He turned to face Smita, his eyes wide and burning with a desperate, hungry clarity. "Tell me exactly what separates us from the rest of the people in this villages. What is the connection between us and those golden warriors who looked at Papa not as a stranger but, as their own kin? What secret have you and he been guarding since the moment I was born? Are we... are we even from this world ma?"
The question hung in the air like an unsheathed blade.
Smita staggered back, her hand clutching the edge of the wooden table so hard her knuckles turned white. The strength she had used to hold her life together for twelve years seemed to evaporate in a single, jagged breath. Her knees buckled, and she collapsed into her chair, her face buried in her hands as a sob—raw and hollow—finally broke through.
"I thought we had more time," she whispered into her palms, her voice muffled by the weight of a decade's worth of secrets. "I thought if we hid you well enough, the universe might simply forget you existed. But we cannot outrun the hands of the clock, Arjun. Destiny has found us, just as it promised it would twelve years ago."
Arjun knelt before her, his movements possessing a newfound, heavy grace. He did not come with the fiery temper of a boy, but with the quiet, chilling gravity of a man accepting a crown of thorns.
"Ma, look at me," Arjun said, his voice steady enough to still the flickering candle flame. "The silence is over. Our destiny hasn't just found us—it has reached our gate and knocked. There is nothing left to hide; the shadows already know my name. It's time I knew it too."
The Revelation of the Heavens
Smita lifted her head. Her eyes were rimmed with a raw, painful red, her expression one of utter, exhausted defeat. The mask of the simple village mother had cracked, revealing the hollowed-out soul of a woman who had spent years guarding a treasure that was never truly hers to keep.
You want to learn the truth, Arjun?" she asked, her voice hitching. "The truth is that this world—this world—was never meant to be your home. And Verman… the man you called father… he was not the simple police man you saw growing up. He was a well respected warrior in his own world where he came from."
"From his own world," arjun asked Smita with pure shock and hesitation in his voice.
"Yes arjun his own world. The shield of our mortal world, The Devlok." She continued spilling more secrets looking directly at him "The Devlok, Asurlok you had heard about growing up were all true, it was not myth it was made myth to eradicate all sorts of fears and bitter memory from the common man subconsciousness that humanity had faced for centuries, they wanted to completely eradicate all those terrible memories of old times forever, thinking it would never came back again.
She took a shuddering breath, her gaze drifting toward the darkened window.
"Now coming to your father, sixteen years ago, the realms were in chaos. Devlok was a theater of war, and Verman—a High Commander of the Deva host—could no longer bear the weight of the endless slaughter. He wanted a life of peace, away from the noise of celestial politics and the scent of ichor. He abondoned everything, freeing himself from the Devlok and fled from his world of immortals, descending to the mortal world of prithvilok to live a quiet peaceful life as a simple man.
"Upon arriving in this world, he met me," Smita said, her voice trembling with the ghost of a smile that vanished as quickly as it appeared. "We married, and he chose this valley to begin a new life—a mortal life. He built this family with me, believing these mountains were tall enough to hide him from the eyes of the Fates."
She looked at the hearth, "But destiny is not something one can simply leave behind. It is a shadow that follows, no matter how bright the sunshines. Verman tried to bury his immortality, but the world he fled eventually came knocking at our door."
"And what was it?" Arjun urged, his voice sharp, cutting through her hesitation.
"I don't know how to tell you this," Smita gasped, a fresh wave of tears spilling over, her hands clutching her shawl. "I never truly believed this day would come—the day I would have to stand before you and unmake everything you thought was true."
Arjun watched her, his own heart hammering a frantic rhythm against his ribs. The sadness in his eyes was a physical weight, yet he remained motionless, anchored by a desperate, terrifying need to hear the words.
"You were not born of my womb, Arjun."
Arjun flinched as if she had struck him. He snapped back, his head withdrawing instinctively, his lungs seizing as he struggled to catch a breath that suddenly felt too thin to sustain him.
