Chapter 26 : Prince of Swarnagad
Aakaash The Moon Blessed Prince of Swarnagad
The Birth - The Night the Moon Bled Silver
It was no known place.
Not land not sea It was that thin threshold where the two meet where water kisses stone and stone drinks the tide There was a cave hidden so deep that no map could ever hold it Its mouth lay beneath the waves and its roof was open straight to the sky as if someone had carved a hole through stone just to invite the moon inside
The night was not moonless But the moon was not whole It hung crooked half eaten pale and sickly like a sun whose fire had been stolen
Then she came
Alone
A woman Clad in black But it was not cloth It was a shroud woven from living shadows clinging to her body like a second skin Her face was veiled But her eyes Those eyes burned through the fabric Embers Desperate and defiant blazing with a fire that had no name
Her belly was swollen Heavy A child writhing to be born
She entered the cave Bare feet Each step a silent scream of pain The stones were wet slick with ancient damp Below her water lay still black glassy reflecting nothing but the moon weak crooked beam
And at the cave heart directly beneath the open roof a single shaft of moonlight fell Thin Cold Unwavering It pooled on the water like a circle of liquid silver
She stepped into that light
And there in that freezing pool she knelt
The labor began
Pain stole her voice She clenched her teeth eyes fixed on the moon above That crooked sickly moon Its light fell upon her belly like a cold hand as if the moon itself shared her agony
And then
The child came
A shudder A ripple in the water The cave walls trembled
The baby first breath did not enter this world It drew breath and the entire cave held still As if creation itself had paused
He did not cry He did not wail
He simply awoke
His mother lifted him into her arms Trembling hands Her veil slipped but still her face remained hidden Only her eyes showed And from those eyes tears fell
The baby hair She gasped Silver Like molten moonlight spun into silk His eyes Not blue not green They were pale white gold like the moon itself holding a cool and ancient light within their depths
My moon she whispered Her voice was breaking Forgive me Forgive me
She kissed him Once Only once
And then she did what no mother should ever do
She placed the child upon the water
But the water did not swallow him A basket A tokri of river reeds It floated there already Who had placed it When This was a question no one would ever be able to answer
She laid the baby in the basket Covered him with a cloth And stepped back
Her eyes held no more tears Only a strange calm And fear And something else Something beyond the reach of words
This world will not understand you she said her voice steady now But you will understand this world You will be a king But your kingdom will not be of thrones It will be of truth Now go
She pushed the basket
Out through the mouth of the cave Into the dark waiting sea
The child drifted away The waves accepted him
And the mother
She vanished
She disappeared as though she had never been No ripple stirred the water No whisper touched the air Only emptiness
The cave stood empty
The shaft of moonlight still fell upon the water But its color had changed No longer silver It was red now Like blood As if the moon itself had wounded its own light
Outside a little distance from the cave mouth a black silhouette stood upon a jagged rock
It did not move It did not speak It did not breathe
It only watched
Watched the basket drift into the darkness
And when the basket finally disappeared into the night the silhouette turned and melted back into the shadows from which it had come
The Fisherman Discovery
The sea was not angry that night It was mourning Under a sky choked with bruised churning clouds the waves did not crash They heaved a slow rhythmic sighing against the black cliffs of Swarnagad The air tasted of salt and impending rain and the moon was a prisoner locked away behind the storm vault
From within that wall of mourning water a new sound surfaced Not the shriek of gulls or the groan of tide worn rock A cry Thin fragile yet piercingly clear A human sound where no human should be
An old fisherman Anant drawn to the shore by a restlessness he could not name froze His lantern a shuttered eye of trembling light guttered wildly He turned peering into the inkwell darkness between waves There lifted on the crest of a heaving swell was a small woven basket A tokri of river reeds impossibly dry Inside a bundle of cloth
His heart a tired drum in his chest skipped a beat He did not think He waded into the icy pulling surf the water clawing at his knees his thighs His gnarled hands closed around the basket rim and he hauled it back to the wet sand his own breath roaring in his ears
The crying had stopped
Panic cold and sharp lanced through him He bent over the basket fumbling with the cloth And then he saw
The infant was awake Not crying Not sleeping Simply gazing up at the turbulent sky with wide tranquil eyes As Anant shadow fell over him the baby head turned Its lips a pale rose in the lantern gloom curved
It smiled
At that exact moment the world hesitated
The wind which had been howling through the cliff passes died mid note The thrashing waves slumped into gentle lapping ripples And high above the mass of cloud tore apart Not as if blown by wind but as if a giant gentle hand had drawn back a curtain Moonlight pure and liquid silver spilled through the rent in the sky falling in a single dramatic column onto the shore illuminating the basket and the child within
Anant stumbled back his soul trembling The baby hair fine as spider silk shone with the colour of fresh minted silver coins His eyes vast and knowing were not blue like the sea but like the moon itself Pale luminous holding a cool ancient light within their depths
