The reply from Suhrawardy arrived on April 12th — seven days after the Lucknow eting, one week ahead of schedule.
Kao's coded ssage reached Vikram at North Block in the early afternoon, delivered through the book cipher system they'd established using the Gita Press edition of the Bhagavad Gita.
Vikram decoded it at his desk, his fingers steady despite the electricity coursing through his veins.
Each word erged from the nurical sequences like a figure stepping out of fog.
LOTUS RESPONDS FAVORABLE. ACCEPTS FRAWORK WITH MODIFICATIONS. REQUESTS SECOND ETING. HASHIM FULLY ENGAGED. PROPOSES CALCUTTA. TILINE URGENT — LEAGUE PRESSURE MOUNTING.
Vikram read the ssage three tis, committing it to mory before burning the decoded text in his ashtray.
The smoke curled toward the ceiling fan and dispersed into the warm Delhi air.
Suhrawardy accepts. With modifications — expected.
Hashim is on board — critical. He wants a second eting in Calcutta — risky but necessary.
And the League is pressuring him — which ans Jinnah's faction suspects sothing.
He needed to brief Patel imdiately.
But before he could stand from his chair, a second ssage arrived — this one not coded, but hand-delivered by a peon from non's office.
A single line, scrawled in non's cramped handwriting.
Co at once. Mountbatten has made his preliminary response.
Not what we expected. — V.P.M.
Vikram's stomach tightened. "Not what we expected" could an many things, and his mind raced through possibilities as he gathered his papers and walked to non's office with the controlled urgency of a man who understood that running attracted unwanted attention in the corridors of power.
non was pacing — sothing Vikram had never seen the usually composed constitutional advisor do.
His desk was covered with papers, and a half-empty cup of tea sat forgotten and cold on the windowsill.
The late afternoon sun cast long shadows through the office windows, painting everything in amber.
"Close the door," non said.
Vikram closed it and waited.
"Mountbatten's preliminary response arrived this morning. Not through official channels — through Ismay."
Lord Hastings Ismay was Mountbatten's chief of staff, a seasoned military and political operator who served as the Viceroy's primary conduit for sensitive communications.
"The response is verbal, not written. Deliberate — Mountbatten doesn't want a paper trail on this."
"What did he say?"
non stopped pacing and faced Vikram.
The worry lines on his forehead seed deeper than usual, carved by the weight of what he was about to convey.
"He said — and I'm quoting Ismay as closely as I can — 'The Sardar's proposal is the most intellectually compelling alternative to partition I've seen. If it were presented six months earlier, the outco might have been different. But the political realities have moved beyond the point where a fully united India is achievable through negotiation alone.'"
Vikram absorbed this. "He's saying no."
"He's saying no but. There's a second part." non picked up a note from his desk and read carefully.
"Ismay added that the Viceroy would be open to — his words — 'creative solutions for specific regions where unity can be demonstrated as viable and where local leadership supports it.' He specifically ntioned Bengal."
Vikram's heart rate spiked. "He's offering a compromise."
"He's offering Bengal as a test case. If we can demonstrate that Bengal — both halves, east and west — can be kept united within the Indian Union with the explicit agreent of its Muslim leadership, Mountbatten would support it."
"He would actively endorse it, in fact — present it to London as a reasonable modification of the partition plan."
"But only Bengal."
"Only Bengal. The rest of the partition plan proceeds as conceived. Punjab is divided along the Radcliffe Line. Sindh goes to Pakistan. The Frontier Province votes on its status through referendum. Balochistan follows."
"That's half a victory."
"Is it? We lose Punjab. We lose Sindh. We lose Balochistan. We still get Pakistan — just a smaller Pakistan, without its eastern wing."
Vikram sat down in the visitor's chair and stared at the map of India on non's wall.
His mind was churning, running calculations, weighing outcos against the original tiline with the precision of a man who had studied these events for decades.
In the original tiline, Pakistan had consisted of two geographically separated wings — West Pakistan and East Pakistan — separated by a thousand miles of Indian territory, united only by religion and Jinnah's force of will.
The arrangent had been inherently unstable, leading to the 1971 war, three million dead, and Bangladesh's independence.
It was one of the great tragedies of the twentieth century — a tragedy born entirely from the absurdity of the original partition.
In Mountbatten's proposed compromise, Pakistan would exist — but only as West Pakistan. No eastern wing. No geographic absurdity. No 1971 war.
And India would retain a united Bengal — sixty million people, the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta, Chittagong port, the jute industry, the natural gas reserves that Vikram knew lay beneath the soil of Sylhet.
It's not perfect, Vikram thought. I wanted to prevent Pakistan entirely. But keeping Bengal united is enormous.
It fundantally changes the strategic calculus. India retains its eastern strategic depth.
