---
The first three days after waking were the hardest.
Not physically — although the headaches were brutal, pounding behind his eyes like a sledgehamr every ti he tried to sit up too quickly. The fractured skull was healing, the doctor assured him, but it would take ti. Rest, fluids, no sudden movents. Standard dical advice that Vikram ignored almost imdiately.
No, the difficulty was psychological. The sheer disorientation of existing in a body that wasn't his, in a ti that wasn't his, surrounded by people who looked at him and saw soone he wasn't.
The nurses called him "Vikram bhai." The other patients in the ward — mostly injured protesters and a few British soldiers who'd been on the wrong end of a crowd — nodded at him with respect.
Apparently, the original Vikram Rathore had been well-known in certain circles. A young firebrand. A Congress volunteer. Soone who showed up at every rally, every protest, every act of defiance against the Raj.
Vikram spent those first days doing two things: recovering his strength and mining the mories of his host body.
It was a strange process. The original Vikram's mories weren't laid out like a book he could read sequentially. They ca in flashes — triggered by sounds, slls, faces, or sotis nothing at all.
A nurse would walk past wearing jasmine in her hair, and suddenly he'd rember a woman's face — the original Vikram's mother, he realized, a schoolteacher in Allahabad who had died of tuberculosis in 1943.
A patient would cough, and he'd recall the stench of a British prison cell where the original Vikram had spent three months during the Quit India Movent of 1942.
Piece by piece, the picture assembled itself.
The original Vikram Rathore had been born in 1923 in Allahabad — now Prayagraj in Vikram's original tiline — to a middle-class Rajput family. His father had been a lawyer, a contemporary of Nehru's at Allahabad High Court, which explained the Congress connection.
The elder Rathore had died in 1940, leaving young Vikram with modest savings, a good education, a burning hatred of British colonialism, and connections to the upper echelons of the Indian National Congress.
The young man had been educated at Allahabad University, where he'd studied political science and economics.
He spoke fluent Hindi, English, and passable Urdu. He'd participated in the Quit India Movent at nineteen, been arrested, spent ti in jail alongside future politicians and bureaucrats, and erged more radicalized than ever.
By 1947, at twenty-four, he was working as an informal aide and organizer in the Congress party's Delhi operations — not important enough to be in the inner circle, but known enough to be recognized.
'Not bad,' Vikram thought, cataloguing these assets. 'Young, educated, connected, and with credibility in the freedom movent. I could have been dropped into a much worse situation.'
But "not bad" wasn't enough. To change India's destiny, he needed to be in the room where decisions were made. He needed access to Nehru, Patel, Maulana Azad, and the other leaders who would shape the nation.
And he needed it fast — Mountbatten was arriving on March 22nd, less than a week away, and the negotiations that would determine India's fate would begin almost imdiately.
'I need a plan,' Vikram thought, staring at the ceiling fan that had beco his constant companion. 'Not just a vague idea of "make India better." I need a specific, actionable, step-by-step plan.'
He closed his eyes and began to organize his thoughts.
---
On the fourth day, a visitor ca.
Vikram was sitting up in bed, eating a bland hospital lunch of dal and rice, when a man appeared at the entrance to the ward.
He was in his late thirties, thin and wiry, with sharp eyes behind round spectacles and the white khadi kurta-pajama that was the unofficial uniform of Congress workers.
His face was familiar — not from history books, but from the original Vikram's mories.
'Rajendra Mishra,' the mories supplied. 'Senior Congress organizer in Delhi. Friend of father. ntor figure. The man who recruited original Vikram into the party.'
"Vikram!" Mishra rushed to his bedside, his face creased with worry. "Thank God. They told you were unconscious for days. I ca as soon as I could — things have been chaotic. The British arrested half our people after the demonstration."
"Rajendra bhai," Vikram said, the na coming naturally. "I'm fine. The doctor says I'll be back on my feet in a week."
Mishra pulled up a chair and sat down heavily. "You scared us, boy. When they carried you off the street with blood pouring from your head, I thought..." He shook his head. "Never mind. You're alive. That's what matters."
"What's happening outside?" Vikram asked, steering the conversation where he needed it. "What's the latest on the transfer of power?"
