CBI HEADQUARTERS, NEW DELHI:
A man in his thirties stood before the illuminated wall-mounted screen, where the details of the person under investigation were displayed. He was the DIG (Deputy Inspector General). His expression remained calm and composed, and he spoke in a quiet, measured voice. Despite his controlled demeanour, a heavy tension lingered throughout the room as everyone waited for his next words.
The DIG– Arvind Sehgal pointed at the map, finger pressed against a red circle near a stretch along the western coast. “No raids. No press. I want eyes on him, nothing more.”
The SP– Imran Qureshi frowned. “Sir, we’ve had movement for two days. If we wait--”
“We’ve waited four years.” Arvind didn’t look up. “Aryan has been buried in the underworld since the day we lost him, and he’s still not in our hands. You don’t get careless now.”
SP– Imran’s jaw tightened, and he didn’t stop; he continued, “With respect, sir, you don’t find Aryan. He lets you find him, right before he disappears again. That’s what he has done every time.”
The room went quiet for a moment. Arvind picked up his cap, voice quieter now.
“Somebody always talks. And the moment the press gets a whiff of that we’re closing in on him, it’s not a manhunt; it’s a headline. I’m not losing him to someone else’s leak. Not after this long.” He paused at the door, not turning back. "Eyes only. Until I say otherwise.”
From the back of the room, a woman’s voice rose. “Then don’t look for him.”
Every head turned. Arvind stopped mid-step.
“What’s that supposed to mean, Mira?” She was no one other than Mira Arora, the CBI Officer.
Imran inquired, and Mira nodded before revealing the information.
“Look for what he can't survive without.” She walked to the map, tapping a point nowhere near the coast. “He hasn’t had dialysis access in three weeks; his usual contact in the medical supply chain went silent after the last raid shut down that route. A man like him doesn’t run out of options. He runs out of suppliers. Find who’s quietly buying insulin or renal supplies in bulk in border towns, and you won’t be hunting a ghost anymore. You’ll be hunting a man with a deadline.”
Silence settled over the room.
The DIG looked at her for a long moment, something unreadable crossing his face.
“Get her whatever she needs,” he said finally, and walked out.
MIRA ARORA. Twenty-six years old. The kind of officer who walked into a room and didn’t announce herself. Just occupied the space until people realised, usually too late, that she had already seen everazor-flatorth seeing.
She never raised her voice. Not once. Not in interrogation rooms, not in the field, not when everything around her was falling apart. People mistook that for calm. It wasn’t calm. It was precision.
BANGALORE – At 10:45 p.m.:
The black car screeched to a halt before the grand white cottage, its walls stretching wide and its glass doors rising tall to the ceiling. With a sharp click, the sports car door swung open, and a figure stepped out from the driver’s seat, radiating confidence and control.
The car door shut firmly behind her as she advanced toward the cottage’s entrance. Her reflection stretched across the polished marble floors, each step calm and assured. The guards recognised her instantly, and without hesitation, they swung open the massive gates, granting her passage.
Footsteps echoed in the quiet hallway. From the corner, another figure appeared. A low, sharp voice broke the silence: “Mira.”
It was Mira Arora.
BENGALURU: (1:35)–
A man stood in the shadows of an unfinished state building. It was a quiet night. Dark clouds covered the sky as thunder echoed in the distance. Heavy rain poured down, soaking the empty structure.
A flash of lightning lit up the building for a moment.
The man's face became visible.
It was Zayne Shah.
His sleeves were rolled to his forearms, veins bulging beneath the skin as though ready to break free. Rain soaked his messy hair, water tracking down his face. The white shirt plastered to his body revealed every muscle beneath the thin, wet cloth. He tightened his hold on the rod while the bloodied man crawled backwards, begging him to spare his life.
Blood and a viscous liquid ran from the rod as Zayne advanced, steadying his movements until the man's battered spine struck the concrete wall.
“Betraying me was never an option; I said it before. Par nahi tujh jaise chutiye ko to ye aazmana hi hai.” My voice dropped into a low, dangerous rumble.
With a violent jolt, he snapped his arm upward and rammed the rod’s razor edge into the man’s shoulder blades, a movement both quick and merciless.
“AAAHHHHH!!”
The injured man’s scream ripped through the cavernous hall and reverberated off exposed beams and concrete, but there was no reply; only the building’s indifferent echo. He let the rod stay planted a heartbeat longer, feeling the tremor of life beneath his grip and knowing, coldly, that the silence was now his witness.
