The
air inside the Sehgal Empire shifted instantly. The murmured conversations died
down as words spread quickly across the floor the moment Ekansh and Eshita
stepped into the company building together. Chairs scraped against the floor
almost in unison. Every employee present on the floor rose to their feet
automatically. That was the authority the siblings carried without even
demanding it.
The stance of the duo radiated quiet
power and control, their mere presence enough to silence the entire office.
A few employees who had been working
there for decades recognized Ekansh instantly. Years ago, he had worked under
Virendra himself and their boss’s son. Back then, no one in the office was
allowed to order Ekansh around, not a senior from another department, not even
the board members themselves, except for his father.
And the same went for Eshita. She
listened, worked, and reported only to one man: the CEO of the company and her
father.
Seeing the siblings together after years
surprised many. Some exchanged shocked glances at Ekansh’s unexpected arrival,
while others simply stood confused, unable to understand what exactly was
happening.
“Who is he?” one of the interns whispered
quietly to the employee beside him, clearly unaware of the tension filling the
atmosphere.
The senior employee looked at him, “You
joined recently, didn’t you?” he muttered.
The intern nodded hesitantly.
The older employee lowered his voice
immediately, careful enough that it wouldn’t travel far. “That’s Ekansh Sehgal.
Boss’s son.”
The intern’s eyes widened slightly. “The
same Ekansh Sehgal?”
“What do you mean?” the other employee
frowned in confusion.
“It’s just… there are words going around
that Ekansh Sehgal was disowned by his own father.”
“Isliye toh Mr. Sehgal ne Ms. Eshita ko
apna heir announce kiya tha kuch mahine pehle.” Another chimed in, “He isn’t
deserving enough to carry the Sehgal legacy.”
Eshita stopped dead in her tracks. The
last words fell in her ears, making her blood boil. Her brother wasn’t looking
for a grand introduction. He had already asked her before stepping down from
the car that they would straight go to their father’s cabin for work. She didn’t
like the idea but understood her bhaiya’s view. He was walking back into a
place where he had left behind too many memories; he needed time to gather
himself before facing everything again, yet the whispers followed him even
here.
She spun on her heels. Silence enveloped
the entire floor. Everyone straightened up instantly. Eshita Sehgal was known
to be sharp-tongued, blunt, and brutally straightforward. The girl was just
eighteen, but the authority she carried in her presence alone was enough to
silence an entire room.
“Kya hua?” Ekansh looked up startled as
he almost collided with Eshita, busy going through his phone.
He heard every single word, but nothing
touched him anymore. He was used to being judged, misunderstood, and talked
about behind his back. Today also, he was fine. He couldn’t waste his energy
going around shutting every mouth.
Those who knew him already greeted him
with warm looks on their faces, and he was content with that. If there was one
thing he had earned on his own, it was the support of the office employees. No
matter how cold or distant he was toward them, they made sure to respect him
and stand by him, not because he was the son of a man who signed their
paychecks, but because of who he was as an individual, and that was enough for
him.
Eshita quietly reached for Ekansh’s hand,
guiding him to the center of the room. “Jitna main samajh pa rahi hoon, aap
sabhi jaante hai yeh kaun hai.” Her voice echoed calmly through the silent
office floor.
“But for those who don’t know…” Her gaze
landed on the ones who were commenting earlier. “He is Ekansh Virendra Sehgal.
My elder brother.” Her voice was sharp with authority.
Her gaze swept across everyone. “From now
on, he will be taking care of office matters jab tak dad wapas nahi aa jaate.
You all will report to him directly, and make sure to spread this news on each
floor immediately. Clear?”
The team nodded instantly, not daring to
question her tone.
Eshita turned to leave but stopped,
looking back at the intern. “We don’t pay here for gossip or unnecessary
commentary. Work properly, or I won’t mind personally reviewing your reports.”
Ekansh sighed, guiding his sister toward
the elevator. There wasn’t much changed in the interior within these five
years. The walls were the same, so were the familiar corridors carrying
memories he never truly left behind.
He punched the button for the last floor
and looked at Eshita. “Satisfied?”
Eshita shot him a sharp look. “You should
have told her something. I know you heard it, yet you ignored it.”
Ekansh shook his head. “Jab main new tha
yaha, working as dad’s PA, I heard many voices too. Some called it privilege,
some favoritism, some even questioned my capabilities. I was angry. I was ready
to fight each one of them, but dad only said one thing.”
A faint smile tugged at his lips. “A
person who keeps stopping to answer every barking voice never reaches his
destination. We prove ourselves through work, not arguments.”
