Thursday, 4 June 2026

A donkey went around telling everyone: **"The grass is blue!"

A donkey went around telling everyone: **"The grass is blue!"** A tiger disagreed and said firmly: "No, the grass is green." The donkey didn't argue further — he went straight to the lion, the king of the jungle, and complained: "Your Majesty, the tiger has been rude and disrespectful to me. He contradicted me!" The lion held court. After hearing both sides, he sentenced the **tiger to three days in jail**. The tiger was stunned. Before being taken away, he asked the lion: "Your Majesty, why am I being punished? The grass *is* green. I was stating a fact." The lion replied: > *"I know the grass is green. That is not why you are punished. You are punished because a brave and intelligent creature like you wasted his energy arguing with a donkey — and worse, allowed it to disturb your peace. The donkey will always believe the grass is blue. That will never change. Your mistake was thinking the argument was worth having."* --- **The lesson:** Not every argument deserves your engagement. When someone is committed to their delusion, arguing doesn't correct them — it only costs *you* your dignity and peace. Choosing your battles wisely is itself a form of intelligence.

Why He Was Murdered

Why He Was Murdered I wish I'd been there earlier. It might have made all the difference. Maybe if I had arrived ten minutes sooner, Daniel Mercer would still be alive. Maybe I would have interrupted the argument. Maybe I would have seen the killer's face. Maybe I would have understood what was happening before blood stained the floorboards of his office. But I wasn't there. And because I wasn't, all I can tell you is why he was murdered. Not who murdered him. Not how. Why. The distinction matters. Because Daniel Mercer did not die because someone hated him. He died because he discovered something that should have remained hidden. Or at least that was what certain people believed. The story begins three months before his death. I first met Daniel in the archives of the city museum. I was a journalist then, thirty-four years old, working for a struggling newspaper that survived mostly because people still enjoyed reading scandals over breakfast. Daniel was not scandalous. At first glance, he was painfully ordinary. Forty-eight years old. Thin. Glasses. A habit of tapping his fingers when he was thinking. He was a historian specializing in local records. The sort of person most people ignored. The sort of person who preferred forgotten documents to living conversation. I had been assigned a dull feature article about historical preservation funding. Daniel happened to be one of the experts I interviewed. The meeting should have lasted twenty minutes. Instead, we spoke for two hours. Not because he was charming. Because he was curious. There is a difference. Charming people make you interested in them. Curious people become interested in you. By the end of our conversation, he knew more about my career than I knew about his. As I prepared to leave, he said something strange. "Most people think history is about the past." I shrugged. "Isn't it?" "No." He smiled. "History is about power." At the time, I thought it was merely an academic observation. Later, I realized it was a warning. Two weeks afterward, Daniel called me. His voice sounded excited. And frightened. "I found something." "What?" "I can't explain over the phone." "Then explain badly." "No." A pause. "You need to see it." The next day I met him in the museum archives. He led me through rows of shelves packed with dusty records. Finally, he stopped beside a table covered in documents. "Look." I examined the papers. Property records. Financial reports. Legal agreements. Nothing unusual. At least not to me. Daniel pointed toward a specific signature. "Read the name." I did. Then frowned. The name belonged to a wealthy businessman named Victor Hale. Everyone in the city knew him. He owned construction companies, hotels, and half a dozen charities. He was respected. Influential. Almost untouchable. "What about him?" I asked. Daniel handed me another document. Then another. And another. Slowly, a pattern emerged. The records connected Victor Hale's family to a series of suspicious land acquisitions dating back decades. Entire neighborhoods had been purchased for absurdly low prices. Families displaced. Ownership transferred through shell companies. The transactions were technically legal. Yet something felt wrong. Very wrong. Daniel leaned closer. "This is only the beginning." "What do you mean?" He opened a folder. Inside were photographs. Letters. Bank statements. Evidence. Enough evidence to suggest a corruption scheme spanning nearly forty years. I stared at him. "Have you shown this to anyone?" "No." "Why not?" "Because I wanted to be certain." "And are you?" He nodded. "Absolutely." The certainty in his voice unsettled me. "Daniel, if this is real—" "It is." "Then this is enormous." "I know." Neither of us spoke for several seconds. Finally I asked the obvious question. "What are you going to do?" His answer changed everything. "Expose it." I remember feeling nervous immediately. Not because exposing corruption was wrong. Because powerful people rarely appreciate transparency. Daniel noticed my concern. "They can't bury this." "They might try." He smiled. "I've spent twenty years digging through records. Do you know what I've learned?" "What?" "The truth survives longer than lies." I wanted to believe him. I really did. But history suggested otherwise. Over the next month we worked together. Daniel continued investigating. I quietly verified information. The deeper we dug, the darker the story became. The corruption wasn't limited to land deals. Politicians were involved. Business leaders. Lawyers. Officials. An entire network benefiting from decades of deception. Each discovery increased the risk. And Daniel knew it. One evening I found him alone in the archives. The building had nearly emptied. Rain hammered against the windows. "You should be careful," I said. He looked up. "I am." "No, you're not." A smile appeared. "You're worried." "Someone should be." He studied me for a moment. Then sighed. "You're probably right." The admission surprised me. Until then, he had seemed fearless. "What changed?" Daniel looked toward the rain. "I received a message." "What kind of message?" "A warning." Cold unease settled in my stomach. "From who?" "I don't know." "What did it say?" He reached into a drawer and handed me a note. The message contained only five words. Stop digging. Last chance. Nothing else. No signature. No explanation. Yet somehow the simplicity felt threatening. "Did you tell the police?" Daniel laughed softly. "And say what? Someone