This is no ordinary castaway the old man whispered the words torn from him by awe This is a blessing or a burden the sea could not keep
He never saw the Watcher Hidden in the lee of a jagged rock a figure stood cloaked in absolute black Not a fold of cloth stirred No breath fogged the air It was less a man and more a condensation of the surrounding darkness a hole cut into the fabric of the night Its unseen gaze was fixed not on the miraculous child but on the fisherman reaction as if observing the first ripple of a stone thrown into fate pond
Unaware Anant gathered the basket with reverence now not pity Cradling it against his chest he turned and hurried not toward his humble hut but up the winding path to the only place that could possibly hold such a mystery The glowing palace of Swarnagad perched on the cliffs above
The Court of Swarnagad
The throne room of Swarnagad was a cavern of gold and sorrow King Ratna Pratap sat upon the Sun Throne his bearing regal but his eyes hollow the light within them dimmed by a loss too fresh to name Five days It had been only five days since the tiny still form of his newborn son had been carried from the queen chambers Queen Nayantara stood beside him a statue of grief wrapped in royal blue her face a beautiful mask etched with lines of silent anguish
When the fisherman was ushered in grime and sea spray on his humble clothes the king voice was flat drained of curiosity
Speak
Anant knelt placing the basket before him with infinite care
Forgive this intrusion Maharaj at this hour of your sorrow But the sea brought a mystery to my feet one too great for a simple man to hold
He told his tale The storm the impossible basket the smiling child the moon obedient light His voice shook with a truth that needed no embellishment
King Ratna Pratap frown was one of weary logic
And you bring him here The sea gives gifts A man may keep them
Anant pressed his forehead to the cool marble
Maharaj I am a lone man To raise a child with hair of silver and eyes of moonfire the village would call it witchcraft They would fear him or worse harm him I seek not reward but sanctuary For him
Before the king could pronounce judgment Queen Nayantara moved It was not the glide of a queen but the stumbling rush of a wounded creature toward water She fell to her knees beside the basket her hands hovering over the cloth
Justice Her voice was a cracked whisper echoing in the vast hall No This is not about justice
She looked up at her husband her eyes blazing with a sudden desperate fire
Ratna Five days ago the heavens closed a door Tonight the sea has opened a window You may call it chance I call it an answered prayer
With a tenderness that made the courtiers catch their breath she lifted the baby from his reed cradle The column of moonlight from the high window seemed to follow him gilding his silver hair She held him close her tears falling onto the blanket
Look at him she pleaded her voice strengthening Does he look cursed He looks chosen My arms have ached with emptiness My heart has echoed in a hollow chest I do not care from whose womb he came From this moment he is the child of my heart My son
King Ratna Pratap stared at his wife at the strange luminous child in her arms and something in his own fortified heart splintered The rigid line of his shoulders softened He saw not a potential political problem but the return of light to his queen eyes
He let out a long slow breath
Very well Nayantara If your heart claims him then so does the crown
He turned his gaze to the fisherman and now it was the king who looked back sharp and calculating
You have done a service to your queen if not your king You will be rewarded
He leaned forward his voice dropping to a low steel edged whisper that carried to every corner of the silent room
But hear this oath fisherman The tale you told tonight ends here The child was born to the Queen in her private chambers delivered early but healthy That is the truth of Swarnagad If any other truth ever passes your lips your life and the lives of any you hold dear will be forfeit Do you swear
Anant trembled the weight of the secret and the threat settling on his old shoulders like a yoke
I swear it Maharaj On my life and my ancestors
As the fisherman was led away laden with gold and a heavier burden Queen Nayantara cradled the baby her tears now of joy whispering to the silent watching moon through the window
Thank you Thank you for returning my son to me
The Moon Prince
Swarnagad awoke to joyous Ghantis Prince Aakaash is born The news flowed through the city like a sweet cleansing river The official story was a balm on the kingdom recent sorrow Festivities bloomed in every street gold leaf and bright cloth banishing the gloom
Only two souls in the palace carried the full weight of the truth The king and his aged razor sharp minister Shraavan The secret became the hidden bedrock of the prince life
And Aakaash grew He was a child of serene beauty and a quiet observing nature His laughter was a rare crystalline sound that seemed to make the very air sparkle His curiosity was boundless but it was a gentle probing never destructive He was in every visible way the perfect moon prince Luminous calm distant
But fate scripts tragedies in the margins of fairy tales
When Aakaash had seen ten monsoons the unthinkable happened Queen Nayantara his sun his heart was laid low by a swift merciless fever The palace healers were powerless In a matter of weeks the light that had pulled Aakaash from the sea was extinguished
The laughing prince vanished In his place was a silent pale boy who moved through the opulent halls like a ghost The only anchor in his sudden bleak ocean was Minister Shraavan The old man stern but infinitely kind became Kaka Uncle guardian teacher and the last tether to the love he had known
Shraavan raised him filling the void with lessons in statecraft history and the subtle art of observing men hearts For Aakaash he was everything
