"You're absolutely right. What do you propose?"
Kao outlined a security frawork that was impressive by any standard — let alone for sothing devised by a twenty-nine-year-old junior police officer in 1947.
Cell-based organization, where each operative knew only their imdiate contacts.
Dead-drop communication systems using locations in Delhi that could be changed regularly.
Code nas for all personnel and operations. A vetting process based on background investigation, personal interviews, and — Kao's innovation — psychological assessnt.
"We need people who can keep secrets," Kao said. "Not just because they're told to, but because they're psychologically suited to it. People who are comfortable with ambiguity. Who don't need external validation. Who can operate alone, under pressure, without breaking."
"People like you," Vikram said.
"People like us," Kao corrected. His expression was neutral, but there was the faintest emphasis on the word us — an acknowledgnt that whatever Vikram's secrets were, they marked him as soone who operated in the sa psychological territory as a natural-born intelligence officer.
---
By 10 AM, they had a working plan. Kao would formally resign from the Imperial Police — citing "personal reasons" — and join Patel's staff as a "special assistant."
This would provide legitimate cover for his activities while giving him access to governnt resources and communications.
His actual role — head of The RAW operations wing — would be known only to Vikram, Patel, and non.
The first operational priorities were set:
Operation SENTINEL : Intelligence network in Punjab to monitor communal violence and identify provocateurs.
Kao would recruit two trusted agents from his police contacts — n he'd worked with and could vouch for personally — and deploy them within the week.
Operation LOTUS : Penetration of the Muslim League's Bengal organization. This required a different approach — not police contacts but political ones.
Vikram would work with non to identify potential assets within the Bengali Muslim intelligentsia who might serve as conduits to Suhrawardy and Abul Hashim.
Operation NORTHERN WATCH : Early warning network in the Northwest Frontier Province and Kashmir. This was the most challenging — the terrain was remote, the population hostile to outsiders, and the British still controlled the security apparatus.
Kao proposed using Kashmiri traders and Frontier rchants as cover for intelligence gathering, building on existing comrcial networks.
"There's sothing else," Vikram said as they wrapped up. "Sothing that doesn't fit into the operational frawork but is equally important."
"What?"
"Patel's health." Vikram lowered his voice, even though they were alone. "The Sardar is seventy-one years old. He's been under enormous physical and ntal stress for years. His diet is poor. He doesn't exercise. He has a history of cardiac problems."
'In the original tiline,' Vikram thought but didn't say, 'he dies of a heart attack on December 15, 1950. Three years and nine months from now. If I can keep him alive for another decade — even another five years — the entire trajectory of Indian history changes.'
"I need you to arrange sothing discreetly," Vikram continued. "A comprehensive dical examination for Patel, conducted by the best physician we can find. Not the usual Congress doctor who tells him to rest and drink warm milk. A real cardiologist. Soone who can assess his actual condition and prescribe a treatnt regin."
Kao raised an eyebrow. "You want to arrange a dical examination for the second most powerful man in India? Without his knowledge?"
"With his knowledge, ideally. But if he refuses — which he will, because he's Patel and he considers personal health a distraction from national duty — then yes, we find ways to monitor his condition and intervene where necessary. Better food. Less stress where possible. dication if available."
"This is unusual territory for an intelligence operation."
"Patel is the single most important asset India has. Protecting him is the highest-priority intelligence operation we'll ever conduct."
Kao considered this for a mont, then nodded slowly. "I know a doctor. Army dical Corps. Dr. Rajeshwari Chatterjee. Brilliant, discreet, and a patriot. She served in Burma during the war. I'll approach her."
"A woman?" Vikram asked, not out of skepticism but curiosity.
"The best doctor I know, regardless of gender. Is that a problem?"
"Not in the least. In fact, it's an advantage. Patel might be more willing to discuss his health with a woman doctor — less ego involved."
Kao almost smiled. "You understand people well, Mr. Rathore."
"It's a necessary skill in this line of work."
---
Vikram spent the afternoon at his desk, drafting additional strategic docunts, when a ssage arrived from non's office.
Co imdiately. Urgent developnt regarding Bengal.
He found non standing by his window, holding a telegram that had clearly just arrived. The constitutional advisor's face was animated — not with worry, for once, but with excitent.
