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The White Epic Volume One : Echoes of the Cursed Veil

## CHAPTER 1: The Author of Haunted Realities

The scream was completely silent, trapped behind the suffocating, heavy wall of sleep paralysis.

In the abyssal dark of her mind, the phantom screen of a phone glowed with a malicious dare: *"A night in the seaside cemetery. Who's in?"* The faces of the teenagers were blurred out, as if erased by death itself, and the air hung thick with the sickeningly sweet stench of rotting lilies and stagnant salt water. A young girl took the bet, dragging her friend past the rusted iron gates. In their arrogance, they found nothing at first. They laughed aloud, mocking the locals who whispered that the soil was cursed. But they didn't see the shadow. They didn't see the formless, weeping entity that detached itself from a headstone to follow them home.

Suddenly, the dream fractured, violently shifting to a desolate highway. The air tore apart with the screech of grinding metal and the heavy, metallic stench of burning rubber. Then came the true horror—a gruesome canvas of a massacre. Severed, unrecognizable limbs and grotesquely deformed bodies were scattered across the smoking asphalt like shattered porcelain dolls. Rivers of thick, pooling blood reflected the moonlight. Amidst the carnage, the mangled corpses weren't entirely dead; their lips moved in silent, synchronized agony, begging for a salvation she couldn't give.

Nandini bolted upright, her lungs seizing as if filled with water.

The bedroom was pitch-black, but the phantom smell of fresh copper and burning tires lingered vividly in her nostrils. She fumbled frantically along her bedside table, her fingers shaking uncontrollably until they locked around her inhaler. Two sharp puffs. The agonizing tightness in her chest loosened, but her heart continued to strike against her ribs in a frantic, irregular rhythm. Even awake, the echoing, collective screams of those mangled souls vibrated in her ears, begging, *Help us. Find us.*

She had no idea that these weren't nightmares at all. These were the desperate, agonizing transmissions of dead souls trying to communicate across the veil, using her hyper-vivid mind as a lighthouse. But Nandini didn't understand the supernatural. To her, it was just a broken brain.

"Another one," she whispered, wiping a layer of icy sweat from her forehead. "New faces, same horrific carnage."

She checked the digital clock: 3:00 AM. Taking a sedative now would leave her a mindless zombie by noon. "What a beautiful, twisted dream," she muttered with a dark, self-deprecating smirk, trying to mask her terror with writerly arrogance. "I guess the universe wants me to finish Chapter 42."

The relentless, terrifying imagery had completely shattered her ability to sleep, cementing another brutal night of insomnia. She washed her face with freezing water, brewed a cup of black coffee so bitter and concentrated it felt like a physical punch to the gut, and sat at her desk. Embracing her identity as a wildly successful author, her fingers began to fly across the glowing keyboard. She didn't write cheap romance; she mapped the sharp, bleeding edges of the human soul.

By 6:00 AM, she opened her Gmail to a flood of notifications.

* **Subject: Official Book Signing - 'The White Epic: Volume One'**

* **Subject: Series Proposal - Copyright Acquisition**

She skimmed the second email and instantly hit *Delete*. A massive production house wanted to turn her masterpiece into a cringy, high-glitz television drama filled with mindless intimacy just to harvest views.

"Over my dead body," she whispered fiercely. Her characters were her children, especially the ones she had meticulously sculpted five years ago in her debut hit—the very individuals who had launched her career into stardom.

### The Morning Vlog

By 9:00 AM, the haunted, insomniac writer had vanished. In her place stood a woman of sharp lines, effortless style, and immense creative pride. She propped up her phone against the window to film a 'One Day With Me' vlog for her thousands of subscribers, ensuring the camera captured her best angles in the natural sunlight. She wore an off-white, intricate lace-work mid-length dress—a breathtaking custom piece she had personally designed and stitched on her machine. It moved with her like a soft, ethereal cloud, a stark, beautiful contrast to the heavy, dark aura she secretly carried.

"Morning, everyone," she said to the lens, her voice vibrant, cool, and perfectly composed. "Heading over to the editor's office today. Big things are coming."

