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Until Time Brings Us Home

1 . The Clock That Shouldn’t Tick

Bangalore — 2025.

The drizzle had just ended when Aarav stepped onto MG Road, the city’s heartbeat. Neon boards reflected in puddles, autos honked like distant memories, and the smell of wet earth mixed with roasted corn from a street cart.

He wasn’t supposed to be here.

He had left office early, mind tired, heart heavier than he realised. A wrong turn near Trinity Circle pushed him into the narrow, quiet lanes behind Brigade Road — the lanes no one notices unless they’re meant to.

And that’s where Aarav saw it.

A tiny, dim-lit shop squeezed between a closed tailor store and a forgotten bakery.

“Mira Curios.”

Faded gold letters, half missing.

The door was slightly open, as if waiting for him.

Aarav hesitated.

Why would an antique shop exist here?

Yet, something pulled him inside.

Inside the shop

Dust floated in the dim light.

Old clocks lined the shelves — some cracked, some frozen mid-tick.

Typewriters. Vinyl records. Rusted compasses. Paintings of people who lived before India had freedom.

It felt like stepping into a room where time exhaled and went silent.

Aarav’s eyes fell on one thing.

A small golden pocket watch, cracked on one edge, resting alone on a deep red velvet cloth.

It looked broken.

But beautiful.

He picked it up — and froze.

The watch felt warm… alive.

“Ah,” came a soft voice.

An elderly woman emerged from the shadows — silver hair, wrinkled hands, eyes too sharp for her age.

“You found that watch,” she said.

Aarav smiled nervously. “I don’t even know why I picked it up.”

“Some things don’t choose shelves,” she said. “They choose people.”

He chuckled. “You speak like you’re selling fate.”

“Fate doesn’t need selling,” she replied. “It simply shows up… when the time is right.”

She wrapped the watch in brown paper without asking.

“I didn’t say I’m buying—”

“You already have,” she said, pushing it gently toward him.

A strange calm settled in the room.

Without understanding why, Aarav placed the cash on the counter.

When he stepped out into the cool MG Road air, the city felt… different.

The breeze lighter.

The lights sharper.

Something watching him.

He shook it off and headed home.

That night

Aarav placed the watch on his desk and turned on his laptop.

The rain began again, soft and rhythmic against his window.

11:09 PM.

11:10 PM.

11:11 PM.

Tick.

Aarav froze.

Tick. Tick. Tick.

The dead watch was beating like a living heart.

The hands moved wildly — like they were running through lost years.

A gust of wind blasted open his window.

Papers flew.

Lights flickered.

Then the world blurred —

his room melting into another place entirely.

He wasn’t in Bangalore anymore.

He was standing in an old-fashioned room lit by a lantern.

Wooden shelves lined with herbs.

Glass jars.

A faint smell of medicine and smoke.

And in front of him—

Her.

A girl in a white saree.

Soft eyes filled with shock and… something familiar.

As if she had been waiting for him her whole life.

Her lips parted.

Her voice trembled.

“Aarav…?”

His stomach dropped.

How did she know his name?

Before he could breathe, the vision shattered —

and he was back in his apartment, chest pounding.

The watch lay silent again.

Aarav leaned forward, rubbing his forehead, trying to understand what just happened.

Then he saw it.

A piece of paper on his desk.

Old. Yellowed. Edges torn.

He unfolded it with shaking hands.

In delicate handwriting:

“If you can read this…

you’re not from my world.”

The room fell silent.

Aarav stared at the note, heart trembling.

Someone — or something — from another time had just spoken to him.

And somehow…

he felt like this wasn’t the first time their souls had met.

2 – The Girl in the Forgotten Memory

The night after Aarav bought the antique watch, sleep came to him easily…

but peace did not.

His mind was restless, tugged by something invisible.

He placed the watch on his bedside table, its metal cool, its surface dull, its hands frozen in time — yet it felt strangely alive, like a heartbeat hiding behind silence.

Aarav lay down, closed his eyes, and the world quietly slipped away.

The First Dream

He found himself standing on a path he had never seen before.

Red soil beneath his feet.

A wide banyan tree stretching out like a guardian.

Far in the distance, lanterns flickered like fireflies.

And the wind smelled of wet earth and jasmine — a scent he somehow recognized.

Then he heard it.

A laugh.

Soft.

Delicate.

Like someone shaping joy with breath.

He turned.

A girl stood with her back to him — long hair braided, anklets chiming as she slowly moved.

He couldn’t see her face.

Yet the sight of her made his chest ache, as if he had missed her for years.

He whispered, “Who…?”

She tilted her head slightly, as if she heard him.

And then everything dissolved.

Aarav woke up gasping.

His heart raced.

His shirt clung to his chest.

And the watch beside him gave a single loud tick.

Just one.

Then silence.

A Day of Fading Reality

Aarav shook off the dream and rushed to the hospital, trying to bury the strange feeling beneath duty and routine.

But the day refused to let him forget.

While walking through the corridor, he glanced outside the window —

for a second, the parking lot blurred into a dirt marketplace.

Ox carts.

Clay pots.

Lantern smoke drifting lazily.

He blinked and it vanished.

Later, while talking to a patient, he felt a sudden chill —

and saw a girl’s hand placing a jasmine flower behind her ear.

A hand he didn’t recognize.

A gesture that felt too intimate to be his own memory.

Even in the cafeteria, when he lifted a cup of tea, he suddenly imagined it in a clay mud cup instead — warm, earthy, old.

His fingers trembled.

“What is happening to me…?” he muttered.

But deep inside, a whisper rose:

Someone is calling you.

The Second Glimpse

When Aarav reached home that evening, exhaustion wrapped around him like a blanket.

He placed the watch in his palm.

“Why do I feel like you’re showing me something?” he asked softly.

Maybe he expected silence.

But the watch pulsed faintly.

Not a light — just a sensation, like a warm breath in his hand.

He closed his eyes for a moment.

And the world shifted.

He was standing in an old marketplace — people wearing traditional clothes, lamps glowing in every corner, the air thick with the smell of turmeric, oil, and freshly baked rotis.

And there she was.

The girl from his dream.

This time she was closer, her back still turned, her dupatta brushing against the wind.

She stopped at a lantern stall, holding a small metal charm — a tiny heart-shaped piece.

Her fingers were delicate.

Her posture soft yet strong.

Something about her made his soul tremble.

Aarav took one step toward her.

The ground beneath him shook.

Not violently — softly.

Like time itself was warning him.

But he couldn’t stop.

He whispered, “Turn around… please…”

The girl slowly began to turn.

The moment her face came close to view —

The vision shattered.

Aarav stumbled back into his room, breathless, sweat dripping down his spine.

The pocket watch in his hand glowed faintly for a heartbeat…

then went still.

But he had seen enough to know the truth:

He wasn’t dreaming.

He wasn’t imagining.

These were memories.

Memories he never lived.

Memories of a girl who didn’t exist in his world —

yet felt like she once belonged in his arms.

Aarav pressed a hand to his chest.

“It hurts,” he whispered.

“But why?”

The night answered with silence.

But the watch — the old, impossible watch — gave one soft tick…

as if saying:

You’ll know her.

You already have.

3 – The Lanterns of Old Bangalore

Aarav felt strange all evening.

Not sick.

Not tired.

Just… pulled.

Like an invisible thread tugged at his chest every time he glanced at the pocket watch lying on his desk.

The hands on the watch were still frozen.

But somehow, the silence felt louder tonight.

The Pull of the Watch

He tried to distract himself — music, scrolling through his phone, preparing dinner — but nothing stayed steady.

Every few minutes, his eyes drifted back to the watch.

By 11 PM, the air felt heavier.

Almost electric.

Aarav picked up the watch again.

The moment his fingers touched the metal, a soft vibration ran through it.

Not mechanical.

Not natural.

Alive.

“Are you trying to show me something?” he whispered, not sure whom he was talking to — himself, the watch, or the girl who appeared in his dreams.

As soon as the words left his lips, the watch ticked.

Once.

Twice.

And then the hands started spinning.

Fast.

Wild.

Like time itself had woken up.

Aarav’s breath caught.

The room blurred.

And before he could stand, the ground beneath him fell away.

The Slip Through Time

It didn’t feel like falling.

It felt like dissolving — like his existence stretched across centuries.

Wind rushed around him.

Flashes of colors burst and faded.

He heard distant voices echoing in languages he didn’t recognize.

And then—

Silence.

The wind stopped.

The spinning stopped.

The world settled.

Aarav blinked.

He was no longer in his room.

Old Bangalore — The First Arrival

He stood in the middle of a narrow mud road lined with lanterns.

The buildings were small, built with brick and red tile roofs.

Smoke curled from chimneys.

The night smelled of sandalwood and jasmine.

Bullock carts moved lazily down the road.

People in traditional clothes walked with lanterns in hand.

Shadows danced across walls made of mud and stone.

Aarav felt his heart hammer in his chest.

“This can’t be real… this can’t be…”

But every sensation — the sound of wooden wheels, the cold breeze, the warmth of lantern flames — felt painfully real.

He took a shaky breath.

And then he saw her.

The First Real Sight of Diya

She was standing beside a lantern stall, gently picking up a small brass lamp.

Her hair braided loosely, a jasmine flower tucked behind her ear.

A soft cream-colored saree bordered with gold hugged her frame.

And when she lifted her head—

Aarav forgot how to breathe.

It was her.

The girl from his dreams.

Real.

Alive.

Her face was delicate, glowing in the lantern light.

Her eyes — deep, warm, impossibly familiar — scanned the stall, unaware of the man staring at her like she was the only person left in the world.

Aarav felt something break inside him —

a mixture of relief, pain, longing…

as if he had finally reached a place he had once lost.

He took a step toward her.

The mud beneath his feet shifted.

She looked up.

Her eyes met his.

And in that instant, the world stopped.

Not metaphorically — literally.

The lantern flames froze.

The cart wheels halted mid-turn.

