non's eyes narrowed. "Natural gas in Bengal? On what basis do you make that claim?"
"Geological analysis, sir. The sedintary formations in the Sylhet region and the Bengal Basin are consistent with hydrocarbon deposits. I would recomnd an imdiate geological survey once we have the administrative capacity."
'The Sylhet gas fields would be discovered in the 1950s in the original tiline,' Vikram thought. 'I'm just pointing people in the right direction.'
"Interesting," non said, making a note. "Continue."
"The point is this: Bengal doesn't need charity from the center. It needs investnt. And that investnt will pay for itself many tis over. Within a decade of independence, a united Bengal could be one of the most productive states in India — a net contributor to national revenue, not a drain on it. The economic case for unity is overwhelming."
He returned to his chair. "And that's the argunt we make to Bengali Muslims. Not — stay with India because Pakistan will treat you badly. But — stay with India because India will make you prosperous. Because your children will have schools and hospitals and factories and opportunities. Because your language and culture will be protected by constitutional law. Because you'll be equal citizens of the world's largest democracy, not second-class subjects of a Punjabi-dominated military state."
non was quiet for a long ti, reading through Vikram's economic projections with the intensity of a man defusing a bomb.
His red pencil moved constantly — underlining, circling, adding question marks.
"Where did you study economics?" non asked suddenly.
"Allahabad University."
"Allahabad doesn't teach economics like this. I know — I've read their curriculum. This..." He tapped the notebook. "This is at the level of a Cambridge or Oxford doctoral thesis. So of these concepts — this idea of 'complentary regional developnt' and 'strategic investnt zones' — I've never seen anything like it."
Vikram's pulse quickened. He'd been too detailed, too advanced. He needed to pull back before non's curiosity turned into suspicion.
"I read widely, sir. British and Arican economic journals. And I've spent considerable ti thinking about what independent India's economy should look like. These ideas aren't born from academia — they're born from observation and common sense."
"Hmm." non didn't look entirely convinced, but he was too pragmatic a man to reject good ideas based on their unlikely source. "All right. Let's move on to the political dinsion."
---
They worked through the morning and into the afternoon, pausing only for more tea and a simple lunch of roti and sabzi brought in by the peon.
Vikram found non to be everything the history books described — brilliant, pragmatic, and utterly dedicated to the cause of Indian unity. He was also, Vikram discovered, deeply frustrated.
"The problem," non said during a break, standing by the window and looking out at the imperial skyline, "is that we're fighting a war on three fronts simultaneously. The British want out. Jinnah wants Pakistan. And our own leadership is divided. Gandhi ji wants Hindu-Muslim unity but opposes any constitutional frawork that institutionalizes religious identity. Nehru ji wants a modern, secular state but keeps making concessions to the League out of a misguided belief in negotiation. And Patel sahab wants to call Jinnah's bluff but doesn't yet have the political support to override Nehru."
"What if Patel had proof that Jinnah was dying?" Vikram asked carefully. "How would that change the dynamic?"
non turned from the window. "It would change everything. If Jinnah has eighteen months to live, then Pakistan's strongest advocate has an expiration date. The League's unity depends on his personal authority. Without him, the movent fragnts. Suhrawardy in Bengal goes his own way. The Frontier Province under Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan stays with India — which it probably would anyway. Sindh wavers. Only Punjab remains firmly in the Pakistan camp, and even there, the Sikh and Hindu minorities would complicate things enormously."
"So the strategy becos: delay the final decision on Partition while building an alternative frawork that makes Pakistan unnecessary for Bengali Muslims. Let ti — and Jinnah's health — do the work."
non studied him with those sharp, worried eyes. "You're very strategic for a twenty-four-year-old Congress volunteer, Rathore. Almost... unnervingly so."
Vikram shrugged with practiced casualness. "I had a lot of ti to think in the hospital."
"Apparently." non returned to his desk. "All right. Let's talk about the next step. Patel wants this proposal on his desk in one week. That ans we need not just constitutional provisions but a political strategy — who to approach in the Bengal Muslim League, what to offer them, how to fra it. And we need the economic projections polished — clear, specific, and convincing enough to make a Bengali farr believe his future is better with India than with Jinnah."
*This is where I really earn my place,* Vikram thought.
