Livid? Even that word couldn’t describe the look on Virendra’s
face, his jaw clenched, his fists tightened, and every muscle in his body
seemed to radiate anger, as he barged into the Commissioner’s cabin without any
heed of protocol or formalities. The video surfacing all over the media and
internet had already spread like wildfire. His son had beaten up the most
celebrated and influential lawyer of the country. Every comment asked for
justice, questioning Ekansh’s character, asking Ekansh to be punished for
taking the law into his own hands.
“Where is my son?” Virendra roared at Satish.
Satish rose to his feet instinctively. “Inside the lock-up,
Virendra,” his tone was professional. “And I hope you won’t ask me to release
him. After...”
“Show him the bail papers, Ram.” Virendra interjected,
ignoring the rest.
Vikram complied, immediately placing the papers before him.
He had prepared them for the second time using his personal connections just
for his friend. Earlier, it was Eshita who had texted him to prepare them.
Years of experience with his friend’s temper gave away Eshita would just
be following through on her brother’s behalf.
“I can’t release him.” Satish stated, keeping aside the
papers. He looked at Virendra. “Your son attacked Samar Singhania first. The
whole office witnessed him walking inside that room. Even the CCTV footage is
as clear as day. First we need to investigate why your son...”
“Because Samar Singhania assaulted a woman.” Virendra’s
voice sliced through the room.
Silence followed. Satish frowned.
“My son didn’t walk into that office looking for a fight,”
Virendra continued. “He walked into that room after finding out that Samar
Singhania, the so-called champion of justice, is a rapist. You want proof?
Fine. I will give you proof. But mark my words... agar mere bete ko kisne haath
bhi lagaya toh...”
A loud commotion from outside cut him off. Before anyone
could react, Satish rushed out of the room followed by Virendra and Vikram.
Their steps halted before the chaotic scene going on inside the cell. Ekansh
fought alone against five built-up criminals.
“OPEN THE DAMN LOCK!” Virendra barked, the blood on his son’s
face making his vision blur with rage.
The constable complied as Satish nodded.
Virendra walked in immediately, holding Ekansh who stumbled
back slightly while the officers pinned the other inmates down and dragged them
apart.
His gaze followed up and down worriedly. “Tu theek....” He
trailed off, noticing the blood stream on his arm. “What is it? How did you get
hurt?”
“One of the idiots was holding a knife,” Ekansh sighed. “It
grazed my arm. Nothing serious.”
Virendra turned to Satish furious, “A criminal in your
custody shouldn’t have a weapon! You can’t keep a first-time offender with
seasoned criminals under the provisions of Indian law until they are proven
guilty! You failed to do your job and I will make sure you regret it.”
His years of friendship with Satish walked out the window
the moment he noticed blood on his son’s arm. He could understand duty. Not
carelessness that endangered someone’s life.
Satish stepped forward as Virendra tried to step out of the
cell with Ekansh. “He stays here, Mr. Sehgal. I don’t care what you do with our
friendship. Or me. But for now, I am the officer in charge of this station. And
your son was caught assaulting a man. He isn’t allowed to leave.”
“I think you didn’t read the bail papers, Mr. Sharma,”
Vikram interjected calmly, “Which clearly states that m client acted in defense
of another person. He didn’t attack Samar Singhania he just defended a woman’s
dignity. In the heat of anger we can say many things, but not deny the
circumstances surrounding them.”
“Proofs, Mr. Mehra,” Satish countered firmly. “Aap khud ek
lawyer hai aur acche se jaante hai ki proofs ke bina kanoon kisi ki nhi sunta. I
want that girl’s statement on record, then only I can...”
“Then take my statement.” A voice floated from behind.
Heads turned instantly. There stood the girl in her early
twenties dressed in a black salwar suit, her hair open, eyes dull yet sharp
enough to hold the room’s attention. Right beside her stood Ananya, unwavering
and supportive.
“Statement chaiye tha na aapko, sir?” The girl spoke
steadily. “Then I am giving you just that. Write it... Mera naam Aarti Kumar
hai. Main Singhania Firm mein intern thi. Do din pehle... Samar Singhania, mere
boss, ne mujhe apne cabin mein bula kar mere saath zabardasti ki. I want to
file a complaint against that man.”
The camera flashes erupted suddenly. The few media reporters
who had stepped in earlier immediately began broadcasting the statement live on
air. It was sensational news. Some of the most powerful people in the industry
were now clashing head-on in public. The chaos had the potential to boost TRPs
overnight, dominate headlines for days, and send shockwaves through the entire
business community.
“What does it have to do with Mr. Sehgal?” one of the
reporters asked. “Why did he have to interfere?”
“What kind of relationship do you share with the victim?”