"Though I have always loved you," Smita whispered, reaching out with a trembling hand, "as if you were my own flesh and blood every second since the moment you arrived. In my heart, you are mine. But in your veins..."
Arjun's eyes were wide, fixed in a stare of pure existential crisis. His heart felt as though it had sunk into a hollow void in his chest. He gasped, a ragged, hitching sound.
"You were brought to us in the middle of a storm that nearly leveled this forest twelve years ago." Smita continued wiping of her tears. "You were brought by a warrior drenched in the celestial blood. By your real father... a celestial knight named Harsha."
Arjun felt the ground tilt beneath him. The name Harsha resonated in his skull like a tolling bell.
"Harsha was being hunted," Smita continued, her voice gaining a feverish edge. "He was the protector of the Great Prophecy. He brought you to us in mortal world seeking a safe refuge, because he knew Verman was the only soul in this world strong enough to keep you hidden and safe.
He trusted Verman to raise you in this valley, away from the searching eyes of the Great shadows... You were a gift from a world that was burning, Arjun. Verman took you in because he knew that one day, the fire that brought you here would be the only thing capable of saving us all."
Upon hearing arjun just couldn't hold himself anymore but he was too stunned to hear the revelation such that he couldn't actually cry just tears rolling down from his cheek with a deep sorrow eyes in his lifeless face.
Smita than brushed herself and reached out, her trembling fingers brushing Arjun's cheek. "I know the hollow ache in your chest right now. This... this was the nightmare that kept your father and me awake every night for twelve years. We didn't keep the truth to deceive you, Arjun. We kept it because you are our son—the only one we ever had—and we couldn't bear the thought of handing you over to the hands of such a cruel, blood-soaked destiny."
Arjun shook off the suffocating weight of his shock, his gaze snapping back to his mother. The reality of his bloodline felt like a betrayal of the only life he had ever known.
"Can't we just keep pretending?" he choked out, his voice fracturing under the weight of grief and fresh tears. "That you and Papa are the only parents I ever had? That I am just your son?"
Smita pulled him into her arms, holding him with a fierce, trembling strength. "You are our son," she whispered, her voice cracked and heavy with sorrow. "But somewhere, others gave everything so you could draw breath. You cannot honor our love by erasing their sacrifice, Arjun.
"My mind understands you, Ma," Arjun replied, his forehead resting against her shoulder. "But my heart... it isn't ready."
"Destiny does not wait for us to be ready," Smita said, her rhythm becoming frantic, desperate. She pulled back to look him in the eyes, her gaze wide with the terror of what was coming. "You were never just an ordinary boy of this valley. You are the Seventh Avatar—the final vessel of the Primal Spark."
She reached out, her hands hovering near his chest as if she could feel the heat of the power within him.
"For centuries, the Great Darkness has torn through the fabric of existence, scouring every plane and citatel of the gods to find the child prophesied to burn their empire to ash. After twelve years of blood and searching, they finally found you—not on a golden throne, but here. In a cottage that smells of woodsmoke and lentils, hidden in the mud of a world they thought was beneath their notice."
The Weight of the Seventh
Arjun sat back on his heels, the sudden silence of the room ringing in his ears like the aftermath of an explosion. The world he had known—the simple, sturdy reality of climbing mango trees, swimming in the cold currents of the Kalindi, and the quiet lessons Verman had taught him about honor and the forge—was dissolving. It had all been a beautiful, fragile lie, a sanctuary built of straw to keep a god-killer from realizing his own terrifying potential.
"Harsha... The man who brought me here... is he still out there?" Arjun asked, his voice barely audible.
"He is caught in the same chaos that is coming for us," Smita replied. "Even if he is alive which i don't think so, but if he is than when he sees you again, he will not see a son to hold; he will see a weapon to wield. That is the tragedy of your birth, Arjun. You were born for a responsibility that leaves no room for the love of a mother or the peace of a normal life."