### The Glitch in Reality

The bustling headquarters of Summit Publishing was alive with energy. Nandini stood by the high-end coffee machine, leaning against the marble counter as she holding court, trading witty banter with the junior editors. She was the undisputed "Queen" of the publishing house. Five long years after writing her debut novel as a broke student, she had finally achieved massive, sweeping recognition. She had a legion of admirers who worshiped her dark tragedies, and she carried that immense literary ego with a playful, sharp grace.

Then, the universe glitched.

A man walked into the open-plan lobby. He didn't arrive with a loud entourage, yet he possessed a calm, gentle authority that seemed to physically part the air around him. He was exceptionally tall, impeccably dressed in a casual but clearly expensive linen shirt, with a professional camera slung effortlessly over his shoulder.

Nandini's fingers went weak; her coffee cup nearly slipped from her hand.

*"Wow... Such a handsome man... but he doesn't look fully Indian... what on earth is he doing in our office?"* she mused internally, her writer's brain instantly cataloging his striking jawline and effortless posture for her next book.

But the man didn't pass by. His eyes locked directly onto hers. He walked straight through the room, entirely ignoring the sudden, frantic whispers of the staff.

"Excuse me," he said, his voice a rich, soft, melodic hum. "I was just visiting an old friend here, but I saw you walking past. You have a very... soulful presence. You walk like a queen—confident and bold. Are you by any chance interested in modeling? I'm Arka. Arka De Cruz. I'm currently looking for a face for my upcoming 'Ancient Roots' photography series. Would you consider—"

He reached into his pocket and extended a sleek, matte-black business card.

Nandini didn't take it. She couldn't even breathe. Her eyes locked onto the black card as her mind raced backward five years—back to the very ink and paper of her soul.

**Arka De Cruz: The beloved male lead. The brilliant photographer and CEO of De Cruz Fashion. The fiercely protective younger brother of the ruthless, hidden villain, Aditya De Cruz.**

"Arka... De Cruz?" she choked out, her voice dropping an octave.

"Yes," he smiled kindly, though a hint of polite confusion touched his eyes at her intense reaction. "Is something wrong with my name?"

Nandini looked at him—the exact, chiseled jawline, the same deep, remarkably calm eyes she had spent three pages describing in Chapter 3 of her debut. This wasn't a coincidence. This was a catastrophic psychiatric emergency.

Her high-and-mighty writer's ego flared up as a defense mechanism against impending insanity. She raised an eyebrow and mocked him openly. "You... are you a fan of my novel or something? You really should not read too much fiction, mister. Now you're standing here thinking you're an actual novel lead?"

Arka blinked, utterly baffled. "Why would I think myself a novel lead? I don't think I understand what you mean."

Nandini's panic spiked into the stratosphere. She turned to a terrified junior editor standing nearby, her voice a trembling whisper. "Can you see him? Or am I the only one standing here talking to a ghost?"

"I think I'm having a massive delulu," Nandini whispered to herself.

Without grabbing the card, she spun on her heel and absolutely bolted. She didn't walk; she sprinted in her designer dress. Ignoring her senior editor calling out her name in shock, she dove headfirst into the open elevator, her heart screaming in pure terror. *I've finally lost it. The insomnia did it. I'm hallucinating my own dead characters. I need an immediate, high-voltage electric shock.*

### The Revelation

Back in the main office, Mr. Chatterjee—the chief editor and an old college friend of Arka's—watched the entire bizarre exchange with a highly raised eyebrow.

"What on earth just happened to her? Do I... look so terrible that I scared her off?" Arka asked, staring blankly at the empty hallway where Nandini had vanished like she'd seen a specter.

"That's Nandini," Mr. Chatterjee laughed heartily. "She's our star writer. A bit eccentric, fiercely proud, but brilliant. Why did you scare her, Arka?"

Arka frowned, genuinely perplexed. "I literally just wanted to offer her a modeling gig. Her walk... she moves like she owns the very ground she stands on."

Mr. Chatterjee chuckled warmly and reached for a heavy, hardcover book resting prominently on his desk. "Maybe it's because of this. This is her debut novel, written when she was just a student five years ago. It has become an absolute cult classic."

Arka took the book, his eyes tracing the title: *The White Epic*.

He flipped the cover open to the detailed character index. His polite smile instantly froze, then slowly, incredulously widened into a look of pure, fascinated amusement. There, printed in bold ink, it read:

> **Arka De Cruz.** Age 25. Renowned Photographer. CEO. A gentleman hiding a devil living in human skin.