sent me a note?" "Still." He shook his head. "They want me scared." "Are you?" His fingers tapped the desk. A familiar habit. "Maybe a little." That was the first time I genuinely feared for him. The second came two weeks later. Someone broke into his apartment. Nothing valuable was stolen. No electronics. No jewelry. Nothing. The intruder had searched only one thing. His files. Fortunately, Daniel kept copies elsewhere. The break-in failed. But the message was clear. Someone knew. Someone was watching. Someone wanted the investigation to stop. Most people would have quit. Daniel became more determined. Looking back, that determination may have killed him. Or perhaps it simply accelerated the inevitable. The final week began quietly. Too quietly. Daniel seemed almost relieved. The threats stopped. No suspicious calls. No warnings. No break-ins. Nothing. I should have recognized the danger. Predators become silent before they strike. Three days before his death, Daniel invited me to dinner. We met at a small restaurant near the river. He seemed happier than I had seen him in months. "I finished it," he said. "Finished what?" "The report." My chest tightened. "Everything?" "Everything." "Then what happens now?" He smiled. "Now the truth becomes public." I remember studying his face. Trying to understand why he seemed so calm. Maybe because he believed the hard part was over. Maybe because he thought evidence would protect him. Maybe because brave people sometimes mistake courage for invulnerability. As we left the restaurant, he stopped beside the river. The city lights reflected across the water. For a moment neither of us spoke. Then he said something I'll never forget. "If anything happens to me—" "Don't." "What?" "Don't say things like that." He laughed. "You sound superstitious." "I sound practical." The smile faded slightly. Then he nodded. "Fair enough." That was the last complete conversation we ever had. Two days later he called me. His voice sounded different. Urgent. "I found one final piece." "What piece?" "The most important one." "What is it?" "I'll show you tonight." "What time?" "Eight." "I'll be there." "Good." Then he hung up. At 7:40 p.m., traffic trapped me on the highway. An accident had closed multiple lanes. Cars barely moved. I called Daniel. No answer. I texted him. No response. Eventually I reached his office building. The clock read 8:17. Seventeen minutes late. I still remember the silence. The front door stood slightly open. Lights remained on inside. Nothing seemed unusual. Yet something felt wrong. Very wrong. I entered. "Daniel?" No answer. I walked toward his office. My footsteps echoed through empty hallways. "Daniel?" Still nothing. Then I reached the doorway. And saw him. The police later described the scene in clinical terms. I won't. Clinical language creates distance. The reality was simpler. A man was dead. A good man. A man who believed truth mattered. For several seconds I couldn't move. Couldn't think. Couldn't breathe. The world narrowed to a single impossible fact. Daniel Mercer was gone. The investigation began immediately. Detectives searched for suspects. Journalists chased rumors. Officials made statements. Everyone wanted answers. Who killed him? How? The questions dominated every conversation. Yet I found myself obsessed with a different question. Why now? The answer arrived unexpectedly. While reviewing Daniel's materials, I discovered a sealed envelope addressed to me. Inside was a letter. And a flash drive. The letter contained only one sentence. If you're reading this, they were afraid of what comes next. My hands trembled. I inserted the flash drive into my computer. Thousands of files appeared. Documents. Recordings. Financial records. Evidence. More evidence than I thought possible. Then I found the final discovery Daniel had mentioned. The most important piece. It wasn't another land deal. Or another financial crime. It was proof that several supposedly independent institutions had secretly coordinated for decades. Businesses. Political organizations. Charitable foundations. Public agencies. The corruption wasn't isolated. It was systemic. The people involved weren't protecting money. They were protecting influence. Control. Reputation. Power itself. Suddenly everything made sense. The threats. The break-in. The surveillance. The murder. Daniel hadn't stumbled across a crime. He had uncovered a structure. An entire machine built on secrecy. And machines defend themselves. The following weeks became chaos. Once the evidence was released, investigations spread nationwide. Resignations followed. Arrests followed. Scandals erupted. Careers ended. Fortunes collapsed. People demanded justice. For a while, it felt as though Daniel had won. Then reality intervened. The truth emerged. But imperfectly. Some guilty individuals escaped consequences. Some evidence disappeared. Some stories were rewritten. Power rarely surrenders completely. Even so, change happened. Not enough. But something. Years have passed since then. The murder remains officially unsolved. There are theories. Suspects. Speculation. But no certainty. Perhaps there never will be. People occasionally ask whether I want to know who killed Daniel Mercer. The honest answer surprises them. Of course I want to know. But not for the reason they expect. Knowing who committed the act would solve a mystery. Knowing why explains the tragedy. Because Daniel wasn't murdered over a personal grudge. Or jealousy. Or rage. He died because he refused to look away. Because he believed ordinary people deserved the truth. Because he understood something many powerful individuals fear. Secrets create power. Truth redistributes it. That's why he was murdered. Not because he was weak. Because he was dangerous. Dangerous to lies. Dangerous to corruption. Dangerous to people who depended upon silence. I still think about that final phone call. That final meeting he promised. That seventeen-minute delay. What would have happened if I had arrived earlier? Would Daniel have survived? Would the killer have fled? Would history have changed? I don't know. Nobody does. Regret is built from questions that have no answers. What I do know is this: Daniel Mercer died trying to reveal the truth. And although his killer stole his future, they failed to destroy what he discovered. The evidence survived. The story survived. His voice survived. Perhaps that's the cruel irony. The people responsible believed murder would bury the truth. Instead, it guaranteed the truth would be remembered. So when people ask me who killed Daniel Mercer, I tell them I can't say. I wasn't there. I arrived too late. All I can tell you is why he was murdered. And sometimes, that's the more important answer.