Even the wind stopped moving.

Only Aarav and the girl remained in motion.

Her eyes widened slightly.

She took a tiny breath.

And whispered a single word —

not in confusion, not in fear…

But like she recognized him.

Like she had known him before.

“You…?”

Aarav’s heart broke at the sound of it.

Because she wasn’t asking who he was.

She was asking why he left.

But before he could speak —

A force yanked him back.

Hard.

Violent.

The world shattered around him.

Colors burst.

Wind roared.

And Aarav fell backward into nothingness.

Back to the Present

He collapsed onto the floor of his room, gasping for breath like someone who had been underwater too long.

The watch in his hand burned hot…

then cooled.

Aarav stared at the ceiling, tears slipping down his temples.

He didn’t understand what was happening…

But he knew one thing with perfect clarity:

He had loved that girl before.

And she remembered him.

Even when he didn’t remember himself.

As he closed his eyes, trembling, the whisper from the past echoed in his mind—

“You…?”

Aarav pressed his hand to his chest, where the pain was sharpest.

“I’m coming back,” he whispered.

“Whoever you are… I will find you.”

And the pocket watch ticked once, as if answering him

4 – The Girl Who Remembers

Diya had always felt that her life didn’t belong entirely to her.

Some days she lived fully in the present — helping her mother grind masala, buying oil lamps for the house, braiding her hair with fresh jasmine.

But some evenings, when lantern light softened the world and the wind whispered through the alleys of old Bangalore, she felt it again:

The emptiness.

The waiting.

The strange, aching longing for someone she had never met.

At least, not in this life.

The Boy in Her Memories

For as long as she could remember, Diya had seen flashes — not dreams, not illusions.

Memories.

A boy standing beneath a banyan tree.

A laugh she recognized.

Eyes filled with warmth and pain at the same time.

She never knew who he was.

No one in her town matched his face.

No one wore the clothes he did.

No one spoke with the softness she sensed in him.

But she felt him.

Always.

Like a shadow waiting for light.

The Day the World Stopped

Diya had gone to the lantern stall that night because she loved the way brass lamps caught firelight — warm, golden, like hope made visible.

She picked up a lamp, feeling the cool metal against her skin.

Then, suddenly…

her heart stuttered.

She felt him.

Before she even turned, her breath caught in her throat.

Someone familiar was watching her.

Someone she had waited for without understanding why.

She lifted her head slowly.

And there he was.

The boy from her memories.

Not a dream.

Not a vision.

Not a story she had made up.

Real.

Standing only a few steps away.

Looking at her like he had finally come home.

Her lips parted.

Her heartbeat stumbled.

She whispered, “You…?”

Not because she didn’t know him.

But because she did.

Too well.

Too deeply.

More than she should.

But before he could answer, the world froze around her.

Lantern flames turned to still gold.

The carts halted mid-roll.

Even the dust in the air hung motionless.

Diya’s eyes widened.

She tried to reach for him.

Her fingers brushed the edge of his presence — warm, trembling —

and then he vanished.

Ripped away as if time didn’t want them touching.

The marketplace resumed.

Noise returned.

Life moved.

But Diya stood frozen.

Her hand trembled over the empty air where he had been.

Her chest felt like it had cracked open.

The Pain of Remembering

She walked home slowly, shock wrapped around her like a cold shawl.

Her mother called, “Diya, where were you?”

But Diya didn’t answer.

She sat on the edge of her bed, fingers still shaking.

He had come.

He was real.

And now the flashes in her mind burst open like unlocked doors —

the banyan tree, the mud road, his smile, her hand in his, a promise whispered in a storm…

She pressed her palm against her chest.

“I knew you,” she whispered to the quiet room.

“Before today… long before today.

Why did you go?

Why did you leave me?”

A single tear rolled down her cheek.

Someone she wasn’t supposed to remember had returned.

Someone time had hidden from her.

And even though she didn’t know his name, she said softly:

“Come back.”

Far away, in another century,

Aarav tightened his grip on the pocket watch —

feeling her voice like a heartbeat inside him.

5 – When the Watch Refuses

Aarav didn’t sleep that night.

He sat on the edge of his bed, the pocket watch clenched tightly in his hand, his pulse racing with a restless pain he couldn’t calm.

He had seen her.

Not in a dream.

Not in a flash.

But standing right in front of him.

Her eyes…

The way she whispered “You…?”

The recognition in her voice…

Aarav’s throat tightened.

She knew him.

But he didn’t know her.

And that hurt more than anything.

He looked down at the watch.

“Take me back,” he murmured.

“Please… let me see her again.”

The watch remained cold.

Silent.

Unmoving.

The First Attempt

Aarav closed his eyes, holding the watch close, hoping the same force that pulled him the first time would pull him again.

Minutes passed.

Nothing.

The metal felt dead.

As if time itself had shut its door.

He waited for hours — trying to recreate the moment, the emotion, the fear, the longing — anything that might trigger another slip.

But time did not bend.

Not tonight.

Aarav exhaled shakily, frustration pushing tears into his eyes.

“How do I reach you?” he whispered, not sure if he was talking to the watch or to Diya.

The room stayed silent.

Restless Day

The next morning, Aarav went to the hospital, but his mind wasn’t with him.

While checking a patient’s pulse, he suddenly froze —

he could faintly smell jasmine.

Jasmine from her hair.

His heart lurched.

He turned sharply — expecting to see a glimpse of the old marketplace again.

But he only saw fluorescent lights.

White walls.

Normal life.

For the first time in years, Aarav felt powerless.

Not as a doctor.

Not as a man.

But as someone whose heart had been ripped out of him by something he didn’t understand.

All day, his mind echoed with her voice.

“You…?”

Not accusing.

Not questioning.

Remembering.

Why did she remember him?

Who was he to her?

And why did it feel like he had lost her once before?

He needed answers.

The Second Attempt

That night, Aarav sat cross-legged on the floor, the room dark except for moonlight spilling through the curtains.

He placed the watch in front of him.

He touched its surface gently, almost fearfully.

“Please…”

His voice cracked.

“I don’t know who she is, but I can’t— I can’t lose her again.”

This time, the watch reacted.

A faint warmth.

A soft vibration.

A whisper of energy.

Aarav held his breath.

“Come on… come on…”

But suddenly, the warmth flickered.

Then died.

The watch fell still again.

Aarav clenched his jaw.

Time wasn’t refusing him out of cruelty.

It was refusing because it wasn’t ready yet.

He felt that truth deep in his chest.

Time didn’t choose based on desire.

Time chose based on something bigger.

And tonight… time said no.

The Pain of Waiting

Aarav pressed the watch to his forehead, his shoulders shaking.

“I’ll wait,” he whispered.

Even if it hurt.

Even if it took days.

Even if it broke him.

“I’ll wait… because she waited for me too, didn’t she?”

The watch stayed silent.

But something deep within him answered.

Yes.

She had waited.

In that frozen moment when her eyes found his,

A lifetime of unanswered waiting had lived in her gaze.

A tear slipped down Aarav’s cheek.

He didn’t know her name.

He didn’t know her story.

He didn’t know why time was pulling them together.

But he knew one thing now:

He wasn’t going to let time keep them apart again.

He would return — whenever time allowed.

As he drifted into a restless sleep, the watch remained still.

But in another century, under a lantern-lit sky…

Diya stood beneath the banyan tree, clutching the charm she had bought, whispering into the night:

“Come back to me.”

And the wind, for the first time in years, carried her voice across time.

Straight into Aarav’s dreams.

6 – When Her Dreams Reach Him

The night after the watch refused him, Aarav finally collapsed into sleep — not peacefully, but the kind that comes from exhaustion, longing, and unanswered questions.

His mind drifted into darkness.

And then…

A scent of wet earth.

A flicker of lantern light.

Wind brushing old stone walls.

He wasn’t dreaming of a hospital.

Or his room.

Or anything that belonged to his time.

He was dreaming of her.

A Dream That Isn’t Just a Dream

Aarav found himself standing near a narrow street of old Bangalore — a place he had seen only once, yet felt deeply familiar.

Shops closed.

Streets empty.

Moonlight soft on the dusty road.

And there she was.

Diya.

Standing under a banyan tree.

Her silhouette glowing in the silver light.

She was holding something — a small charm tied with a red thread.

Her eyes were closed.

Her lips moved softly, as if praying.

Aarav stepped closer.

“Diya…?”

Her eyes snapped open.

For a split second, she looked shocked — not frightened, but heartbroken, as if she had been waiting for him for years.

“You came…” she whispered.

He swallowed.

He had no idea what to say.

This wasn’t real — it couldn’t be — yet it felt more real than anything in his waking life.

“How did I… reach you?” he asked, voice shaking.

Diya smiled faintly.

“You always find your way back to me.”

The words hit him like a memory he didn’t have.

He reached out —

and for the first time ever,

their fingers touched.

Warm.

Real.

Alive.

But then—

A tremor ran through the air.

The ground cracked faintly like ripples in a reflection.

Her image flickered.

“No—” Aarav tried to hold on.

“Diya—!”

Her voice echoed as she faded:

“Come back… for real.”

The dream shattered.

Aarav Wakes Up With Her Voice Still In His Ear

Aarav shot awake, breathing heavily, his heart pounding.

The room was dark.

But her voice… her voice… stayed with him.

Come back… for real.

His hands trembled as he picked up the watch lying beside him.

It was warm.

Pulsing.

Glowing faintly from the inside, like a heartbeat.

“Diya…” he whispered, his throat tight.

“That wasn’t just a dream, right?”

The watch gave a soft click.

As if answering.

Aarav felt tears form in his eyes — not from sadness, but from the overwhelming certainty that something bigger than time itself was happening.

She wasn’t just someone from the past.

She wasn’t just a stranger he accidentally met.

She was someone his heart recognized even before his mind did.

Someone he had loved once.

Someone he had lost once.

And time…

was giving them another chance.