> *Associated Characters:* **Aditya De Cruz**, the ruthless Chairman and Arka's older brother. **Samuel**, the fiercely loyal right-hand man.

"She wrote... this?" Arka whispered, letting out a short, breathless laugh of sheer disbelief. "She wrote about me, my brother, and even Samuel? How? My family has never even set foot in India before this month. I've never given a single public interview. Absolutely no one knows who we are here."

"She's never met you in her life," the editor confirmed solemnly. "She's an orphan from Kolkata who rarely leaves her writing desk."

Arka felt a thrilling chill of genuine, dangerous curiosity ripple down his spine. This wasn't just a fictional story; it was an exact, classified blueprint of his actual life.

"I need her contact info," Arka said, his eyes dancing with a sudden, intense interest. "And her home address."

"She will literally murder me if I give that to you," Chatterjee warned.

"Then don't tell her it was you," Arka smirked, casually tucking *The White Epic* under his arm. "Tell her a vengeful ghost from her novel came back to life to claim the author's Soul."

### The Diagnosis

On the other side of town, Nandini was trapped in the back of a moving cab, her hands violently shaking as she scrolled through her phone, dialing at supersonic speed.

"Yes, Dr. Chatterjee's clinic? Do you have an immediate opening for an emergency session? No, it's not the standard nightmare this time... I think I need an emergency electric shock to the temporal lobe before I go full-blown insane! I just saw a character I created in 'The White Epic' standing in broad daylight! I'm visually hallucinating my own intellectual property! Please, I am completely losing my mind!"

## The Clinical Reality

For a solid, grueling week, the grand "Author Nandini" remained utterly silent online. She didn't write a single word of her highly anticipated Volume Two; she was far too busy frantically navigating the sterilized, white hallways of South Kolkata's most elite psychiatric clinics. Refusing to trust a single opinion, she consulted three separate high-priced specialists, desperately begging for a logical, scientific label to explain the terrifying glitch in her reality.

"It's a rare, highly advanced manifestation of **Hyperphantasia with Parallellomania**," the third doctor finally concluded with a grandiose flourish, scribbling a formal diagnosis that felt more like a death sentence to her literary sanity.

"Your creative imagination is so incredibly potent that your brain is actively over-mapping your fiction onto the physical world. You are actively seeking patterns—mere cosmic coincidences—and your mind is inflating them into full-scale delusions. Take this official medical certificate, Miss Nandini. I highly suggest you step away from the keyboard immediately."

Nandini gripped the stamped medical certificate like a holy, protective relic.

*See?* she thought, a massive, arrogant spark of her signature high-ego returning in full force. *I'm not being haunted by literary ghosts. I'm just medically brilliant and slightly over-saturated by my own magnificent genius.*

### The Patient vs. The Phantom

She marched out of the elite clinic, feeling strangely validated and incredibly proud of her official "hallucination" certificate. She adjusted her sunglasses, completely ready to conquer the world again, when a tall shadow suddenly eclipsed the afternoon sun.

"So, did the doctor give you a clean bill of health? Or am I still just an imaginary ghost in your machine?"

Nandini shrieked at the top of her lungs, instantly clutching her custom designer bag to her chest like a medieval shield.

Leaning casually against a stone pillar by the clinic entrance was **Arka**. In the harsh, unforgiving glare of the 2:00 PM sunlight, he looked terrifyingly three-dimensional. She could see the intricate weave of his expensive linen shirt, the warm, golden flecks in his eyes, and the undeniable, rhythmic movement of his chest as he breathed.

"Go away! You... you imagined thing!" she hissed venomously, thrusting the medical certificate directly into his face as if it were a holy crucifix intended to ward off a vampire. "I have literal, legal proof! You are a manifestation of my overworked, brilliant psyche! This is Parallellomania! You do not exist in the census!"

Arka blinked at the paper inches from his nose, then let out a laugh so genuine, rich, and melodic that a nearby nurse paused in the corridor just to smile.

"A medical certificate?" Arka asked, his voice shaking with amusement. "You actually spent an entire week and a small fortune visiting three separate doctors just to get a piece of paper that claims I don't exist?"

