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Now reading: Chapter 25: The Spine of Power from Reborn in 1970 INDIA, a Action novel by SakshamRaj2742.

18 April 1971 — The Gorakhpur Forge

The forge no longer ended at its walls. It had outgrown them—quietly, thodically, without spectacle. What had once been a cluster of factories feeding regional demand had evolved into sothing far more dangerous: a system that entire states now depended on without realizing it.

Karan Shergill felt it the mont he stepped out of Hangar 4. The air wasn't louder or hotter—it was disciplined. Transmission lines humd with stability, trucks moved in tid intervals, and even the workers carried a rhythm that spoke of certainty rather than urgency. The chaos of growth had been replaced by the precision of control.

He hadn't seen this happen.

For months, he had been buried inside Delhi's shadows and Gorakhpur's engine core, fighting tallurgy, thermodynamics, and politics. While he had been building the future of air power, sothing else had been built behind him.

Sothing wider.

Sothing deeper.

He walked toward the estate without slowing. His shoulders were stiff, his eyes heavy, but his mind had already shifted gears. If Hangar 4 was the heart of the empire, the study would tell him whether that heart now belonged to a body—or to a nation.

The doors opened. Inside, the transformation was absolute. Maps layered over ledgers, mineral routes intersecting steel outputs, logistics grids flowing into revenue columns. It wasn't a study anymore. It was a command center.

At the center stood , bent over a ledger thick enough to feel like a physical object of power.

"If that's another requisition file, I'm approving it without reading," he muttered, then looked up—and froze.

His gaze swept across Karan: burn marks, grease stains, exhaustion worn openly. Concern replaced irritation instantly.

"You look like the engine tried to lt you," he said, stepping forward.

Karan dropped into the chair, exhaling slowly. "It tried. I adjusted the laws of physics."

Aditya snorted, then pulled him into a tight embrace—firm, grounding, unspoken relief passing between them.

"You disappear for months," Aditya said quietly, "and co back like the world waited."

Karan leaned back. "It didn't?"

Aditya gave him a look. Then turned the ledger toward him.

"No, Bhaiyya. It didn't. It grew."

He opened it.

Shergill Agri-Chem — National Scale Agricultural Control

Aditya didn't rush. He walked Karan through it like a strategist briefing terrain.

"Fertilizer was entry," he began. "But fertilizer alone doesn't lock farrs. Systems do."

The network had expanded across northern and central India. Not just urea and phosphate, but full-cycle agricultural inputs: pest-control rotations, micronutrient corrections, soil rehabilitation compounds, irrigation chemicals, and crop-yield stabilizers.

But the real shift wasn't chemical.

It was structural.

"Every district now has a Shergill field agent," Aditya said. "Not a salesman—a controller. He tracks crop cycles, recomnds usage, and ties supply to output."

Karan's fingers tapped lightly. "So yield becos predictable."

"Exactly. And predictable yield removes risk. And when risk disappears—loyalty appears."

Then ca the second layer.

Shergill Rural Credit.

Seed financing. Equipnt loans. Harvest-linked repaynt.

Karan's eyes narrowed slightly. "So if they fail…"

"They don't leave," Aditya said calmly. "They stay inside the system."

Monthly Net: ₹16 Crores

Shergill Mining Consortium — Raw Power

The next section shifted the map from farms to the earth beneath them.

Aditya didn't summarize—he defined.

Coal (Jharia & Dhanbad belts): Primary fuel for steel plants and thermal power units. High-grade coking coal reserved for tallurgy.

Iron Ore (Keonjhar, Odisha): Direct supply to Shergill steel units. Low impurity, ideal for controlled alloy production.

Bauxite (Koraput region): Feeding aluminum refining—critical for aviation fras and lightweight engineering.

Listone (Satna belt): Cent backbone and tallurgical flux.

Copper (Singhbhum belt): Wiring, electrical systems, early avionics groundwork.

Manganese (Nagpur-Bhandara zone): Strengthening alloys, improving fatigue resistance in high-stress components.

"Every major input," Aditya said, "is now internal."

Karan nodded slowly. "Which ans no one can choke production."

Monthly Net: ₹8.5 Crores

Shergill Steel Network — Mid-Scale Industrial Backbone

This section made Karan lean forward.