Diya’s Side — A Night of Restless Hope (Past, 1810)

Meanwhile, far in the past, Diya sat near the same banyan tree, clutching the charm.

Her hands were cold.

Her eyes swollen from crying.

She didn’t understand why she felt so connected to him.

This stranger who spoke like he came from a world she couldn’t imagine.

But her heart remembered him.

More than remembered —

ached for him.

When she had seen him again, even for a moment, it felt like life had returned to her chest after years of emptiness.

She lifted her face to the moon and whispered:

“Let him find the way to me…

Please.”

A soft gust of wind brushed her cheek.

She smiled weakly.

For the first time in years, she felt hope.

Time Responds

Back in the present, the watch in Aarav’s palm glowed brighter — soft, rhythmic pulses, like footsteps approaching.

Aarav closed his eyes.

“Take me back.”

The watch warmed—

But didn’t open.

Not yet.

Time was moving.

Listening.

Changing.

But it wasn’t ready to reunite them fully.

For now, it only allowed dreams.

Shared whispers.

Moments between sleep and waking.

Aarav exhaled shakily, pressing the watch to his forehead.

“I’ll come back,” he murmured.

“For real.

I promise you.”

In the past, under a banyan tree, Diya felt a warmth settle in her chest — without knowing why.

And for the first time,

she slept peacefully.

7 – The Second Crossing Goes Wrong

Two nights after the dream, Aarav felt a strange calmness in his chest — the kind that comes before something big happens.

The watch hadn’t glowed since, but it hadn’t gone cold either.

It felt alive.

Waiting.

Breathing with him.

Aarav sat on his bed, lights off, the moon painting pale shapes across the walls.

He held the watch tightly.

“Please,” he whispered, “just take me to her. To that moment. To the banyan tree. To Diya.”

The watch pulsed once.

Then again.

Then harder.

Aarav’s heart jumped.

The air around him thickened.

His ears rang.

His vision blurred.

He clutched the watch—

And the world snapped.

Back in Time — But Wrong

Aarav stumbled forward, nearly falling onto uneven ground.

Dust.

Smell of burnt oil lamps.

Night sky darker than he remembered.

He spun around.

This wasn’t the banyan tree.

This wasn’t the market.

This wasn’t where he had last seen her.

He was standing in a narrow alley, dimly lit by half-burnt lanterns.

Stray dogs barked in the distance.

Old wooden houses leaned heavily on each other.

His pulse raced.

“Diya?” he called softly.

Only silence answered.

The watch in his palm cooled instantly — as if exhausted.

Aarav clenched his jaw.

Something was wrong.

A New Clue From the Past

He walked forward slowly, trying not to draw attention.

The world here was older, quieter, untouched by modern noise.

As he turned a corner, he saw a small shopkeeper closing his wooden shutters.

The man glanced at Aarav — suspicious, confused by Aarav’s clothes, his shoes, everything.

Aarav stepped closer and pointed to the charm hung outside the shop.

“Who bought this?”

His voice cracked.

“A girl… Diya?”

The shopkeeper frowned, thought for a moment.

Then nodded.

“A young woman bought a charm yesterday. Said she would wait near the banyan tree for someone.”

Aarav’s breath hitched.

Yesterday?

But the last time he saw her was…

Days ago in his time.

“So she hasn’t met me yet?” he whispered.

He suddenly understood —

time hadn’t taken him back to the moment he met Diya.

It had taken him before that.

To a time when she was waiting… but for someone she hadn’t met yet.

Someone she had only dreamed of.

Someone time had promised her.

Aarav swallowed hard.

This was his chance —

to see who she was before destiny tangled their lives.

To know her without the shock or confusion of their first meeting.

But also…

This meant she wouldn’t recognize him.

Not yet.

Not until the future-version of him arrived days later.

A painful ache spread in his chest.

He would meet her…

but she wouldn’t know him.

The Moment That Breaks Him a Little

Aarav reached the banyan tree.

Lanterns flickered softly.

The night smelled of jasmine and mud.

And then he saw her.

Diya.

Sitting on the old stone platform around the tree.

Holding the charm in her hands.

Looking up at the sky with a small, aching smile.

She whispered into the wind:

“Where are you…?”

Aarav felt something inside him shatter gently.

She was waiting.

She had hope.

She was looking for him —

the version of him she hadn’t met yet.

He took one step forward.

The dry leaf crunched under his shoe.

Diya turned.

Her eyes met his.

Not with recognition.

Not with the lightning that struck the first time.

But with curiosity —

like seeing a stranger who felt strangely familiar.

“Do I… know you?” she asked softly.

Aarav’s breath trembled.

He wanted to say everything.

Tell her the truth.

Tell her he loved her already.

Tell her he had crossed time just to stand here.

But time wouldn’t allow that.

He knew it instinctively.

So he smiled —

a broken, quiet, tender smile.

“No,” he whispered.

“Not yet.”

Her brows knitted.

“Yet…?” she repeated, confused.

Aarav closed his eyes.

Because in his heart, he knew:

This was the moment time sent him to learn something.

To understand the woman he loved

before she knew he existed.

8 – The Days Before Destiny

Aarav learned very quickly that living in the past was not like visiting a memory.

It wasn’t nostalgic.

It wasn’t peaceful.

It wasn’t simple.

It was real — painfully real.

People stared at his clothes.

The roads were uneven.

The nights were too dark.

The air was heavy with smoke from lanterns and wood fires.

But none of that mattered.

Because Diya lived here.

And every moment he existed in this time felt like a fragile miracle.

Aarav Follows Her Footsteps (Silently, Carefully)

For the next few days, Aarav stayed in the shadows of her world.

Not stalking.

Not spying.

But protecting.

Watching.

Understanding.

Time had brought him here not to change destiny…

but to know her — truly, deeply — before their worlds collided.

He saw her walking to the old school where she volunteered, helping kids read under a broken roof.

He saw her give her lunch to a hungry child without thinking twice.

He saw her sit on her house’s small balcony every evening, staring at the same sky he saw centuries later.

She would whisper the same thing every night:

“Whoever you are… I feel you.

Wherever you are… find me.”

Aarav’s chest tightened every time.

She wasn’t calling into emptiness.

She was calling him.

The Pain of Distance

One evening, Aarav stood near the temple steps, half-hidden behind a pillar, watching Diya light an oil lamp.

The flame reflected in her eyes, softening her face.

A small girl beside her tugged her arm, “Didi, why do you light a lamp every day?”

Diya smiled, tucking the child’s hair behind her ear.

“For someone who has not yet arrived,” she said softly.

“But I know… he will.”

Aarav felt his throat close.

She had faith in him —

before she ever met him.

This is why time sent him here.

To feel the weight of that faith.

To understand that their story didn’t begin when he fell into the past.

It began much earlier —

in her prayers,

in her waiting,

in some ache that she couldn’t explain.

But he couldn’t go to her.

Not yet.

He knew it every time she walked past him with curious eyes, a slight smile, a strange familiarity — but never recognition.

Every time she asked him gently,

“Are you lost?”

Aarav would shake his head and walk away quickly, afraid that even one wrong word could break something time was protecting.

Distance became a silent wound.

A wound he carried every second.

Diya Begins to Notice Him

On the fourth day, Diya stood in the crowd at the evening market, trying to bargain for vegetables.

Aarav was nearby, pretending to check the pottery stalls just to keep her in sight.

Suddenly, the vendor at Diya’s stall shouted angrily at a boy who accidentally bumped into him.

The man raised his hand to hit the child.

Before Aarav could move—

Diya stepped forward.

“No!” she said firmly, shielding the boy with her small frame.

Her voice didn’t shake.

Her hands didn’t tremble.

Aarav froze.

He had seen her kindness.

He had felt her hope.

But this —

this courage…

this fire…

this strength…

He hadn’t seen it like this before.

The vendor backed down, muttering.

Diya knelt and comforted the scared boy until he calmed, then helped him find his parents.

As she walked away, she glanced toward Aarav — unintentionally.

Their eyes met for half a second.

A very small second.

But enough for something inside her to flicker.

“Why do I keep seeing you… everywhere?” she asked softly.

Aarav swallowed.

He was hurting more than she was.

Because he knew the truth:

She was meant to meet him after this phase.

Not now.

Not here.

If he spoke too much…

time might break.

He forced a small smile.

“Maybe destiny,” he said quietly.

She smiled back — shy, surprised.

But before she could speak again, Aarav turned and walked away.

He had to.

If she fell in love with this version of him —

the timeline would shatter.

Night — The Moment That Changes Him Forever

Aarav returned to the banyan tree that night, sitting exactly where Diya sat every evening.

He watched the glow of oil lamps around the street.

Watched the wind play with fallen leaves.

Watched the world she belonged to.

And he whispered to the empty air:

“I don’t know how many lives I’ve lived…

but in this one…

in this time…

I want you.”

The watch warmed faintly —

like a heartbeat agreeing with him.

Aarav closed his eyes.

His love wasn’t new.

It wasn’t sudden.

It wasn’t born the day he fell into the past.

It was older.

Deeper.

Something time had been trying to return to him.

He now understood one thing:

Diya wasn’t waiting for him.

Time was waiting for 

them

 to be ready.

And the moment was coming.

Very soon.

9 – The Day Two Aaravs Exist

The air changed on the fifth morning.

Aarav felt it the moment he opened his eyes.

It wasn’t wind.

It wasn’t temperature.

It wasn’t anything physical.

It was something deeper —

like the heartbeat of time had shifted.

The watch buzzed faintly in his pocket, almost nervous.

Aarav stood up slowly.

“Is it today?” he whispered.

The watch pulsed once.

Yes.

Time was ready.

Destiny was moving.

And Diya…

Diya was about to meet him —

the original him, the version who had slipped into the past the first time.

The version she remembered.

The version she loved instantly.

The version she was meant to meet.

Aarav’s chest tightened painfully.

He was here before that moment.

He had watched her.

He had protected her.

