Sardesai tossed and turned on his bed. He had been unable to
sleep ever since the killings at the fort. The case had made him impatient. It
wasn't that often that a case like that happened in Raiji. In his career he had
never seen a crime like this. The weapon did not match any of the conservative
weapons used. Who was this mastermind? How did a simple town like Raiji give
birth to such a criminal?
He felt his wife's hand over his chest. She caressed him lightly. He
turned towards Sadhna, his wife.
"What is it that keeps you occupied these days?"
"Nothing" he lied to his wife as he ran his hand into her long
hair.
"I heard about the fort."
"From whom?" he asked her, at once alarmed.
"I have my sources too" she giggled.
"Sadhna, please tell me, who told you?" His tone scared
her.
"Dilip, the locals know all about it. They talk in hushed tones
about the murders because no one knows for sure. There are rumors that there is
a ghost in the fort."
"What rubbish" Sardesai dismissed his wife's news. But it
bothered him that the news was out in the public. Did that mean that there was
someone who was letting out the secret? His investigation had not progressed
much but whatever he had come across in the last 2 days had been shocking. If
given a free hand, he could have openly investigated the matter but Patil had
tied his hands. He now knew only too well what happened to people who went
against Patil.
"When we were young, Prabhakar Kaka would sometimes visit us and
tell us about the history of the fort. He loved to teach us. He took us to each
and every corner of the fort. Did you know there is a hidden passage in the
fort?" Sadhna mumbled, staring at the ceiling.
"What did you just say? A hidden passage?" Sardesai sat
up.
Sadhna raised herself and leaned against the pillows.
"Sadhna you never told anything about Prabhakar Kaka. How was he
related to you?"
"There isn't much that I know of Prabhakar Kaka. We were only kids
that time. He was my father's cousin. He used to visit us in Nagpur once in a
year or two. It was only after I shifted to Raiji for studies that I came to
know how popular he was."
"What do you know about the secret passage?" he
interrogated.
"I have never seen it. He never showed us the passage. He
said it was the best kept secret of the fort. I doubt if even he knew where it
was. But he did tell that one cannot stumble upon it if one looked too hard for
it. It always intrigued me, the secret passage."
***
She sang about the winter nights. About the fire. About the love
that keeps the heart warm. About the ice daggers that cuts the soul. When she
sang, her melody carried pain. Her eyes closed, she was lost in her past. A past that had so much happiness and so much deceit.
It numbed him every time she sat like that. He had goosebumps all over. For him, she was his world. He could do anything to make her happy. Yet, on days when tears rolled down her cheeks, he watched helplessly. He never interrupted her. He knew it was her only release. Her history made his blood boil. With a strengthened resolve, he set on his task.
***
Mukta was nervous about her father's visit. Her father had never expressed any love for her or her brother. She was always conscious in his presence. As a child, she always hid in her room when her father was in the house. He too never bothered to interact with her. The only time he had been proud of her was when she had topped her class 10 exams. He had kept a grand party at their bungalow and distributed sweets in his constituency. It was the only time when she had felt like his daughter. She had thought that this would change her relationship with her father. She had been brave enough to tell her father that she aspired to be a doctor. Her father had been indifferent. The very next day, Dinkar kaka had told her that her father was sending her to Raiji to pursue an Arts degree. Mukta was heartbroken. She had not even been consulted on this major decision of her life. She was sure that her father had no plans of investing on her future and would find an alliance for her that would benefit his political career. He was the most selfish man she knew. She began hating her father with a new vigor. The only good thing about Raiji was that her brother was already there. Sharad had met a similar fate when he had desired to be a writer. He was promptly packed to Raiji and enrolled in commerce. Patil wanted him to complete a management degree so he could carry on his businesses under Sharad's name.
She had told Samarth that her father had ways of knowing her activities and if he found out about campusdiaries he would expel Samarth. Samarth had simply laughed off her worries. She remembered Sharad's words. No, she would not be careless. She had messaged Samarth that she won't be coming online. He had simply said ok. Just ok? Why did she have to tell that to him? Unlike her, he had other people to chat to. Why would it matter she was online or not? Her father would reach late at night. She could have still chatted with him. Now she regretted tell him she won't come online. She was already missing him. Was she falling in love with him? Did she have the right to?
***
2 comments:
Getting better with each part, post the subsequent parts sooner na, it's very difficult to remember the characters and the story at such long intervals.. :(
You are right Keirthana.. Even I had to read the first 2 parts again to pick where I left. I had to put my life back on track to start all over with blogging. I hope to post the next parts back to back :)
Thank you for keeping up with the series
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