"Yes, of course I did! Because you are *my* character! I birthed every single detail of your pathetic life—your specific name, your fashion career, your exact height! I created you out of thin air five years ago! You are a figment of my imagination, and you dare to try and turn me into a psychiatric patient? Be gone, thought!"

Arka stepped closer, his playful expression softening into that trademark calm, gentle aura she had so meticulously detailed in Chapter Three of her debut. Feeling a sudden wave of sheer embarrassment as she continued to brandish the crinkled paper at him, he reached out in a fluid, lightning-fast motion and gently caught her wrist.

The physical contact was electric, warm, and entirely undeniable.

"Nandini, look at me," he said softly, his grip firm but incredibly careful. "I have a distinct pulse. I have a valid passport. I am literally just a real man who wants to hire a creative queen for a global photography campaign."

Nandini squinted hard at him, her massive literary ego battling her five physical senses. "Wooo... what a high-technological, advanced imagination I have," she muttered to herself, her voice trembling as she stared at his fingers on her wrist. "Even as a brain delusion, you're remarkably warm. Fine. If you are supposedly real... walk back into that clinic with me. Right now. Tell the doctor to her face that you aren't a phantom."

### The Verification of a Delusion

The scene that unfolded inside the consultation room was an absolute masterpiece of psychological absurdity.

Nandini marched right back into the office, dragging the six-foot-tall, wealthy CEO by his linen sleeve. Being barely five feet tall herself, she looked like a stubborn, furious toddler dragging a towering giant into time-out, which only added to the sheer, unparalleled humiliation of the moment.

"Doctor!" she barked authoritatively, pointing a dramatic finger at the empty air next to her. "Tell me you can't see this man! Tell me my hand is holding onto nothing but oxygen and delusion! Look at him right now and tell me there is no one present in this room!"

The psychiatrist looked up from her paperwork, sighed heavily with deep professional exhaustion, and stared directly at the incredibly handsome, towering man standing awkwardly by the desk.

"Miss Nandini... I can see him quite clearly," the doctor said dryly. "He is very much taking up physical space in my office."

Arka, looking profoundly embarrassed but exhibiting the patience of a saint, actually had to reach into his pocket, pull out his official government ID, and shake the utterly bewildered psychologist's hand just to legally prove he wasn't a hallucination. By the time they finally exited the clinic for the second time, the psychiatrist looked like she needed an emergency prescription herself.

Nandini stared blankly at the concrete pavement, her face a shade of crimson so deep it practically burned through her light brown skin. The humiliation was absolute, total, and historic. She, the bold, cool, unbothered "Queen of Tragedies," had just tried to legally exorcise a real, living human being with a doctor's note.

"Okay," she muttered, her characteristically straightforward nature forcing her to finally concede defeat. "So you're real. And you just so happen to share the exact same first name, the exact same career, and the exact same rare family surname as the literal lead in my novel. That is a statistically impossible, terrifying coincidence."

"Life is significantly weirder than fiction," Arka said, his eyes practically dancing with pure delight. He found her erratic, high-ego reactions utterly fascinating; no woman in high society had ever treated his wealthy presence as a severe mental illness before. "Since you've officially put me through a rigorous psychiatric evaluation, the absolute least you can do to compensate me is buy me a coffee. Actually, it's late—make it lunch. My car is parked right here."

### The Devil in the Details

They settled into a quiet, secluded booth at an ultra-high-end restaurant down the street. Nandini sat incredibly stiff, her shattered writer's ego slowly reassembling itself like broken glass in her mind. Arka watched her carefully, noting the way she analyzed the luxury menu with a cold, sharp, calculating gaze.

Internally, Arka was treading on thin ice. He was exceptionally careful to avoid certain topics. He knew with absolute certainty that if he casually mentioned his brother "Aditya De Cruz" or their trusted associate "Samuel," this brilliant, fragile author would likely check herself into a high-security asylum permanently.

"I don't do modeling, Arka," she said sharply, her eyes fixed firmly on her plate. "I am a writer. I am the one who observes and controls the narrative; I am not the object of observation."

"That's exactly why you're perfect for the project," Arka said, leaning forward across the table, his melodic voice turning serious.

"The 'Ancient Roots' series is entirely about souls that are old, deep, and... inherently tragic. You don't just walk into a room, Nandini; you carry an entire heavy narrative with you. Besides..." He smirked, a playful, wicked glint appearing in his eyes. "Don't you want to see if the reality of 'Arka De Cruz' is better than the one you wrote?"