He had fallen in love with her even deeper.

But he wasn’t the Aarav fate intended for her first meeting.

And now…

the “other” him was arriving.

The Rip in Time

Aarav felt the shift like a sudden pull in his lungs — a strange vibration that made the ground tremble faintly.

He knew this feeling.

He had experienced it once already —

when time had dragged him into Diya’s century.

He looked up.

A narrow alley twisted with swirling air.

Dust spiraled upward.

A faint white glow spread like mist.

Someone fell out of the light —

hard, stumbling, coughing.

Aarav’s eyes widened.

It was him.

His other self.

The Aarav she was destined to meet first.

They were identical —

same breathless shock,

same confusion,

same struggle to understand where they were.

But this Aarav hadn’t seen her yet.

Hadn’t followed her.

Hadn’t watched her kindness.

Hadn’t learned her fears.

Destiny wanted this Aarav to meet her.

Aarav’s heart sank.

The Pain of Watching Your Own Fate Replace You

The other Aarav stood up, looking around —

confused, alert, just like the first time.

And that’s when Aarav realized something the universe had never told him:

There were rules.

Rule 1:

The first meeting has to happen naturally.

An accidental collision of time and fate.

Rule 2:

Diya must meet the version of Aarav who arrives without knowing her —

so their connection forms purely.

Rule 3:

Whatever Aarav has seen these last days…

Diya wasn’t allowed to see it.

The Aarav who fell here now —

was innocent of her story.

He was about to be the one she sees,

the one she cries for,

the one she holds.

Not the Aarav hiding in the shadows.

Not the Aarav who already loves her deeply.

Aarav felt his throat close as the other him walked toward the market —

toward the banyan tree.

Toward her.

He whispered painfully to himself:

“So this is how destiny works…”

The Moment of the First Meeting — Seen From the Shadows

Aarav followed quietly, staying far enough not to be seen.

His legs felt heavy.

His chest felt hollow.

And then—

He saw her.

Diya.

Standing under the banyan tree, adjusting her dupatta in the lantern light.

She looked anxious.

Hopeful.

Like she was waiting for something her heart recognized but her mind couldn’t explain.

The other Aarav walked toward her.

Aarav’s hands shook.

He watched the entire scene —

the moment that had already happened in his life…

but now he was witnessing it from the outside.

Diya turned.

Her eyes widened.

The world around her froze.

“You…?”

Her voice broke slightly.

The other Aarav looked confused.

Just like the first time.

There it was.

The spark.

The recognition.

The soul’s memory.

Aarav felt something inside him fracture silently.

He watched her look at the other him with a mixture of shock and relief —

as if her waiting finally ended.

As if her prayers finally reached someone.

But not him.

Not the Aarav who had walked her world silently for days.

Not the Aarav who already loved her more than destiny allowed.

Aarav Walks Away — Broken But Understanding

Aarav stepped back slowly.

His breath shook.

He blinked hard.

This was fate.

And fate wasn’t cruel.

It was precise.

It wanted their connection to begin the way it remembered.

The moment that anchored their souls together.

The version of him who didn’t know her yet…

was the one she fell for first.

Aarav whispered into the cold wind:

“I’m not the one you meet first…

but maybe…

I’m the one who stays.”

The watch warmed faintly —

comforting him.

Agreeing with him.

He wasn’t erased by time.

He was being prepared for something bigger.

A future collision.

A future choice.

A future moment where Diya would see both versions of him —

and her heart would know the difference.

Aarav walked away from the banyan tree,

breathing quietly, painfully…

But with a strange, deep clarity:

This wasn’t the end.

This was the beginning of the real conflict —

where time, love, and destiny would all collide.

10 – When Her Heart Knows What Her Eyes Can’t

The days after the “destined meeting” unfolded exactly as time intended.

The first Aarav — the one who had just arrived — began spending time with Diya.

They walked through the old market.

They sat beneath the banyan tree.

He helped her carry water pots from the well.

She laughed softly at his confusion with their old customs.

Everything looked perfect from the outside.

Everything looked like fate from the inside.

But Diya…

Diya felt something strange deep within her.

Something she couldn’t explain.

Aarav (the First) — Confused, Gentle, and New

When Diya talked, he listened.

When she smiled, he softened.

When she held the charm she bought, he didn’t understand why her eyes grew emotional.

He liked her.

He was drawn to her.

He couldn’t deny it.

But this Aarav didn’t carry the weight of watching her for days.

He didn’t know her beyond what she told him.

He didn’t see her courage in the market.

He didn’t understand the years she spent waiting.

He was falling for her from the start.

Not from the ache of having known her and almost lost her.

He was new.

Fresh.

Unwritten.

Diya felt that difference — even without knowing why.

Meanwhile — The Other Aarav Watches From Afar

The older Aarav — the one who arrived earlier — stayed hidden.

He watched from temple steps.

From behind the tea stalls.

From the marketplace shadows.

He wasn’t jealous.

He was hurting.

Hurting because destiny allowed him to love her…

but not to approach her.

Hurting because he could see the small cracks forming in her heart —

cracks she didn’t understand.

Hurting because the more she spent time with the first Aarav…

the more she seemed lost in her own thoughts.

Aarav whispered to the air:

“You feel me, don’t you?

Even if you don’t see me.”

The watch pulsed faintly —

as if agreeing.

Scene: The First Time She Feels “Wrongness”

One afternoon, Diya and the first Aarav walked near the dried-up lake.

The air smelled of dust and summer.

She was quiet.

He noticed.

“Are you alright?” he asked gently.

Diya looked up at him with eyes filled with something she couldn’t name.

“Yes… just…”

She hesitated.

“It feels like I know you. But also like… you’re not the one I know.”

Aarav froze.

“What do you mean?”

She looked away, embarrassed.

“I don’t know,” she whispered.

“It’s a strange feeling. When I saw you the first time… something felt complete. Now, sometimes… something feels missing.”

The first Aarav didn’t know how to answer.

But the second Aarav, watching from a distance, felt tears sting his eyes.

She sensed him.

Even without seeing him.

Her heart recognized the version of him who had protected her from the shadows.

Night — The Dream That Pushes Her Closer to the Truth

That night, Diya dreamed.

Not of the Aarav she had walked with that day.

But the Aarav who stood by the banyan tree silently for days.

The Aarav who watched her defend the little boy.

The Aarav whose eyes reflected a lifetime of knowing her.

She woke with her heart racing.

“This isn’t the same person…” she whispered into the darkness.

“There are two… aren’t there?”

Her voice shook with the truth she didn’t want to believe.

The First Hint — She Sees a Shadow

Two days later, at dusk, Diya walked alone, buying flowers for her mother.

A soft wind blew.

And then she froze.

She saw him.

A silhouette.

A familiar height.

A familiar stillness.

Standing near the narrow alley where lanterns flickered.

For a moment, her heart leapt.

“Aarav?”

The figure stepped back into the shadows before she could see his face.

But she knew.

Her heartbeat changed.

Her breath trembled.

“That wasn’t the Aarav who walks with me…” she whispered.

“That was… someone else.”

Someone who felt like the one she met in her dreams.

Someone whose presence calmed her soul without reason.

Someone whose pain she could sense.

She clutched her dupatta tightly.

“I’m not imagining things…

there are two of you…”

Aarav (the Second) Breaks His Promise

That night, the hidden Aarav stood under the tree, his eyes burning with longing and guilt.

He whispered:

“Diya… I never wanted you to find me like this.

But I can’t watch silently anymore…”

The watch glowed softly in agreement.

Time was no longer stopping him.

Diya was beginning to see the truth.

And once she saw him clearly…

the two timelines would collide.

11 — The Night She Finally Sees the Second Aarav

The night air of Old Bangalore carried a strange silence — the kind that feels like the world is holding its breath.

Diya couldn’t sleep.

Not after the dream.

Not after the shadow she had seen.

Not after the feeling that the Aarav who walked beside her wasn’t the only Aarav her heart was calling for.

Her mind was a storm, but her heart…

Her heart was a compass, pulling her somewhere.

So she followed it.

Barefoot, she walked through the quiet streets.

Past the temple.

Past the closed flower market.

Past the narrow lane where the shadow had stepped back.

Finally, she reached the banyan tree.

The same banyan tree where she had once felt someone watching her — not with fear, but with familiarity.

Tonight, that same presence wrapped around her again.

A soft breeze brushed her hair.

Diya whispered into the darkness:

“I know you’re here.

Please… don’t hide anymore.”

Her voice trembled not with fear, but with longing.

For a moment, nothing moved.

Then the air shifted.

The lantern nearby flickered.

The shadows thickened — and from within them, a figure slowly stepped out.

Her breath caught.

It was him.

Not the Aarav she had spent days with.

Not the one who asked her about village customs…

Not the one who stumbled through old words and traditions…

This one carried a different weight.

Older.

Quieter.

Steadier.

Filled with a sadness she felt in her bones.

He took a step into the light.

Diya’s eyes widened.

“You…”

Her voice broke.

“You’re… the other one.”

Aarav froze.

The second Aarav — the one who had watched over her silently for so long — suddenly felt naked under her gaze.

He lowered his eyes.

“I didn’t want you to see me like this,” he whispered.

“You weren’t supposed to know.”

Diya took a shaky step toward him.

Her heart thudded painfully.

She looked at him closer — his eyes, his face, the way he stood, the ache in his expression.

This wasn’t the Aarav who just arrived into her life.

This was someone who had been there already — someone who had lived moments with her in silence.

Her voice was barely audible:

“Why do I feel like… I’ve known you longer?”

Aarav’s chest tightened.

He wanted to tell her everything — how he’d seen her courage, how he’d fallen for her from afar, how he felt she was the only person time itself couldn’t erase.

But he couldn’t.

Not yet.

Instead, he whispered:

“Because… I’ve been here longer.”

His voice cracked.

“And because I… I cared before I was allowed to.”

Diya’s eyes filled with tears.