THE TWIGHTLIGHT ZONE

THE TWIGHTLIGHT ZONE “Darling Priya , my dearest was preoccupied with exacting back to back meetings virtually spanning all most of the far eastern countries for nearly weeks now. I am now desperate to get back home. Virtual conferencing, teleconferences, endless meetings and eating out daily in the high prized hotels where we were put up have taken a strenuous and accentuated toll of my system. I am positively enervated both physically and mentally,” Whatsaaped Rahul to his winsome looking wife at around 11pm , Malaysian time as he sank into the luxuriant couch sipping a glass of white wine. “ Whenever it is possible, I try to hit the gym or swim to ensure the release of positive hormones and attempt to remain in shape and increase my energy ad prana levels was the second text ,” from the pretentious mobile of a loving and a devoted husband to his caring wife . The clock read 12 am now as Rahul had finished the bottle of Rozells Ipoh White Coffee wine as he crashed into the bed. The couple relished chatting or face timing while communicating with each other. This was a long conversation spread over an hour. “ The endorphins you would have released Mr Tharoor would dissipate in this cesspool of white wine ,” Priya Sehgal snapped back to the man who shaped her existence. . Rahul was her lover, husband and the universe of her life. Priya was possessive about her husband but permitted these indiscretions . It was 7.10 pm , and the weather in Gurugram was scorching and roasting as Priya along with domestic help Gita were attempting to feed the apples of her eyes , the twins Chayya and Suraj . Rahul had done the Namkaran and was insistent on the names. “ These names unravel upon us tenebrosity and luminosity in our lives” Rahul was to tell Priya. “ For heaven’s sake stop reading Tharoor and read Chetan Bhagat for a change . I feel his presence in our flat . I actually need a dictionary while hearing you speak and write ,” gushed the lady of the house. Priya looked at the crimson red sun sinking into the jungle of byzantine towers and labyrinths of Gurugram in the twig light zone . Unexpectedly her cell rang , it was 7.15pm in India and 9.45 in Malaysia. “ Love I am boarding GH 197 tomorrow morning from KL and would land at Sahar sometime in the night and tomorrow evening will catch up with you in Delhi in the twilight zone," Rahul hung up as he spoke with his beau Priya. " Hello Hello Rahul... do not forget to buy the latest mobile," were the last words Priya spoke to Rahul. Next evening in the twilight zone she got down from her car, unmindful of honking of others in various cars as she was taking pictures of a plane in the falling sun. It was a brilliant sight to watch. She had a gargantuan collection of the sun in the twilight zone. Suddenly she shrieked and others were stupefied as there were two balls of fire. One, that of the sun and the other of an aircraft which unexpectedly caught fire and was diving at a ferocious speed towards the earth." Oh God, I hope this is not Rahul's plane," she caterwauled. The traffic came to a standstill as everyone on the flyover stopped their vehicles and watched the extraordinary but apathetic and disturbing spectacle. It was bumper to bumper. A squalling Priya snaked her way to the Indira Gandhi International Airport to find the place choc a bloc with security forces., ambulances, media personnel and the fire brigades. There was a virtual belam at the airport. And her worst fears came true. It was indeed Rahul's flight from Mumbai which crashed due to a technical glitch and there were no survivors. Some suspected this to be an act of terror. Priya swooned and collapsed. She was wheeled into an estimable hospital and was in the ICCU as a shattered Priya suffered a heart attack. Priya was fetish about taking pictures from her extortionate mobile. Among her favourites was clicking the crimson sun sinking into the bosom of mother earth. Years back as a youngster she captured this graphic scene from her father's camera in Rourkela. Mr Sehgal her father was then working as a chemical engineer in the Rourkela Steel plant. When the Sehgal family was relocated to Kolkata she ambushed the sinking sun in the Hooghly river with a more developed camera. Rriya followed the quotidian practice at IIM Bangalore where she was pursuing PGDM and specializing in Finance and Marketing. The country had developed and mobile phones had made their ways in Indian households. Meanwhile, this winsome girl was bewitched by the polymath Rahul Srinivasan, who was a senior to her. North met south. Priya fell in love with Rahul, but the sun remained the same as it set in Ulsoor lake of Bangalore. This image found a spesh place in the alcoves of her mind and her mobile. " Common take my picture, not of a setting sun and the twilight zone," Twighlight Zone was also the favorite joint of Rahul, Priya, and their buddies where they chilled out on weekends and jived to some groovy music. Soon it was a champagne time during the big fat Panjabi wedding where booze flowed and Tandoori Chicken and Seekh Kebab's replaced Idli, Vada, Dosa and Sambar much to the chagrin of the conservative Iyer family." But Appa this is customary among Panjabi's," Rahul attempted to assuage his father Venkatesan Srinivasan Iyer. Priya was however welcomed with the traditional Tamil Brahmanical customs in the Iyer household and Rahul and Priya led a blissful married life at Chennai. They were working for Microsoft and led a hectic but a luxuriant life. Priya endeared herself to the Venkatesan family and soon Idli, Vada, Dosa, Uttapam, Sambar, and Chutney replaced Butter Chicken, Tandoori Chicken, Seekh Kebabs. Her palate and platter became " Ghas Phus," as she jocularly reminded her husband. While Priya was attired in azure blue tops and denim jeans and western wear to the office, she accompanied her mother-in-law Savitri to Kapaleeswara Temple in Kanjeewaram Saree every Monday morning for the Rudra Puja in the honor of the presiding deity Lord Shiva. Rahul realised the sacrifices Priya made for him and their bonding strengthened. Thus began their rendezvous to Mahabalipuram, Ooty, Kodaikanal, Bangalore and Coorg in an extended honeymoon. Both Rahul and Priya gorged on Mughalai food which was savored by both Priya and Rahul as they washed it down with jugs of wine and beer. But they strove hard to cut the extra flabby hitting the gym regularly and footslogged on the treadmill, elliptic and pumped in iron. The couple were hardworking and soon were promoted to the Delhi office. Soon the clangour and clamour for a child began from the Sehgal and Iyer families. The couple kept on postponing the addition to the family. But an unabated cacophony continued and finally, Priya was impregnated as the couple caved into parental diktats. There were many vaunted celebrations in the Iyer and Sehgal extended families as the couple was blessed with twins a boy and a girl. While Priya was on maternity leave, Rahul continued working hard and climbed the corporate ladder and was soon to establish his own software company called RP Solutions which had a logo of a sunset. " The sun may set, but we will provide all solutions," was the mission statement of RS Solutions. Meanwhile, Priya was in the ICCU and was being resuscitated by a battery of doctors and paramedics. In the chambers of her febrile mind, her life history played out as she was attempting to regain consciousness. It was evening time in Delhi and nature was entering the twilight zone as the Sehgal's and Iyer's were keeping a vigil. The mothers were chanting Hanuman Chalisa and Sundara Kand as the fathers were pacing the floor frenetically. Priya regained consciousness and in a feeble voice and with moist eyes uttered the name of Rahul. The doctors were relieved and informed the two families, that Priya had regained consciousness. The doctor's pronounced that only one person was permitted to enter the ICCU. Slowly tiptoed a man who was disheveled. Priya could not believe her eyes as she saw Rahul and looked at the clock. It was around 6.30 pm, dusk time, and in the twilight zone. " Darling fortuitously I missed the flight and spent the night at the airport and caught an early morning flight," gushed Rahul and broke down. Both Rahul and Priya were locked in an embrace and wept inconsolably. " Rahul, from today I will not take pictures of the sinking sun," remarked Priya in an effete voice. " No more twilight zones for me," Priya added. " Yes let it be the rising the sun ..... Udayan, "gushed Rahul. " And the logo of our company would be a rising sun with the mission statement, Solutions are discovered as the sun rises in the horizon."