Nandini felt a sudden, familiar spark of her signature curiosity. She lived for the vibrant, electric rush of new experiences; it was the raw, bleeding fuel she used to write her tragedies. And her immense pride was piqued—if she was going to be cosmically haunted by her own creative writing, she might as well get a massive modeling paycheck for the trouble.

"Fine," she said, tilting her head with a bold, cool, dangerous smile. "I'll try my best for your series. But on one absolute condition."

"Anything," Arka promised instantly, raising his hands. "As long as it doesn't involve a psychiatrist. I have literally spent the last week searching for you in almost every psychiatric clinic in South Kolkata."

"If I see a single other person from my book..." Nandini warned, her voice growing deadly serious. "Specifically, if you ever look me in the eye and tell me that the pathetic, horrific villain I created—a man named Aditya—actually exists as your real-life brother... I am jumping directly out of the nearest window. I don't think my sanity can accept that much coincidence."

Arka nearly choked on his glass of water, coughing slightly to mask his sudden shock.

Internally, a dark, heavy thrill ran down his spine. He felt a chilling premonition of the absolute chaos that was about to unfold. He realized right then and there that he could never mention Aditya's name to her. Not until the trap was completely closed around her. For now, the "Ghost" and the "Author" had a deal, and the true King of their dark reality would have to remain hidden safely in the shadows.

"Deal," Arka managed to say, regaining his composure with a smooth smile. "No jumping out of windows. But tell me... you created that villain. Why do you hate him so intensely?"

Nandini's face instantly darkened with a look of genuine, deep-seated distaste. "I don't hate him—I fear the absolute reality of someone like him. I originally wanted to write a standard, ruthless fiction villain, but I ended up birthing an absolute monster.

Even as the author, I honestly don't understand how I made his character so entirely ruthless and cruel. I tried to rewrite him, to soften his edges, but he literally took on a life of his own on the page. My readers absolutely love him, but he's an unredeemable monster. In the end of the plot, he cuts you into tiny pieces... oh, wait, I mean he cuts the hero in the book into pieces, not you. And yet, some insane readers actually want him as the romantic hero! Oh my God, it's sickening. I'm actually planning on completely killing him off in the next few chapters as soon as I start writing Volume Two. But just think about it... if I keep meeting people with the exact names from my novel, how am I supposed to deal with my sanity with so much coincidence?"

Arka went completely silent, a profound chill settling deep into his bones. He looked at the proud, fiery woman sitting across from him, entirely unaware that the monster she had written was very real, very powerful, and currently waiting for her.

## CHAPTER 2: The Prophecy of the Gilded Card

The drive back from the luxury restaurant was considerably quieter, the atmosphere inside the sleek vehicle heavy with the unspoken questions of five long years. Arka steered through the chaotic traffic with a relaxed, effortless grace, while Nandini stared out the window at the blurred, humid lights of Kolkata. Her hard-earned medical certificate was now folded and completely forgotten in her bag—a discarded souvenir from a psychological war she had thoroughly lost.

"You dropped this last week," Arka said, breaking the silence as he reached into the polished center console. He handed her a matte-black business card that possessed the heavy, physical weight of an impending prophecy. "You were running through the publishing house like you were actively training for an Olympic sprint, so I didn't get the chance to give it to you properly."

Nandini took the card, her fingers brushing against the heavy cardstock. Her eyes widened slightly as her gaze traced the embossed, specialized silver lettering.

**ARKA DE CRUZ**

*CEO – De Cruz Fashion*

A sudden, deep chill that had absolutely nothing to do with the car’s air conditioning crawled straight up her spine.

"CEO," she whispered, her voice dropping to a trembling murmur. "I literally wrote that you were the CEO of an international fashion brand five years ago. Back then, you were probably still struggling with university midterms in another country. I didn't just write a fictional character, Arka... I wrote a literal destiny. I should honestly quit the writing industry entirely and start charging people premium rates for fortune-telling."

Arka let out a soft, rich, melodic laugh that instantly eased the tension in the vehicle. "Yeah, you probably should. Honestly, I’m thinking about reading your book tonight just to find out if I’m getting a massive financial raise next year, or if I’m scheduled for some horrific, tragic accident."

