The Silent Winters of Seventeen years
The city whispered his name like a curse.
Born of royal blood, crowned in shadows, he ruled the underworld with silence sharper than any blade. To his men, he was a god of war; to his enemies, a phantom cloaked in fire. He believed in Shiva’s stillness, Parvati’s fierce devotion—but not in love. Love was weakness, a distraction, a chain he refused to wear.
She prayed in temples where Radha and Krishna’s eternal dance was sung, yet her heart was untouched by romance. To her, love was illusion, a fragile dream that broke too easily. Faith was her anchor, not desire. She believed in gods, not men.
And yet, destiny is cruel.
When her light crossed his darkness, the world trembled.
Two souls who denied love, bound by forces older than time—one forged in solitude, the other in devotion.
In the silence between them, danger breathed.
In the shadows around them, fate waited.
This was not a story of love.
It was a story of surrender, of power, of gods and mortals colliding in a dance neither of them believed in—until it consumed them both.
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