"I can finalize everything," he said. "Give three days."
"Three days for a comprehensive state integration proposal with economic projections?"
"I work fast."
---
Vikram spent those three days in a state of controlled frenzy.
non had given him access to a small office — really just a desk in a corner of the Political Reforms section, but it ca with access to North Block's extensive library and filing system.
Vikram devoured everything he could find: census data, agricultural reports, trade statistics, industrial surveys, revenue records. Much of it was outdated or incomplete — the British had been better at extracting wealth from India than asuring it — but it was enough to provide a factual foundation for the projections he was building.
The projections themselves, of course, were based on knowledge that no one else in 1947 possessed.
Vikram knew, from his 2026 perspective, exactly what Bengal's economic potential was. He knew about the natural gas reserves in the Sylhet region.
He knew about the fertile potential of the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta for high-yield rice cultivation. He knew about the jute industry's potential for modernization and export.
He knew about the deep-water port potential of Chittagong, which could beco one of Asia's great trading hubs if properly developed.
He also knew what would go wrong if Bengal was divided. In the original tiline, East Pakistan — later Bangladesh — had been systematically exploited by West Pakistan, its resources extracted to fund developnt in Punjab and Sindh.
The result was poverty, resentnt, and eventually the bloody liberation war of 1971.
West Bengal, anwhile, had fallen under Communist rule and stagnated for decades, its industrial base crumbling, its intellectual capital fleeing to other states.
'A united Bengal within India,' Vikram calculated, 'fully integrated, sa currency, sa national frawork — with proper investnt and governance, could beco the powerhouse of eastern India. A gateway to Southeast Asia. An engine of national growth.'
He worked eighteen-hour days, sleeping on a cot in the corner of his borrowed office, eating als brought by the peon.
His hand cramped from constant writing. His eyes burned from reading by dim lamplight.
But the work poured out of him like water from a broken dam — decades of accumulated knowledge finally finding an outlet.
By the end of the second day, he had produced a sixty-page docunt titled "The Bengal Integration Proposal: Constitutional Frawork, Economic Projections, and Political Strategy."
The docunt was structured in four parts:
Part One — Constitutional Frawork. Bengal as a full state of the Indian Union. Sa constitution, sa currency, sa central laws. Special provisions for minority protection — reserved seats, language guarantees, autonomous education board, land reform protections. All enforceable through the courts, not dependent on political goodwill.
Part Two — Economic Developnt Plan.
A twenty-five-year roadmap for Bengal's transformation. Agricultural modernization, industrial investnt zones around Calcutta and Chittagong, infrastructure developnt including roads, railways, and port expansion. Projected GDP growth of 8-10% annually with proper execution.
Part Three — Political Strategy.
A detailed plan for approaching key Bengali Muslim leaders — Suhrawardy, Abul Hashim, Fazlul Huq — and presenting the proposal as an alternative to Pakistan. Specific talking points tailored to each leader's known priorities and vulnerabilities.
Part Four — Strategic Resource Assessnt.
And here, buried in the appendices, Vikram planted seeds for the future. He included a section titled "Untapped Natural Resources of the Indian Subcontinent" — a docunt that "predicted" the existence of significant resources he knew from the future would be discovered:
Oil and natural gas deposits in the Krishna-Godavari Basin off the coast of Andhra Pradesh. Oil reserves in Rajasthan's Barr district. Rare earth mineral deposits in the Eastern Ghats and parts of Jharkhand.
Uranium deposits in Singhbhum. Thorium reserves in Kerala's coastal sands — the largest in the world, he noted, which would be critical for advanced nuclear energy programs. Natural gas in Bengal's Sylhet region.
He presented these as "geological assessnts based on available survey data and extrapolation from known mineral patterns." It was thin cover, but he needed to plant these seeds now. When these resources were eventually "discovered" based on his recomndations, his credibility would beco unshakeable.
'And India will have its own energy independence,' he thought. 'No more dependence on Middle Eastern oil. No more vulnerability to supply disruptions. The foundation of a truly sovereign economy.'
On the morning of the third day, as Vikram was reviewing the final draft, a peon appeared at his desk.
"Rathore sahab, there is a ssage from non sahab. He requests your presence imdiately in his office. He says it is urgent."
Vikram gathered his docunts and went.
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