Blood bloomed across his shirt and flecked the concrete walls. Would anyone stand up and name him for what he was? Not a single fucking soul would risk it.
He stepped back and knew, with a cold certainty, that a corpse lay before him. He stood on the ledge of the tallest concrete skeleton, exposed to the wind and rain; the downpour struck him, but he did not flinch. Hands buried in his pockets, he cracked his neck like a man preparing for what came next. Lightning split the clouds, and for the briefest moment the dark tattoo ‘77’ on his chest bled through the soaked white fabric.
The fresh blood washed away from his shirt, but dark stains clung stubbornly to the fabric. He didn’t care. He turned and walked down the stairs without a backward glance at the body.
A red Ferrari SF90 screeched to a stop before a magnificent black mansion. The estate sprawled across an enormous expanse, its towering obsidian walls stretching far beyond sight, concealing whatever lay within. Massive iron gates stood at the entrance like silent sentinels, while the mansion itself loomed in the darkness, radiating power, opulence, and mystery.
He reached the top floor and froze. His jaw ticked tight, as if he'd felt something only he could sense. A deep growl rumbled beneath his ribs.
“UGH!”
“Jasoosi ki bhi ek had hoti hai… us had ke baad har raaz, raaz nahi rehta.”
(Even espionage has its limits… beyond them, every secret ceases to be a secret and becomes the cause of your destruction.)
Then a low, sharp voice cut through the silence. The rain seemed to fall and mean nothing; only the quiet remained, like the ground for a war between them.
“Jasoosi to dushman karte hai. Mai kabse aapki dushman ho gayi?” (Espionage is what enemies do… since when did I become your enemy?)
Zayne's lips curved upward, but it wasn't a smile. It was the kind of expression that could send anyone's heart racing, yet that person remained completely unfazed. Not even a flicker of fear crossed their face. Zayne tilted his head toward them, intrigued by their composure.
“Iss haseena ka dushman to door ki baat hai, log iske kareeb aane ke liye har kirdaar nibhaane ko taiyaar rehte hain.” (Becoming her enemy is out of the question; people are willing to play any role to get close to her.)
She leaned against the looming pillar, arms folded tight across her chest, watching him without a trace of alarm. She stepped closer and let her gaze travel over the red stains marring his shirt; in that single, unemotional sweep, the truth registered; he had killed a man. He remained calm as she closed the distance and halted a breath away, the space between them suddenly charged and ready.
“Just like you! Zayne Shah.”
He smirked and stepped closer until their warmth bled through damp fabric and the thin air between them vanished. She didn’t flinch as he loomed over her, cool and unshaken.
“When you say my name, you don’t just speak it; you make it special.”
“Of course,” she said, her tone razor-flat. “You’re on my special list.”
He let out a psychotic chuckle that made her spine prickle, but she steadied herself. “Seems you’re here to give a reference on how special I am on your list.” She stepped closer.
“Do you know what your file says about you?”
She demanded, chin lifted like a challenge. The smirk vanished from him as if erased; a flat, blank expression settled over his features. His hand came to her waist, casual and loose, precisely calibrated. No force, only possession, a quiet claim meant to rearrange the balance between them.
He was testing her, and it hit: her jaw tightened into a hard, involuntary tic and her eyes went cold with fury. She felt the urge to push him away, to snap the contact into oblivion, but she didn’t; yet. Holding back sharpened everything; it made the moment an unread threat, a pause taut with what would come next.
“Then you know more about me than most alive.”
“So, am I on your enemy list, or next on your target list?”
“You’re on my damn list. My one and only ‘FUCKING’ list.”
She didn’t move or flinch; she only shook her head in disbelief and snapped, “What can I even expect from a horn like you?”
“The only thing predictable about me is that I’ll always prove you wrong, Babe.”
The next day– The Tech Corporation:
The moment Zayne stepped into the company, the atmosphere subtly shifted as every eye turned toward him. He wore a perfectly tailored white shirt, formal trousers, and a sharp blazer that reflected both confidence and sophistication. An AP Royal Oak watch adorned his wrist, symbolising refined taste rather than mere wealth. His posture was disciplined, his manners impeccable, and every movement carried the quiet authority of a respected businessman. During the day, he embodied professionalism and integrity, making it nearly impossible for anyone to believe that once darkness fell, he became the shadow of that unknown place, moving with unwavering precision and control.