1. The Wheels of Time

1. The Wheels of Time 2. I wish I could turn back the clock and bring the wheels of time to a stop. 3. I have said that sentence so many times in my head that it no longer feels like a wish. It feels like a fact I am repeating to a world that refuses to listen. 4. Time, however, is not interested in being negotiated with. 5. It keeps moving. 6. Always moving. 7. Even when everything inside you begs it to freeze. 8. ________________________________________ 9. It began on an ordinary Thursday. 10. That is what makes it unbearable. 11. If it had been a stormy night, or a dramatic farewell, or a moment marked by prophecy, perhaps I could have made peace with it. 12. But it was Thursday. 13. Office emails. Half-finished tea. A phone on silent. A life that looked exactly like it always had. 14. My daughter, Anya, had texted me in the morning. 15. “Pick me up at 5:30. Don’t forget.” 16. I replied with a thumbs-up emoji. 17. That was the last conversation we ever had. 18. ________________________________________ 19. At 4:47 PM, my phone rang. 20. Unknown number. 21. I ignored it. 22. At 4:52 PM, it rang again. 23. This time I picked up. 24. The voice on the other end was calm. Too calm. 25. “Are you Mr. Arvind Sharma?” 26. “Yes.” 27. “This is City Hospital. There has been an accident involving your daughter.” 28. The rest of the sentence dissolved into noise. 29. Accident. 30. Daughter. 31. Hospital. 32. Come immediately. 33. I remember standing up too quickly. The chair fell behind me. Someone in the office asked a question. I didn’t hear it. 34. I ran. 35. Not walked. 36. Not drove. 37. Ran. 38. Even though I knew I could not outrun what was already happening. 39. ________________________________________ 40. Hospitals do not feel like places built for humans. 41. They feel like places where reality is processed. 42. Where it is sorted into acceptable and unacceptable versions. 43. A nurse at the reception asked me to sit. 44. I refused. 45. Another asked for details. 46. I had none. 47. Only a name. 48. Anya. 49. Age sixteen. 50. My daughter. 51. The word “critical” was used. 52. Then “surgery.” 53. Then silence. 54. Too many words. Not enough meaning. 55. ________________________________________ 56. I remember the waiting room most. 57. Not because of what happened there. 58. But because of what did not. 59. Time continued. 60. People laughed in corners. 61. Phones rang. 62. A child cried. 63. A man drank tea. 64. The world refused to acknowledge that mine had stopped. 65. Or perhaps mine was the only one that had stopped. 66. That is the cruel trick of grief-in-progress. 67. It isolates you inside a moving world. 68. ________________________________________ 69. At 8:12 PM, a doctor came out. 70. He looked tired. 71. Not sad. 72. Doctors are trained not to look sad. 73. “Are you Anya’s father?” 74. “Yes.” 75. “We did everything we could.” 76. That sentence. 77. That sentence is a kind of death on its own. 78. Not immediate. 79. Delayed. 80. Spreading slowly through the body. 81. I asked questions. 82. He answered with more sentences that meant nothing and everything at once. 83. Brain injury. 84. Internal bleeding. 85. Trauma. 86. Unstable. 87. Then finally: 88. “I’m sorry.” 89. ________________________________________ 90. I do not remember signing papers. 91. I do not remember calling anyone. 92. I do not remember the drive home. 93. Memory stopped working like a recording device that night. 94. It became fragments. 95. Smells. 96. Fluorescent lights. 97. The sound of paper turning. 98. A clock ticking somewhere too loudly. 99. ________________________________________ 100. At 2:03 AM, she died. 101. My daughter. 102. Anya. 103. Sixteen years old. 104. The world did not pause. 105. It did not even hesitate. 106. A notification came on my phone that night. 107. “Battery low.” 108. That felt obscene. 109. ________________________________________ 110. The funeral was two days later. 111. People said things. 112. Words like “strong,” “angel,” “time heals.” 113. None of them reached me. 114. My wife did not cry. 115. Not because she didn’t feel it. 116. Because she had already left emotionally. 117. Grief does not arrive equally. 118. It chooses different victims at different times. 119. Mine arrived late. 120. Hers arrived early. 121. Or perhaps we were both wrong in different ways. 122. ________________________________________ 123. After the funeral, I stopped working. 124. Not officially at first. 125. Just… stopped participating. 126. I would sit at my desk and stare at emails I could not read. 127. I would eat food without tasting it. 128. I would wake up and forget why. 129. Time became a corridor I walked through without direction. 130. People said I needed distraction. 131. I wanted reversal. 132. Not distraction. 133. Reversal. 134. ________________________________________ 135. The house became a museum of absence. 136. Her shoes still near the door. 137. Her books still on the shelf. 138. Her laughter still echoing in places memory refused to erase. 139. My wife eventually moved to her sister’s house. 140. “We need space,” she said. 141. What she meant was: I cannot survive inside this version of you. 142. And she was right. 143. ________________________________________ 144. Months passed. 145. Then a year. 146. Then something worse than grief arrived. 147. Regret. 148. Grief says: this happened. 149. Regret says: you could have prevented it. 150. They are not the same thing. 151. Regret is heavier. 152. It is personalized suffering. 153. It turns memory into accusation. 154. ________________________________________ 155. I replayed everything. 156. The morning text. 157. The thumbs-up emoji. 158. The unknown number I ignored at 4:47. 159. What if I had answered earlier? 160. What if I had left sooner? 161. What if I had driven faster? 162. What if I had been a different kind of father? 163. These questions are pointless. 164. But the mind does not care about usefulness. 165. It cares about punishment. 166. ________________________________________ 167. One evening, I found myself standing in her room. 168. Everything was exactly as she left it. 169. A notebook open on her desk. 170. A pen resting beside it. 171. A half-finished drawing of something she had never explained. 172. I sat on her bed. 173. And for the first time in months, I spoke aloud. 174. “I wish I could turn back the clock.” 175. My voice sounded foreign in that room. 176. “I wish I could stop time.” 177. The words hung there. 178. Useless. 179. True. 180. Useless. 181. ________________________________________ 182. That night, something strange happened. 183. Or perhaps my mind simply broke in a quieter way than expected. 184. The clock in her room stopped. 185. Not metaphorically. 186. Literally. 187. The second hand froze mid-motion. 188. I stared at it for a long time. 189. Then laughed. 190. Because grief eventually removes the boundary between observation and meaning. 191. ________________________________________ 192. The next morning, the clock worked again. 193. I told myself it was a coincidence. 194. But I checked it every hour anyway. 195. Because grief makes scientists of ordinary men. 196. Not because it reveals truth. 197. Because it refuses to allow certainty. 198. ________________________________________ 199. Weeks later, I returned to work. 200. Or attempted to. 201. People avoided asking personal questions. 202. Which was kind. 203. And unbearable. 204. Because kindness becomes another reminder of what you have lost. 205. ________________________________________ 206. One evening, I met a man at a railway platform. 207. He was sitting alone, watching trains pass. 208. He said, without looking at me: 209. “You want to stop time.” 210. I froze. 211. He smiled slightly. 212. “You all do.” 213. I asked him who he was. 214. He said nothing. 215. Only pointed at the tracks. 216. “Time is like that.” 217. “What?” 218. “A train you think you missed.” 219. ________________________________________ 220. I don’t know why I stayed talking to him. 221. Perhaps because grief recognizes itself in strangers. 222. Perhaps because I had stopped making decisions consciously. 223. He told me something that night. 224. Not scientific. 225. Not logical. 226. Something else. 227. He said: 228. “Time doesn’t move forward. It moves through you.” 229. I told him that made no sense. 230. He nodded. 231. “That’s why it hurts.” 232. ________________________________________ 233. After that, I began noticing strange things. 234. Not supernatural. 235. Not dramatic. 236. Subtle distortions. 237. A conversation repeating itself in memory with different outcomes. 238. A moment in the street where I felt I had already lived it before. 239. A dream in which I saved her. 240. Then woke up to a different reality. 241. Grief does not alter time. 242. It alters perception of sequence. 243. It makes memory porous. 244. ________________________________________ 245. Years passed. 246. Life rebuilt itself without permission. 247. Bills arrived. 248. Weather changed. 249. Seasons rotated. 250. The world refused to end. 251. That is one of its most cruel features. 252. It continues. 253. Regardless of meaning. 254. ________________________________________ 255. One day, I found myself at the hospital again. 256. Not for tragedy. 257. For a checkup. 258. The same building. 259. Different patients. 260. Different emergencies. 261. Same indifferent corridors. 262. I stood outside the room where she had died. 263. And for the first time, I did not feel panic. 264. Only stillness. 265. ________________________________________ 266. A young father was sitting nearby, holding a small boy’s hand. 267. The child was laughing. 268. The father was crying silently. 269. I understood both emotions. 270. That is the strange gift of loss. 271. It removes the illusion of uniqueness. 272. It shows you the shared architecture of pain. 273. ________________________________________ 274. I sat beside him. 275. He did not speak at first. 276. Then he asked: 277. “Does it ever stop hurting?” 278. I wanted to lie. 279. But grief has no patience for lies. 280. So I said: 281. “No.” 282. He nodded. 283. Then I added: 284. “But it changes shape.” 285. ________________________________________ 286. On my way home, I thought about time again. 287. Not as enemy. 288. Not as force. 289. As condition. 290. Something we exist inside of, not something we control. 291. The desire to stop it, I realized, is not really about time. 292. It is about love. 293. We want to freeze what we cannot bear to lose. 294. ________________________________________ 295. That night, I returned to her room. 296. The clock ticked normally. 297. I sat there for a long time. 298. And for the first time in years, I did not ask to go back. 299. Instead, I said something different. 300. “I understand now.” 301. Not forgiveness. 302. Not acceptance. 303. Understanding. 304. There is a difference. 305. ________________________________________ 306. If I could turn back the clock, I would. 307. That part of me has not changed. 308. But I no longer believe time is something to defeat. 309. It is something we carry. 310. Every moment we loved. 311. Every moment we lost. 312. Every moment we survived. 313. ________________________________________ 314. Before I left the room, I touched her notebook. 315. It was still open. 316. On the last page, she had written a sentence: 317. “Dad, you worry too much about time. It’s just days.” 318. I smiled. 319. For the first time in a very long time. 320. Then I closed the notebook gently. 321. Not to preserve the past. 322. But to allow it to remain where it belongs. 323. ________________________________________ 324. Time did not stop. 325. It never does. 326. But something inside me finally did. 327. The need to reverse it. 328. The need to undo it. 329. The need to argue with it. 330. And in that quiet surrender, I discovered something I had not expected. 331. Not peace. 332. Not happiness. 333. Something smaller. 334. Something real. 335. Continuity. 336. I still wish I could turn back the clock. 337. But now, when I say it, I understand what I am really saying. 338. I wish love did not require time to become memory. 339. I wish memory did not require loss to exist. 340. But it does. 341. And so I walk forward. 342. Not because I have accepted time. 343. But because I have finally learned how to live beside it.

"I'm Not a Refugee. I Am an Immigrant.

