Chapter 75
Didi
The sun was bright, but it was pleasant. Strangely enough, Mandu didnât remember the last time she slept with the blinds open, or slept at all in the past month. Getting sleep as a vampire was just not that comfortable, only a means to an end.
The sun cast its rays over her delicate eyes. Her hand hooked the blankets, and pulled them over her face.
The sheetsâŚ.are warmâŚ
Something didnât feel right. She shoved the bedcovers aside, sitting up. Her eyes flew open, taking in the sun like it wasnât a bother anymore. She felt a thumping in her chest. Underneath her body were the sheets of her bed, at the palace. The woven fabrics of a particular old scent. Yes, this was her old room.
Siddharth lay next to her, fast asleep. She stared at him for only a moment.
WhereâŚ.
Her palm pressed itself against her chest, feeling her own heartbeat. Vampires didnât have heartbeats. She was human, which was impossible. She then looked to Siddharth again, and lay her head to his chest gently. He stirred, and wrapped his arms around her, still in deep sleep. There was a heartbeat in him too.
He was warm, she was warm. They werenât vampires. They were human. Mandu carefully placed his arms away from herself, and sat up straight. Birds were chirping outside.
Was all thatâŚ.a dream?
It couldnât be. Even a lucid dream wouldnât be so real. She looked around for a sign of reality. Ayushmaan was the last to meet her.
Youâre messing with my head, arenât you you snake?
She stood up abruptly, and searched the room bare-footed. Her fingers could sense the softness of the curtains, the smoothness of the gold finishings on walls, and the polish of the wood on drawers. Behind her, a rocking cradle, far from empty. It rocked in sync with the cool breeze. Vaibhav was awake, crying restlessly for his mother. Her gaze softened, and filled with all the love she could never give him. She picked him up and held him against her bosom, rocking him while humming his lullaby.
âDonât cry, my babyâŚ..â
Vaibhav went silent as soon as he was in his motherâs arms. He cooed, and filled his fists with locks of Manduâs hair. She kissed him and began to undo them, then looked outside. It was bright and green all around, like heaven on earth. Her home. The Pandher she knew and loved.
What a strange dreamâŚ
But so wonderful.
Her guard was let down. As soon as the simple thought of bliss crossed her thoughts, it was snatched from her. A thick haze blanketed the room and blinded her. Wisps of smoke began to fill her nose, and burn with ash. Her arms suddenly felt empty, and she heard Siddharth call her name. There was urgency and pain in his voice.
The burning throne room, but this time she was standing. Child taken away, and husband at deathâs door. This wasnât a dream. It was her worst nightmare.
Mandu screamed, arm shooting out in front of her. It was dark, and the air smelled of blood and ash. Everything went black, and the illusion was removed her eyes.
She blinked several times to adjust her vision.
Around her arms were restraints made from some strong elemental energy. No matter how much strength she tried to put against them, they wouldnât break. It was unlike anything she had seen before. She took heavy breaths and looked up.
OhâŚ.he saidâŚ.she wanted to see meâŚ
Before her eyes, Maithili sat cross-legged upon her stone throne. Twirling some kind of crystal between her fingers. She looked down at her elder sister, who was kneeling and bound beneath her feet, with a chuckle. Messing with peopleâs memories was quite fun. And Manduâs were quite painful.
âDidiâŚ.Iâve been trying to get your attention for so long. Where are you lost? Havenât you missed me?â
Mandu looked behind the massive throne. A cage of sorts, surrounded by Vitael, and a sneering Ayushmaan. An older woman was trapped inside, who also didnât seem human. The scent was missing completely. She shared a look of pity, and stared at the floor.
âOver here.â Maithili said coldly, snapping her fingers in her face.
âWhat do you want?â Mandu hissed, baring sharp fangs. The binds seemed to be getting tighter.
âWhat Iâve always wanted. Everything you have. Status, power, love, everything. But especially my Abhayendra.â
Mandu fought at her restraints, angry tears filling her eyes.
âAbhay will never come back to you.â
âWhy not? Heâs my husband.â
âWas. Not anymore. He belongs to someone else.â
âPiya, correct?â Maithiliâs scowl while uttering her name took form of a menacing cackle. She looked back at Nature, clutching her stomach from the pain that laughter brought. âYou should be angry too, am I not right?â
âI am bound by the will of Fate.â Nature sputtered.
Maithili leaned down, gripped and squeezed Natureâs aged visage between her fingers, and coldly gave her reply.
âBut Iâm not.â
Mandu furrowed her brows. Ayushmaan took steps beside her, running a palm over her hair. She jerked back, and tried to bite his hand.