She stepped even closer.

“You feel like the one I dream about,” she whispered.

“The one who watches me from the steps.

Who stands near the tea stall.

Who disappears when I blink.”

Aarav shut his eyes.

That was him.

Every moment.

Diya lifted her hand… and touched his cheek lightly.

He inhaled sharply — he had never expected she would touch him first.

“You’re the one I saw in the shadows,” she whispered.

“The one my heart recognized before my eyes did.”

Aarav opened his mouth to speak —

But suddenly, the ground beneath them trembled.

A short, violent pulse.

Time was reacting.

The watch on Aarav’s wrist flickered wildly — the strongest glow yet.

Diya gasped, stepping back.

“Aarav… what’s happening?”

Aarav looked terrified.

Not for himself.

For her.

“Diya, listen to me,” he said urgently, stepping toward her.

“Time is thinning. It’s letting you see me because it’s losing control. The two timelines—”

He swallowed hard.

“—are crashing into each other.”

Diya shook her head, tears spilling.

“What does that mean? What will happen to you?”

Aarav reached for her hand — and this time, when he held it, it didn’t fade.

It stayed.

Her fingers fit perfectly with his.

“It means,” he whispered, voice breaking,

“that my time here is almost over.”

Diya’s breath collapsed into a sob.

“Aarav— no— don’t go—”

He lifted her hand to his chest.

“Diya… if I could stay, I would stay for a lifetime.”

The air shook again — stronger.

Lantern lights swayed violently.

Diya clung to him.

“Don’t disappear,” she cried.

“Not when I finally found you.”

Aarav held her tighter.

“I don’t want to go,” he whispered.

“I still have so much to tell you.”

The world around them flickered.

The watch blinked faster.

Diya could feel him slipping.

She cupped his face with trembling hands:

“Aarav… which one are you?

Who are you to me?”

Aarav’s voice shook as he answered:

“I’m the one who loved you first.”

And then —

The light burst.

Time snapped.

Aarav vanished from her arms.

Diya fell to her knees, sobbing into the empty air.

But something soft touched the ground beside her.

A small white paper fragment.

She picked it up with shaking hands.

It was a page from her diary — the one she hadn’t written yet.

A single line was written in Aarav’s handwriting:

“I’ll return when time stops fighting us.”

She pressed it to her heart.

Tonight, she finally saw the second Aarav.

And she knew, without doubt—

He was the one her soul had been waiting for.

12 — The Collapse of Time

The night after Aarav disappeared from her arms did not feel like night at all.

The sky held a strange metallic glow, and the air felt heavy — as if time itself had stopped breathing.

Diya clutched the torn diary page against her chest.

“I’ll return when time stops fighting us.”

His handwriting.

His promise.

The version of Aarav who understood her without asking.

She didn’t sleep.

She didn’t eat.

She just waited — for the world to feel normal again.

But instead…

It began to feel wrong.

Very wrong.

The First Sign — Time Bleeds

At dawn, as Diya walked near the well, she noticed something terrifying:

Her shadow split into two for a moment

— one clear, one faint.

She blinked.

The second shadow flickered like smoke and vanished.

Her hands trembled.

“Not again… not like this…”

But the universe didn’t stop.

A few women walked by — and Diya saw their outlines glitch for a split second, as if they dissolved into light before becoming whole again.

Time…

was tearing.

Meanwhile — Aarav (Future) Fights the Pull

Far across the timeline, in his own world, Aarav gasped awake.

His chest burned.

His vision blurred.

He was back in his apartment — breathing hard on the floor, holding nothing but air.

But the watch on his wrist—

It was glowing brighter than ever.

Sparks of light flickered around the edges.

“Diya…” he whispered, voice breaking.

He tried to stand, but the world bent around him — walls stretching, light bending, his room warping like a mirror underwater.

The timeline was not just unstable.

It was collapsing.

His watch buzzed violently.

A single sentence blinked on the cracked display:

RE-ENTRY IMMINENT

TIMELINES: COLLIDING

Aarav’s breath froze.

“Not yet— please— not without her knowing the truth—”

The watch sparked again.

Pain shot through his arm.

But he didn’t let go.

Diya’s World — The Second Sign

Diya walked quickly through the old market, searching for answers she didn’t know how to ask.

But the market wasn’t normal.

The flower seller moved in slow motion for a moment, then sped up unnaturally.

A clay pot floated half a second before smashing.

Everyone around her looked confused, scared, whispering prayers.

Diya’s heart pounded.

She ran.

She ran to the banyan tree — the only place where she felt him.

“Aarav…

please…

come back.”

Her voice cracked.

The banyan leaves shook violently though there was no wind.

A soft hum filled the air.

A tear slipped down her cheek.

She whispered shakily:

“If time is breaking because of us…

then let it break.

Just bring him back to me.”

Aarav (Future) — Pulled Through Time

In his apartment, the cracks of light wrapped around Aarav’s body.

He screamed as the world twisted, pulled, stretched—

And then the floor beneath him disappeared.

He fell.

Through light.

Through shadows.

Through centuries.

His heart hammered against his ribs.

The last thing he saw was Diya’s face.

The last thing he heard was her voice.

He reached out blindly—

“DIYA!”

The Return

Diya stumbled backward as the ground under the banyan tree glowed.

The air crackled like a storm trapped in a bottle.

Something was pushing through.

Fighting.

Trying to reach her.

“Please…” she whispered.

“Please come back…”

And then—

In a burst of blinding white—

Aarav fell onto the dusty ground at her feet.

Half-conscious.

Shaking.

Breathing hard.

His clothes torn from the timeline split.

Diya dropped to her knees, tears pouring.

“Aarav… Aarav!”

Her hands cupped his face.

This time…

he didn’t disappear.

His fingers slowly wrapped around her wrist.

He looked at her with pain and love tangled together.

“You called me…”

His voice was barely audible.

“And time… obeyed you.”

She pulled him into her arms, her tears falling into his hair.

“I thought I lost you,” she whispered.

“You almost did,” he breathed.

“Time is collapsing.

But I had to come back before everything breaks.”

Suddenly—

A violent tremor shook the ground.

The banyan branches twisted unnaturally.

The lanterns flickered in erratic pulses.

Aarav grabbed her hand.

“Diya— listen to me—

We don’t have much time.”

Her voice trembled.

“What’s happening to us?”

He looked into her eyes, heartbreak heavy in his chest.

“Time isn’t breaking by accident.”

Her breath stopped.

Aarav swallowed hard.

“It’s breaking because—

you were never meant to meet two versions of me.”

Thunder cracked across a clear sky.

The truth had begun.

13 — The Forbidden Truth of Two Aaravs

The banyan roots trembled beneath them as if the earth itself was breathing too fast.

Diya tightened her hold on Aarav’s wrist.

“Aarav… what do you mean I wasn’t meant to meet two versions of you?”

Aarav’s throat tightened.

The watch on his wrist sparked again, light slicing through the air.

“The timeline wasn’t designed to hold two ‘me’s at once,” he said softly.

“One of us is written… the other is not.”

Diya’s breath caught.

“You’re saying… one of you is real, and one is—”

“An anomaly,” Aarav whispered.

“An error destiny tried to remove. But I stayed anyway.”

A fresh tremor tore through the soil.

The banyan branches twisted like they were responding to his confession.

Diya’s Heartbreaking Realization

Her eyes filled.

“You stayed because of me, didn’t you?”

Aarav swallowed the pain.

“I stayed because I saw you in danger the day I arrived. I should have vanished. The watch was supposed to reset the timeline. But when I saw you… I resisted.”

Diya’s lips parted in shock.

“You resisted… time?”

Aarav’s smile was soft and unbearably sad.

“You were the first person I saw. The first heartbeat I heard.

Something inside me refused to disappear.”

The ground cracked near the base of the banyan.

Time… disagreed.

Why the First Aarav Exists Without Knowing Anything

Diya wiped her tears roughly.

“Then the other Aarav… the one who came after you… what about him?”

Aarav looked away.

“He’s the one destiny intended you to meet. He’s pure, untouched by time travel. He doesn’t carry the burden I do.”

She shivered.

“But I felt something missing with him… something incomplete.”

Aarav’s jaw clenched.

“That’s because your heart already recognized me.”

The air flickered with light at the truth — their truth.

The Forbidden Rule of Time

Aarav held her hand tighter, his voice trembling.

“There’s a rule written in the watch… a rule even I didn’t understand until now.”

Diya whispered, “What rule?”

He exhaled shakily.

“If a person falls in love with their anomaly,

the timeline collapses.”

Her world froze.

“I’m not allowed to love you,” she said, barely breathing.

Aarav closed his eyes, agony tightening every muscle.

“No, Diya.

You’re allowed.

Time is not.”

Another violent shockwave hit the ground.

Cracks of golden light spread across the roots like lightning.

Diya Refuses Destiny

She stepped closer until her forehead rested against his.

“I don’t care what time wants,” she whispered.

“I love the version of you who protected me. Who felt what I felt before I even understood it.”

Aarav inhaled sharply, eyes burning.

“That’s exactly why time is tearing itself apart.”

The Hidden Truth Aarav Hasn’t Said

Diya cupped his cheek, voice breaking.

“Then tell me how to stop it.

Tell me what you’re hiding.”

Aarav’s breath shook.

“I didn’t disappear that night because time rejected me.”

His eyes met hers — full of guilt.

“I disappeared because… the watch tried to erase me.”

“What?”

“It’s been trying since the moment you saw me.”

The banyan leaves shrieked in the wind, the sky flashing white.

“Diya,” he whispered,

“I’m not supposed to exist here. I’m the Aarav you were never meant to meet…”

He paused.

“…but I’m the one who fell in love with you first.”

Her tears fell freely now.

“And I’m the one my heart chose first,” she said, voice breaking.

Aarav pulled her into him—

But suddenly—

The watch emitted a piercing crack.

A circle of golden light expanded around them.