"I'm Not a Refugee. I Am an Immigrant." 1. "I'm not a refugee. I am an immigrant." 2. The immigration officer looked up from the application form. 3. For a moment neither man spoke. 4. Rain tapped softly against the glass walls of the processing center. Beyond the windows, gray clouds hung low over the harbor. Ships moved slowly through the cold morning mist. 5. The officer adjusted his glasses. 6. "Mr. Kareem," he said carefully, "according to your documents, you crossed the border during the war." 7. "Yes." 8. "You entered this country without a visa." 9. "Yes." 10. "You are seeking permanent residence." 11. "Yes." 12. The officer folded his hands. 13. "That is usually called seeking refuge." 14. Kareem shook his head. 15. "No." 16. The officer waited. 17. Kareem stared through the window. 18. At the sea. 19. At the ships. 20. At the nation whose army had destroyed his homeland. 21. And quietly repeated: 22. "I am an immigrant." 23. ________________________________________ 24. Ten years earlier, Kareem had lived in the city of Almar. 25. Before the bombs. 26. Before the occupation. 27. Before the maps changed. 28. Back then, Almar had been famous for its gardens. 29. In spring, white flowers covered entire hillsides. 30. Tourists came from neighboring countries to photograph them. 31. Children played football in dusty streets. 32. Old men argued about politics in cafés. 33. Life was ordinary. 34. Which meant it was precious. 35. Though nobody realized it then. 36. Kareem owned a small bookstore near the university. 37. Nothing special. 38. Just shelves packed with novels, poetry, history, and textbooks. 39. He knew many of his customers by name. 40. Students often stayed for hours discussing ideas they barely understood. 41. Professors bought books and forgot to pay until weeks later. 42. Teenagers came pretending to browse while secretly meeting girlfriends. 43. Kareem loved all of it. 44. He loved the smell of paper. 45. The sound of turning pages. 46. The quiet rhythm of normal life. 47. Most of all, he loved his family. 48. His wife, Leila. 49. His daughter, Mariam. 50. His son, Youssef. 51. They were his world. 52. ________________________________________ 53. The war began with speeches. 54. Wars often do. 55. Politicians spoke of security. 56. National pride. 57. Historical rights. 58. Ancient grievances. 59. People cheered. 60. Flags appeared. 61. Television channels repeated the same messages. 62. Across the border, another government answered with its own speeches. 63. Its own flags. 64. Its own promises. 65. For months, everyone insisted conflict was impossible. 66. Then one morning fighter jets appeared above Almar. 67. By sunset, hundreds were dead. 68. The war had begun. 69. ________________________________________ 70. At first people believed it would end quickly. 71. A few weeks. 72. Perhaps a month. 73. Governments always claimed that. 74. Governments were almost always wrong. 75. Weeks became months. 76. Months became years. 77. Cities burned. 78. Hospitals filled. 79. Schools closed. 80. Entire neighborhoods disappeared beneath rubble. 81. The bookstore survived the first year. 82. Then a missile destroyed the building next door. 83. The explosion shattered every window. 84. Thousands of books scattered across the street. 85. Kareem spent days gathering torn pages from puddles. 86. Some books could be repaired. 87. Most could not. 88. He buried them in cardboard boxes. 89. It felt like attending a funeral. 90. ________________________________________ 91. The second year was worse. 92. Food became scarce. 93. Electricity unreliable. 94. Water uncertain. 95. People stopped discussing politics. 96. They discussed survival. 97. Who had flour? 98. Who had medicine? 99. Which roads were safe? 100. Which neighborhoods had been shelled overnight? 101. Every conversation began with the same question. 102. "Who died?" 103. Sometimes nobody. 104. Sometimes many. 105. Too many. 106. ________________________________________ 107. Leila remained hopeful. 108. Even then. 109. Especially then. 110. She taught mathematics at a secondary school. 111. When the school closed, she taught neighborhood children in their apartment. 112. When the apartment became unsafe, she taught in a basement. 113. When the basement flooded, she taught beneath a partially collapsed parking structure. 114. Nothing stopped her. 115. "Children still need to learn," she insisted. 116. Kareem loved her for that. 117. And feared for her because of it. 118. Hope was dangerous during war. 119. It encouraged people to remain visible. 120. ________________________________________ 121. One afternoon Mariam asked a question. 122. She was twelve. 123. Old enough to understand some things. 124. Too young to understand others. 125. "Baba?" 126. "Yes?" 127. "Who is winning?" 128. Kareem looked at her. 129. The question lingered between them. 130. Outside, artillery thundered in the distance. 131. Finally he answered. 132. "No one." 133. She frowned. 134. "But both sides say they're winning." 135. "Both sides are lying." 136. The answer surprised even him. 137. Mariam considered it. 138. Then nodded. 139. Years later he would remember that conversation. 140. Because it was the last truly normal one they ever had. 141. ________________________________________ 142. The missile struck at dawn. 143. Kareem never heard it coming. 144. Nobody did. 145. One moment he was asleep. 146. The next he was buried beneath concrete dust. 147. The building shook violently. 148. Glass exploded. 149. Walls collapsed. 150. People screamed. 151. For several seconds he couldn't breathe. 152. Couldn't think. 153. Couldn't understand. 154. Then instinct took over. 155. "Leila!" 156. No answer. 157. "Mariam!" 158. Silence. 159. "Youssef!" 160. Nothing. 161. Panic consumed him. 162. He clawed through debris. 163. Called their names again and again. 164. The apartment no longer existed. 165. Only fragments remained. 166. Broken walls. 167. Twisted metal. 168. Dust. 169. Smoke. 170. Death. 171. Hours later rescue workers found him. 172. Alive. 173. Alone. 174. His wife and children never emerged. 175. ________________________________________ 176. Grief is often described as pain. 177. That description is incomplete. 178. Pain eventually fades. 179. Grief changes shape. 180. It becomes part of you. 181. Like a missing limb. 182. You continue living. 183. You continue breathing. 184. But nothing feels entirely real. 185. For months Kareem wandered through the ruins of Almar. 186. He no longer cared about the bookstore. 187. Or money. 188. Or politics. 189. The war became background noise. 190. He was empty. 191. Thousands around him shared the same emptiness. 192. Entire streets consisted of people carrying invisible wounds. 193. Parents without children. 194. Children without parents. 195. Spouses without partners. 196. Each surviving. 197. Few living. 198. ________________________________________ 199. The city eventually fell. 200. Government forces retreated. 201. The invading army entered. 