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Now reading: Chapter 30 30: The Calcutta Decision (2) from India 1947 : The Architect Of Superpower, a Action novel by DattebayoDude.

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"You're staring at , Rathore," Patel said without looking up from his file.

"Apologies, Sardar sahab. I was thinking about the eting."

"You were thinking about my health. Don't deny it — I can read faces better than I can read files, and I've been reading files for fifty years." Patel set down the docunt and looked at Vikram directly.

"I know I'm not a young man. I know the work is taking its toll. But I'll be dead soon enough regardless — what matters is what we accomplish before that happens."

The casual reference to his own mortality hit Vikram like a physical blow. He knows. On so level, he knows he doesn't have much ti.

"With respect, Sardar sahab, I disagree. What matters is that you live long enough to see India through its first decade. The nation needs you — not just your ideas, but your presence. Your authority. Your ability to hold things together when they threaten to fly apart."

"That's very flattering, but—"

"It's not flattery. It's strategic assessnt. You are India's most valuable asset. Your health is a matter of national security.

I've arranged for a doctor — a very good doctor, Dr. Rajeshwari Chatterjee — to conduct a comprehensive examination. I'd like you to see her after we return from Calcutta."

Patel studied him for a long mont. The Sardar was not accustod to being managed — he was the one who managed others.

But sothing in Vikram's voice — the genuine concern, the strategic framing, the quiet insistence — seed to reach him.

"You're very persistent, Rathore."

"Yes, sir. It's one of my better qualities."

The ghost of a smile. "Very well. I'll see your doctor. After Calcutta."

"Thank you, Sardar sahab."

They flew on in silence, the DC-3's twin engines droning steadily as the landscape changed beneath them — the flat plains giving way to the river-crossed, village-dotted terrain of Bengal, the land that Vikram was fighting to keep within India.

Calcutta in May 1947 was a city holding its breath.

The scars of the Great Calcutta Killings — the August 1946 riots that had left thousands dead and the city's Hindu-Muslim relations in ruins — were still visible everywhere.

Burned-out buildings. Boarded-up shops. Military checkpoints at major intersections.

The once-vibrant comrcial district along Chowringhee Road had a haunted quality, as if the ghosts of the dead were walking alongside the living.

But alongside the trauma, there were signs of the new energy that Suhrawardy's open letter had unleashed.

Bengali flags — not Indian, not Pakistani, but Bengali, green and red — hung from balconies in both Hindu and Muslim neighborhoods.

Student groups distributed pamphlets advocating unity. Wall slogans proclaid "BENGAL IS ONE" and "UNITY IN DIVERSITY" in Bengali and English.

The street is moving, Vikram observed from the car that took them from Dum Dum airfield to Alipore.

Public opinion is shifting. If we can close the deal with Suhrawardy today, the montum becos unstoppable.

The Sarkar residence in Alipore was a grand colonial mansion — white-columned, set in extensive grounds, far more opulent than the modest Lucknow safe house.

Kao had chosen it for practical reasons: the grounds provided natural security, the mansion had multiple rooms suitable for private conversation, and Sarkar's wealth and political connections ant that a gathering of political leaders at his ho would not attract unusual attention.

Kao t them at the gate — characteristically calm, his dark suit immaculate despite the Calcutta heat. He briefed them as they walked through the garden.

"Suhrawardy and Hashim will arrive at 2 PM. I've confird through three separate sources that they're coming with authority to negotiate — not just explore.

Suhrawardy has already drafted a frawork docunt of his own, based on our proposal, with modifications he wants to discuss."

"What modifications?" Patel asked.

"Three main ones.

First: he wants the Chief Minister of united Bengal to be elected by the provincial assembly, not appointed by the center.

Second: he wants a larger share of central revenue allocated to Bengal — specifically, forty percent of customs duties collected at Chittagong and Calcutta ports.

Third: he wants an explicit constitutional provision guaranteeing that Bengali — not Hindi or Urdu — will be the primary language of administration and education in the state."

Vikram processed these demands rapidly. The first was reasonable and easily conceded — an elected Chief Minister was consistent with democratic principles.

The second was a negotiating position — Suhrawardy was asking for forty percent knowing he'd settle for twenty-five or thirty.

The third was both reasonable and strategically important — language was the bedrock of Bengali identity, and protecting it would cent Muslim support.

"All negotiable," Vikram told Patel. "Concede the first imdiately — it shows good faith. Negotiate the second — offer twenty-five percent with a review chanism after five years. Accept the third — language protection costs us nothing and gains us everything."

Patel nodded. "And Liaquat?"

Kao answered. "Liaquat Ali Khan is currently in Lahore. He's booked on a train to Calcutta departing tonight — arriving tomorrow morning. We have approximately eighteen hours before he reaches the city."

"Then we close tonight," Patel said flatly. "Whatever it takes."