Eshita sighed. She had heard the same
before, but back then her father’s words, any word of wisdom, only fueled her
anger. She ignored them all, only to realize now that he had given her the same
lessons he taught her bhaiya… just in different ways.
“The floors changed or what?” Ekansh
asked as they stepped out of the elevator.
“HR department is on the third floor, the
finance one is on the fifth,” Eshita recited like a cassette player, “legal
department on the seventh and the board meeting halls along with dad’s personal
conference cabin are on the top floor.”
Ekansh blinked, startled, taking in her
words. “Did you mug everything up like a parrot?”
Eshita shrugged, pushing the door of her
father’s cabin open. “I didn’t have much of a choice. Har ek floor par dus dus
baar gayi hu seedhiyon se. Bhoolne ka koi chance hi nhi hai.”
Ekansh stiffened each time he heard one
of the struggles his sister had gone through. He didn’t know what to make out
of it. He had gone through the same more times than he could count on his
fingers. His father was ruthless in his business mode. He preferred perfection
and professionalism. If the expectations from employees were a hundred percent,
then from his son they were far beyond that. But the age difference and choices
mattered.
He looked on as Eshita sat on the couch
with their father’s laptop. He settled down beside her quietly. For years he
had yearned to see his child grow up, wondering how she was living, was she
happy, did she miss him, did she stop getting into trouble at school, was her
temper still the same or had it lessened as she grew up… so many questions, so
many lost moments.
But now, sitting there in a formal suit
with her hair falling over her shoulders, her brows furrowed in concentration,
completely focused on her work, after everything he was seeing, Ekansh didn’t
know what he should actually feel.
His sister had grown up in ways much
harsher than he had imagined. Before leaving the house, he had teased her that
she would create chaos, but this side of Eshita came as a complete surprise to
him. He wasn’t prepared to see that businesswoman in action.
He was proud of what she had become
despite the forced responsibilities she chose to carry silently, but even his
pride tangled itself with guilt because she never wanted this life in the first
place.
“Here is the presentation of the new
startup collaboration proposal.” Eshita’s voice snapped him out of his
thoughts.
He leaned forward, going through the
screen. “What’s the issue here exactly?”
Eshita sighed, rubbing her forehead
lightly. “They want us to do all the manufacturing, packaging, marketing, and
distribution while paying them an extra percentage over the agreed amount. The
product cost itself is low, so is the making cost.”
“We will be at a loss that way,” Ekansh
concluded. “Why are we even working with this company? What’s their history?”
Eshita leaned back on the couch. “A few
months back, Mr. Kashyap and Dad opened a new investment branch where they
offer funds to small startup companies that have creative ideas and potential
but lack manufacturing and financial support. We handle the production and
business side while they focus on innovation. We gain profits and they get a
platform.”
Ekansh still looked clueless. “Now what
does it have to do with Mr. whoever Kashyap is?”
Eshita rolled her eyes slightly. “Dad and
Mr. Kashyap signed deals with a few startup companies, but this one…” She
pointed at the screen. “Was brought in personally by Kashyap. He wanted to help
his old school friend and that’s how this whole mess began. In the beginning
everything was perfect as per the contract, the profit margin, timelines, even
the responsibilities were clearly divided. But now…” She gestured toward the
screen. “You can see yourself. They want more money without contributing
anything extra.”
“In short, greed ruined professionalism,”
Ekansh muttered.
Eshita nodded. “I made changes a few
months back, and I think they responded, but we were busy with our lives. So…
now we have a meeting with them. They want to find a middle ground.”
Ekansh went through the presentation and
the pros and cons carefully, trying to understand every detail before reaching
any conclusion.
“Are they an asset for our company or a
liability?” He asked, closing the file.
Eshita contemplated for a moment. “I
guess both. Latter one more, because Kashyap Industries were drowning in their
own losses a year back before dad helped them despite not being on good terms.
Six months back the company reached new heights, new investors, extra profits, and
they started showing their true colors. Dad chahte toh pehle hi contract se
alag ho jaate, par kaafi paise bhi lage hai, reputation too. The ATV launch
that happened in dad’s absence… the man took every credit for it. I worked on
the presentation dad made and even handled the technical modifications, but he
was the one who bragged about it like he built the whole project from scratch.
Yet we can’t do anything under the legal contract.”
Ekansh exhaled sharply. That was one
thing he hated about business partnerships, you couldn’t simply walk away,
neither could you destroy someone without destroying yourself in the process.
✨✨✨
After a while, the siblings stepped into
the conference room where Avinash and two more men were waiting. As the duo
walked in, rather than Virendra Sehgal himself, they exchanged glances filled
with visible dissatisfaction.