202. Flags changed. 203. Uniforms changed. 204. The ruins remained. 205. Officially the war was ending. 206. Unofficially suffering continued. 207. Occupation replaced combat. 208. Curfews replaced bombardment. 209. Fear remained fear. 210. Only the source changed. 211. ________________________________________ 212. One evening Kareem sat beside the destroyed bookstore. 213. A soldier approached. 214. Young. 215. Perhaps twenty. 216. Carrying a rifle. 217. The uniform identified him as part of the occupying army. 218. The enemy. 219. The soldier stopped. 220. Looked at the ruins. 221. Then at Kareem. 222. "Was this yours?" 223. Kareem nodded. 224. The soldier was silent for a moment. 225. "My father owned a bookstore." 226. The statement surprised him. 227. The soldier shrugged. 228. "Back home." 229. Home. 230. Such a simple word. 231. Such a complicated thing. 232. For the first time in years, Kareem saw the enemy not as a machine. 233. Not as a uniform. 234. But as a frightened young man standing far from his own family. 235. The realization disturbed him. 236. Hatred had been easier. 237. ________________________________________ 238. The decision to leave came gradually. 239. Not because he feared death. 240. He no longer feared much. 241. But because everything he loved was gone. 242. The city remained. 243. The country remained. 244. Yet the life he had known no longer existed. 245. He spent months resisting the idea. 246. Then one morning he packed a small bag. 247. Locked the apartment. 248. And walked away. 249. No destination. 250. No plan. 251. Only movement. 252. Sometimes survival itself becomes a direction. 253. ________________________________________ 254. Most refugees fled away from the invading nation. 255. Kareem did the opposite. 256. Everyone called him insane. 257. Perhaps they were right. 258. Yet the decision made sense to him. 259. The war had already taken everything. 260. Hatred offered nothing. 261. Revenge offered nothing. 262. The future, if it existed at all, lay elsewhere. 263. And strangely, the strongest economy in the region now belonged to the country that had destroyed his own. 264. The aggressor nation. 265. The victor. 266. The place where opportunity still existed. 267. The irony was bitter. 268. But hunger ignores irony. 269. ________________________________________ 270. The journey took months. 271. Borders. 272. Detention centers. 273. Interrogations. 274. Paperwork. 275. Waiting. 276. Always waiting. 277. He met thousands like himself. 278. Teachers. 279. Farmers. 280. Doctors. 281. Engineers. 282. Widows. 283. Orphans. 284. Men who once commanded companies now standing in food lines. 285. Women who once taught literature sleeping in train stations. 286. War had flattened everyone. 287. Reduced lives to luggage. 288. Reduced identities to documents. 289. Yet even then people carried fragments of themselves. 290. Recipes. 291. Photographs. 292. Stories. 293. Memories. 294. The last possessions no government could confiscate. 295. ________________________________________ 296. When Kareem finally reached the capital of the victorious nation, he expected hostility. 297. Some existed. 298. But not as much as he imagined. 299. Most people were occupied by ordinary concerns. 300. Jobs. 301. Families. 302. Bills. 303. Relationships. 304. The daily struggles of peace. 305. To them he wasn't a symbol. 306. Or an enemy. 307. Or a political statement. 308. He was simply another stranger seeking work. 309. A realization both comforting and unsettling. 310. ________________________________________ 311. The first years were difficult. 312. He cleaned warehouses. 313. Loaded trucks. 314. Worked construction. 315. Learned a new accent. 316. Learned new customs. 317. Learned how to smile when people asked where he came from. 318. Sometimes they expressed sympathy. 319. Sometimes guilt. 320. Sometimes indifference. 321. All reactions felt strange. 322. Eventually he saved enough money to open a small secondhand bookstore. 323. The irony wasn't lost on him. 324. A bookstore again. 325. Different country. 326. Different language. 327. Same dream. 328. Slowly customers arrived. 329. Then regulars. 330. Then friends. 331. Life began rebuilding itself. 332. Not replacing. 333. Never replacing. 334. But rebuilding. 335. ________________________________________ 336. Years passed. 337. The war became history. 338. Then memory. 339. Then headlines on anniversaries. 340. Politicians discussed reconstruction. 341. Historians debated responsibility. 342. Television documentaries revisited old battles. 343. Meanwhile ordinary people continued living. 344. As ordinary people always do. 345. Kareem watched children grow up. 346. Watched seasons change. 347. Watched the bookstore flourish. 348. Sometimes he still dreamed of Leila and the children. 349. In those dreams they remained exactly as they had been. 350. Untouched by time. 351. Waiting somewhere beyond reach. 352. He learned not to resist the dreams. 353. They were all he had left. 354. ________________________________________ 355. And now he sat inside the immigration office. 356. Across from a young officer who had probably been a child when the war began. 357. The application rested between them. 358. The officer spoke carefully. 359. "I don't understand." 360. Kareem smiled faintly. 361. "Understand what?" 362. "Why you insist on calling yourself an immigrant." 363. The older man considered the question. 364. Outside, rain drifted across the harbor. 365. Ships moved through the mist. 366. Life continued. 367. Finally he answered. 368. "Because refugees are people running from something." 369. The officer listened. 370. "At first, that was true." 371. Kareem's voice remained calm. 372. "I ran from war. From death. From loss." 373. He paused. 374. "But that is not why I stayed." 375. The officer looked down at the application. 376. Then back up. 377. "I stayed because I wanted a future." 378. Silence. 379. "I built a business here." 380. Another pause. 381. "I made friends here." 382. Another. 383. "I buried my grief here." 384. His eyes drifted toward the window. 385. "And one day I realized I wasn't merely escaping a country anymore." 386. The officer said nothing. 387. Kareem smiled sadly. 388. "I was building a new one." 389. For a long moment the room remained silent. 390. Then the officer slowly nodded. 391. Not because he completely understood. 392. Perhaps nobody who had not lived it could. 393. But because he understood enough. 394. Enough to recognize the difference. 395. Enough to recognize the man sitting before him. 396. Not as a statistic. 397. Not as a victim. 398. Not as a refugee. 399. But as someone who had lost everything and somehow found the courage to begin again. 400. The officer stamped the final document. 401. "Welcome home, Mr. Kareem." 402. Kareem looked out at the rain. 403. Thought of another city. 404. Another life. 405. Another family. 406. Then he quietly whispered a goodbye that nobody heard. 407. And stepped forward into the future.