They gathered in Sarkar's library at 2 PM — a magnificent room with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, leather furniture, and tall windows that looked out onto a garden of bougainvillea and frangipani.

The room slled of old books and furniture polish, with the faint sweetness of tropical flowers drifting through the open windows.

The arrangent was different from Lucknow. This was not a two-person eting with aides lurking in adjacent rooms.

This was a proper negotiation — Patel and Vikram on one side of a large table, Suhrawardy and Hashim on the other, with Kao positioned by the door in his nominal role as Patel's security aide.

Suhrawardy had changed since Lucknow. The confident, slightly sleek politician was still there, but underneath it, Vikram sensed tension — the strain of a man who had taken an enormous political risk and was now committed to seeing it through.

He was dressed more formally than before — a dark sherwani, a black cap, polished shoes. War paint, Vikram thought. He's dressed for a battle.

Abul Hashim was the revelation. Vikram had studied his biography extensively but had never t him.

In person, Hashim was everything Suhrawardy was not — lean where Suhrawardy was round, intense where Suhrawardy was smooth, ideological where Suhrawardy was pragmatic.

He had the burning eyes of a true believer — but a true believer in Bengal, not in Pakistan.

His commitnt to Bengali Muslim identity was absolute, and it was this commitnt that made him the key to the entire negotiation.

If Hashim endorsed the deal, Bengali Muslims would follow. If Hashim rejected it, no amount of Suhrawardy's political maneuvering would be sufficient.

"Gentlen," Patel began, with the directness that was his signature. "Thank you for coming. I won't waste ti with pleasantries — we all know why we're here, and we all know that ti is limited. Let state our position clearly."

He laid out the Indian offer with the precision of a lawyer presenting a case — constitutional provisions, economic commitnts, language protections, democratic governance.

Every point was specific, docunted, and backed by the detailed analysis that Vikram had prepared.

Then he added sothing that wasn't in any docunt.

"Mr. Suhrawardy, Mr. Hashim — I want to speak to you not as a Congress leader but as an Indian who loves this country and all its people. I know there is fear among Bengali Muslims. Fear that a Hindu-majority India will not protect their rights, their language, their way of life. I understand that fear. It is not irrational — history gives ample reason for it."

His voice was quiet but carried the full weight of his moral authority. "I am asking you to trust . Not the Congress party — parties change, leaders change, political fortunes rise and fall. Trust . Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.

I give you my personal word that every commitnt in this docunt will be honored. Not as a political promise — as a sacred oath.

Bengali Muslims will be equal citizens of India. Their language will be protected. Their culture will be respected. Their economic future will be secured."

The room was utterly silent. Vikram watched Hashim's face — the ideologue, the true believer — and saw sothing shift. Not surrender, exactly.

More like recognition. The recognition that the man sitting across the table ant every word he said.

Suhrawardy spoke first. "Sardar sahab, your sincerity is not in question. But sincerity dies with the man who carries it. What happens when you are no longer here? What prevents a future governnt from revoking these protections?"

"The constitution," Patel said. "These provisions will be embedded in the fundantal law of India — not as ordinary legislation that can be changed by a simple majority, but as constitutional guarantees requiring a two-thirds parliantary supermajority and state ratification to and. No future governnt can revoke them without the consent of the Bengali people themselves."

"And if a future governnt ignores the constitution?"

"Then the courts will enforce it. An independent judiciary — truly independent, not subservient to the executive — will be the guardian of these rights.

This is not a gift from the Congress to Bengali Muslims. It is a constitutional compact between equal partners."

Hashim leaned forward. This was his mont — the question he had co to ask.

"Sardar sahab, I have one concern that supersedes all others. Bengali Muslims are not just Muslims who happen to live in Bengal.

They are Bengalis who happen to be Muslim. Our identity is Bengali first — our language, our literature, our songs, our food, our way of being in the world.

If India tries to impose Hindi on us — if Delhi bureaucrats try to replace Bengali with Hindi in our schools and our courts — there will be revolt. I promise you this. Not because we hate Hindi, but because we love Bengali."

Patel looked at Vikram — a glance so brief that only soone watching carefully would have caught it. Vikram gave an almost imperceptible nod.

"Mr. Hashim," Patel said, "Bengali will be the sole official language of the Bengal state governnt.

All state administration, courts, and educational institutions will operate in Bengali.

Hindi will have no special status in Bengal beyond its role as one of the national languages used for inter-state communication.

This will be constitutionally guaranteed — as immutable as the right to vote or the right to equality before the law."

He paused. "Furthermore, I propose that Bengali be recognized as one of the official languages of the Indian Union — alongside Hindi, and any other major regional languages that the constituent assembly chooses to recognize.

India is a nation of many languages. No single language should dominate at the expense of others."

Hashim's expression changed — slowly, like dawn breaking over a landscape. The suspicion didn't vanish entirely, but it was joined by sothing else. Hope. Genuine, fragile, hard-won hope.

"You would put that in the constitution?"

To be continued..

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