he draped Chitrakshi’s black saree over the lifeless figure, disguising it as best as he could.

Then—one final act.

Chapter 10 : The Unveiling of the truth

The Unveiling of the hidden truth

He slipped into his car, his fingers tightening around the steering wheel. The bitterness in his chest remained, unchanged. The betrayal of Chitrakshi Sen still gnawed at his soul, and no amount of business success could silence it.

Tomorrow. The day after. And the day after that.

He would find the truth.

And if that truth was what he feared—if Kiaan Roy was still in Chitrakshi’s life—then Akash Pal would not sit in silence.

The Unveiling

The city was eerily silent that Sunday morning, as if the universe itself was holding its breath. Akash Pal sat in the driver’s seat of his friend’s car, his fingers gripping the steering wheel with an iron grip. The car was parked a short distance from Bipin Sen’s house, in the exact spot he had staked out the previous Sunday. His heart pounded in his chest, anticipation mingling with the rage that had been simmering inside him for weeks.

And then, like clockwork, she appeared.

Chitrakshi Sen stepped out of the grand gates, dressed in a black saree that clung to her body like the shadows of the night. Her long, dark hair cascaded down her back, her earrings swaying with each graceful step. She walked with an air of quiet confidence, completely unaware that she was being watched.

Akash’s eyes darkened as he watched her slip into the driver’s seat of her car. He had expected this. He had felt this moment coming. Without hesitation, he started his engine and followed, keeping a safe distance.

The drive was short. She was heading to the Sen Publishers office.

Akash’s grip on the wheel tightened. Why would she go there on a Sunday?

He parked discreetly outside the office building, his gaze locked onto Chitrakshi as she entered the premises. The parking lot was almost empty—of course, it was. No staff would be here today. Just her. And whoever she was waiting for.

Minutes passed.

Then, another car pulled in.

Akash’s pulse roared in his ears as he watched Kiaan Roy step out, dressed in a casual shirt, looking far too comfortable as he strode into the office like he owned the place.

It was all the proof Akash needed.

His rage boiled over, raw and uncontrollable. His teeth gnashed together as he slammed his fist against the dashboard.

“You bitch!” he growled through clenched teeth, his entire body trembling with fury.

For a few moments, he just sat there, breathing heavily, his mind whirling with thoughts of betrayal. His hands itched to storm inside, to grab Kiaan by the collar, to demand answers from Chitrakshi. But he forced himself to wait. To watch.

After a few minutes, he got out of the car, moving like a shadow. His footsteps were silent as he made his way toward the office. He slipped inside the building, navigating the familiar halls until he reached the meeting room.

Loud music pulsed through the walls.

Through the slightly open door, he caught a glimpse inside.

There they were.

Chitrakshi Sen and Kiaan Roy, seated opposite each other. A chilled beer bottle sat on the desk between them, condensation dripping onto the polished wood. Kiaan leaned back in his chair, saying something that made Chitrakshi laugh—a soft, intimate sound that sent a dagger straight into Akash’s heart.

His fingers curled into fists. His vision blurred with red-hot rage.

But instead of barging in, he took a step back and pulled out his phone. He dialed her number.

His eyes never left her face as he heard her phone ring inside the room.

And to his surprise—she picked up.

“Hello?”

Akash’s voice was ice-cold. “Where are you?”

There was the briefest hesitation. And then, her voice came through the receiver, smooth and unbothered.

“I’m in my bedroom.”

A lie. A blatant, effortless lie.

Akash inhaled sharply. His fingers trembled with fury as he reached for the door handle.

And then, with one sharp push—he opened it.

The music seemed to fade into the background as Chitrakshi Sen’s face drained of color. Her phone was still pressed to her ear, her wide, startled eyes locking onto him in shock. Kiaan, too, froze mid-sip, his expression shifting from amusement to disbelief.

For a long, excruciating moment, silence reigned.

And then, Akash took a step inside, his voice like thunder in the storm.

A Dance with Deception

The air inside the meeting room grew heavy, thick with the unspoken storm that loomed between them. Chitrakshi Sen’s eyes locked onto Akash Pal’s face—the dark circles beneath his eyes, the sweat glistening on his forehead, the way his jaw tensed with barely contained rage. His face had turned a deep shade of red, his fingers twitching ever so slightly at his sides.

And yet, something held him back.

Something restrained the fury she knew was bubbling beneath the surface.

She swallowed, her lips parting as she hesitated. How much did he see? How much did he hear?

“Akash, we are just—” she started, her voice uncertain.

But before she could finish, Akash Pal’s lips curled into a slow, almost eerie smile. His eyes, dark and unreadable, met hers with an intensity that sent a strange shiver down her spine.

“Hush, my baby,” he murmured, his voice smooth—too smooth. It was almost a whisper, laced with something she couldn’t quite place. “I wanted to surprise you.”

Chitrakshi blinked, confusion flickering across her face.

Akash took a step closer, closing the distance between them, his presence overwhelming.

“I think you forgot,” he continued, his tone deceptively gentle, “that we were supposed to go on our last date as bachelors. Am I correct, Chitrakshi?”