Aarav’s body jolted violently.

“No…” Diya gasped, trying to hold him.

He screamed her name.

The light grew brighter.

The banyan tree groaned.

Time itself was making a decision.

14 — The Moment Time Chooses Who Must Be Erased

The golden light spread outward like a living creature, wrapping around Aarav’s body as if trying to pull him away again — but this time, Diya felt something colder, heavier, more final.

This wasn’t a pull.

This was erasure.

Aarav’s knees buckled.

Diya caught him before he hit the ground.

“Aarav! Aarav—stay with me!”

His fingers dug weakly into her arm.

“Diya… listen…”

But the light flared again and he screamed, gripping his chest as though time itself was ripping through his ribs.

She held his face with both hands.

“I’m here. I’m right here—look at me!”

His eyes finally found hers.

They were full of fear — the kind he never showed.

“Time is making a choice…” he whispered.

Diya swallowed the lump in her throat.

“What choice?”

Aarav’s answer came like a knife:

“Which Aarav will stay…

and which one will be erased forever.”

The ground shook violently.

Cracks of light raced across the banyan roots like veins.

Time’s Warning

A ring of symbols flashed on the watch — ancient marks Diya had never seen.

Aarav stared at them with terror.

“It’s starting,” he whispered.

“The Collapse.”

Diya gripped his hand harder.

“What does that mean?!”

Aarav looked up at her with the kind of expression that only someone who has seen the end carries.

“It means time has reached its limit.

It can’t hold two versions of me anymore.”

The light surrounding him pulsed faster.

“It’s choosing one to erase.”

Diya felt her entire body turn to ice.

“No… no, Aarav, I won’t let it. You just came back to me—”

Aarav’s voice cracked.

“Diya… time isn’t asking you.”

The Other Aarav Arrives

A sudden burst of blue-white light tore through the night.

Diya spun around.

Another figure stumbled forward from the opposite direction, breathless, confused.

The first Aarav.

The one destiny wrote.

The one Diya should have met.

He stared at the scene — at the glowing banyan, the collapsing air, and at the other Aarav on the ground.

His face went pale.

“…what is this?” he whispered.

The two Aaravs looked at each other — mirror images, same eyes, same heartbeat, same soul.

But completely different paths.

The future Aarav — the one collapsing — whispered:

“You were never meant to see this.”

The first Aarav stepped forward slowly, horror spreading across his face.

“You’re… me.”

A tear fell from Diya’s chin.

“And one of you,” she whispered, “time wants to erase.”

The Timeline’s Verdict Begins

A sharp chime burst from the watch.

Aarav looked at the symbols as they realigned.

His face shattered.

“No…”

Diya grabbed his shoulders.

“What? What does it say?!”

Aarav lifted trembling eyes to hers.

“Time has chosen…”

The light flared violently, illuminating both Aaravs —

“…to erase the one who arrived first.”

Diya froze.

“That’s YOU,” she whispered.

Aarav swallowed, eyes full of resignation.

“Yes.”

The first Aarav stepped forward.

“Why him?” he demanded.

“He didn’t do anything wrong!”

“He stayed,” the collapsing Aarav replied softly.

“He fought the erasure the moment he saw her.”

Diya’s tears blurred everything.

“You stayed for me,” she whispered, “and now time wants to punish you for it.”

Aarav cupped her cheek with a shaking hand.

“I don’t regret a second.”

The light began pulling him upward.

“No—NO!” Diya screamed.

She wrapped both arms around him, trying to anchor him to the earth.

The other Aarav reached forward instinctively, as if trying to help hold him down.

But the collapsing Aarav shook his head weakly.

“Don’t… both of you will be pulled in.”

Diya didn’t care.

“I choose you,” she sobbed.

“I choose YOU — the one who loved me first.

The one who stayed.

The one who fought time for me.”

Aarav’s entire body trembled.

The light brightened —

angry, warning, unstoppable.

“Diya…”

His voice broke into a whisper.

“If you choose me… the world breaks.”

She pressed her forehead to his.

“Then let it break.”

The banyan tree split with a deafening crack.

The ground shook like thunder.

And time made its move.

The golden light swallowed Aarav completely—

And then—

He vanished from her arms.

Diya screamed his name into the collapsing night—

But the space where he had been…

…was empty.

A hollow in time.

A void.

A wound.

Her tears hit the ground.

The first Aarav stood frozen, horrified.

Because Diya’s entire world had just been torn in half.

And time wasn’t done.

Not even close.

15 — The Version of Aarav Who Remains

The world didn’t collapse with noise.

It collapsed with silence.

The banyan branches stopped moving.

The wind died completely.

The golden light faded as if swallowed back into the soil.

Diya knelt on the ground, her fingers clutching air where Aarav had been just moments before.

There was no warmth.

No trace.

No echo.

Just emptiness.

Her heartbeat felt too loud in the stillness.

As if it didn’t belong in this world anymore.

The first Aarav — the one destiny allowed to remain — stood a few feet away, his chest rising and falling in sharp, uneven breaths. He looked at Diya, at the ground, and at the sky with the same disbelief she felt.

“…he’s gone,” he whispered, voice unsteady.

Diya didn’t respond.

Her eyes stayed fixed on the place where the golden light had erased the only version of Aarav her soul truly recognized.

The one who loved her first.

The one who fought for her.

The one she chose.

The one time stole back.

Aarav took one careful step toward her.

“Diya…”

She finally looked up at him.

Not with hatred.

Not with blame.

But with grief so deep it hollowed her eyes.

“You survived,” she said, barely audible.

He swallowed hard.

“I didn’t ask for that,” he whispered.

“I know,” she said quietly.

Her voice was flat, tired, broken in the middle.

Aarav’s Guilt

Aarav knelt beside her, but he didn’t touch her.

He didn’t dare.

“Diya… I don’t want to be the reason you’re hurting.”

“You’re not,” she said.

He blinked.

She continued softly:

“You existed first. Time wrote you. You didn’t do anything wrong.”

Aarav looked at the ground.

“But he loved you before I even met you.”

Diya closed her eyes as fresh tears escaped.

“He loved me from the shadows,” she whispered.

“He loved me like someone who had lived a lifetime with me… even though he hadn’t.”

Aarav inhaled shakily.

“I’m sorry,” he said.

“For what?”

“For being the one time kept.”

Her breath caught.

They stayed like that — both kneeling under the silent banyan tree — for a long moment neither of them knew how to break.

Diya’s Pain, Aarav’s Fear

The first Aarav finally asked, in a soft, trembling voice:

“Diya… do you wish it had been me who disappeared instead?”

Diya didn’t answer immediately.

She lifted the torn diary page — the one the other Aarav had written — and pressed it to her heart.

Then she whispered:

“I wish time let us choose.”

Aarav’s eyes glistened.

A quiet, painful truth.

Not a rejection of him.

Not a dismissal of destiny.

Just the unbearable ache of love interrupted.

He nodded.

“I understand.”

Aarav’s Promise

Then, slowly, he did something unexpected.

He bowed his head deeply — like someone who believed he didn’t deserve the place destiny forced him into.

“Diya… I won’t ask you to forget him.”

Her lips trembled.

“I can’t.”

He nodded again.

“And I won’t ask you to accept me,” he added softly.

“Not now. Maybe not ever.”

She watched him with hollow eyes.

“But I promise you this…”

His voice cracked, sincere and raw.

“I will never replace him.

I will never pretend to be him.

I will only be who I am…

and wait until you decide what I am to you.”

Her breath quivered.

“…why would you wait for me?”

Aarav looked at her with a grief that mirrored her own.

“Because I feel what he felt,” he whispered.

“Not with the same history…

but with the same soul.”

Diya froze.

Something inside her shifted.

Because she knew — deep down — that the Aarav destiny left her with…

…carried the same heart.

…carried the same capacity to love her.

…carried the same longing.

But he didn’t carry her memories.

He didn’t carry her moments.

He didn’t carry her scars.

He was a blank page…

standing beside the ghost of the version she loved.

A Silent Beginning of Something New

A faint breeze finally returned.

The banyan leaves rustled gently — the world restarting itself, piece by piece.

Aarav stood slowly and extended a hand to help her up.

Not as a replacement.

Not as a demand.

But as someone who wanted to be whatever she needed in this shattered moment.

Diya stared at his hand.

Her heart split between two truths:

The one she lost.

And the one who remained.

After a long moment…

She placed her hand in his.

Not as a choice.

Not as love.

But as a fragile acceptance of the moment she was forced into.

Aarav exhaled shakily, helping her stand.

He didn’t smile.

He didn’t claim victory.

He just stood beside her quietly — the only Aarav the world allowed her to keep.

But Diya’s heart whispered a promise to the one she lost:

“I won’t let time bury you.

I’ll find you again.”

And far away, though neither of them knew it…

The erased Aarav

was not entirely gone.

Not yet.

16 — The Echo He Left Behind

The morning after the truth shattered her world, Diya stood under the banyan tree again.

But this time…

there was no Aarav.

Only the air — heavy, quiet, waiting.

She closed her eyes.

His touch still lived on her skin.

His voice still echoed in her ears.

His warning still trembled in her heart:

“Time is at war because you met two versions of me.”

But she didn’t care.

Her heart had no logic.

Only longing.

She pressed her palms against the bark.

“Please come back,” she whispered.

“Even if time doesn’t want us.”

The leaves rustled softly — almost as if answering her.

But no one emerged.

No footsteps.

No glow.

No Aarav.

Only silence.

And in that silence, Diya felt it:

A hollow ache slowly expanding inside her —

the echo of someone who had crossed centuries for her…

then vanished into the cracks of time.

She wiped her tears and walked back toward the village.

But the old Bangalore around her wasn’t the same anymore.

Shadows flickered.

Walls shimmered faintly.

Stone paths rippled as though made of water.

Time wasn’t stable.

Not here.

Not anywhere.

And she felt it deep in her bones —

the world was preparing for something.

Something enormous.