Ekansh and Eshita avoided the head chair,
settling down side by side right across from them.
Eshita quietly attached the laptop to the
big screen beside her, which lit up with the new presentation she and Ekansh
had worked on an hour ago before coming there. She didn’t believe in handshakes
or fake introductions when people had already decided to underestimate you the
moment you walked in.
“So let’s start the meeting, gentlemen.”
Her tone was calm and professional. “We have...”
“Where is Mr. Sehgal?” Avinash Kashyap
cut in casually. “We were supposed to have a meeting with him. Not you… or an
outsider.” He emphasized the last words while looking at Ekansh. “Who is he?”
Eshita glared at the old hag, ready to
spit out something harsh, but Ekansh held her wrist under the table, stopping
her at the last moment.
“Who I am and what my relation is with
this company, we can keep the introductions for later, Mr. Kashyap.” Ekansh’s
firm tone sliced through the air, gaining each of their attention.
“For now, let’s focus on what we are here
for.”
“We don’t do business with children.”
Another man scoffed. He turned to Avinash. “Yeh kya hai Kashyap sahab? Aapne
toh kaha tha Mr. Sehgal se mulakat hogi. Yaha toh yeh bacche itni badi meeting
mein hai. Mr. Sehgal ko apni company ki padi nahi hai kya?”
“Was that a threat I heard, Mr.
Maheshwari?” Eshita asked sharply. “Or are you trying to insult my father?”
The man glared at her. “We are here to
talk to the man who will actually handle the deal, not a college-going child
who is yet to understand how the real world works.”
Ekansh leaned back in the chair coolly. “Well,
you don’t have a choice in that, Mr. Maheshwari. Unfortunately, you willl have
to see for yourself what experience a child going to university has unlike the
grown men whose fragile ego can’t deal with a woman talking logically.”
He could recognize a bully the moment he
saw one because he had dealt with enough of them in life, and Rajesh Maheshwari
was clearly one. His tone gave away that he could handle the deal being
presented by his father, but not by Eshita. That rubbed him the wrong way. They
were living in the twenty-first century, not some fucking backward era.
Before Rajesh could utter another word,
Eshita rose to her feet. She stared at Avinash, in the eye.
“If your partner has a problem with me
leading this meeting, then we have to end this all here, Mr. Kashyap.” Her tone
firmed. “I am here representing Seghal Empires, and this gentleman here…” She
pointed at Ekansh, “Is my elder brother. We both are here filling in for our
father who couldn’t attend the meeting due to some personal reasons. So… you don’t
have a choice but to go through the process.”
“We suggested the merger a few months
back. You responded to the proposal yourselves, and that’s how we are all here
today. You can walk out if you want, but after this we will meet in court. As
legally, we abided by the rules attending the meeting for the better
continuation of the partnership, but…” She glanced at Rajesh with a sweet
smile, “Someone has to throw tantrums like a toddler. Not our fault. Is it now?”
Avinash raised his palm, stopping Rajesh who
tried to speak. He knew speaking to Eshita was a waste of time. The girl was
the youngest person he had come across in all the decades he had spent building
his own company, yet Eshita was someone who could corner people with her firm
stance and unwavering confidence without giving them a chance to recover.
He knew he didn’t have much of a choice
except to go with the flow. The man sitting beside her was unknown to him, but
the news spreading around that Virendra Sehgal’s son was back in business had
already reached his ears. He had ignored it earlier, but he couldn’t ignore
Eshita’s words now. He didn’t wish to mess with Virendra Sehgal’s children.
“Continue with what you were saying,” He
said begrudgingly.
Eshita nodded and sat back, turning
toward the screen. “So as we were speaking…” Words tumbled out of her smoothly,
each precise detail and calculation presented with complete clarity.
Ekansh sat back, letting his sister take
over, only adding his views when needed and giving her time to breathe whenever
she paused. None of the three interrupted, listening to everything quietly with
full concentration because the confidence Eshita carried mixing with Ekansh’s
support left no room for carelessness.
“We can divide the investment percentage
while balancing the production responsibilities equally.” Eshita concluded,
looking at them, “This way our companies will gain profit and so will the
workers. But you can’t rely on Sehgal Empires completely to pay for all the
costs while your side simply supervises the outcome.”
“We don’t want the company to pay
completely.” The man with Rajesh spoke up hesitantly, “We will pay the company,
but after the six months of product launch and market performance.”