The Knock in the Rain

The Knock in the Rain It was getting late enough to be worried. I once again stepped into the balcony and looked down. Except for a drenched street dog that was lying down miserably near the gate, there was not a soul to be seen anywhere. Rainwater had puddled under the lamp post. A breeze ruffled the mango tree in the courtyard and a few twigs fell down and broke. Thunder rumbled in the distance. Did I hear a soft knock at the door? I turned back. For a moment I simply stood there, listening. The rain hammered the roof. Water gurgled through clogged drains. The old apartment building groaned in the wind. Nothing. I almost convinced myself that I had imagined it. Then the knock came again. Three gentle taps. Not loud. Not urgent. Almost polite. My stomach tightened. At eleven-thirty on a stormy night, polite knocks were somehow more unsettling than desperate ones. I glanced at my phone. No messages. No missed calls. No indication that anyone was coming. Another knock. Tap. Tap. Tap. Slow. Measured. Patient. I walked toward the door. Halfway there I stopped. A ridiculous thought crossed my mind. What if nobody was outside? The idea was absurd. Yet somehow it refused to leave. I shook my head and looked through the peephole. The corridor was empty. Completely empty. The yellow ceiling light flickered weakly above the staircase. No visitors. No neighbors. Nothing. I frowned. Perhaps someone had knocked on another door. Perhaps the sound had echoed. I was about to return to the balcony when the knock came again. This time from the other side of the door. Directly in front of me. Three taps. Slow. Patient. Impossible. I jerked backward. The corridor remained empty. My heart began beating faster. Someone was playing a prank. That had to be it. I unlocked the door and pulled it open. The corridor stretched away in both directions. Vacant. Silent. The elevator stood motionless. The staircase was deserted. Nobody. Yet something sat on the floor directly outside my apartment. A small brown package. I stared at it. I was certain it hadn't been there a moment earlier. Rain couldn't have delivered it. Wind couldn't have moved it. Someone had placed it there. But who? And how had they vanished so quickly? I bent down. No address. No postage. No name. Just a plain cardboard box tied with string. Thunder boomed somewhere far away. The lights flickered. For reasons I couldn't explain, I suddenly didn't want to touch it. Yet curiosity eventually won. I carried the package inside. Locked the door. And placed it on the dining table. The box was surprisingly heavy. My fingers hesitated over the knot. Then I untied it. Inside lay a leather notebook. Nothing else. No letter. No explanation. Just a notebook. Dark brown. Old. Worn at the edges. The kind used by students decades ago. I opened the cover. My blood ran cold. My name was written on the first page. Not printed. Handwritten. In black ink. For Arjun. I swallowed. Beneath it was another sentence. You were right. I should have listened. The handwriting was instantly familiar. I knew it. Because it belonged to my brother. And my brother had been dead for eight years. The storm intensified. Wind rattled the windows. The street dog below had disappeared. Somewhere nearby, a transformer exploded with a sharp crack. The apartment briefly went dark before emergency lights activated. I sat at the dining table staring at the notebook. My brother. Rohit. Twenty-nine years old. Journalist. Stubborn. Fearless. Dead. Officially, he had died in a car accident on a highway outside the city. A truck. Wet roads. Mechanical failure. End of story. At least that was what the police report claimed. I had never believed it. Neither had our mother. Rohit had been investigating a corruption scandal before his death. A major one. Several politicians. Businessmen. Police officials. Then suddenly he was gone. The investigation vanished with him. The case disappeared from the news. Everyone moved on. Everyone except us. My hands trembled as I turned the page. The first entry was dated nine days before his death. Arjun keeps telling me to be careful. He thinks someone is following me. He's probably right. Today a man waited outside my apartment for nearly three hours. Same blue umbrella. Same gray jacket. When I approached him, he walked away. If anything happens to me, this notebook matters. I stared at the words. Rain hammered the windows. A cold sensation crept through my chest. Someone had preserved this. Someone had delivered it. Tonight. Why? Page after page described Rohit's investigation. Bribes. Illegal contracts. Missing government funds. Names. Dates. Meetings. Evidence. Enough to destroy careers. Enough to send powerful people to prison. The final entries became increasingly frantic. I made a mistake. The corruption goes higher than I imagined. Someone inside the police department is helping them. Another page. They're watching the apartment now. Different people. Different cars. But definitely watching. The next page contained only a single sentence. I don't think the accident will be an accident. That was the last completed entry. The following page was half-written. The handwriting became shaky. Hurried. Uneven. As though he had been interrupted. If you're reading this, then they probably succeeded. The name you need is— The sentence ended abruptly. Nothing followed. The remaining pages were blank. I leaned back slowly. Thunder shook the building. The notebook felt heavy in my hands. Not physically. Emotionally. Eight years. Eight years of unanswered questions. And suddenly a piece of the puzzle had arrived at my doorstep. Who delivered it? Why now? Most importantly— What name had Rohit been about to write? A flash of lightning illuminated the apartment. For an instant I noticed something strange. A folded piece of paper tucked inside the back cover. My pulse quickened. I hadn't seen it before. Carefully, I unfolded it. A single address. No explanation. No note. Just an address. And beneath it, a time. 12:30 AM I checked the clock. 11:57. Thirty-three minutes away. A sensible person would have ignored it. Locked the door. Called the police. Gone to sleep. I was not feeling particularly sensible. At 12:10 I grabbed my raincoat. At 12:15 I left the apartment. At 12:17 I regretted it. The storm was ferocious. Sheets of rain reduced visibility to almost nothing. Roads resembled rivers. Trees bent violently in the wind. Yet the address wasn't far. An abandoned printing warehouse near the old railway yard. I arrived shortly after midnight. The building stood alone among overgrown weeds and rusted fencing. Most windows were broken. The signboard had fallen years ago. Nobody should have been there. Yet light glowed faintly from inside. My heartbeat accelerated. Someone was waiting. The front door stood slightly open. Rainwater dripped from the ceiling as I stepped inside. The enormous warehouse echoed with emptiness. Rows of abandoned machinery stretched into darkness. The faint light came from a lantern positioned near the center of the room. And beside the lantern sat an old man. He looked at least seventy. Thin. Gray-haired. Calm. As though midnight meetings in abandoned warehouses were perfectly normal. "You came." His voice was soft. I remained several feet away. "Who are you?" "A friend of your brother." I didn't move. "Name." "Mahesh." Not helpful. "Did you deliver the notebook?" "Yes." "Why now?" The old man sighed. Because, for the first time, it is finally safe." I laughed bitterly. "Safe?" "No." He smiled sadly. "Perhaps safe is the wrong word." Thunder rolled overhead. The warehouse trembled. I stepped closer. "Tell me what happened." The old man's expression changed. The sadness deepened. "He got too close." For the next twenty minutes he told me a story. A story hidden for eight years. A story involving money laundering, political corruption, and murder. According to Mahesh, Rohit had uncovered evidence connecting several powerful individuals to a network that siphoned public funds through shell companies. Millions disappeared annually. Road projects. Schools. Hospitals. The money vanished. Someone profited. Many someones. Rohit intended to expose them. Then came threats. Surveillance. Warnings. And finally the accident. Except it wasn't an accident. The truck driver responsible had disappeared two days later. Never found. The investigating officer retired unexpectedly. Records vanished. Witnesses changed statements. The case died. Deliberately. I listened in silence. Every word confirmed suspicions I'd carried for years. Yet one question remained. "Why didn't you come forward sooner?" The old man looked away. "Because I was afraid." Honest. Simple. Human. Fear explained many things. Then he handed me a photograph. The image showed four men leaving a hotel. Three faces meant nothing to me. The fourth did. I stared. Looked again. And felt the world tilt. "No." Mahesh nodded sadly. "Yes." The man in the photograph was Deputy Commissioner Vivek Saran. A celebrated police officer. Decorated. Respected. Frequently interviewed on television. The same officer who had supervised the investigation into Rohit's death. The same officer who had assured my family that every lead had been pursued. The same officer who had attended the funeral. I suddenly understood why Rohit's final note ended abruptly. He had discovered the truth. And someone had stopped him before he could write the name. A sound echoed through the warehouse. Metal scraping against metal. Mahesh's face changed instantly. Fear. Real fear. "Did you hear that?" I nodded. Another sound. Closer. Footsteps. The old man stood. "They found us." My stomach dropped. "What?" "Run." The warehouse lights suddenly exploded. Darkness swallowed everything. Then came the first gunshot. The noise was deafening. Mahesh stumbled backward. I heard him fall. He cried out. Another shot. Chaos erupted. I ran. Instinct took over. Rain blew through shattered windows. Footsteps thundered behind me. Voices shouted. Someone knocked over machinery. A flashlight beam swept across the darkness. I sprinted toward a side exit. The door burst open. Rain struck my face like ice. Behind me came shouting. Then another gunshot. I didn't look back. Police arrested three men before sunrise. Not because of me. Because Mahesh had anticipated this possibility. The notebook wasn't the only evidence. Copies existed. Documents. Financial records. Photographs. Enough material had already been sent to investigative journalists. By morning the story was public. By afternoon it dominated every news channel. By evening warrants were issued. Including one for Deputy Commissioner Vivek Saran. The scandal that followed lasted months. Careers ended. Trials began. Secrets surfaced. And eventually, after nearly a decade, the truth emerged. Rohit hadn't died in an accident. He had been murdered. Officially. Legally. Finally. Six months later, another storm rolled through the city. I stood once more on my balcony. Rain pooled beneath the lamp post. The mango tree swayed in the wind. Thunder echoed across the night. For a moment I remembered that first knock. The package. The notebook. The mystery that had changed everything. Below, near the gate, a drenched street dog lay sleeping. Perhaps the same one. Perhaps not. The city looked peaceful. Ordinary. As though terrible secrets had never hidden beneath its surface. A soft breeze touched my face. Then I heard another knock. Three gentle taps. Tap. Tap. Tap. My heart skipped. For one absurd second, I thought of ghosts. Then I laughed. Walked to the door. And opened it. A courier stood outside holding a parcel. "Delivery for Mr. Arjun?" I signed. Closed the door. And smiled. Some knocks bring fear. Some bring answers. And occasionally, if you're fortunate, they bring justice. We use cookies Cookies help this site function, measure usage, and support marketing. Manage your cookie preferences anytime. Learn more about our cookie policy.