Another asked.
“Insaniyat ka rishta,” Ananya answered firmly, meeting the
woman’s gaze. “Shayad aap log iss rishte se anjaan honge, par har koi aapki
tarah nhi sochta, right?”
She faced the cameras. “I am fighting a case for Mr. Sehgal.
He is my client. My opposing lawyer was Samar Singhania. In the morning I faced
him in court aur shaam mein mujhe pata chala what that man did to my sister.
Mr. Sehgal came to visit me regarding case matter. He heard everything and was
furious. That a man who has a reputation to fight for children and women’s
rights is the one who dared to violate them. So in his anger, he did the right
thing. Kyuki main bhi wahi karna chahti thi jo Mr. Sehgal ne kiya. I am
grateful for his intervention. It doesn’t matter if it was his empathy towards
my sister or simply his conscience, but he did the right thing.”
“You heard it, Satish,” Virendra said calmly. “My son did
what the law often fails to do in time. Now I think I can take Ekansh with me.
And you should focus on the actual culprit.”
Satish sighed heavily. “Complete the formalities and you can
leave.”
Ekansh followed behind his father, stepping out and dusting
off the invisible dust from his shoulders.
“How is the bastard?” He asked Vikram quietly.
“Zinda hai.”
Ekansh nodded, satisfied. That was exactly what he wanted.
The man wasn’t supposed to die so soon. He had planned everything far too
carefully for that. He wasn’t foolish enough to walk into a spider’s web
without carrying a blade to cut himself free.
Every move, every possibility, every escape route had been
accounted for long before the game had begun. And in the end, he had finally
cornered Samar exactly where he wanted him, inside a cage of his own making. On
a hospital bed. With a few broken bones.
He had deliberately aimed for injuries that could damage him
permanently, reducing nearly fifty percent of his chances of ever walking
properly with confidence again. For the rest, the media would do its magic by
morning. Those who once sang praises and admiration for the very influential
Samar Singhania would now curse him with the same passion.
✨✨✨
Ekta paced the room restlessly, fidgeting with her fingers
as countless thoughts collided inside her head. It had been four hours, and she
was yet to hear from Ekansh. Every news channel displayed what he had done to
Samar, replaying the footage again and again without mercy.
She was petrified by the fact that he had attacked a man who
could destroy lives with a single command. She had understood by now that the
Sehgal family was influential, but were they as powerful as the people she knew,
the ones she had spent years terrified of? That was something she was yet to
understand.
Her subconscious mind told her everything was fine, that she
was out of the trap finally, that there were bright rays showing her the way
out, guiding her toward a life she never thought she deserved. Still, her mind
dragged her back to the worst-case scenarios, refusing to let her breathe.
“Arre bas yaar.” Eshita hissed, annoyed. “Tujhe aise chalte
dekh mujhe pairon mein dard ho raha hai. Meri maa... baith jaa paanch minute
shanti se.”
She forced the girl down onto the couch. “Bhaiya aa jayenge.
Calm down, girl.”
Ekta looked up at her helplessly. “How can you be so calm?
Abhi tk bhaiya ka call nhi aaya hai. Vo news wale... Unhe kuch ho gaya toh?
Please meri ek baar unse baat karwa dijiye. Mujhe kuch samajh naii aa...” She
trailed off as Eshita hugged her abruptly.
Her body stiffened under the unfamiliar yet strangely
familiar warmth. Obviously, Eshita had hugged her once or twice before, but
every time they shared that kind of closeness, she never knew what to feel, accepting
the affection offered toward her or rejecting it like she always did.
“Relax, Ekta.” Eshita’s tone softened. She ran her hand over
her back in soothing circles, just the way Ekansh did for her whenever she
panicked.
“Bhaiya theek hai,” She continued. “Dad hai na unke saath.
Main un dono ko acche se jaanti hoon. Jab tak vo dono ek dusre ke saath hai,
koi unhe kuch nhi kar sakta. They will be back safe and sound. I promise.”
Ekta went still for a moment before leaning into Eshita’s
touch, letting herself melt against the warmth she was offering. The voices in
her head slowly calmed down, the horrifying possibilities that had been clawing
through her mind evaporating into thin air. All she felt was safe.
The sound of a car parking in the driveway echoed through
the mansion, snapping the girls out of their thoughts. Ekta rose to her feet,
rushing out of the room and down the stairs hurriedly.
Before Ekansh could understand what had happened, he was
pulled into a bone-crushing bear hug. His arm wrapped around Ekta’s shoulder
instinctively. Virendra held them both, steadying them before they could lose
balance and stumble from the impact.
“Main theek hoon, Ekta,” Ekansh murmured softly, patting her
head. She was shivering in his hold as if she had been standing in the cold for
hours.