Eshita shook her head. “We can’t go with
that either. The factory workers need to be paid on time, so do the raw
material suppliers. Campaign and ads you will do later, but what is the
guarantee that your product will sell well enough? What if what we pay for
making the product is less than the losses we end up carrying? There are risks
involved.”
“Risks are a part of business.” Rajesh
mocked. “I think that’s the basic business principle you should be aware of.”
“Risks taken from both sides are called
business.” Ekansh said sharply. “Only a fool will think one side should carry
the entire burden.”
Rajesh glared at Ekansh. “So you think we
will run away after taking your company’s investment? We will be bound in a
legal contract still your company is doubting us?”
“Legal documentation doesn’t give blind
trust,” Eshita chimed in calmly. “Legal contracts are for the safety of
business, not for emotional reassurance.”
“I understand, Eshita.” Avinash spoke
diplomatically, “But you see, I am working with your father’s company for years
now. A little bit of flexibility can strengthen business relations. It’s just
my friend here wants a chance. I don’t think you want to disappoint your father’s
old friend.”
Ekansh rose to his feet, startling them
all. He buttoned his coat and stared at Avinash. “Business and personal
relationships are two different things, Mr. Kashyap. My father won’t accept us
agreeing to something that will cost our company unnecessary losses. The final
decision is made. Like my sister said, either we divide the investment percent
or the deal is off. The choice is yours. You can answer us through mail.”
“I will drag you to court.” Rajesh fumed.
He had come hoping to gain easy benefits all because Avinash told him Virendra
Sehgal was his friend. And he pounced on the opportunity as his own company was
on the edge of collapsing, but here everything flipped against him instead.
He glared at Eshita. “I have enough dirt
on your father to dig up and destroy his reputation. Then we will see...”
“Before that
think what I will do with you.” Ekansh’s voice boomed through the
room. His eyes blazed with fury as he stood before Eshita protectively,
blocking Rajesh completely. ”You want to
drag my father? Threaten my sister?”
He rounded the table. Each step echoed
with controlled fury, like a predatory beast slowly closing in on its prey.
Rajesh rose to his feet, flinching slightly at the unexpected venom in Ekansh’s
voice and presence.
Ekansh picked up the contract papers,
tearing them apart right before Rajesh’s face. “The deal is off… permanently.” He stepped closer. “Let’s see
what dirt I find on you and how many years it will take for you to clean it.
Maybe then you will curse yourself for threatening my sister in front of me.”
Avinash rose to his feet. The rage in
Ekansh, his cold dominating demeanor, everything made them deeply
uncomfortable. It was the first time they were meeting, Ekansh, first time
witnessing the real Ekansh Sehgal behind the composed businessman mask he was
displaying earlier and already hoped it was the last time. He didn’t need to
shout to make his displeasure know. His aura, few choosen words dipped in
warning were enough to make a statement.
Eshita picked up the laptop hurriedly
before rushing to Ekansh’s side. Her brother was too close to punching the
daylight out of the man if he dared utter a single word wrong. Even though the
fear in their eyes gave away that they wouldn’t dare provoke him further, still
she refused to take risks.
She had seen that side of her bhaiya
before; it was nothing new to her. But it would be a lie if she said it didn’t
scare her. Even if that anger, that venom, was reserved for the outer world who
wronged his loved ones, she still feared the destruction he could unleash once
he truly lost control. She thanked her stars that Ekansh had held back for so
long. He was pissed the moment Rajesh opened his mouth, yet he controlled
himself, giving him a calm yet cutting reply. But she knew this much, that was
all he could hold in.
“Bhaiya…” She reached for his arm,
standing beside him.
Ekansh stepped back. He glanced at
Avinash. ”You have my father’s number.
Make sure to tell him what occurred here. I would really like to know if he
still wants to be your friend or business partner anymore, or if he would
rather continue entertaining people like him.”
Turning on his heels, he walked out of
the room followed by Eshita. He had planned to let everything slide calmly and
stay as professional as possible, but some people simply didn’t deserve
calmness. He did what he was supposed to do. He didn’t regret anything.
Eshita dialed the intercom, ordering
coffee. She looked at her brother. “Barf laau aapke liye? Aapka dimaag thanda
karne ke liye.”
Ekansh ignored her words, slumping down
on the couch. He glanced at his watch. “Ekta ko school se lene jaana hai. What
meetings do we have now?”
Eshita shook her head. “Abhi ke liye kuch
nahi hai. Shaam mein hai. I will come with you.”
Ekansh raised an eyebrow. “Are you sure?”