Aarav — Lost Between Versions of Himself

Far across the collapsing timeline, Aarav found himself standing in the middle of… himself.

He blinked.

He was in his modern room.

Yet it wasn’t the same room.

The posters were different.

The laptop was gone.

The bookshelves were arranged differently.

This was his room…

but from a version of him that lived on another path.

And for a terrifying moment, he didn’t know which Aarav he was supposed to be.

The one who loved Diya?

The one who never met her?

Or the one who shouldn’t even exist?

A sharp pain shot through his skull.

He grabbed the table to steady himself.

His hands trembled — not from fear…

But from the growing realization that he was losing something.

A memory.

A moment.

A piece of his own past.

He whispered in panic:

“No… no, no— Diya. I can’t forget her. Not again.”

But time didn’t care.

The collapsing timeline was already erasing the parts of him that didn’t belong.

And Diya was the biggest part of all.

He closed his eyes desperately.

“Please… don’t take her away from me.”

His voice cracked.

And then —

a flicker of warm light appeared on his palm.

Her handwriting.

The torn diary page she always carried.

It materialized from thin air — glowing like a dying star.

Aarav gasped.

Time was trying to erase her from him…

But his love was strong enough to pull a memory back.

He swallowed hard.

“I’m coming back, Diya,” he whispered.

“I don’t care how many versions of me disappear.”

He pressed the glowing diary page to his heart.

“It will never erase you.”

Diya — The Day the Temple Collapsed

That noon, Diya walked past the old stone temple — the one where Aarav first saw her praying.

Villagers stood outside, arguing.

Confused.

Afraid.

Time cracks glowed faintly along the pillars — like lightning trapped inside stone.

A priest shouted:

“The gods are angry! The land is cursed!”

Another yelled:

“No! The world is changing! This is not of man, this is— something else!”

Diya stopped.

Her breath hitched.

Because on the pillar, she saw something she recognized:

A faint engraving that hadn’t been there before.

It was a symbol Aarav once drew for her—

the loop of time.

Two circles intersecting.

Two Aaravs existing where only one should.

Her heartbeat quickened.

He was reaching her.

Even across collapsing worlds… he was trying to send signs.

She touched the glowing symbol, whispering:

“Aarav… are you close?”

Suddenly—

CRACK!

A loud boom shook the temple.

Dust rained down.

The ground split.

Villagers screamed and fled.

Diya stumbled back, terrified.

The temple wasn’t collapsing because of earthquakes.

It was collapsing because time itself was tearing.

And this was only the beginning.

The Unseen Voice

That night, as Diya sat trembling in her room, thinking of him…

Someone whispered her name.

Not loudly.

Not physically.

But through the air.

Through time.

Aarav’s voice.

“Diya… don’t be afraid.”

Her breath froze.

“Aarav?”

“I’m finding my way back. The worlds are merging.

Before it all breaks… we will meet again.”

Tears rushed down her cheeks.

“When?” she whispered.

His answer came gently — heartbreak hidden in the softness:

“When the tragedy arrives.”

Her blood ran cold.

“What tragedy?”

A long silence.

And then, in a voice filled with love and sorrow:

“The one that rewrites everything…

including me.”

The night grew colder.

Diya whispered:

“Aarav… please don’t disappear.”

His fading voice answered:

“Even if I do…

I will always come back to you.”

The echo dissolved.

And Diya was left shaking, tears dripping onto the floor.

She had no idea what tragedy was coming.

But she knew one thing with certainty:

Whatever was about to happen…

Aarav was going to risk everything —

even his own existence.

17 — The Diary No One Should Have

The morning sun in old Bangalore rose dimmer than usual…

as if the sky itself was tired of holding the world together.

Diya didn’t sleep.

She couldn’t.

Aarav’s fading voice haunted her all night.

“We will meet again… when the tragedy arrives.”

What tragedy?

What was going to happen?

Why did his voice sound like a goodbye wrapped in hope?

Her thoughts were loud, but her village was louder.

People gathered near the old well, whispering.

“The temple cracked again last night!”

“Cows vanished from their sheds!”

“My son swears he saw two moons for a moment!”

“This land is haunted!”

Diya’s chest tightened.

They didn’t know what was happening.

But she did.

Or at least… she felt it.

Time was bleeding into itself.

And Aarav was somewhere in the cracks.

She walked past the crowd, clutching her dupatta, her steps shaky.

She wasn’t going to the market or the well.

She was going to the banyan tree — the place destiny always chose for him.

And today…

It had something waiting for her.

The Tree Gives Her Something That Shouldn’t Exist

The banyan branches hung oddly still, even though the wind blew fiercely.

Diya approached slowly.

Something was stuck between the roots.

A small leather-bound book.

It wasn’t old.

It wasn’t from this time.

She picked it up.

Her breath caught.

It was Aarav’s diary.

Not the young Aarav.

Not the one she met.

Not the first version.

This was from the Aarav 10 years older

— the one who déjà-vu’d his way through life, haunted by dreams of a girl he had never met.

Her hands trembled as she opened the first page.

Two words stared back at her:

“For Diya.”

Her heart compressed painfully.

She flipped through the pages — each one more shocking than the last.

Inside the Diary — His Pain, His Memories, His Secret

Drawings.

Notes.

Torn sketches of temples, clocks, and her face — drawn from memory.

Not the memory of a meeting with her.

But the memory of dreams.

Dreams he used to have in his real timeline.

Dreams of her.

Lines written with shaking hands:

“I don’t know who she is.”

“I see her in places I’ve never been.”

“Why do her eyes hurt so much?”

“Why do I feel like I lost her before I met her?”

“Why does she look at me like she knows me?”

Diya touched the page softly.

“Aarav… you remembered me even before time let us meet?”

But the next page froze her blood.

In bold handwriting:

“If I ever reach her timeline…

I must not meet her twice.

If two versions of me see her,

the world will collapse.”

Her hands went cold.

The diary was written long before he ever traveled.

Long before he ever knew what was waiting for him.

He had seen everything in dreams — dreams the universe forced him to remember.

And the worst part?

The last line on the page:

“If I fall in love with her…

I will have to lose everything to fix time.”

Diya shut the diary, heart pounding so hard it hurt.

Tears slipped down her cheeks.

“No…

no, you didn’t write this.

You didn’t mean this.”

She pressed the diary to her chest.

“Why would loving me destroy you?”

But she already knew the answer.

Aarav had two timelines fighting over him.

And only one could survive.

Aarav — On the Edge of Another Collapse

In modern Bangalore, Aarav stood inside a version of his home that didn’t match his memories.

The lights flickered.

Air shimmered.

Shadows shifted unnaturally.

He heard voices downstairs — voices of people he didn’t recognize.

His family.

But… not his family.

A different version of them.

He felt like a ghost in his own life.

He grabbed the table for balance.

“What is happening to me?”

Then the watch on his wrist lit up —

brighter than ever before.

A message blinked violently:

TRAGIC EVENT INBOUND

TIMELINE BREAKPOINT: 4 DAYS LEFT

Aarav’s heart dropped.

“Diya…”

He felt it.

Something was coming for her world.

Something huge.

Something irreversible.

His voice shook.

“It’s the tragedy…

the one I told her about.”

Another message appeared:

ACTION REQUIRED

IF YOU INTERFERE, TIMELINE RESETS

ALL CONNECTIONS LOST

ALL MEMORIES LOST

ALL IDENTITIES REWRITTEN

Aarav stared at the warning, breath frozen.

If he helped her…

he would lose EVERYTHING.

Family.

Friends.

His life.

His own reality.

Everything.

He whispered:

“But I won’t lose her.”

He pressed his palm over the watch.

“Erase my timeline if you want.

Rewrite my life if you need.

I don’t care.”

He took a deep breath.

“For Diya… I will lose the world.”

Diya Learns the Final Truth

Back under the banyan tree, Diya opened the last page of the diary.

A page that didn’t feel handwritten.

The ink shimmered —

as if written by time itself:

“When tragedy comes,

he must make a choice.

To save your world…

he must lose his.”

Diya dropped to her knees.

Her tears fell uncontrollably.

“No.

Aarav, you can’t do this.

Not for me.

Not like this.”

The banyan leaves rustled as if answering her sorrow.

She pressed her forehead to the diary.

“I’ll stop the tragedy.

Before it reaches us.

Before it takes you.”

But deep inside…

She wasn’t sure if destiny would let her.

18 — OLD BANGALORE’S HIDDEN SHRINE

The night air in Old Bangalore felt strange—quiet in a way that made Diya’s heartbeat sound louder than her footsteps. She walked through the narrow path behind Ulsoor Lake, guided only by the moonlight and the memory of a place she had never seen, yet somehow remembered.

The old shrine finally appeared before her—small, ancient, built from stone darkened by decades of monsoons. This was the place that came to her in visions, the place where her past and future had begun to blur.

Aarav was already there.

Not the future Aarav.

Not the one whose eyes carried a lifetime of unsaid stories.

This was Aarav of 1999—the one whose innocence still lived behind his smile.

But tonight, even he looked unsettled.

He turned as she approached, as if he had sensed her before hearing her.

“Diya,” he said softly.

He hadn’t said her name like that before—half fear, half longing, and something else she couldn’t name.

She tried to speak, but the question in her throat was too heavy.

A windless thrum passed through the air—low, vibrating, familiar.

Her breath caught.

She had felt this before.

The day she met the future Aarav in MG Road station.

The same moment when time had felt like it folded around her.

Aarav saw her panic.

He took a step forward.

“I know,” he whispered.

“You saw… someone who looked like me. Someone who wasn’t me.”

Her eyes filled.

“I didn’t imagine him,” she said.

“No. You didn’t,” he replied.

Before either of them could say more, a lantern flickered to life inside the shrine.

An old priest stepped out, his white beard glowing in the dim light as if he too belonged to some in-between world.

“I wondered when you two would come,” the priest said.

He spoke as if he had been expecting them for years.