### The Fortress of the Orphan

As the luxury car glided smoothly through the bustling streets of South Kolkata, the conversation shifted, flowing with an impossible ease that shouldn't exist between complete strangers. They felt like ancient friends—or perhaps, like a divine creator and her creation finally reconciling in the physical world. Arka, deeply fascinated by the proud woman who had mapped out his very soul before ever meeting him, gently steered the conversation toward the past that had shaped her.

"My chief editor mentioned you lost your parents when you were young," Arka said softly, his tone careful. "How did you survive the wolves long enough to become the 'Author Nandini'?"

Nandini didn’t flinch. Her face remained a flawless mask of regal composure, her chin held high as she adjusted the collar of her dress. There was absolutely no "poor, helpless orphan" act in her repertoire; she despised pity. She smiled, but it was a sharp, fiercely proud, and enigmatic expression.

"I believe whatever happens in life happens for a distinct reason. In that belief alone, I am still standing here alive at twenty-three," she said, her voice steady and solid as iron. "But when my father died suddenly of a massive stroke when I was only fourteen, leaving me in a terrifying, silent vacuum, I realized that 'reason' is often a very cruel, unforgiving teacher."

She gave a small, cynical smirk, looking out at the city lights. "The moment the funeral shroud was placed, my relatives were practically lining up at the door to 'take care' of me. Why wouldn't they? My parents were highly respected government employees; they left behind massive savings, prime property, and extensive insurance policies for me to live happily for my entire life. Those greedy vultures didn't see a grieving, traumatized child standing in the hallway; they saw a massive bank account they wanted to withdraw from."

### The Super-Woman

Her face grew pale for a fleeting, microscopic second—the only crack in her majestic armor. "For a long time, I blamed myself. I thought I was just a selfish, useless child who couldn't do a single thing to save her parents, and yet here I was, using their hard-earned legacy just to survive the wasteland. But they had planned everything out for me... as if they somehow knew they were going to leave me behind in this world alone. I had to grow up in a single night. I refused to let those parasites touch a single rupee of my father's hard work."

She laughed then, a bright, triumphant sound that cut through the heavy darkness of the car. "Then came my aunt. My absolute savior. She swept into that house and legally dragged me away from those money-hungry wolves like a superhero dressed in a traditional cotton saree. She’s a schoolteacher—she never married. She told me later that she feared if she ever had her own biological child, she might neglect me, and she loved my mother far too much to let her daughter be ruined. She promised my mother in that labor room that I would always be hers."

Nandini leaned back deeply into the leather seat, a rare, genuine warmth touching her dark eyes. "I never felt like an orphan for a single day because I have a second mother who brushes my hair, packs my tiffin, and still threatens to beat me with a rolling pin if my creative schedules mess up my health. She even 'tricked' me into paying rent for my own apartment using a fake landlord name, just to ensure I didn't become a spoiled, lazy brat. She wanted me to be a queen who earned her own crown through hard work, not one who was just handed a legacy."

### The Doctor and the Muse

"She eventually made me move to South Kolkata with my absolute best friend, Diya. Diya was pursuing a grueling medical degree while I was completely lost in English Literature and dark poetry," Nandini chuckled, her expression softening. "After graduation, Diya got an incredible residency offer in another state. She actually wanted to reject it because she didn't want to leave me alone, but I literally forced her out the door. You don't let a brilliant talent like hers go to waste just to be my personal babysitter. She’s a fully qualified doctor now..."

Nandini turned her head toward Arka, a playful, childishly mischievous glint appearing in her eyes. "And I actually wrote the main female lead character in *The White Epic* entirely after her. Diya... the brave, fiercely kind, and slightly bossy muse. So, since I’ve already found the male lead in the flesh, and the female lead is my stunning best friend... if the male lead happens to be completely single, I could easily arrange an elite blind date. What do you say, CEO?"

Arka chuckled, smoothly dodging a massive pothole in the road. "Yeah, why not? As long as she doesn't think I’m a psychiatric hallucination too."

Nandini laughed loudly, her voice vibrant. "Oh, she’s a medical doctor, Arka. She won't think you're a hallucination. She’ll probably try to perform an emergency operation on you right at the dinner table just to legally prove you’re actually a human being and not some supernatural devil I dreamt up in my room."