She had asked him so many questions, how
Ekta was, her mood, whether she was happy, and countless other things, but she
herself refused to approach Ekta directly. He gave her every tiny detail, even
about what happened with the sacred thread, because he could never hide
anything from his sister. He didn’t know what changed that she suddenly wanted
to go along to pick Ekta up.
“You scared the shit out of them,” Eshita
murmured, changing the topic. She was doing it simply.... because she wanted
to. There was no explanation beyond that.
Ekansh let her be. “They deserved that.
How did you even handle those jerks alone?”
Eshita frowned. “Who said I dealt with
them alone? Dad humesha saath hote the. Presentation main deti thi ya unke
saath rehti thi, but no one dared question me or cross me in dad’s presence.
Kis ki himmat hogi dad ke samne muh kholne ki aur...” She trailed off as
realization slammed against her heart wildly.
Just like her bhaiya was there with her
today, her father too had always been there for her. There was not a single
meeting she attended without his presence, and when he was busy, he asked the
manager to handle things rather than letting her go alone despite her knowing
everything about the project.
Ekansh rose to his feet, walking up to
her. He didn’t like tears in her eyes. “Kya hua?”
Eshita wrapped her arms around him. “Dad
humesha mere saath hi the.”
Her anger toward her father never let her
see his positive side. She focused on finding flaws in him because he was never
emotionally present when she needed him, always so cold and distant. So the
best way to protect herself was to think he was selfish, heartless, and every
other negative word present in the vocabulary. Now the realization she felt
today spread a strange warmth through her chest, melting the walls around her
heart a little bit.
Ekansh kissed her crown tenderly. “Dad ne
kabhi nahi kaha hoga. But main keh raha hoon. He is proud of you, Esha. So am
I… I am proud of my sister.” His words were laced with sincerity and
admiration.
Every fiber of his being knew that if he
had been in her place, he would have rebelled and done everything wrong just to
make a point rather than growing up so maturely like his sister did. He was
genuinely proud of her.
Tears overflowed as Eshita let herself
relax in her bhaiya’s embrace. Until she heard those words, she herself hadn’t
realized how deeply she yearned to hear them, craving for that quiet
acknowledgment and unconditional pride from the people she loved the most.
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
What are your thoughts on the Sehgal
siblings and Ekansh’s intense protective side?
Do you remember who Avinash Kashyap is?
Any scene you wish to read(If it goes
with the upcoming Chapters I will add them accordingly.)
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
Like I said, the story will move on at a slow pace. I have a lot to add here; it’s like I just don’t want to end the Seghal Siblings Saga so easily. Or I can just come to the main twist, but it will end up messing with my plans, disconnecting the emotional flow. I will go at the pace I find fit. I just hope I don’t bore you.
Please do share your views!
Next Update: Wednesday!
Thanks for reading!!!
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She is strong
ReplyDeleteLOVED this sooo much, author didi, please keep bringing this power sibling duo time to time
ReplyDeleteπ
Deleteas far as i remember, that to if correctly avinash is ritwik's grandfather
ReplyDeleteππ
DeleteSeeing ekta's personality, in comparison to sehgal siblings she is calm, i want see her being ice to these fire heads in future
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DeleteAuthor di, can we have a scene of eshita for her negligence towards her health in last 5 years, like having too much caffine and sleeping pills showing a side effect or something like that,
ReplyDeleteAlso can we please have scenes of eshita for now with ekansh later with ekta too, fulfilling a small part of providing mother's warmth, in most stories it is shown how a sister in law takes place of a mother but it is often forgotten that even a sister despite of age have a maternal side for her sibling to look after and care, given that eshita's situation she grew up mature before her actual age she knows how to handle emotions and is capable of providing that warmth at the same time ekta needs someone with that warmth and a friend at home with whom she can share her closest secrets without hesitation, and even ekansh needs someone in front of whom he can bare his emotions, tho the age gap is huge but he does not always need to be strong
yes please
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DeleteAmazing..loved it..alsothe way in step by step.you are showing positive side of.virendra to ishita. Pace is perfect..go.with your flow..pls show.fb of ekansh when he was working as virendra assistant -@kvs99
ReplyDeleteThanks dearπ
DeleteAwesome update ♥️
ReplyDeleteThe siblings gonna rule the business world with iron fist
ReplyDeleteAuthor di I don't get that why are you neglecting ekta so much please more scene of her like i too want to see the bonding of esha and ekansh but with ignoring ekta please no I don't know π why they neglect younger ones
ReplyDeleteI am not neglecting her story dear. It's just story is moving forward in slow pace. And I can't add evrything in the one chapter. Slowly you will read her side too.
DeleteI wanna see new trio bonding too
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