Diya stiffened.

Aarav swallowed hard.

“You know who we are?” Aarav asked.

“I know who you were.

And who you will be.”

The priest’s voice was calm, but his words struck like lightning.

Diya felt her knees weaken.

“Please… tell us the truth. Why are there two Aaravs?”

The priest placed his lantern on the stone floor.

“There are not two Aaravs,” he said.

“There is one soul walking two paths.”

Aarav blinked.

Diya shook her head slowly.

“I don’t understand,” she whispered.

“You will.”

The priest traced a small circle on the ground with his finger.

“Time is not a straight line. It bends around the choices we make. Aarav—your future self did something your present self hasn’t done yet.”

Aarav looked at Diya, fear slowly rising in his eyes.

The priest continued:

“A tragedy is coming to this city.

To this very part of Old Bangalore.”

His voice lowered.

“Aarav will try to save someone he loves.”

Diya flinched.

“And in saving her,” the priest said, “he will break the timeline. He will lose everything he knows. He will become a stranger in his own future.”

The truth hit them both at the same time.

The Aarav Diya met in her present…

the one who spoke like he carried centuries of pain…

the one who recognized her before she spoke…

He wasn’t a different man.

He was this Aarav—after the sacrifice he hadn’t made yet.

Aarav stepped back as if the weight of destiny had been dropped on his chest.

“So the other me… he’s just me after I… lose everything?”

“Yes.”

The priest’s eyes softened.

“The timeline split the moment he chose love over his world.”

Diya felt tears slip down her cheeks.

“So if he exists… then this Aarav…”

She touched this Aarav’s hand shakily.

“…will become him?”

“If he makes the same choice,” the priest answered.

“And that choice will cost him his entire life.”

Silence.

Dense.

Heavy.

Breaking.

The shrine bell rang once, though no hand touched it.

Time had begun to shift.

Diya held Aarav’s hand tighter.

“I don’t care how many versions there are,” she whispered.

“I don’t care what time wants.

I just… I don’t want to lose you again.”

Aarav closed his eyes, fighting a truth that already tasted like grief.

“You already have,” he whispered back.

“You just don’t know it yet.”

The lantern flickered.

The shrine darkened.

And Diya and Aarav stood there—caught at the intersection of two futures, knowing that whatever came next… would change everything forever.

19 — The Day Old Bangalore Broke

The morning was beautiful.

Birds circled above the lake.

Children ran through the narrow streets.

The flower stalls opened one by one, colors blooming like small celebrations.

But Aarav felt it the moment he woke up:

Time was holding its breath.

A tension beneath the air.

A vibration in the watch that wasn’t supposed to vibrate.

A heaviness behind his ribs — as if the future already knew what he was going to do.

Diya noticed him staring at the horizon.

“Why are you so quiet today?” she asked softly.

Aarav didn’t answer.

He couldn’t.

Because he knew what was about to happen.

He had seen it once already — in a broken version of the timeline he was never meant to remember:

The explosion.

The collapse.

The screams.

The way the earth split near the old market.

And the exact minute Diya would be standing right at the center of it.

He had come back not only for love.

He came back to change that ending.

The Experiment Beneath the City

Far beneath old Bangalore, an early-science workshop had been set up by a local scholar — someone trying to test a new kind of mechanical pressure chamber.

It was harmless in theory.

A simple experiment with steam.

But time… time hates interference.

And Aarav’s arrival had rippled through everything — even through this.

The chamber overheated.

Pressure rose beyond limits.

Small tremors began under the city.

Aarav felt it first — the ground shivering ever so slightly beneath his feet.

Diya didn’t feel it yet.

But he did.

His breath caught.

“It’s starting,” he whispered.

The First Crack

The first sound wasn’t loud.

Just a low, deep groan from beneath the earth, like the city sighing in pain.

Then:

CRACK.

The street outside the market split almost two inches.

People screamed.

Dust blew upward.

Horns blared from wooden carts.

Lanterns swung violently.

Diya grabbed Aarav’s arm.

“Aarav! The ground—”

Before she could finish, a second tremor hit — stronger, violent, like the city had been punched from below.

Stalls collapsed.

Pots shattered.

A wall near the lakeside temple crumbled.

Villagers ran in every direction, pulling children, screaming names.

Aarav grabbed Diya’s hand tightly.

“Come with me. NOW.”

She didn’t question him.

She trusted him more than her own heartbeat.

The Moment the Truth Hits Him

The watch on Aarav’s wrist screamed with red light.

A message flashed:

TIMELINE REVISION POINT

UNAVOIDABLE

He knew what that meant.

If he saved her today…

If he interfered now…

If he jumped into the epicenter of the explosion to stop the chamber…

His memories would rewrite.

His past would vanish.

His present would change.

Everyone who knew him — would forget him.

He would wake in a world where he was a stranger.

A world where Diya might never meet him again.

But the explosion would kill her if he didn’t stop it.

His heart clenched.

“It’s okay if the world forgets me,” he whispered.

“I just can’t lose her.”

The Collapse

A deafening blast shook the ground.

A fireball of smoke burst upward from under the market.

People fell.

Stalls flew into the air.

Horses panicked.

Tiles shattered like glass rain.

Diya stumbled, almost falling into the widening crack — but Aarav pulled her back just in time.

“Aarav!” she cried, terrified. “What’s happening?”

He cupped her face, breath shaking.

“Listen to me, Diya. Whatever happens next — remember this.”

He pressed his forehead to hers.

“I found you across time.

And I will find you again.”

Before she could respond —

The ground jolted violently and tore open beneath them.

Aarav pushed Diya out of the collapsing path.

She screamed his name.

“AARAV!”

He didn’t wait.

He ran straight toward the source of the blast — toward the underground chamber — toward the fire, the smoke, the heat.

Toward the place where his destiny would change forever.

Because saving her…

Even at the cost of losing everything…

Was the only future he ever wanted.

20 — When Time Brings Him Home

The explosion swallowed him.

Aarav ran into the collapsing underground chamber as the wooden beams snapped and the iron pipes burst with blinding steam.

The heat scorched his arms.

Smoke tore into his lungs.

Stones rained from above.

He pushed forward anyway.

Because Diya was behind him.

Because saving her meant losing everything else.

He reached the center of the chamber — a massive pressure cylinder glowing red, vibrating violently.

It was seconds away from ripping the entire district apart.

Aarav braced his hands against the overheated valve.

His skin burned instantly.

The watch on his wrist screamed:

TIMELINE REVISION LOCKED

MEMORY ERASE PROBABLE

SURVIVAL: UNKNOWN

He didn’t care.

He pushed.

The valve resisted.

He pushed harder.

Metal screamed, sparks exploded—

And with a final roar, the chamber released its pressure upward in a safe direction, diverting the blast away from the market.

The city was saved.

Diya was saved.

But the force threw Aarav backward.

His head hit stone.

Light burst across his vision.

The last thing he whispered was:

“Diya… live.”

Then everything went white.

Everything went silent.

Everything… ended.

The New Bangalore

A cool breeze touched his face.

Birds chirped.

Traffic horns echoed in the distance.

Aarav opened his eyes.

He was lying on a hospital bed — in modern Bangalore.

His clothes were clean.

His burns were gone.

His body felt… wrong, as if it belonged to someone slightly different.

A nurse walked in with a clipboard.

“Good morning, sir. You fainted in your apartment hallway. Minor dehydration. Nothing serious.”

He blinked.

No explosion?

No chamber?

No old Bangalore?

No Diya?

His chest tightened.

He tried to speak.

“Diya… where is Diya?”

The nurse tilted her head.

“Who?”

Aarav’s throat closed.

He checked the watch on his wrist.

It was dead.

Black.

As if it had never been anything more than a normal piece of metal.

Time had rewritten itself.

Everything that happened…

Everything he suffered…

Everything he loved…

The world no longer remembered.

But he did.

He remembered everything.

The City That Forgot Him

When Aarav stepped outside the hospital, the city felt colder, emptier… unfamiliar.

His phone showed different contacts.

His apartment key didn’t fit the old lock.

A neighbor he used to chat with walked past him without recognition.

He was a stranger in a world he had lived in his whole life.

Because in this timeline…

Aarav had never traveled to the past.

Never met Diya.

Never loved her.

Never saved her.

But she was alive.

Somewhere in history… she lived a full life.

Not lost to the explosion.

Not written into tragedy.

She lived — because of him.

That was enough.

Or he tried to believe it was.

One Last Thread

Weeks passed.

Aarav tried to rebuild his life in this new world — but every night, he found himself staring at the dead watch, remembering her laugh, her perfume, the gentleness with which she said his name.

One evening, unable to breathe from the ache, he walked down MG Road — just to feel less alone.

And then…

He froze.

Across the street, a girl walked past with friends — laughing, sunlight catching her hair.

She wasn’t dressed in old-time clothes.

She carried a modern sling bag.

But the way she tilted her head…

The way she touched her wrist when she laughed…

The small birthmark near her jaw…

Diya.

Young.

Alive.

Modern.

Here.

Aarav’s heart stopped.

She glanced at him for a second —

Just one second —

And her smile faded.

Her brows knit together.

She stared at him with a strange confusion…

a strange recognition…

as if her soul remembered something her mind had never lived.

Aarav couldn’t move.

Diya took a step toward him.

“Do I…” she whispered, almost afraid to finish.

“Do I know you?”

Tears burned Aarav’s eyes.

The watch on his wrist flickered — just once — a weak spark of gold.

He smiled softly, voice breaking.

“Maybe not yet.”

She stared at him with the same gentle curiosity she once had centuries ago.

“Then…” she said quietly, “should we start now?”

Aarav breathed in — the first real breath since time stole her away.

“Yes,” he whispered.

“Let’s start again.”

And as they stood under the bright lights of modern Bangalore, two souls who had loved across centuries finally found each other again…

Not because time allowed it.

Because love insisted.

— Until Time Brings Us Home