5 June 1971 — The Shergill Estate & Gorakhpur Town
The afternoon sun lay heavy over the Shergill estate, as if the sky itself had pressed its palm against the earth. The valley below humd with Gorakhpur's slow transformation—factories breathing, chimneys exhaling, steel dreams taking shape in invisible layers. But on the veranda, everything felt paused. Even the wind seed careful.
Sakshi stood by the stone railing, holding a small "Shergill Sanchar" transistor radio. The soft Bengali folk song coming from it felt almost rebellious in this silence—sothing human slipping through machinery. Karan sat behind her, not speaking. A tea cup rested between his fingers, unmoving.
"You're using the sa technology for a forty-rupee radio that you're using for those 'printing presses' in the vault," she said, barely above a whisper. Then she turned. Her eyes were tired—but not weak. "The beauty of it is that you're becoming a ghost, Karan. You're in the papers, you're in the factories, and now you're in every ho. Even your mother is afraid of the man you've beco."
The tea cup clicked down. Not loudly. But decisively. At the far edge of the garden, Mr. Bharat adjusted his stance. A faint hand signal passed through the hedges. The estate subtly emptied itself—servants drifting away without being told, guards repositioning without footsteps being heard. The air tightened. Sakshi noticed none of it directly. But she felt it.
Karan stood up slowly. Not rushed. Not emotional. Controlled—but not calm. Sothing behind his eyes was already shifting into another register.
"Sakshi," he said, softer than before. "Co here."
She hesitated. Not fearfully. Carefully. Then walked toward him. He took the radio from her hands and switched it off. The silence that followed was not empty. It was engineered.
"You asked if the country is worth the man you're losing," Karan began, eyes locked on hers, voice low and precise. "But you're asking the wrong question. You should be asking if the India we live in is actually 'India' at all."
Sakshi frowned—but didn't interrupt imdiately. "What are you talking about? We are a free nation. We have our own flag, our own Parliant—"
"We have a flag made of imported cloth and a Parliant that begs for wheat from the Aricans," Karan interrupted. A bird sowhere in the trees suddenly stopped chirping. Even nature seed unsure about entering this argunt. "True sovereignty isn't a piece of paper signed in 1947, Sakshi. True sovereignty is when a nation can say 'No' to the world and not starve the next day..."
He stepped forward. Not aggressively. Just enough for space to disappear. "My ambition isn't 'business.' It isn't even 'victory' in the coming war. My ambition is Self-Respect..."
A faint flicker of factory smoke rose in the distance, like the land itself reacting. Sakshi's expression tightened—but she didn't break eye contact.
"And the blood, Karan? The lies? The way you've manipulated the elections? Is that self-respect?"
A pause. Longer than before. Karan's jaw tightened slightly—not anger, but fatigue.
"It's surgery," he said finally.
Sowhere in the estate, a tal gate shifted slightly in the wind. "You don't cure a gangrenous limb with poetry..."
Sakshi didn't move. But her breathing changed. Sharper. asured.
"I told you I'm an industrialist. That was a lie..." The wind rose slightly, brushing the veranda curtains—but only for a mont. "I have seen the future, Sakshi..."
When he reached out and cupped her face, it wasn't dominance. It was grounding. Almost human.
"I can't tell Pitaji this..." His voice softened, just a fraction. "But you... you are the one who has to live in the world I'm building."
For the first ti, Sakshi didn't look away.
Silence returned again. But this ti it was different. Not tense. Heavy. Shared.
Sakshi looked at the radio on the table. Then at Karan. Then at the distance between them—which suddenly felt smaller than before.
She didn't step back. "You're a terrifying man, Karan Shergill," she whispered. Then, after a breath—"If you're going to be the villain, then don't do it halfway..."
Karan exhaled. Not relief. Recognition. "I won't fail," he said. A pause. Then, slightly quieter—"And I will make sure the folk songs still have a country to play in."
Sakshi picked up the radio again. Switched it on. The folk song resud. But now it didn't feel fragile. It felt… guarded.
She handed it back to him. "Then go back to work, Karan. The folk songs are over. Tell what I need to do to keep the 'Ho Front' as silent as your Clean Room."
Karan looked at her for a mont. Longer than necessary. Then nodded.
Mr. Bharat stepped out quietly from the bougainvillea shadows. "A successful synchronization, Sir."
Karan didn't respond imdiately. Instead, he glanced at Sakshi briefly—just once. Then back to Bharat.
"She's in," he said.
Bharat nodded. "Ensure Ergency Household Protocol is briefed."
Karan turned toward the horizon. The factory glow was stronger now. Less like industry. More like a second sunset.
"The family is no longer a liability, Bharat," he said.
"Yes, Sir."
"And the General?"
"Sam arrives in forty-eight hours."
A faint smile appeared on Karan's face. Not cold this ti. Sothing sharper. More playful.
"We're going to show him I'm both patriot and profiteer." He glanced toward the house. "And definitely not well-behaved."
Later that evening.
The veranda was quieter again.
Sakshi was walking back inside when she felt it. A small tap on her shoulder.
She turned.
Karan was holding the sa transistor radio. But now it had a tiny handwritten label stuck on it: "Approved by Revolutionary Household Authority – Sakshi Division"
She blinked. "…What is this?"
Karan looked completely serious. "The official designation of your departnt."
She stared. "You created a departnt?"
"Yes."
"With one employee?"
"Yes."
"And that's ?"
"Yes."
A beat. Then—"Why do I feel like I just got promoted and demoted at the sa ti?"
Karan nodded thoughtfully. "That is accurate performance feedback."
Sakshi narrowed her eyes. "This is your idea of seriousness?"
Karan leaned slightly closer. Dead serious face. "Revolutions require administrative structure."
She almost laughed.
"You are impossible."
Karan leaned back, hands in pockets. "History tends to agree."
Then casually: "Also, I approved a bonus."
She stopped. "What bonus?"
"Weekend permission to yell at ."
Silence.
Then Sakshi finally laughed—short, surprised, disard. "For God's sake…"
Karan nodded once. Satisfied. "See? Stability achieved."
From the garden, Mr. Bharat quietly turned away, pretending he had seen nothing.
The foundries glowed in the distance.
And for the first ti that day—the Republic felt strangely alive.
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