Ekta clung onto him tightly, her heart pounding violently
against her ribs. The entire time he had been gone, fear had gripped her chest
relentlessly. He was fine. He was safe. He was here. She repeated to herself
inwardly. Relief washed over her so strongly that her knees nearly gave up.
Eshita’s gaze scanned her brother from head to toe, trailing
over his bruised knuckles and following the bloodstain on his shirt. Without a
word, she turned on her heels and walked toward the kitchen for the first-aid
box. Her brother was supposed to return home unharmed, not looking like he had
walked straight out of a street fight.
Ekta stepped back quietly as Eshita returned, her eyes
widening upon noticing the first-aid box.
She looked at Ekansh in shock. “Aapko chot...” Her gaze fell
on his knuckles. Hr trembling fingers brushed against wound carefully. Tears
shimmered in her eyes instantly at the sight of the torn skin and dried blood.
“I am fine, Ekta.” Ekansh pulled back gently. “Bas thoda
sa...”
“Haan, Ekta. Yeh toh lohe ke bane hai.” Eshita rolled her
eyes dramatically while grabbing his hand and forcing him into a chair. “He is
invincible. Tu tension mat le. Inhe chot lagi hai, hume thodi farq padna
chaiye. We should enjoy. Jaa icecream leke aa we will party over it. That our
brother got hurt.”
She rolled up his sleeves only to freeze at the deeper cut
hidden beneath them. The sight made her fingers tremble despite her attempt to
remain casual.
Virendra took the cotton from her grasp. “Let me do it,” He
coaxed gently. He sided with his son, but he couldn’t ignore that his daughter
was sensitive whenever any of them got hurt. They could play the bravery game
before the world, but never before each other.
Eshita rose to her feet, allowing her father to take her
place. “Kya hua? Is the man dead?” She asked, deliberately avoiding looking at
Ekansh. He had broken their code. She wasn’t going to forgive him that easily.
Ekta’s fingers curled around Ekansh’s hand. She wanted to
ask the same question, but fear and uncertainty held her back. She wanted him dead,
but... it would solve nothing. Everything would only become messier and darker
than it already was.
“Not yet,” Virendra replied calmly while continuing to clean
the wounds. “Check the news and you will find out.”
Eshita frowned, pulling out her phone. Earlier every
business channel had been bashing her brother, which had only fueled her anger
further. She would have smashed her phone if Ekta hadn’t stopped her. Now her
eyes widened in disbelief as article after article appeared before her. She
tapped on the link. The anchor’s voice echoed through the room...
“Senior advocate Samar Singhania is facing serious
allegations of workplace harassment and sexual assault made by a former intern
employee at his firm.”
“The complainant has reportedly submitted evidence to the
authorities. With Victims live statement on our channel. Police sources confirm
that a preliminary investigation has already begun.”
The screen switched to Aarti, her statement ringing loud and
clear, leaving no space for doubt or questions. Every word echoed like a
carefully aimed bullet, striking exactly where it was meant to. Flashes
exploded around her face as reporters pushed forward, desperate for more.
Back in the living room, silence settled heavily. Ekta
froze, her fingers tightening around the edge of the couch as shock rippled
through her entire body. Eshita glanced at her brother and then at her father,
trying to understand what she had just witnessed and why neither of them looked
at least angry.
“When did you meet Ekta’s lawyer?” She asked finally.
“I didn’t,” Ekansh replied calmly.
“Whatever you just heard was a lie,” Virendra stated,
clearing her confusion.
Eshita looked at them, stunned. Ekta gasped, her eyes
widening in disbelief.
“Samar Singhania ne Aarti Kumar ko haath tak nhi lagaya,”
Ekansh explained calmly. “She is an intern in his firm. Two days ago she met
him... that’s it. There is nothing else to the story. Uske aage jo bhi hai, it
was part of my plan.”
“Bhaiya!” Eshita shook her head in disbelief. “Do you even
realize aap kya bol rahe hain? I don’t give a damn what plan you choose... but
jab sach saamne aayega toh vo ladki par sawaal uthenge. Aur aap par bhi...”
“Nothing like that will happen,” Ekansh replied firmly. “Sach
saamne tab aayega jab kisi ke paas koi saboot hoga. Abhi ke liye sab kuch mere
plan ke hisaab se chal raha hai. Aarti uss cabin mein gayi, Samar se mili bhi,
par uss cabin mein kya hua aur vo wahan se kab nikli kisi ko nhi pata. Kisi ne
usse aate jaate nhi dekha. It was Sunday. So...” He shrugged. “The CCTV footage
is wiped clear. It’s Aarti’s words against the man who isn’t even in condition
to speak for a few days. Jab tak vo thoda hosh mein aayega tab tak uski izzat
ka kachra ho chuka hoga.”
