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Devyani: Tempered by Adversity (Part 1)

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Companions in Unequal Worlds Devyani is the daughter of Shukracharya, the guru whose counsel upholds the strength of the Asura kingdom. Sharmishtha is the princess of Asuras, born to the Asura King Vrishaparva. As a constant royal companion to Sharmishtha, Devyani grows up in the palace, playing and studying by her side, but pride lies between them — a rivalry quiet yet constant, neither willing to yield. Though they move as companions, Devyani and Sharmishtha do not walk the same ground. Sharmishtha’s authority is visible — royal blood, courtly command, the expectation of obedience. Devyani’s power is quieter, but heavier. It does not announce itself; it arrives before her, carried by her father’s reputation. Each senses the other’s advantage, though neither names it. Devyani grows with an unspoken certainty that the world bends, if not to her will, then at least to her father’s voice. Where Shukracharya walks, kings listen; where he pauses, empires hesitate. That assurance...

When Love Could Not Become a Marriage: Devyani and Kacha

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How Kacha Comes to the Asura Ashram The devas and asuras remain locked in continuous conflict. The asuras possess Sanjivani , the knowledge to revive the dead, held by Shukracharya. Brihaspati, preceptor of the devas, does not possess this knowledge. Victory thus turns often on survival rather than on strategy. To counter this imbalance, the devas send Kacha, Brihaspati’s son, to Shukracharya’s ashram with a single objective: learn Sanjivani and return alive. Kacha enters the asura world with no allies and no guarantees of survival. Devyani’s Intervention In Shukracharya’s ashram, Devyani encounters Kacha as a student under her father’s authority. The asuras soon suspect Kacha’s intent. They kill him repeatedly. Each time, Devyani appeals to her father. “Restore him,” she insists. Shukracharya complies, moved by Devyani’s insistence. With each revival, Devyani’s attachment intensifies. Kacha’s survival becomes personal. The Ash Episode The asuras finally act decisively. Th...

Born Split, Doomed to Divide: Jarasandha

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In the kingdom of Magadha, ruled by King Brihadratha of the Brihadratha dynasty, a strange sorrow weighs on the palace. The king has two queens — both loved equally, both childless. In a moment of divine grace, a sage grants him a boon, a single fruit blessed to bring life. But fairness binds him. He cuts it into two halves and gives one piece to each queen. The heavens grant life, but not as humans intended. Months later, two infants are born — each only half a body, each incomplete. Shock turns to horror. The king orders the halves to be discarded quietly. It is not cruelty. It is erasure — an attempt to undo a mistake before it breathes. But destiny rarely obeys human discomfort. In the forest, a demoness named Jara finds the two severed halves. Moved by some strange flicker of instinct, she joins them—one piece fitting perfectly into the other. The child breathes, whole for the first time. She takes him to the king, who recognizes the divi...

Syamantaka Speaks — Am I a Cursed Treasure?

I am Syamantaka, the gem that has witnessed the ebbs and flows of empires, and the storms of human hearts. Born in the heart of the Earth, forged in the intense heat and pressure of ancient volcanoes, I've been passed from hand to hand, coveted by kings and warriors, and I've watched as humans fought and died over me. I was born of the sun — a spark of Surya hardened into radiance. Kings have called me a blessing. Enemies have called me a curse. Both are right. And wrong. My story begins with Satrajit, a Yadava noble who loved the idea of everyone staring at him. He received me as a gift from the Sun God Surya, who was pleased with his devotion. I could summon gold, heal lands, and turn scarcity into abundance. But anything that radiant draws envy faster than truth. And with a treasure like me, fortune can flip into danger in a heartbeat. I still remember the first time I entered Dwaraka. People shaded their eyes. Some gasped. Such was my brilliance. Satrajit glowed ...

Karna My Son - part 2

I faint in the arena, not from weakness but from the shock of seeing my past walk into my present — alive, grown, strong, claimed by another woman and another world. When I wake, I say nothing. The truth inside me tightens like a knot pulled too hard. ******** After the tournament, life moves on as if nothing has changed. Duryodhana stands beside Karna with a pride that only deepens with time; their bond grows quickly, two young men hungry for recognition and fiercely loyal to each other. I watch them from afar, always with the same quiet dread. I know what it means for a boy to be lifted from obscurity and given a place. I know what such gratitude can become. I know the same ache Karna carries : the hunger to belong, the desperation to prove oneself worthy. And that is when I realise I cannot reveal the truth now. He is no longer a child in a basket — he is a man with pride, anger, and wounds I cannot predict. And he stands beside the one person who trusts him completely. If I spe...