Her breath caught in her throat.

Something was wrong.

The man standing before her was not the Akash Pal she knew. He was not the man who stormed into rooms with fire in his eyes, nor the man who let his emotions spill over like a raging river. No—this Akash Pal was different. Colder. Calculating. Dangerous.

Her fingers clenched into fists on her lap, her mind racing.

Behind her, Kiaan Roy shifted uneasily in his chair, sensing the strange shift in energy. The playful arrogance he had carried moments ago was gone, replaced with cautious silence.

Akash’s hand reached out, his fingers brushing against hers with the tenderness of a lover. But Chitrakshi knew—she felt—that beneath that touch lay something far more volatile.

He didn’t yank her. He didn’t drag her.

Instead, he took her hand as if leading her into a slow, intimate dance.

A perfect act of devotion.

A perfect lie.

Without sparing Kiaan another glance, Akash guided her out of the meeting room, his grip firm but gentle, his expression unreadable. His movements were precise—controlled. Not a single trace of rage, hatred, or anger remained in the room they left behind.

But inside Akash Pal, the fire burned hotter than ever.

And this was only the beginning of the end.

Chapter 9: A Man of Responsibilities

Akash Pal is a Man of Responsibilities

For the first time in weeks, he had something to do.

Akash Pal stood before the cracked mirror in his dimly lit apartment, his own reflection staring back at him—a ghost of the man he used to be. His eyes, hollow and bloodshot, bore the weight of sleepless nights, dark circles settling beneath them like bruises from an unseen war. His beard, rough and unkempt, shadowed his sharp jawline, a testament to the days he had let slip away in a haze of smoke and silence.

With a slow, mechanical motion, he splashed cold water on his face, the droplets sliding down his skin, washing away nothing but the dust of neglect. He ran a comb through his disheveled hair, the strands falling back into their usual chaos as if resisting order. A quick spray of cologne under his arms did little to mask the lingering scent of tobacco that clung to his clothes, to his very being.

The cigarette between his fingers burned steadily, its ember glowing with an eerie persistence, much like the fire raging in his chest. It had been days—weeks—since the betrayal, but the wound had not scabbed over. It festered, raw and unrelenting, fueled by the image of Chitrakshi Sen, draped in red, laughing with Kiaan Roy as if nothing had ever existed between them.

He took a deep drag, letting the smoke coil in his lungs before releasing it in a slow, heavy exhale. The bitterness curled on his tongue, but it was nothing compared to the taste of betrayal that had settled at the back of his throat.

Bipin Sen had given him a task, and though his mind resisted, his body moved on autopilot. He had to meet Gaurav Banerjee. He had to ensure the delivery of paper for Sen Publishers. Not for Chitrakshi. Not for Bipin Sen.

For himself.

Without another glance at his reflection, Akash grabbed his keys, the cigarette still burning between his fingers, and stepped out into the world—where the fire in his heart refused to die.

The factory loomed ahead like an aging giant, its walls stained with time and its air thick with the mingling scents of wood, ink, and damp paper. As Akash Pal stepped inside, the rhythmic hum of machines echoed around him, the scent of freshly processed pulp stinging his nostrils. The workers moved with mechanical precision, their hands stained with the raw essence of creation—tree bark, paper fibers, and sweat.

Gaurav Banerjee sat in a modest office near the heart of the factory, surrounded by stacks of yellowing invoices, sample paper rolls, and half-open ledgers. His salt-and-pepper hair was slicked back, his face worn yet sharp with the experience of years spent in this very trade. He looked up as Akash entered, his eyes narrowing slightly as he tried to place the young man before him.

Akash knew that look—the uncertainty, the vague flicker of recognition struggling to grasp something familiar. He let the moment stretch before finally breaking the silence.

“I’m Akash Pal,” he said, his voice steady, devoid of warmth.

Gaurav’s expression cleared as understanding settled in. A small smile tugged at the older man’s lips as he gestured toward the wooden chair across from him.

“Ah, Akash Pal,” he said, nodding. “Sit, sit. How is your father-in-law doing? Is he okay?”

Akash’s jaw tightened. He inhaled, his fingers instinctively seeking the cigarette in his pocket, though he resisted lighting it.

“He is not yet my father-in-law,” Akash corrected, his tone edged with something close to bitterness. “But he will be.”

The sharpness in his voice made Gaurav blink. The older man’s smile faltered, a flicker of surprise crossing his face. He hadn’t expected hostility—only pleasantries, business talk. But Akash wasn’t here for small talk.

Gaurav cleared his throat, attempting to shift the conversation. “Can I order some tea, coffee, or maybe a cold drink for you, sir?”

Akash leaned forward, resting his elbows on the desk, his gaze unwavering.

“I didn’t come here for tea or coffee,” he said, his voice laced with impatience. “Bipin Sen-ji sent me to ask about the paper stock that hasn’t been delivered to Sen Publishers.”