Mishra leaned forward, lowering his voice instinctively — a habit born from years of operating under British surveillance. "It's moving fast, Vikram. Too fast. Mountbatten arrives in four days. The Congress Working Committee t yesterday. Nehru ji and Patel sahab are... not entirely aligned on strategy."
Vikram's ears perked up. "What do you an?"
"Nehru ji is inclined toward accommodation with the Muslim League. He believes so form of federation might satisfy Jinnah — a loose union where the Muslim-majority provinces have significant autonomy. Patel sahab thinks this is nonsense. He believes Jinnah will accept nothing less than a separate nation, and that trying to appease him only weakens our position."
'Patel was right,' Vikram thought grimly. In his original tiline, Nehru's attempts at accommodation had failed spectacularly. Jinnah had been unyielding, the British had been eager to leave regardless of the consequences, and the result had been a hasty, bloody Partition that killed over a million people and displaced fifteen million more.
But here was the crucial insight that most historians missed: Partition wasn't inevitable. It had been the product of specific decisions made by specific people in a specific sequence. Change the decisions, change the sequence, and the outco could be entirely different.
"Rajendra bhai," Vikram said carefully, "I need to speak with Patel sahab."
Mishra blinked. "Patel sahab? Vikram, he's the most powerful man in Congress after Gandhi ji. He doesn't have ti to—"
"I understand. But I have ideas — ideas about how to handle the Muslim League, about how to keep India united without partition. I've been thinking about this for..." He paused, almost saying 'eighty years'. "...for a long ti. I believe I can help."
Mishra studied him with those sharp eyes. "The blow to your head has made you ambitious, it seems."
"Perhaps. Or perhaps it's given clarity."
Sothing in Vikram's voice — a quiet confidence that hadn't been there before, a weight and gravity that seed out of place in a twenty-four-year-old — made Mishra pause. The older man looked at him as if seeing him for the first ti.
"You've... changed, Vikram," Mishra said slowly. "Sothing about you is different. I can't quite put my finger on it."
'You have no idea,' Vikram thought.
"Near-death experiences do that to a person," he said aloud. "Rajendra bhai, I'm serious. I know I'm young. I know I'm nobody in the grand sche of things. But I have knowledge — strategic knowledge, economic knowledge, military knowledge — that the leadership needs. India is about to make decisions that will shape its destiny for the next century. We cannot afford to get them wrong."
Mishra was quiet for a long mont. Then he said, "There is a eting tomorrow evening. Not an official Congress session — sothing smaller, more private. Patel sahab is hosting it at his residence on Aurangzeb Road. A few senior leaders, so military advisors, so of the younger people he's been grooming. I was invited. I could... bring you along. If you're well enough."
Vikram's heart hamred. 'Patel's inner circle. Tomorrow.'
"I'll be well enough," he said firmly.
"The doctor—"
"Can go to hell. I'll be there."
Mishra laughed despite himself. "Definitely different. The old Vikram would have needed three more days of hesitation before making a decision like that." He stood, adjusting his spectacles. "Fine. I'll co for you tomorrow at five. Wear clean khadi. And Vikram?"
"Yes?"
"Don't waste this opportunity. Patel sahab has no patience for fools. If you speak, make sure you have sothing worth saying."
"I will," Vikram promised. "I absolutely will."
---
After Mishra left, Vikram's mind went into overdrive.
He had less than twenty-four hours to prepare for the most important eting of his life — and perhaps the most important eting in India's history, though the participants didn't know it yet.
He needed to present ideas that were brilliant enough to capture Patel's attention but not so radical that they seed insane. He needed to demonstrate knowledge and insight that would make a seasoned political leader take a twenty-four-year-old seriously.
And he needed to do it without revealing that he was a ti-traveler from the future, because that would get him committed to an asylum rather than invited to the next eting.
'Think, Vikram. What does Patel care about most right now?'
The answer was obvious: national unity. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel's greatest achievent in the original tiline had been the integration of over 500 princely states into the Indian Union — a feat of diplomacy, persuasion, and occasional coercion that had prevented India from balkanizing into dozens of small kingdoms after the British left.
But that process had been incomplete. Kashmir had been bungled. Hyderabad had required a military operation. And East Bengal — the territory that would beco Bangladesh — had been lost entirely to Partition.
To be Continued..
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