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

The Sound of Rain

The Sound of Rain The rain is relentless. I hear it thrumming on the metal roof and running down the broken pipe into the mud, and I moisten my cracked lips with my tongue. I wonder if they'll bring me food and water. I wonder if they're coming at all. The darkness inside the shed feels alive. Not moving. Not breathing. Just waiting. I sit with my back against a damp wooden wall, my wrists tied behind me with plastic restraints. My shoulders ache. My neck aches. Everything aches. Time has become meaningless. Hours. Days. Maybe longer. The rain never stops. It falls with the persistence of guilt. And lately, guilt is all I can think about. ________________________________________ My name is Daniel Mercer. At least, I think it is. The strange thing about isolation is that certainty begins to dissolve. You start forgetting small things first. Dates. Names. Conversations. Then larger things. Memories become slippery. Reality develops cracks. The mind hates empty spaces. It fills them. Sometimes with truth. Sometimes with lies. I am no longer sure which memories belong in which category. I know there was a woman. I know there was blood. I know someone died. Everything else feels uncertain. ________________________________________ The first time they brought food, I almost cried. A plastic container slid across the floor. Water. Bread. An apple. No words. No explanation. The door opened for perhaps three seconds. Just long enough. Then darkness again. I rushed toward the food like an animal. Afterward I hated myself. But hunger changes people. It strips away dignity first. Then reason. Then hope. I learned that quickly. ________________________________________ The second visit came twelve hours later. Or maybe twenty-four. The man wore a raincoat. His face remained hidden. I stood. "Who are you?" No answer. "Why am I here?" Silence. "Please." The man placed another bottle of water on the floor. Then left. I lunged toward the doorway before it closed. Too slow. Always too slow. The lock clicked shut. I screamed until my throat hurt. Nobody responded. Not even the rain. ________________________________________ The third visit changed everything. Because this time he spoke. Only four words. But they changed everything. He said: "Do you remember Emily?" Then he left. ________________________________________ Emily. The name hit me like a hammer. Suddenly I was somewhere else. A coffee shop. A yellow umbrella. A woman laughing. Dark hair. Green eyes. Emily. The memory flashed through my mind before vanishing again. I grabbed at it desperately. But it slipped away. Like trying to hold water. Who was Emily? A girlfriend? A wife? A victim? The uncertainty terrified me. Because deep down I already knew the answer. The man wasn't asking random questions. He was accusing me. ________________________________________ That night I dreamed. Or remembered. Sometimes they're the same thing. Emily stood beside a lake. The sky was gray. Wind moved through her hair. She looked angry. No. Not angry. Afraid. "Tell me the truth." Her voice sounded distant. "What truth?" "You know." Then blood appeared on her hands. And mine. I woke screaming. The rain hammered the roof. For several seconds I genuinely believed Emily stood inside the shed watching me. The corner of the room seemed occupied. A shape. A silhouette. A woman. Then lightning flashed. The corner was empty. I laughed hysterically. For nearly five minutes. ________________________________________ On the sixth day—assuming it was the sixth day—the man returned. This time he brought a chair. He placed it opposite me. Sat down. Said nothing. I stared at him. He stared back. Rain echoed above us. Finally I spoke. "Did I kill her?" No answer. "Tell me." Silence. The hidden face remained motionless. Then he asked: "What happened on October seventeenth?" The date meant nothing. Or almost nothing. Something stirred in the darkness of my mind. A road. Headlights. An argument. Then nothing. "I don't know." The man stood. "Yes, you do." Then he left. ________________________________________ Afterward I became obsessed. October seventeenth. October seventeenth. October seventeenth. The words repeated endlessly. I scratched the date into the wooden wall. Then beneath it: EMILY Then beneath that: WHAT HAPPENED? The questions stared back at me. Mocking. Unanswered. ________________________________________ Memory returned in fragments. Tiny pieces. Like broken glass. A restaurant. A wedding ring. An argument in a car. Rain. Always rain. Emily crying. Me shouting. A sharp turn. A flash of white light. Then darkness. Was it an accident? Was it murder? I couldn't remember. And the not knowing was becoming unbearable. ________________________________________ The next visit came unexpectedly. The man entered carrying a file. He dropped it beside me. "Read." Then he left. Inside were newspaper clippings. Police reports. Photographs. My hands trembled as I turned the pages. MISSING PERSON EMILY HART, AGE 32 LAST SEEN OCTOBER 17 POLICE SEEK INFORMATION The next clipping: SEARCH EFFORTS CONTINUE The next: CASE COLD AFTER SIX MONTHS Then photographs. Emily smiling. Emily walking. Emily standing beside me. My stomach twisted. I knew her. Not vaguely. Not distantly. I knew her. I loved her. Or had loved her. And now she was gone. The final page contained a single sentence typed in black letters. YOU SAID YOU DIDN'T KNOW WHERE SHE WAS. ________________________________________ Something broke inside me. Not dramatically. Not all at once. A slow fracture. A realization. The man believed I had killed Emily. Perhaps the police believed it too. Maybe everyone believed it. The question was why. And the terrifying possibility was this: What if they were right? What if I had done something so horrible that my mind buried it? People talked about repression. Trauma. Blocked memories. I had always considered such things exaggerated. Now I wasn't so sure. ________________________________________ That night the storm intensified. Thunder shook the building. Water seeped beneath the door. I sat awake staring at the photographs. Emily's face seemed different each time I looked. Happy. Sad. Accusing. Forgiving. Dead. Alive. By morning I no longer trusted my own perceptions. And that was when the memory returned. Not a fragment. Not a glimpse. A complete memory. Crystal clear. Terrifyingly clear. October seventeenth. The road. The rain. The argument. Emily shouting. Me pulling the car onto the shoulder. Both of us stepping outside. The storm raging around us. Then another vehicle appearing. Black. Unmarked. A man emerging. Not me. Someone else. A stranger. The memory ended there. But it was enough. Enough to know one thing. I hadn't killed Emily. At least not that night. ________________________________________ When the man returned, I was waiting. "You've made a mistake." No response. "There was another man." Silence. "I remember." The raincoat figure remained perfectly still. Then slowly, very slowly, he removed his hood. For the first time, I saw his face. And my blood turned cold. Because I knew him. Not from prison. Not from captivity. From somewhere else. Somewhere much worse. Detective Marcus Shaw. The lead investigator in Emily's disappearance. The man who had spent three years trying to prove I murdered her. And according to every newspaper clipping I remembered... Marcus Shaw was dead. I had attended his funeral. I had stood beside his grave. I had watched the coffin lowered into the ground. Yet here he was. Alive. Smiling. Rain rattled the roof. My heart pounded. And suddenly a far more frightening question emerged. If Marcus Shaw wasn't dead... Then whose funeral had I attended? And what else had I been lied to about? The detective's smile widened. "Now," he said quietly, "you're finally remembering." Outside, thunder rolled across the sky. Inside the shed, the real nightmare was only beginning.