The following morning, Aarav’s mind was still clouded by fragments of the dream. The girl’s name—Mihika—echoed endlessly in his thoughts. He could still see her eyes, still feel the warmth of her hand pressed against his, though logic told him none of it was possible.
Unable to shake the feeling, he decided to visit Pandit Varun, his mentor and one of the last great scholars in Kashi known for decoding forgotten Vedic texts. Varun’s home was an old haveli near the banks of the Ganga, its sandstone walls weathered by centuries, but its halls alive with the fragrance of sandalwood and the sound of chanting.
When Aarav entered, he found the Pandit seated cross-legged on a woven mat, surrounded by manuscripts, copper yantras, and oil lamps. His long white beard touched his chest, and his sharp eyes gleamed with wisdom that seemed older than his frail body.
“You look disturbed, Aarav,” Varun said without looking up, as though he had already read Aarav’s thoughts. “What have you found?”
Aarav hesitated, then placed the manuscript on the floor between them. The crimson thread around it seemed brighter in the lamplight, as though pulsing with life. Varun’s expression hardened instantly. He extended a trembling hand but stopped short of touching it, as if afraid.
“Where did you get this?”
“It was hidden in the archives,” Aarav explained quickly. “I—I didn’t mean to steal it. But it… it called to me. I had a dream, Pandit-ji. A girl. She knew my name. She said the wheel of time is stirring again.”
At this, Varun’s eyes widened. He leaned back, sighing deeply. “So it begins,” he murmured.
Aarav leaned closer. “What begins?”
Varun closed his eyes, reciting from memory:
‘When two souls bound by destiny awaken the wheel, the Yugas shall tremble. What was hidden shall rise, and what was written shall be broken.’
He opened his eyes again, sharp and grave. “That manuscript speaks of the Kalachakra, Aarav. It is not a myth—it is real. The rishis of old knew of its power. They wrote of machines that could defy time, weapons that could rewrite wars, and codes that even the gods feared.”
Aarav’s heart thudded. “Machines? But Pandit-ji, these are ancient scrolls—how could they possibly…”
“Because,” Varun interrupted, his voice firm, “our ancestors were not primitive. They had knowledge that your modern science has only begun to glimpse. The Vaimanika Shastra, the astras of the Mahabharata, the yantras of the Rigveda—these were not poetry, Aarav. They were blueprints.”
A chill crept up Aarav’s spine. “And this… scroll? What does it want from me?”
Varun fixed him with an unblinking stare. “The scroll does not choose lightly. If it revealed itself to you, then you are part of the prophecy. But be warned—there are others who seek the Kalachakra. Some wish to guard it. Others… to abuse it.”
Aarav thought of the cloaked figures he had seen the night before, their glowing eyes tracking him through the alleys. He swallowed hard. “Who are they?”
“They call themselves the Anant Vrat,” Varun said darkly. “Guardians of eternity—or so they claim. But not all of them are true. Some factions believe the wheel should be turned, no matter the cost. They will come for you, Aarav. They will come for her, too.”
Aarav’s breath caught. “Her? Mihika?”
Varun nodded slowly, as though confirming a secret he had hoped to avoid. “The girl of your vision. She is no dream, Aarav. She is your link to the wheel, your other half in this prophecy. Without her, the Kalachakra cannot be awakened. Without you, she cannot survive what is coming.”
The words struck Aarav like thunder. He wanted to protest, to demand proof, but deep inside he already knew. The warmth of Mihika’s hand, the familiarity of her eyes—it was real. It was ancient.
Varun placed a hand on his shoulder, his voice softer now. “You must tread carefully, my boy. The path ahead will tempt you with power, test you with love, and break you with loss. But remember—the wheel turns for no one. Yet, sometimes, one soul can turn the wheel.”
A silence hung in the room, broken only by the rustling of palm leaves in the wind outside. Aarav lowered his gaze to the manuscript, feeling its energy pulse in rhythm with his heartbeat.
For the first time, he realized his life was no longer his own.
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