Then war came A greedy eye was cast upon Swarnagad legendary shores Shraavan though aged took up arms to defend the kingdom he had served for a lifetime He did not return The news of his fall on the battlefield reached the palace and for Aakaash it was a second drowning The anchor was gone He was adrift once more now in a palace that felt vast gold plated and icily empty
King Ratna Pratap drowning himself in scrolls of governance and strategies of defence saw his son profound isolation not as a wound to be healed but as a problem to be solved The boy was too quiet too inward He needed hardening Purpose
Send him to Margdarshak Vishrayan Tapobhumi the king decreed his decision swift and final The discipline there will forge him Give him something else to think about
And so at twenty Prince Aakaash of Swarnagad was sent away from the only home he had ever known carrying a small bag of belongings and a cavernous unspoken grief within his moonlit eyes
A Prince Enters the Tapobhumi
The royal chariot departed leaving him before the ancient vine strewn gates He stood for a moment a slender figure in travel dusted silvers and blues his silver hair catching the dappled forest light Then he walked forward each step measured calm giving nothing away
He found Margdarshak Vishrayan in a courtyard of whispering pines
Pranam Margdarshak His voice was quiet melodious but it held a distance like a note played on a flute from very far away
Margdarshak turned His wise eyes which had seen the birth cries of elements and the meeting of soul bound children took in the young man in one encompassing glance He saw the princely posture the elegant features but he also saw the deep still wells of sorrow in those pale eyes and the way the very air around him seemed hushed waiting
You arrive with the bearing of royalty young one yet your spirit walks a lonely path What brings a prince of Swarnagad to our forest door
Aakaash bowed and presented a sealed scroll
I am Prince Aakaash My father King Ratna Pratap sends me to learn under your guidance Margdarshak
Margdarshak read the formal missive his expression unchanging He nodded
Then you shall be a student here Go with him
He gestured to a waiting Anveshak
Rest now Your lessons begin tomorrow
As you command
Another perfect bow
As Aakaash followed the Anveshak away his silver hair a fading beacon in the green gloom Margdarshak did not move He watched until the prince disappeared into the shadows of a stone archway
His whisper was so soft it was less a sound and more a thought given to the wind
You carry not storms child but the profound silence after the storm has passed A grief that has hollowed you into a vessel You were born under a bending moon and a watching shadow
A faint chill unrelated to the breeze passed through the courtyard
And like it or not Moon Prince your life is a thread in a tapestry woven by a hand that dwells in darkness A darkness that has been waiting for you since the hour you were found
The Unanswered Question
The last of the tale faded in the study The phantom scent of sea spray and night blooming flowers seemed to linger Acharya Shatrunjay sat motionless his mind an echo chamber for the final haunting image The still black figure watching from the rocks
After a long silence he found his voice
Margdarshak I see now Each of these five is a world of pain and power Their pasts are not just stories They are the roots of the trees they are becoming
He leaned forward his voice dropping to a hushed urgent whisper
But one shadow remains The man in black on the shore Who was he
For the first time that evening a flicker of something like unease passed through Margdarshak Vishrayan fathomless calm His smile was gentle but carried the weight of galaxies
That my dear Acharya is a question to which even I have no clear answer Some presences in this world are like deep sea currents Felt by their effects but their source remains shrouded in the abyss
He looked toward the window where the first stars were pricking through the twilight
Some truths are veiled not to be cruel but because the light to see them by has not yet dawned The future holds the key to that particular darkness
Acharya bowed deeply his scholarly mind humbled his heart heavy with the majesty and mystery of it all
I understand Margdarshak My doubts are settled Thank you for this profound trust
Go in peace Acharya Tend to your students Their pasts are prologues The epic is yet to be written
As Acharya Shatrunjay left the weight of the five stories settled upon him But one question echoed louder than all the answers a persistent chilling note in the symphony of destinies he now understood
Who was the man in black And what did he want with the moon blessed prince he watched from the shadows
The room fell into a hush that felt almost sacred Margdarshak tale had ended but the echo of it still pulsed in the air like a second heartbeat
And then
Just as Acharya Shatrunjay final question dissolved into the evening light a sudden gust of wind passed through the study
The Deeps did not flicker They bowed Their flames slanting sharply in one direction
Toward the window
Toward the darkening forest
Margdarshak eyes rose Not surprised but accepting As though greeting something inevitable
Far beyond the courtyard deep within the crushed violet shadows of the treeline something moved
A silhouette Not walking Not standing Simply present
Unlit Unborn Unseen Except by those who knew how to listen to the silence
Margdarshak spoke his voice softer than breath
The shadow that watched his birth watches still
Before Acharya could respond the figure in the woods vanished Not by movement not by speed but like a memory blinking out of existence
The Deeps straightened
The air stilled
And the mystery of Aakaash deepened
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