âDonât. Touch. Me.â She hissed. âAnd who is that?â
âMother Nature herself. I hear she gave Abhayendra at lot of trouble back in the day. Not anymore, since he has a soulmate now.â
Maithili looked back at him, furious. Her eyes shot daggers. Ayushmaan but his tongue:
âI am his soulmate! Not that girl!â She roared. Nature flinched. Mandu let out a painful breath and started to chuckle.
âPiya is his fated. After all, a person wouldnât try to kill their own soulmate. Right?â
âAnd who are you to say that? You donât know what happened that night. Abhayendra is lying.â
Mandu stayed silent, but kept her glare intact.
âWell?â
âWhy would he lie if he truly loved you? If you did no wrong? Please, enlighten me, Maithili.â
Maithili fumed, but couldnât reply. She had gone mad with obsession.
âSpeak up. Why have you gone silent?â
The chatter amongst the other Vitael grew. Maithili shot a glare so intense that they all shook with fear.
âIâll get rid of her. Simple.â
âI wonât let you. None of us will let you.â
âDonât be like this, didi. It brings me great pain, you know? Remember, you once said to me that Abhayendra and I make a beautiful pair?â
âThings have changed. Times have changed. Both of us have changed.â
Maithili opened her palm wide, and shot out her arm. Nature shrieked in the back as she created a whip made of pure silver, extracted from the underground. Manduâs eyes widened in fear.
âYou arenât human anymore either, right? This might hurt more than it would if you were.â
âYouâre a monster.â
âI know. But Iâm also playing God. Itâs quite fun.â
She cracked the whip at Manduâs knees, and began to strike her with it. It brought great pain to her skin, and blood oozed everywhere.
âIf I can get my hands on Time next, then I can simply wipe her from existence, canât I? And you too.â
Mandu managed to stagger herself up, but Maithili continued to strike her down. Burns were everywhere. Blood was everywhere. It had gone a little too far. Ayushmaan stepped forward, unusually silent for the majority of the time, and seized Maithiliâs wrist.
âNow now, your highness. I donât think itâs awfully fair for you to fight your sister while sheâs unarmed.â
Maithili stared at him and clenched her jaw, imprinting the handle of the whip into the skin of her palm.
âWhy do you suddenly care?!â
Ayushmaan tightened his hold and threw the whip to the side. Mandu backed away from it as much as she could. He gave Mandu a creepy smile.
*Donât scar my dear Mandakiniâs beautiful face.*
âEnough. She is far too weak. They will finish her off.â He scolded.
Those âtheyâ appeared before her, the slaves Maithili had control over. He gave his commands by the flick of a wrist. The werewolf dragged Mandu outside but the sleeve of her salwar, and the two vampires followed.
Maithili looked at Ayushmaan. He let go of her and bowed.
âYour next orders, my queen?â
âTell that woman to take care of the task I gave her. She should be well rested by now.â She hissed, departing towards another room.
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
Siddharth never felt such a strong sense of dread in a very long time. An entire night almost went by in searching for Mandu. Should the sunrise arrive before they found her, the search would be cut short. Supernaturals never committed any sketchy acts in the daytime. He was close to going mad, separated as such from his soulmate. While he could sense something was wrong with her, he couldnât see it, nor could he reach her through mindlink.
âI canâtâŚ.I still canât sense her.â He breathed out, exhausted. In frustration, he slammed a hardened fist into a nearby tree, bark digging into the knuckles. Some roots popped out from under the soil. Abhay put a palm over his shoulder. Enlisting Mayaâs help, they set out to find her.
âWeâll find her. Donât worry.â He said firmly.
Maya stood from the ground, and dusted her palms. The light shimmering in the soil burnt out. In her hands, a pair of Manduâs earrings. Letting out a heavy sigh, she looked towards a direction they hadnât yet pursued. Retrying the locator spell there could hopefully bring leads.
âThereâs nothing here. We should go that way.â She pointed downhill, deeper into the forest. âWe havenât checked there.â
âThe palace is that way, isnât it?â Abhay noted.
âBut why would she go there?â Siddharth asked.
âWe can only ask her if we find her there, or even nearby.â Maya said, taking the lead.
Siddharth couldnât walk properly and repeatedly was bent over against a tree, experiencing a searing pain in his chest. At one point, he even coughed up blood. It was getting worse by the second. Abhayâs eyes widened. He took Siddharthâs arm and slung it over his shoulders.
âSheâsâŚin great pain, little brotherâŚâ He murmured, clutching his chest.
âI know.â
That he could see with his own eyes.
