"Good luck with that. The man considers rest a form of treason."
"Then I'll fra it differently. India needs him alive for at least another decade.
If he dies in three years, everything we've built — Bengal, Kashmir, RAW, the economic reforms — all of it is at risk.
Nehru alone cannot hold the country together. Patel knows this. He needs to act on it."
"You're going to tell the Iron Man of India that he's mortal?"
"Soone has to."
non gave him a look that was equal parts admiration and sympathy. "Better you than ."
Vikram t Patel that evening at the Sardar's residence. The study was familiar — the sa desk, the sa maps, the sa portrait of Gandhi, the sa ceiling fan rotating with its faint squeak.
But Patel looked different. The Kashmir victory had given him a temporary boost, but underneath it, the exhaustion was deeper. His face was thinner.
His movents slower. The tremor in his hands that Vikram had noticed in Calcutta was more pronounced.
"Sit down, Rathore. I know why you're here."
"You've read Dr. Chatterjee's report?"
"I've read it." Patel's voice was flat. "She says I'm going to die in three years unless I learn to nap and eat vegetables."
"She says you're at high risk of a major cardiac event unless you make significant lifestyle changes. That's not the sa thing as—"
"It's exactly the sa thing. I know my body, Rathore. I've felt the tightness in my chest. The breathlessness.
The episodes where my heart seems to stumble over its own rhythm."
He t Vikram's eyes with the unflinching directness that was his hallmark. "I'm not afraid of death. I'm afraid of dying before the work is done."
"Then let help you live long enough to finish it." Vikram leaned forward. "Sardar sahab, I'm not asking you to retire.
I'm not asking you to reduce your responsibilities. I'm asking you to make specific, targeted changes that will extend your productive life by years — possibly decades."
"Such as?"
"Three things. First: dication. Dr. Chatterjee has prescribed a regin of drugs to manage your blood pressure and strengthen your heart.
You must take them regularly — not when you rember, not when you feel like it, every single day."
"I dislike pills."
"India dislikes losing its greatest leader. Take the pills."
Patel's lips twitched. "What else?"
"Second: diet. Your current diet is terrible — too much salt, too much ghee, not enough fresh vegetables and fruit. Kamala—" He referenced Patel's household cook. "—needs to be instructed on a modified diet. Dr. Chatterjee has prepared specific al plans."
"Kamala has been cooking for for twenty years. She'll be offended."
"She'll get over it. Your heart won't."
"And the third thing?"
"Rest. Not retirent — rest. Seven hours of sleep per night. No all-night working sessions.
Delegation of routine tasks to subordinates so you can focus your energy on the decisions that only you can make."
Patel was quiet for a long ti. The ceiling fan rotated. Outside, the Delhi evening was settling into its familiar pattern of fading light and rising sounds — birds, traffic, the distant music of a radio.
"You know, Rathore," Patel said finally, "when you first appeared in my study three months ago — a twenty-four-year-old nobody with impossible knowledge and extraordinary confidence — I thought you were either a genius or a madman. I've since concluded you're both."
"I'll take that as a complint."
"It wasn't entirely intended as one." But the Sardar's voice had softened. "Very well. I'll take the pills.
I'll eat the vegetables. I'll try to sleep more — though I make no promises about seven hours. Five is the best I can manage."
"Six."
"Five and a half. That's my final offer."
"Done." Vikram allowed himself a small smile. "And Sardar sahab — I want Dr. Chatterjee to beco your personal physician.
Not a consultant. A permanent mber of your staff. She monitors your health daily and reports to ."
"Reports to you?"
"Your health is a matter of national security. It falls under RAW's mandate."
Patel stared at him for a mont, then — for the second ti in their acquaintance — laughed.
An actual, genuine laugh — brief, gruff, but unmistakable.
"You've put my heart under intelligence surveillance. That may be the most audacious thing you've done yet — and you've done so extraordinary things."
"I'll take that as authorization."
"Take it however you like. Just keep alive long enough to deal with Hyderabad. That's going to make Kashmir look like a picnic."
The conversation shifted to strategy. With the personal matter resolved — or at least addressed — Patel's mind snapped back to the relentless forward montum that defined his political life.
"Nehru wants to discuss Kashmir with you tomorrow," Patel said. "He's uncomfortable with the military deploynt.
Handle him carefully — he's the future Pri Minister, and we need him on our side."
"What specifically is he uncomfortable about?"
"The speed. The decisiveness. The fact that it happened without his direct involvent." Patel's expression was carefully neutral.
"Jawaharlal likes to be consulted. He likes to deliberate. He likes to feel that major decisions reflect his input.
Kashmir was decided and executed while he was reading position papers about the United Nations."
"With respect, sir, if we'd waited for Nehru's input, we'd still be debating the rits of various constitutional fraworks while Pakistan's tribals marched on Srinagar."
"I know that. You know that. But politics requires managing egos as well as managing crises.
Nehru must feel that he's leading, even when others are driving. Otherwise, he becos an obstacle rather than an ally."
Vikram absorbed this. Patel's political wisdom — the ability to navigate human psychology as skillfully as he navigated strategic challenges — was sothing that no amount of future knowledge could replicate.
It ca from decades of experience in the trenches of Indian politics, and it was invaluable.
"How do I handle him?"
"Give him ownership of the next phase. The Kashmir deploynt is done — that's history.
What cos next — the constitutional frawork for Kashmir's integration, the governance model, the developnt plan — that's Nehru's territory. Intellectual work.
Policy work. The kind of work he loves and does brilliantly. Let him shape Kashmir's future within India while we handle the security dinsions."
"Divide and conquer, but on our own side."
"Divide and coordinate," Patel corrected. "Nehru leads the civilian dinsion. We lead the strategic dinsion.
India gets both — the idealism and the pragmatism. The vision and the steel."
The partnership that should have defined India's first decade, Vikram thought.
In the original tiline, Patel died too soon and Nehru was left alone — brilliant but unbalanced, idealistic but impractical.
If I can keep Patel alive and keep the partnership functioning, India gets the best of both n.
"I understand, Sardar sahab. I'll handle Nehru accordingly."
"Good." Patel stood, stretching his stiff back. "Now get out of my house and let an old man take his pills and eat his vegetables."
Vikram stood, gathered his papers, and headed for the door. But Patel's voice stopped him.
"Rathore."
"Yes, sir?"
"Kashmir." The Sardar paused, and when he spoke again, his voice carried a weight that went beyond politics — sothing approaching the sacred. "Every inch. We held every inch."
"Yes, sir. Every inch."
Patel nodded slowly. "Every inch," he repeated, more to himself than to Vikram. And in those two words, Vikram heard the echo of a lifeti of fighting — fighting the British, fighting communalism, fighting indecision and cowardice and the thousand forces that conspired to tear India apart.
Every inch. The creed of the Iron Man.
Vikram left the study and walked into the Delhi night, his mind already turning to tomorrow's eting with Nehru, the economic study, the Hyderabad crisis, and the thousand other challenges that awaited him.
Behind him, in the study on Aurangzeb Road, the most important man in India swallowed his first heart dication with a grimace and a muttered complaint.
And India — united, whole, and growing stronger by the day — continued its improbable, magnificent, terrifying journey toward the future.
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To be continued..
[END OF CHAPTER 47]
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