These weren't massive, singular plants like . Instead, Aditya had built sothing smarter.

A distributed steel network.

Plant 1 – Gorakhpur Rolling Mill: Structural steel, beams, rails, construction-grade output.

Plant 2 – Bokaro Integration Unit: Semi-finished steel, slab processing, feeding secondary plants.

Plant 3 – Kanpur Alloy Works: dium-grade alloys for machinery and transport.

Plant 4 – Ranchi Precision Casting: Small-batch, high-accuracy casting for specialized components.

Plant 5 – Varanasi Sheet tal Unit: Automotive sheets, industrial panels.

Karan stared at the layout.

"…you didn't build a giant," he said slowly.

Aditya shook his head. "Giants are easy to regulate. Networks are not."

The realization hit imdiately.

Distributed production.

Decentralized control.

Unstoppable flow.

Monthly Net: ₹9 Crores

Shergill Manufacturing Stack — Owning Production

Aditya flipped ahead.

Machine tools. Industrial lathes. Press systems. Gear assemblies.

"We don't just run factories anymore," he said. "We build the machines that run them."

Karan leaned back, a faint smile appearing.

"That… is leverage."

Monthly Net: ₹6 Crores

Shergill Consur Stack — Daily Control

Food processing. Dairy. Packaged grains.

Beverages:

Thunder (cola competitor to )

Zest-Li

Agni Charge

Kisan Boost

Sa logistics network.

Zero waste return.

Monthly Net: ₹11 Crores

Shergill Eastern Shipyards — Strategic Expansion

The map shifted to the eastern coast near .

"Civilian yard," Aditya said. "Oil carriers."

Then he tapped the structural plans.

"Upgradable."

Corvettes. Destroyers. Submarines with precision upgrades.

Karan's voice dropped slightly. "And carriers?"

Aditya t his gaze. "Seventy-five thousand tons. With upgrades."

Silence followed.

"…you bought naval capability," Karan said.

Monthly Net (current civilian ops): ₹3.5 Crores

Shergill Energy — The Growing Beast

Aditya turned the last operational section.

Thermal plants using internal coal.

Localized grids.

Industrial-first allocation.

"…and your engine," he added carefully.

Karan raised an eyebrow.

"…is eating villages."

A pause.

"…last test—three outages."

Karan leaned back.

"…good."

Aditya laughed despite himself.

Monthly Net: ₹4 Crores (but under expansion)

Future Directive — The Next 15 Fronts

Karan closed the ledger halfway. His exhaustion hadn't vanished—but sothing sharper had replaced it.

Clarity.

He looked at Aditya.

Then spoke.

Not casually.

Decisively.

"Automotive," he said. "I'm giving you everything."

Aditya blinked. "Everything?"

"Engine design. Materials. Cooling systems. Transmission concepts. We start with trucks. Then tractors. Then cars. No foreign dependency."

Then he continued.

Not as ideas.

As orders.

Heavy Automotive Manufacturing

Tractor & Farm Equipnt Division

Railway Locomotive Production

Aviation Components (non-sensitive)

Electronics Manufacturing (radios, circuits)

Semiconductor groundwork (long-term)

Telecommunications hardware

Petrochemicals (future integration)

Synthetic fibers & polyrs

Defense-grade materials

Ship engine manufacturing

Industrial robotics (primitive automation)

Battery and storage systems

Urban construction ga-projects

Export trading arm

Pharmaceutical manufacturing

dical equipnt

Education institutes (technical training pipelines)

Aditya didn't interrupt.

Didn't question.

He just listened.

Because this wasn't brainstorming.

This was expansion doctrine.

Karan leaned forward slightly.

"We are not building industries anymore," he said quietly.

"…we are building independence."

Final Ledger

Aditya slowly turned the final page.

Total Monthly Flow: ₹90 Crores

Silence settled.

Karan didn't react imdiately.

He just looked at his brother.

Then nodded.

"…I built a machine."

A pause.

"…you built the ecosystem that feeds it."

Aditya smirked faintly.

"And the electricity it steals."

Outside, the forge roared like sothing alive.

Inside, the ledger closed.

And sowhere nearby—

a village light flickered.

Then ca back.

End of Chapter 25

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