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Chapter 22 - Chapter 22: The Saffron Whisper and a Garden of Secrets

Chapter 22 The Saffron Whisper and a Garden of Secrets

Chandrapuri Palace A Dance of Words and Glances

The grand dining hall of Chandrapuri was a spectacle of opulence. Silver platters gleamed under the light of a hundred oil lamps, laden with delicacies that filled the air with aromatic spices. Yet, for Mrinal, the most interesting part of the evening was the prince seated across from her.

The meal concluded with sweet, syrupy jalebis. As servants began clearing the tables, the prince turned to Mrinal, a familiar, playful glint in his eyes. So, chipkali (lizard), he began, using the childhood nickname that now felt like a secret shared between them, are you going to give me a tour, or must I rediscover all our old hiding spots myself

Mrinal feigned indignation. For you, kankhajura (earwig), I might just lead you straight into the royal kennels. She rose, smoothing down her silk lehenga. Come. I will show you what has changed.

They walked through the moonlit corridors, the silence between them comfortable, filled with the ghosts of shared memories. They passed the courtyard where they had staged mock battles, the balcony from which they had dropped water balloons on unsuspecting guards.

I have met your parents, the ministers, the prince said casually, his hands clasped behind his back. But I have not had the pleasure of seeing Prince Devansh. Is he away

The mention of her brother sent a faint pang of worry through Mrinal. He is in Vayupuri, she replied, her tone deliberately light. Some matter of a musical performance for their king. It was a half-truth, a shield against explaining the terrifying reality of cursed ruins and vengeful spirits. But look, she quickly diverted, leading him into the palace central garden. The night-blooming Divya Pushpa. Is it not magnificent

The garden was indeed a marvel under the full moon. The star-shaped white flowers seemed to glow with their own ethereal light, their fragrance an intoxicating blend of sweetness and spice. Fireflies drifted like scattered embers amongst the leaves.

The prince was not looking at the flowers. His gaze was fixed on Mrinal, her profile silvered by the moonlight, the delicate curve of her neck, the determined line of her jaw. Yes, he murmured, his voice softer, deeper than before. Truly magnificent some of the most beautiful flowers I have ever seen.

Mrinal turned, catching the intensity of his stare. A faint blush warmed her cheeks. What was that she asked, a teasing note in her voice to mask her own sudden fluster.

The prince seemed to snap out of a trance, clearing his throat and looking away towards the blossoms. I I meant the Divya Pushpa, he stammered, a rare loss of composure for the usually confident warrior. Their fragrance is unparalleled.

But his eyes, when they briefly met hers again, held a story his words were too cautious to tell a story of admiration that had nothing to do with flowers and everything to do with the woman standing beside him.

Vayupuri A Dream That Clawed Its Way Out

In his chamber in Vayupuri, Devansh slept fitfully. The peace he had helped secure for Nandarai was short-lived in the realm of his dreams. He was back in the ruins, but the atmosphere was thicker, more suffocating. The air hummed with a chorus of tormented whispers, overlapping and desperate.

Seven we are seven

The earth drank our blood the stones remember

He promised he promised we would be remembered

Free us please the first note find the first note

Devansh tossed, the phantom sensation of cold, grasping hands pulling at his clothes. He saw not just Nandarai, but six other spectral forms, their faces contorted in agony, their farmer clothes stained with ethereal blood. They were trapped, bound to the stones by a magic far older and more cruel than Nandarai personal vengeance.

He woke with a gasp, his heart hammering against his ribs, his thin sleeping robes plastered to his sweat-slicked skin. The whispers echoed in his mind, as real as the cool night air. It was not just a dream it was a summons. A plea.

Driven by a compulsion he could not ignore, he slipped out of the palace. The moon, which had illuminated Mrinal garden, here seemed like a cold, watchful eye over a landscape of nightmares. He moved like a ghost himself through the sleeping city, drawn back to the one place he never wanted to see again.

The ruins loomed ahead, darker than the surrounding night. As he approached, the massive stone door, which had been sealed shut, groaned open on unseen hinges, inviting him in. It was a predator opening its maw. Devansh took a steadying breath and crossed the threshold. The door slammed shut behind him, the finality of the sound echoing in the absolute blackness.

The Heart of the Ruins A Symphony of Suffering

Inside, the ruins had transformed. The relative peace after Nandarai departure was gone, replaced by a visceral, waking horror. The air was frigid and carried the metallic tang of fresh blood, mixed with the deeper, older stench of rot. An unseen source provided a faint, sickly green luminescence, revealing that the walls were now weeping thick, dark droplets that rolled down the ancient carvings like tears of tar.

His foot slipped on something wet. Looking down, his stomach lurched. It was a body. A farmer, his eyes wide with frozen terror, his throat slit in a grim, precise line. But as Devansh eyes adjusted to the gloom, he saw they were not alone. Six other corpses were arranged in a grotesque semicircle, their positions not random, but ritualistic. This was an altar, and these men were the sacrifice.

His gaze, drawn by a morbid pull, fell on the corpse directly in the center. Unlike the others, this one seemed older. Desiccated. And on its forehead, a symbol had been carved into the flesh not a word, but a single, elegant, Devanagari character that glowed with a faint, malevolent golden light.

सा

Sa.

The first note of the ancient musical scale. The foundation upon which all ragas were built.

A cold deeper than the chamber chill seized Devansh heart. This was no longer about land disputes or personal vengeance. This was about music. About power.

As if in response to his realization, the note began to pulse, its golden light flaring, casting long, dancing shadows that twisted into monstrous shapes. The very air began to vibrate with a low, dissonant hum, the antithesis of melody.

Then, a section of the wall opposite him cracked open, not with a crash, but with the sound of breaking bone. From the darkness within the new crevice, a figure emerged. It was not Nandarai. It was taller, shrouded in deeper shadows that clung to it like a robe. Its features were indistinct, but two points of cold, intelligent light fixed on Devansh from the depths of the hood.

A voice, dry and ancient, rasped through the chamber, a sound that seemed to be made of dust and forgotten curses. It did not shout. It simply acknowledged his presence with a familiarity that was more terrifying than any threat.

You

Devansh blood ran cold. His mind, reeling from the horror, made a connection a flicker of recognition from a memory that was not his own, a whisper from a past life. The posture, the aura of ancient, twisted power He knew this presence. The truth was so shocking, so impossible, that it stole the breath from his lungs and the words from his throat. His eyes widened in pure, unadulterated panic.

You he gasped, his voice a strangled whisper, the sentence dying before it could be born. It is you

The figure took a step forward, and the golden symbol of Sa blazed like a miniature sun, its light now a physical force pushing against Devansh, demanding submission.

Chapter End

In a moonlit garden, a prince unspoken feelings hang in the air, a delicate, new mystery of the heart. But in the depths of a cursed ruin, a far more ancient and terrifying mystery has fully awakened. The haunting is not over it has just revealed its true, orchestrated nature. A single musical note carved in flesh, seven souls sacrificed, and a shadowy figure from a forgotten past Devansh stands alone at the epicenter of a horror that understands the very source of his power. The first note has been struck, and the melody it begins is one of pure, undiluted dread. The game has changed, and the stakes are no longer just about freeing souls, but about surviving a composer of nightmares who knows exactly who Devansh is, and more importantly, what he is.

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