"Well, that sounds like a distinct, highly terrifying threat to my physical health," Arka mocked, pulling the car smoothly up to the curb of her high-rise apartment building.

Nandini hopped out of the vehicle, turning back to give him a bold, cool smile, promising to visit his studio office later that week for a "sightseeing tour" of his latest fashion designs. Arka smiled warmly, waving. "Of course. You have to see if the real-life CEO is actually worth being your novel’s main lead."

### The Real Estate Nightmare

The very moment Nandini’s figure disappeared safely past the security gates of her building, the charming smile on Arka’s face vanished instantly. The warmth in his eyes died, replaced by a cold, sharp alertness. Suddenly, his phone buzzed violently in his pocket with a encrypted, high-priority corporate alert.

**[REAL ESTATE LOGISTICS: MANSION PURCHASE COMPLETED – SOUTH KOLKATA REGION.]**

Arka’s blood instantly ran cold. The steering wheel groaned under the sudden, involuntary tightening of his grip. "No," he whispered, his voice laced with a sudden, suffocating dread. "No, no, no. It’s too fast."

He hit his secure speed-dial. The call was picked up on the very first ring by the calm, terrifyingly efficient, and toneless voice of **Samuel**.

"Samuel? Tell me my global GPS tracker is lying to me right now," Arka hissed into his Bluetooth headset, aggressively swerving his car back toward the highway. "Why did my brother just purchase a massive, high-security fortress in South Kolkata? He is supposed to be managing the textiles in Mumbai for the next three months!"

"The Chairman decided that the Kolkata launch requires his direct, personal supervision," Samuel replied, his voice completely level, devoid of any human warmth. "He believes your progress with the 'Ancient Roots' photography series has been... uncharacteristically sluggish, Arka. We land at the private terminal tomorrow morning to ensure the Indian market is conquered swiftly. Prepare the briefings."

"Samuel! You need to stop him! Tell him the air in Kolkata is highly toxic! Tell him the extreme humidity will absolutely ruin his bespoke Italian suits!" Arka barked, his calm demeanor completely shattering into pure panic. "He cannot be in this city right now! If Nandini walks into our corporate office next week and sees the literal 'Ruthless Monster' from her manuscript sitting in the Chairman’s executive chair, she won't just jump out a window. She will check herself into a high-security asylum and melt the goddamn key!"

There was a brief, sharp pause on the other end of the line. "Who exactly is Nandini?" Samuel asked, his tone instantly sharpening with deep, dangerous suspicion. "And why is an ordinary local girl more important than the global expansion of the De Cruz Empire? You should focus entirely on finding faces for the cameras, Arka, and leave the heavy logistics to Aditya. You know better than anyone that no one dictates the Chairman's movements."

Arka slammed his hand violently against the leather steering wheel. *They don't understand,* he thought frantically. Samuel and Aditya had absolutely no idea about the web novel. They didn't know they were exact, living blueprints of a dark tragedy written by a twenty-three-year-old girl with a medical inhaler.

But it was far worse than a mere novel coincidence.

### The Suppressing Aura

Arka pulled the car over to the side of the dark road, his chest heaving as a cold sweat broke out across his forehead. He gripped his chest, feeling his inner heartbeat racing in an irregular, erratic rhythm.

Ever since he had stood close to Nandini at the publishing house, and even tonight during the drive, Arka had felt a bizarre, terrifying phenomenon occurring within his own body. He wasn't just a regular human—he possessed ancient, hidden lineage traits, a powerful internal energy that usually made ordinary humans bow to his presence. Yet, when he was within a three-foot radius of Nandini, his actual powers violently rose and fell like a chaotic tide.

Her aura was completely invisible to the naked eye, but to a creature of his caliber, it was a suffocating, crushing weight. It was an aura so heavy, so ancient, and so utterly suppressing that it made his inner instincts feel entirely weak, paralyzed, and humbled. She looked like an ordinary human girl, she bled like a human, and she clearly had no idea who or what she truly was—yet she possessed a dormant energy that could bring supernatural creatures to their knees.