Gaurav sighed, rubbing his temples before leaning back in his chair. “I sincerely apologize for the delay,” he said, his voice heavy with genuine regret. “Our paper-making machine broke down. We tried repairing it—three times, in fact. But all it gave us in return was a pile of bills, and it still refused to work. We had no choice but to invest in a new machine.”

He stood up, smoothing the wrinkles from his shirt as he gestured for Akash to follow.

“Come,” he said, placing a firm hand on Akash’s shoulder. “Let me show you.”

Reluctantly, Akash followed him through the maze of the factory. The air thickened with the scent of processed pulp and damp fibers. Piles of wooden logs lay stacked against the walls, their bark stripped away to reveal pale, raw cores, ready to be ground into pulp. Workers in sweat-stained uniforms heaved sacks of shredded fibers onto conveyor belts, while massive rollers pressed and stretched them into delicate, fragile sheets.

And then, there it was—the new machine.

It stood like a behemoth in the center of the production floor, its steel body gleaming under the industrial lights, the scent of fresh oil and machinery lingering in the air. Gaurav gestured toward it proudly.

“This beauty can process tons of paper using the finest wooden pulp,” he said, his voice brimming with the kind of admiration one reserved for something that had cost a fortune. “Now that it’s up and running, we’ll be able to meet the demand again. The paper stock for Sen Publishers will be delivered soon—I promise you that.”

Akash crossed his arms, surveying the factory, the ceaseless labor, the endless piles of raw material waiting to be transformed. His anger, though not extinguished, simmered beneath the surface.

“See that you do,” he muttered, his voice low.

Because right now, business was the only thing keeping him from thinking about the fire still burning inside him.

Akash Pal turned slightly, his eyes narrowing as he studied Gaurav Banerjee one last time. The factory’s dim industrial lights cast long shadows over the older man’s face, emphasizing the deep lines of experience etched into his skin. There was something in Gaurav’s expression—pride, perhaps, or the quiet dignity of a man who had spent decades building his business. But Akash wasn’t here for sentiment.

He took a slow drag from his cigarette, exhaled a thin stream of smoke, and let his voice drop into an unsettling calm.

“Let us know,” he said, his words deliberate, sharp as a blade, “if you’ve found a better business partner than Bipin Sen… ji.”

Gaurav’s brow furrowed.

Akash flicked the ash from his cigarette, his gaze unwavering. “Because if you have, we’ll have to find an alternative. The publishing business doesn’t stop for anyone. We’ll keep things running—with or without you. Hope I’m clear, Gaurav Banerjee-ji?”

A flicker of something passed through Gaurav’s eyes—discomfort, maybe, but also an understanding of the weight behind Akash’s words. He straightened slightly, the easy warmth from earlier replaced by a serious resolve.

His voice, when he spoke, was firm, unwavering.

“My first priority will always be Bipin Sen and Sen Publishers only. Only Bipin Sen Ji. Ok? Ok?”

Akash didn’t blink.

Gaurav stepped closer, his fingers gripping the edge of his desk as if to reinforce his point. “From today, for the next ten days, we will be making paper only for Bipin Sen and Sen Publishers. All other orders will be paused. No one else will get a single sheet until your stock is delivered. Ok, sir? Ok, sir?”

There was no hesitation in his tone, no room for doubt. It was a businessman’s promise—one forged from years of trust and, perhaps, a hint of fear.

Akash let the silence stretch between them, then nodded once, satisfied. Without another word, he turned on his heel and strode toward the exit, his cigarette still burning between his fingers.

The deal was set.

Now, all that was left was to wait—and see if Gaurav Banerjee kept his word.

As Akash Pal stepped out of the factory, the heavy scent of wood pulp and ink still clinging to his clothes, he pulled out his phone. The night air was thick with humidity, and the dim glow of streetlights barely cut through the shadows. He flicked the cigarette from his fingers, crushing the embers underfoot before dialing the number he knew by heart.

The call barely rang twice before Bipin Sen answered.

“Akash,” Bipin’s deep, authoritative voice came through the speaker. “What did he say?”

Akash took a breath, his jaw tightening. “Gaurav Banerjee assured me that Sen Publishers is his first priority. He admitted the delay was because their old paper-making machine was broken. He tried fixing it three times, but it kept failing. So, he bought a new one.”

Bipin was silent for a moment, processing the information.

Akash continued, his voice edged with impatience. “He says for the next ten days, his factory will produce paper for no one else—only Sen Publishers. All other orders are on hold until our stock is delivered.”

A slow exhale came through the line, followed by a deep chuckle.

“I knew you were the right person to get the job done, son,” Bipin said, his tone carrying a rare warmth. “That’s exactly what I wanted to hear.”

Akash’s grip on the phone tightened at the word son. He didn’t respond to it—didn’t let it settle too deeply in his mind. Not yet.

Instead, he said, “You’ll get your paper. No more delays.”

“Good,” Bipin said, his satisfaction evident. “Come home for dinner sometime. We should talk.”

Akash ended the call without a reply.

His job here was done. But his real work—the thing that had been consuming him like a slow-burning fire—was only just beginning.