She grabbed his shoulders, her grip surprisingly strong. "The Devas are coming back. they are coming to claim you back. You are of the age now for which you would be hand over the responsibility for Your powers—the Avatar's fire—is beginning to wake. It's what the villagers see in your eyes. You are a sun beginning to rise, and this little house cannot contain your light anymore you belongs to the heaven."
Arjun watched her break down again, the weight of the revelation crushing her spirit. He moved forward, pulling her into a tight, fierce embrace. He pressed his forehead against hers, his own tears falling into her hair.
I wanted to erase kill every single of those ugly creatures I saw that night with the same violence that they had shown upon us, i wouldn't rest till every single of them get to see their karma, but ma i don't wanna leave you here alone i don't have anyone else by my side in this world specially not in the Devlok.
Smita pulled back, her face hardening into a mask of maternal authority. She gripped his face in both hands, forcing him to look into her eyes.
I understand what you are thinking or feeling as for right now but this is not the time to get weak with such emotions, your responsibilities are far more important than your emotions you are born for a greater purpose that can't be achieved staying here with me, if you respect your dying father's words enough than you have to understand that sacrifice isn't just a choice it is an essential element required to forge you into a warrior you need to be in your upcoming destiny.
Arjun hearing his mother fell into deep thoughts.
Smita stood up, pulling him towards her. "You have a promise to your father. You told him you would carry his flame until the shadows were burned to ash. You told him his sacrifice would not be forgotten. Do you think you can fulfill that promise by staying here and watching the village gossip about us?"
He looked at his mother's face—a face he had loved since his first memory—and realized that the greatest act of love she could perform was to cast him out.
The universe is screaming for you, my son," Smita said, her voice finally steadying into the calm of a martyr. "The dark shadows are already on the march. They didn't just burn this valley for spite; they destroyed our home because they are terrified of what you represent. If you stay, if you hide in the shadows of these mountains, they will return. And next time, there will be no Verman to stand in the breach and hold back the tide."
As the weight of Smita's words settled into his soul, Arjun felt the tectonic plates of his identity shift for the final time.
He saw Verman standing over the forge, the orange light of the coals glinting in his eyes as he spoke of the "unyielding nature of true steel." He remembered his father's calloused hands guiding his own, teaching him that strength without purpose was merely violence. Every lesson, every stern look, and every hidden sigh now made sense.
Than the memory shifted, turning jagged and cold. He saw it again—the mockery in the demon Mihirkul's laugh as he pinned Verman to the earth. The sound echoed in Arjun's mind, a jagged blade of noise that tore through his grief and left something sharper in its wake. The sorrow that had weighed him down for two months began to boil, calcifying into a singular, burning intent.
Arjun gasped, his breath hitching as he snapped back to the present. He looked down at his wrist, where the faint, rhythmic pulse of his blood seemed to animate the serpent symbol etched into his skin. Signaling the awakening of a power that had been dormant for twelve years.
When he finally lifted his gaze to meet his mother's, the boy she had raised was gone. In his place stood someone forged from the same indomitable spirit that had held the Kalindi Valley together. His eyes were no longer hollow with grief; they were fueled by a terrifyingly beautiful passion.
"I will fulfill the promise i made to my father, Ma," Arjun whispered into the silence of the cottage. "I will burn the shadows until the sky is clear again. For Papa. For Harsha, And for you i will avenge every fallen's death who layed their life fighting against the shadows so that I and others could live, i will take my vengeance against them."
Outside, the wind picked up, howling through the cedars on the hill. Far above the clouds, a golden light began to gather, pulsing in time with the heartbeat of the boy in the valley. The two months were over. The Avatar had awakened.
The fire had finally surrendered, leaving the room in a thick, charcoal gloom. Smita wiped her eyes with the back of a trembling hand and stood up, her movements possessing a sudden, hollow determination.
...