As the office door shut behind him, Zayne stepped into his expansive executive suite. The office reflected elegance and power, featuring floor-to-ceiling glass windows that offered an uninterrupted panoramic view of Bangalore. From that height, the city's skyline stretched endlessly, and even the narrowest lanes seemed visible beneath him, a reminder of the empire he overlooked every day.
Not a flicker of emotion crossed Zayne's face. With practised composure, he slipped off his blazer and draped it neatly over the back of his chair before rolling up the sleeves of his crisp white shirt to his forearms. He walked toward the floor-to-ceiling glass wall that overlooked the city, where Bangalore stretched endlessly beneath him. Reaching for a cigarette, he lit it with unhurried precision and released a slow stream of smoke into the quiet office. His gaze remained fixed on the bustling streets far below, yet it wasn't the city he was truly seeing. His expression stayed as cold as carved stone, revealing nothing of the calculations unfolding inside his mind.
Zayne took another slow drag from the cigarette, holding the smoke for a brief moment before exhaling it into the stillness of the room. The pale plume drifted lazily through the air, dissolving against the floor-to-ceiling glass as his gaze remained fixed on the city below.
Without warning, the office door burst open.
A man stumbled inside, drenched in sweat and struggling to catch his breath. His chest rose and fell violently, each gasp sharper than the last, as though he had sprinted across the entire building without stopping. Panic was written all over his face, and urgency radiated from every hurried step he took toward the centre of the office.
Yet Zayne didn't flinch.
He neither turned around nor acknowledged the intrusion. Standing motionless before the glass wall, he continued watching the city beneath him as if nothing had happened. It was almost as though he had expected this exact interruption, or perhaps he already knew who had entered long before the door had opened.
The only sign of life was another slow stream of smoke escaping his lips, disappearing into the silence that now felt heavier than words.
The man shut the door behind him and strode across the suite toward the wall-mounted television. He didn't stop to steady himself or even reach for the glass of water on the table. The impatience burning inside him refused to settle. Without wasting another second, he switched on the news channel.
"Zayne," he called.
But Zayne remained still. He neither turned nor acknowledgedgedgedged the voice behind him. His expression didn't change. He stood there as though the man had never spoken at all, his silence heavier than any reply.
The news channel sprang to life, the anchor's voice firm and urgent.
"Breaking News."
"CBI officials have intensified their nationwide search for Aaryan, the son of a prominent politician, who remains the country's most wanted fugitive. Despite months of investigation, no confirmed sighting has been reported, and authorities believe he is operating from deep within the criminal underworld."
The moment Aaryan's name echoed through the room, Zayne froze.
A dangerous stillness settled over him. His eyes darkened, a deep crimson fury creeping into them, while his hand slowly curled into a tight fist at his side. The calm, unreadable man from moments ago vanished, replaced by a rage that seemed to have no end.
It was as though the name itself had awakened something buried deep within him.
The cigarette crumpled in his clenched fist, its burning ember searing his skin. He didn't flinch. The sting was insignificant compared to the inferno consuming him from the inside. Every word spilling from the news anchor fed that fire, until it blazed beyond restraint.
"Officials say no one has seen Aaryan in person for years. His exact location remains unknown, and every lead has ended in failure. The CBI has urged the public to report any credible information, warning that anyone found aiding or sheltering him will face strict legal action."
The headline at the bottom of the screen read–
'CBI HUNT FOR AARYAN CONTINUES; FUGITIVE STILL AT LARGE.'
Zayne didn't turn around. His eyes slid shut, as if he were holding back something violent threatening to break free. Silence stretched for a heartbeat before his voice cut through the room, low enough to be almost calm, and all the more terrifying for it.
"Turn. It. Off."
The man didn’t listen. He rose to his feet and turned toward him, fingers raking through his hair, leaving it in disarray, but he no longer cared. The news had already hollowed him out. He thrust his hand toward the screen, ready to speak, when a piercing scream split the air. A bullet tore through his wrist, blood splattering across the walls.
“AAHHH!”
The gun was clenched in none other than Zayne’s hand.
Driven by rage, he had pulled the trigger. His eyes blazed with fury, perhaps even hatred. But why? What had provoked such wrath?
That man fell to the ground, loathed in his own blood. Despite the pain, he smiled crazily and whispered in a low tone that almost felt like a whisper.
“Aakhirkaar, Zayne Shah ke dil ki chingari sholon me badal hi gayi?” (At long last, the spark in Zayne Shah’s heart has finally become an inferno.)
To Be Continued…!
Every chapter takes the story in a new direction. Get ready to unravel secrets, uncover mysteries, and face the twists.
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