Maya stared on with acute curiosity. Danish had told her of the ceremony that takes a blood bond to its peak. Souls are tied in such a way, that if one left this world, the other would too. Seeing Siddharth in this condition, it meant Mandu was getting closer to that other plane of existence. It was literally killing him too.
For some, eternity without your soulmate was a death on its own.
âWe should hurry.â She urged, pulling on Abhayâs sleeve. He nodded, and tried to help Siddharth along. Holding the earrings up in the air, she chanted a spell that would guide a wisp of light in Manduâs direction.
âWait!â
The wisp finally appeared, and zipped through the air eastward. Siddharth, with eyes full of hope, took a deep breath to numb the pain and took off. Abhay and Maya followed right behind. The noses of the vampires twitched.
The wisp circled and landed on Manduâs body before disappearing. Her eyelids fluttered, struggling to stay awake.
âWerewolves? Again?â Abhay exclaimed, hiding the volume of his surprise under his breath.
And two vampires. However, none of them looked normal, in supernatural terms. They looked like puppets. Robotic movements.
Mandu knew they were there. She looked up, whilst writhing in the leaves with a stake hovering dangerously over her heart. Siddharth shot out his arm, and dove in, without thinking of his health, to save her. The vampires were much faster, and they knocked him back and held him down. Mandu screamed, but Maya stopped the stake from going too deep with a small shield in between her heart and wood. Abhay lunged forward, and ripped the stake away from the werewolf. In equal speed, he drove it clean through his body, skewered from chest to back. The puppet-like vampires vanished.
He cast a shadow around them.
âThank goodnessâŚ.â Maya said, kneeling in the soft grass. She then looked at Mandu, who had seized up from immense pain and couldnât say anything.
Siddharth screamed.
âWhatâs happening?â
âThe stakeâŚsome is in herâŚI need to...â
His shirt soaked red with blood, a warning of what was to happen. Siddharth leaned over Mandu, and clawed his fingers into the flesh of her chest. He hated doing it, but hated the idea of seeing her die. There was a piece of wood left, inching its way closer to her heart. As they were tied, he could sense where it was. Like they had been staked together.
He ripped it out and collapsed from exhaustion. The pain subsided. Mandu coughed up blood and passed out. Abhay examined her arms and legs.
âInjuries from silver.â
They looked like lashes from a whip.
Siddharth passed out next to her, bloodied hand sticking to leaves and dirt beneath him.
âSiddharth!â Maya shouted, shaking his side. Abhay put his hand on her shoulder.
âTheyâll be fine. Can you help me?â
âYou really donât have to ask, Abhay.â
They each took one individual and Maya teleported them to the mansion. There, Piya opened the door, frightened at the sight. Abhay asked her to be there, in case Mandu showed up hone herself, before they found her.
âAre they okay?! What happened?â
The amount of blood dripping on the floors made her dizzy. If they were human, theyâd absolutely be knocking on deathâs door by now.
âThey will be. Donât worry.â He replied, with a steady tone. Piya was amazed to see how calm he was. She, on the other hand, was a shaking mess. Maya was somewhere in the middle.
Siddharth was gaining consciousness going up the stairs. He looked over to Mandu, and breathed a sigh of relief.
âAlmost there. Hang in there.â Maya said, as they entered the bedroom. Piya followed right behind them. Abhay laid Mandu on her side, and Siddharth weakly sat next to her.
âPiyaâŚ.I think you should stay outside. Itâs dangerous for you.â Abhay said.
Piya tried to protest, but she knew he was saying it with everyoneâs best interests in mind.
âWill they be okay?â
âYes. I promise.â
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
âI canât wait to finally graduate from this place.â Misha said, basking her arms in the open halls. She high-fived Kabir, then Ruhi. Piya clutched a book to her chest, walking alongside them. They were all graduating after this semester, even Abhay.
âHow does it feel? Being almost done with school?â Piya asked.
âSo liberating. No more bickering with my parents about school work again.â Misha beamed, swinging her arms.
âBut now theyâll start bickering with you about a job or worse, marriage.â Ruhi joked, running in front of them.
Misha groaned, and chased her in a circle.
âDonât jinx it. Marriage is the last thing I ever want to do in my life.â
They passed the practice rooms, and Kabir looked around with nostalgia. He would really miss all the times he spent in them, and with his friends.
âLetâs promise to meet up often once this is over. Piya will need company too.â
âOf course, how can we forget our sweet Piya?â
Misha hugged Piya tight and squished their cheeks together. She smiled back. In the midst of chaos, simple times like this was refreshing.