Pakistan loses its most populous wing — and with it, half its population, most of its agricultural wealth, and its access to the Bay of Bengal.
The balance of power shifts permanently in India's favor.
"What does Patel think?" Vikram asked.
"I haven't briefed him yet. I wanted your assessnt first. You've been the architect of this entire strategy — I need to know if you think the compromise is worth taking before I present it to the Sardar."
Vikram didn't hesitate. "We take it."
non blinked. "Just like that? No analysis? No gaming out alternatives?"
"I've already gad them out, sir. In my head, every night for the past three weeks.
The alternative is holding out for total victory — a united India with no Pakistan at all — and risking Mountbatten walking away from the table entirely.
If that happens, he proceeds with full partition. We lose Bengal and Punjab. We get the worst of all possible outcos."
He leaned forward. "Mountbatten's compromise gives us Bengal. Sixty million people. The most fertile river delta on earth. A deep-water port on the Bay of Bengal."
"Strategic depth in the east that prevents encirclent. And — crucially — it denies Pakistan the population base and agricultural wealth that would have made it a more formidable rival." He paused.
"Sir, this is not a compromise. This is a strategic victory disguised as a concession."
non studied him for a long mont. "You never cease to surprise , Rathore. Most people your age would agonize over a decision like this. You made it in thirty seconds."
"The decision was already made, sir. The mont Mountbatten opened the door, the only rational response was to walk through it."
"And Punjab?"
Vikram's expression hardened. "Punjab will bleed. Nothing we do can prevent that entirely — the communal tensions are too deep, the population transfers too massive."
"But we can mitigate the damage. Pre-positioned relief operations. Intelligence networks to identify and prevent the worst provocations."
"Military deploynt to protect refugee columns. We save as many lives as we can."
In the original tiline, a million people died in the Punjab partition, Vikram thought. I may not be able to prevent all of those deaths.
But if I can reduce them by even half — even a quarter — that's hundreds of thousands of lives.
"All right," non said. "Let's brief Patel."
The briefing took place that evening at Patel's residence on Aurangzeb Road.
The familiar study — whitewashed walls, heavy desk, portrait of Gandhi, map of undivided India — felt smaller tonight, as if the walls were contracting under the weight of the decisions being made within them.
Vikram, non, and Kao were present — the inner circle that was now effectively running India's most critical strategic operations.
A circle so tight that even most senior Congress leaders didn't know it existed.
Patel listened to Mountbatten's response in absolute silence, his face carved from granite.
He sat behind his desk with his hands folded, his reading glasses perched on his nose, his eyes fixed on so middle distance that only he could see.
When non finished his presentation, the Sardar didn't speak for a very long ti.
The ceiling fan rotated. A gecko clicked on the wall.
Outside, the Delhi evening settled into its familiar symphony of dogs, distant music, and the calls of chowkidars beginning their night rounds.
"We lose Punjab," Patel said finally. His voice was heavy — heavier than Vikram had ever heard it.
Punjab was where so of his closest allies lived. Where millions of Hindus and Sikhs had built lives over centuries.
Where the violence of partition would fall hardest and most cruelly.
"We minimize the loss, Sardar sahab," Vikram said carefully.
"If partition of Punjab is inevitable, we ensure the boundary line is drawn as favorably as possible — Lahore may be lost, but we fight for every district, every tehsil, every village that has a Hindu or Sikh majority."
"We pre-position resources for refugee relief on an unprecedented scale. We establish intelligence networks in western Punjab to anticipate and prevent the worst communal violence. And —" He paused for emphasis.
"— we secure Kashmir completely. Which becos even more critical if Punjab is divided."
"And Bengal?"
"Bengal we keep. Whole. United. Sixty million people who remain Indian citizens."
"Chittagong port, which gives us strategic access to Southeast Asia and the Bay of Bengal."
"The natural gas reserves in Sylhet that will fuel Bengal's industrialization. The agricultural wealth of the delta that will feed eastern India."
"The intellectual capital of Calcutta that will drive innovation and education."
Vikram t Patel's eyes. "Sardar sahab, in my judgnt, this compromise gives us approximately seventy percent of what we wanted."
"The alternative — rejecting it and holding out for total unity — gives us a significant probability of getting nothing."
"Mountbatten is not bluffing. If we reject this, he proceeds with full partition on his own terms. We lose Bengal and Punjab."
Patel looked at Kao. "Your assessnt?"
Kao spoke with his characteristic precision, each word asured and deliberate. "I concur with Rathore, Sardar sahab. The compromise is strategically sound."
"Additionally, it gives us a diplomatic advantage internationally — India can be presented to the world as the party that sought unity, that offered generous terms to its Muslim population, while Pakistan insisted on division."
"The moral high ground has practical value in international relations, particularly with the Aricans, who are increasingly focused on democratic credentials as the Cold War develops."
To be continued..
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