Karna, My Son : Part 1

I am Kunti. I was Pritha once, but I grew into Kunti — shaped by the homes I entered, the vows I kept, and the secrets I carried. Though young, I vividly remember the moment when everything familiar is taken away from me. One day I am in my father Surasena’s palace — the footsteps I know, the voices I recognize, the comfort of routines that never change. And the next day, I am being sent to Kuntibhoja’s kingdom, because my father must keep a promise given to his childless cousin. A child understands no promise. A child only knows the fear of being uprooted. My new mother — the mother of this new house — welcomes me kindly, holds my hand, even hugs me. But her touch is not my mother’s, and my mother does not seem to miss me the way I miss her. So, I try to be careful. I try not to offend. I try to belong. Some days I feel accepted. Other days I feel like I must prove myself again. Slowly, the new rhythms become familiar, but the insecurity settles quietly inside me — not lou...

The Queen Who Chose the Dark — Part II

(Continued from Part 1 : While Kuntī and I waited for the thirteen years to end, my sons plotted to find the Pāṇḍavas during their concealment in Virāṭa’s kingdom — so that exile might begin anew.) Meanwhile, whispers reached Hastinapura — Keechaka, the mighty general of Virāṭa, had been slain. I needed no further sign. Only Bhīma’s hand could have struck so. My heart trembled — if they were discovered before their time, the wheel of sin would turn once more, and no redemption would follow. Restlessness seized Duryodhana. Convinced that the sons of Pāṇḍu were hiding in Virāṭa’s court, he led a raid upon its cattle, eager to draw them out. Soon I learnt that Prince Uttara had gone to face our armies, taking with him his charioteer — a dancer from the women’s quarters. That charioteer turned the tide, scattering seasoned generals and humbling our might. I needed no confirmation — only Arjuna could have stood thus. The Paṇḍavas’ disguise had served its purpose; what was meant to be h...

The Queen Who Chose the Dark — Part I

I remember the scent of sandalwood that morning in Gandhara — faint, deliberate, the fragrance our women used before dawn prayers. Outside, the court murmured with talk of Bhishma’s arrival from Hastināpura. In those days, Gandhāra was a small border kingdom — between the Kurus of the plains and the western realms of Madra, Bāhlika, Sindhu, and Kamboja — a frontier that often bent before power but preserved its pride in wisdom and diplomacy. My father, King Subala, had ruled long enough to know that pride alone cannot guard borders. Bhishma’s proposal — that I be wed to the blind prince Dhritarashtra — carried the weight of a command more than a request. Shakuni, my brother, raged. His love for me was fierce, and his sense of insult fiercer. But he, too, saw the truth in our father’s silence. To refuse would invite ruin; to accept, at least, preserved Gandhāra. When the decision was made, I felt no anger. Only a stillness, as if my life had suddenly stepped out of its own light. Tha...

The Dice, the Drag, the Divine

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Draupadi’s Reflection They played the game. And lost. Gold. Livestock. Brothers. The self. And then — me. I was not in the sabha when the dice fell. A messenger came and said I had been lost. I asked, “Did Yudhishthira lose himself before he lost me?” There was no answer. I refused to move. Another messenger came. Still, no answer. Then came Dushasana. Leering. Gloating. Smirking. He came not to speak, but to seize. He was Duryodhana’s hand — exultant, vicious, unrestrained. His face gleamed with triumph. He dragged me by the hair — This was not duty but desire — a moment long awaited, to drag me, to break me, to show me where I belonged.

The Flame That Remembered : Story of Ashvasena

The hall had fallen silent. The scent of jasmine and camphor drifted through the air. On the stage sat under the soft light the storyteller wearing a spotless white dhoti, his forehead marked with stripes of vibhuti. He adjusted the microphone, cleared his throat once, and spoke in that calm, resonant tone that balances the weight of wisdom with the ease of banter — the way only a seasoned upanyāsakar can. He looked around the hall, his gaze sweeping slowly and deliberately over the audience — as if to say, “Listen well... what follows is not just a story...” “Karma, my dear listeners, is like a shadow that refuses to fade. You may walk in sunlight, hide in a cave, or sink into the sea — it follows, unseen, waiting for the next dawn. No act is ever lost. It moves — from father to son, from serpent to sage, from forest to flame. Only with the touch of grace — only when the Divine decides — can that chain be broken. And today, we speak of one such karma — born in fire, car...