"It's from our contact in Calcutta," non said. "Suhrawardy has agreed to a private eting."
Vikram's pulse jumped. Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy — the Premier of Bengal, the man who had presided over the Great Calcutta Killings of August 1946 but who also harbored deep ambivalence about joining Pakistan.
In the original tiline, Suhrawardy had actually proposed a united independent Bengal in 1947 — a proposal killed by both Nehru and Jinnah. Here, in Vikram's altered tiline, that ambivalence was the lever they needed.
"When?" Vikram asked.
"He's willing to et in two weeks. But not in Delhi — too visible. He suggests a neutral location. Our contact proposes Lucknow."
"Lucknow works. It's Congress territory but far enough from Delhi to avoid attention." Vikram's mind was already racing. "Who ets him?"
"That's the question." non sat down heavily. "Patel wants to et him personally. I've argued against it — if word gets out that the Congress's number two is having secret etings with the Bengal Muslim League premier, it will be interpreted as either a sign of weakness or a conspiracy. Either way, it damages our position."
"Patel should et him," Vikram said firmly.
non looked surprised. "You agree?"
"Suhrawardy is not a man who responds to interdiaries. He's a politician — he needs to look the person making the offer in the eye and gauge whether they can deliver. non sahab, with respect, you don't carry enough political weight for this eting. Neither do I. If we send anyone less than Patel, Suhrawardy will conclude that the proposal isn't serious."
"And if the eting leaks?"
"It won't." Vikram paused, then added: "I have soone who can handle the security arrangents. Soone very good."
"Your mysterious source?"
"No. Soone new. A professional."
non studied him. "You're building sothing, aren't you, Rathore? Not just a policy team. Sothing... operational."
"With Patel's authorization."
"Hmm." non didn't press further, but Vikram could see the calculations behind his eyes. The constitutional advisor was no fool — he could see the outlines of The Directorate taking shape, even if he didn't know its na or full scope. "Very well. I'll inform Patel. You handle the logistics."
---
That evening, Vikram briefed Kao on the Suhrawardy eting.
They t at a chai stall near Connaught Place — Kao's suggestion, since public spaces with ambient noise were better for sensitive conversations than quiet rooms where every word carried.
The evening crowd provided perfect cover: two n sharing tea, indistinguishable from a thousand other pairs having casual conversations across Delhi.
"Lucknow in two weeks," Vikram said, stirring his chai. "Patel ets Suhrawardy privately. Maximum four people in the room — Patel, Suhrawardy, one aide each. We need to control the venue, secure the approaches, and ensure absolute secrecy. No leaks to the press, the British, or the Muslim League's Jinnah faction."
Kao sipped his tea thodically. "Venue selection is critical. It needs to be private but not obviously suspicious. A governnt guesthouse would attract attention. A private residence is better — soone we trust completely, with a house large enough for the eting and discreet enough to avoid notice."
"Do we have anyone in Lucknow?"
"I have a contact — retired ICS officer nad Tripathi. Congress sympathizer, owns a large house in the Hazratganj area. Well-connected but discreet. I've used his house before for... unofficial etings."
Before, Vikram noted. Kao has already been conducting his own informal intelligence operations. The man is a natural.
"Approach him. Quietly. I want the house surveyed, entry and exit routes mapped, and a security plan in place within ten days."
"Understood. What about communications? If we're coordinating between Delhi and Lucknow, we need a secure channel."
"Can you set up a coded communication system? Sothing simple but effective?"
Kao reached into his pocket and produced a small notebook. "I've been working on a book cipher system. Both parties use the sa edition of the sa book — I recomnd the Gita Press edition of the Bhagavad Gita, since it's common enough to avoid suspicion. ssages are encoded using page numbers, line numbers, and word positions. Unbreakable without the key text, and the key text is sitting on every Hindu bookshelf in India."
Vikram stared at him. "You developed this overnight?"
"I've been developing it for years. I just never had anyone to use it with."
This man, Vikram thought, was wasted as a junior police officer for decades. In the original tiline, India's intelligence capability didn't mature until the 1970s. I'm going to make it world-class by 1950.
"Excellent. Implent it. I want secure communication established between Delhi and Lucknow within a week."
"Done." Kao paused, then added casually: "There's sothing else you should know."
"What?"
"Soone is asking questions about you."
To be continued...
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