“Aapko aisa nhi karna chaiye tha,” Ekta murmured quietly, gaining
their attention. Uneasiness crept through her chest as she met Ekansh’s gaze
hesitantly. “Jhooth bol kar jeetne ka kya fayda, bhaiya...”
“Tere saath usne jo kiya vo toh sach hai na, Ekta.” Ekansh
answered firmly. “Main duniya ke saamne tera naam nhi aane de sakta. I can’t
let you face the dark side of the world where people question and doubt a girl
first. Lekin tere saath jo usne kiya uski saza usse milegi! Kaise.... Vo mere
haath mein hai! Aarti ne bhale hi jhooth kaha ho, lekin usne jo kiya vo uski
choice thi. Mera saath dena uski marzi thi, majboori nhi.”
He cupped her face with one hand. “Aaj jo uss aadmi ka haal
hai... this is the first step towards your justice. First step towards taking
back the power he stole from you. Aur aakhir step tak... I will make sure that
man begs for death rather than mercy.”
Ekta’s gaze lowered. She couldn’t bring herself to nod.
Ekansh was right in every possible way, but still she felt conflicted inside.
“Sometimes we have to become animals to deal with monsters,
Ekta.” Virendra spoke up, gaining her attention. He held her gaze. “You can’t
win every battle with kindness. We have to fight people in the language they
understand.”
She glanced at the ointment he forwarded toward her. Her
fingers wrapped around the tube as the words sank into the part of her mind
that never allowed shades of grey, always seeing the world in light or
darkness, black or white, just two extremes with nothing in between. Maybe, for
the first time, she was seeing the layers beneath every truth. With her gentle
hands, she applied the ointment on Ekansh’s knuckles, careful not to hurt him.
Eshita relaxed her shoulders loosened up. She didn’t know
what exactly shifted inside her in that moment, but she was grateful to Aarti
for her help. A few days ago, she had questioned herself about the same thing.
The fake reports filled the girls with false hope, using loopholes in the
system and twisting the law for personal gain.
But her father’s words gave her clarity. There was a
difference between fighting for justice and fighting for revenge. You can’t win
every battle in life, but you can’t bow down to injustice either. It wasn’t
about proving yourself right but about doing what was right.
And her bhaiya did just that. For people like Samar, who
spread fear, cruelty, and suffering by staying within the system, needed to be
brought face-to-face with the consequences of their actions in their own
language, their own way.
Ekansh waited for Eshita to say something, but the girl just
turned on her heels and walked away, leaving him staring at her in annoyance.
Couldn’t she cut him some slack? He wasn’t dying to get into a fight or
something. But no, she was as stubborn as ever!
“What are you going to do now?” Virendra drawled, rising to
his feet. Well aware of what went wrong between his children, but like always,
he refused to interfere.
Ekansh groaned. “Grovel, Dad. What else do you think?”
Virendra shrugged, walking away. Not so easily. Five years
of distance had loosened the reins around his son. He needed some lessons on
how to grovel, and he was sure Eshita would teach her brother exactly that.
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
Share your views!!!
Next Update: Friday!
Thanks for reading!!!
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Loved it. Also waiting to read more about Ekansh and Eshita. Feels like I have missed their bond! :)
ReplyDeleteUs !
Deletesame here I love reading about them
Amazing....I loved virendra..fiercely protective
ReplyDeleteEkansh did absolutely right!
ReplyDeleteLoved the chap... looking forward to see Eshita and Ekansh's groveling session and if possible, Ekta witnessing it and taking notes 😉
ReplyDeleteLoved the chapter
ReplyDeleteCan you include Ekansh' s other friend Rajeev in few chapters. He was ther in the story only for 2-3 chapters. Would love the reunion of Ekansh and Rajeev. Only of storyballows you to...
Hope to see Virenndra and Ekta's bond as well.
ReplyDeleteI feel now atleast after telling the thruth, Ekansh can make Ekta comfortable in expressing herself atleast before him. Like how she doesn't say what's running in her mind mist of the time and goes through it alone is something which can be changed now, since Ekansh knows the thrjth.
With Eshita , Ekansh knows what's going on in her mind but he doesn't with Ekta, he only knows her behavioral pattern, not her thiughts . So I think it could be something which can be done by making her comfortable and pushing her tp express herselves and not carry the weight of her thoughts alone.
loved the chapter, the portrayal of the grey situation was so good
ReplyDeleteauthor di, can we have a scene or plot where esha, vanya and ritwik are involved in racing, as before their was no one to monitor so closely, this time getting caught
ReplyDeletecan we have something like ritvik v/s esha