âIâll soon join you all too. In the former students club.â
Piya was unable to catch a glimpse of Abhay today. Both brothers were at home, tending to Mandu. Even Haseena came by to visit, planning to stay until she was alright. She too wanted to see her.
Misha tapped Piyaâs head.
âLooking for your Romeo?â
Piya shook her head, blushing.
âHeâs not even here today.â She said.
âI wish I had that much freedom, then I would never come to lectures.â
They reached the gates. Mishaâs scooter had broken down again, so Arnab was coming to pick her up. Piya didnât want to be there when he arrived, lest they made eye contact, so she made an excuse of practice with another friend.
Abhay was on his way to pick her up anyways.
She waved them goodbye, and mindlessly dashed down the halls, bumping into someone. Her violin case left her hands, and would have almost hit the ground were it not for the person she bumped into.
âOh! Thank you so much!â Piya huffed. She hastily collected herself, looked up, and saw Madhu auntyâs face. âAunty, youâreââ
âHow are you, Piya? Itâs been a few days.â
The wind picked up. Piya nodded, though confused. Did she come with him? Or alone? She looked around and behind them.
âDonât worry. Iâm here alone.â She gestured toward the benches. âShall we take a seat?â
Piyaâs heart raced, and she gulped nervously. She nodded, and the two sat at farthest away from other ears. People certainly recognized the lady of the Dobriyal household. They didnât need to hear this discussion however.
âIs something the matter, Aunty?â
Madhu folded her hands in her lap, unable to find a proper way to start. She herself was quite rattled from the night prior, when Arnab himself told her the truth.
âPiya isâŚ..my daughter,â he said, voice wavering.
Even she didnât expect her own reaction. Not anger, but apprehension. The family that she sought to protect from this secret was facing it once again.
âIâŚ.know who you are. YouâreâŚSugandhâs daughter, right?â
Piya looked away, and bunched the fabric of her skirt in her palms. She was sweating, in cooler temperatures. Her mouth was sealed shut.
âPiya dear, Iâm not here to yell at you. Youâre an innocent caught in the crossfire.â
âDo you hate my mumma?â She blurted out, wiping tears from her eyes.
âIâŚ.not really. At the beginning I was. Then I realized, she didnât do this intentionally.â She paused, then looked at Piya again. She was about to ask for something selfish. âBut I request of you, if Arnab ever asksâŚ.â
Piya took her hands and clasped them between her own. She shook her head. Frankly, she didnât want to deal with this headache anymore. Whatever the request was, as long as she could remain friends with Misha, she was fine with.
âYou donât have to request me of anything. Your family will stay together. Iâm okay on my own.â
Madhu felt bad, but nodded. That was all she wished to ask of her. From now on, she was just a good friend of Mishaâs. She caressed Piyaâs hair and picked up her purse.
âMay god bless you with happiness. I should go. I made an excuse to meet you, so I need to get home. Take care.â
âI willâŚâ Piya murmured.
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
Abhay, on Piyaâs request, took her to his home directly. She really wanted to see how Mandu was doing. Siddharth was fit and fine after a day and after emptying many blood bags, but Mandu needed longer to recuperate. Wounds caused from silver took longer to heal, and she had many. All the human blood went to her to speed up the healing.
Piya sat at her bedside, wincing on inspection of each lash. Mandu looked at them with her and laughed. The wound on her chest was healed, but it was a visible pink scar in its place.
âHey, why the long face?â
âHow can I not? I saw you covered in blood only recently.â
âSilly girl, Iâm fine.â
âThe whole family is crazy. You all only know how to give one answer.â
Piya rolled her eyes at Manduâs giggle, and smiled at Siddharth who came in to check on her. Mandu tried to sit up, but he stopped her. The pillows under her had to be adjusted first.
âYouâre going to kill me one day. Now Piya is here too. Tell me the truth. Where did you go that night?â
Her mood went somber, and she tried to avoid eye contact. But everyone wanted to hear this answer, and the room was then crowded.
âWhere do you think? Even I was surprised that I decided to go there. But they took me elsewhere after that, and I donât remember.â
Mandu took Piyaâs hand.
âIâm not worried for myself. But I am for you, Piya. I saw it. Sheâs obsessed with Abhay. Youâre one of her biggest obstacles, one of her biggest prizes. She has already captured Nature.â
Mandu recalled the sight of the poor woman as a slave to her sister. She shuddered. With Piyaâs soul, she could do much more. Abhay took a defensive step forward. Now he understood, why he hadnât been hearing Natureâs voice in his head lately.
âAnd she used her to destroy the headquarters.â
Behind them, a voice boomed. Their guest stood at the door, hands behind his back.
âDragomir?â
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