*If she stays near me, I can manage it,* Arka thought frantically, his eyes wide in the dark car. *But if she meets Aditya...*

Aditya was a apex predator. A monster who ruled by absolute dominance and cruel power. If Aditya felt a human girl possessing an aura that could actively suppress his magnificent power, he wouldn't just be intrigued—he would view her as an existential threat. He would hunt her, break her, or lock her away in a gilded cage until she was destroyed. For her own survival, and for the sanity of her fragile human mind, she could not meet the Chairman.

"If those two cross paths," Arka whispered into the empty, dark car, a chill settling into his bones, "Kolkata isn't going to have a fashion launch. It’s going to have a bloody massacre."

### The Collision of Fate

Meanwhile, up on her apartment balcony, Nandini paced back and forth, the cool night breeze ruffling the curtains. Her phone was pressed tightly to her ear as she eagerly recounted the absolute absurdity of her week to Amit. From the humiliating psychiatric certificate to the heavy, matte-black business card, she laid out the entire story with a vibrant, mocking energy she hadn't felt in months.

On the other end of the line, the silence from Amit was deafening.

Amit sat at the dark wooden desk of his office, his jaw clenching so hard his teeth ached. He didn't care about *The White Epic*, and he didn't care about the strange, impossible coincidence of this photographer’s name. All his mind registered was that a wealthy, dangerously handsome stranger was circling his territory.

Amit had loved Nandini since they were children playing in the historic courtyards of North Kolkata, back when her father was still alive. He knew her better than anyone else. He knew she didn't love him with a roaring, burning passion; she loved the immense safety, the loud family dinners, and the unconditional affection his parents and sister provided. She desperately wanted the family unit she had lost.

"Nandini, you don't need to do this," Amit said, his voice straining under the immense effort to sound calm and supportive, while his mind calculated how to intercept her. "You are already a highly successful, wealthy writer. Why expose yourself to the shallow, dangerous world of modeling? People will stare at you. Strange men will... it's just not safe for a girl like you."

"It’s just a highly professional conceptual shoot for his 'Ancient Roots' series, Amit! It’s literal art, not a cheap pageant," Nandini countered instantly, her majestic author-ego flaring up aggressively at his controlling tone. She had built her kingdom alone after her father's death; she took orders from no man.

Amit bit his tongue, swallowing his rage. He knew the absolute rules of dealing with her: Nandini fiercely loathed control freaks. If he pushed her too hard right now, she would walk away from him without a second thought. He just had to endure this madness until the wedding. Once the ring was securely on her finger, he could finally tuck her away safely where no other men could ever gaze upon her. He would keep her protected in his world, and as long as that dark, hidden world couldn't find her, she would be his forever.

"Fine," he sighed, his voice laced with a thick, possessive undertone. "Just... promise me you'll be careful."

### The King’s Descent

The next morning, while Nandini was casually filming a playful "Get Ready With Me" vlog for her daily channel—looking like a literal, flawless "brownie doll" in a short, white custom-stitched dress that elegantly showed off her toned legs—the entire atmosphere at the Kolkata airport private terminal violently shifted.

The air in the terminal seemed to grow immensely heavy, pressurized by a cold, dark, and suffocatingly rich aura that made the security guards instinctively straighten their spines.

Aditya De Cruz stepped off the staircase of his matte-black private jet.

If Arka was the gentle, warm morning sun, Aditya was the absolute midnight storm. He was masculine to an almost unbearable, dangerous degree, his silhouette commanding total submission. His face was carved with a sharp, lethal perfection that suggested the gods had broken the mold after creating him. His charcoal-black eyes held a hidden, flickering violet ray within the pupils, burning with a cold, predatory, and ancient intelligence. He was three times more breathtaking, and ten times more terrifying, than the "ruthless villain" Nandini had ever dared to describe in her ink.

"The luxury sedan is idling by the tarmac, Aditya," Samuel murmured smoothly, stepping into perfect lockstep at his right hand as they crossed the concrete. "We should head directly to the South Kolkata mansion. I need to rest before the board meeting."

Aditya didn't speak a single word. He didn't have to. His absolute silence was a heavy, suffocating command that echoed louder than a shout.

He adjusted his dark sunglasses and moved toward the waiting vehicle, his powerful presence so intense that the airport staff instinctively looked down at the floor, entirely unable to bear the sheer, crushing weight of his predatory gaze. The King had officially descended upon Kolkata, and the gears of the ancient curse had begun to turn.

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