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Indian independence movement if it was a tale of H.P Lovecraft.
Curruption
London was a city of endless shadows, each one darker than the last. The fog wrapped around the streets like something alive, something hungry. It whispered to those willing to listen, to those who lingered a bit too long in the places others feared to go. It was here, in this tangle of alleys, that Mohandas first felt it—the quiet pull toward darkness that stirred something deep, something terrible, within him.

He had come to study, to learn the laws of man in the courts and chambers of a foreign empire. But it was in the dark heart of this city that he found a different lesson, one unspoken and unspeakable. It came not as a revelation but as a subtle infection, an idea like a germ, taking root in his mind. It began as a whisper, an invitation from the night itself, and though he resisted, the city would not let him go. It wanted something of him.

One evening, he wandered farther than usual, the weight of the fog pressing down on him, its touch damp and cold against his skin. There was a scent in the air—metallic, sickly sweet—that seemed to follow him. It led him into an alleyway where the gaslight barely reached, and there, in the dim glow, he saw a figure crumpled against the cobblestones, crimson pooling beneath her. She was like a broken doll, discarded and forgotten, her face frozen in terror.

He staggered back, feeling bile rise in his throat, but something rooted him to the spot. He couldn't look away. There was a peculiar stillness in the air, a silence that seemed to echo within him, and he felt a strange calm settle over him. The horror should have repelled him, should have driven him back into the light—but it didn't. Instead, he felt an unsettling fascination, a pull he couldn't understand, a desire to know the depths that had been carved into this stranger's flesh.

And then, in a moment so quick he could scarcely believe it happened, he felt something shift within him. A small, almost imperceptible fracture in his spirit, a hairline crack that let the darkness seep in. He was no longer just a man; he was something caught between light and shadow, life and death. He was someone who had glimpsed the void and felt it blink back at him.

After that night, he became different. In the daylight, he continued to speak of peace and morality, his words drawing others to him, filling them with hope. But in the quiet hours, when the streets were empty and the fog crept close, he felt that pull again—the memory of the alley, the blood, the silence that had cradled him in its cold embrace. He would walk the streets, following that scent, searching for that nameless thing he'd glimpsed. He became a shadow among shadows, a man who walked with two faces, one for the world and one for the darkness that London had woken within him.

What he sought, he never fully understood. Perhaps he was searching for some absolution hidden within the depths of horror, or perhaps it was merely the emptiness calling to him, pulling him deeper into the void.
 
Friends
He was floating.

Or was he falling? The sensation was somewhere in between, an endless descent through unseen chasms that stretched in every direction. He felt weightless, his limbs insubstantial as if his body had dissolved into vapor. A whispering echoed from the blackness, a language both ancient and incomprehensible, slipping into his ears like tendrils of smoke. In his sleep, he shuddered, for the voices carried with them a coldness, a suggestion of vast, unfathomable despair that made him feel small, like an insect under the weight of a vast, indifferent cosmos.

The dream began to shift, his senses sharpening into something more tangible, and he was standing on parched earth beneath a sky the color of dying embers. The horizon was blurred, wavering as if viewed through the distortion of unbearable heat. A landscape stretched before him—worn and cracked, as though the land itself had been scorched by some divine hand, and all life drained from its bones. It was unmistakable, the way the red dirt clung to his shoes, the harsh angles of barren, jagged cliffs—South Africa. Though he had never set foot there, he recognized it instinctively, with the clarity only dreams could provide.

In the distance, something moved—a dark shape, crawling across the horizon, dragging itself toward him with a relentless, unhurried purpose. He tried to look away, to turn back, but found his legs rooted to the ground, as if the earth itself had seized him. The thing came closer, and the closer it came, the less it resembled anything of this world. It was enormous, amorphous, a mass of writhing, shifting shapes, like smoke condensed into flesh. He could not discern its form, only that it was monstrous, an embodiment of all that was hidden in the deepest shadows of the universe.

It spoke to him without words, a voice that burrowed into his mind like nails scraping across raw nerves. He felt its intentions, its commands, and they terrified him beyond reason. It wanted him. Not just his presence, but his soul, his mind, his very essence, all drawn to this desolate place under a dying sky. There was no escape, no mercy in that gaze that saw through flesh and bone and memory, down to the core of what he was.

Images flashed before him, brief, tantalizing glimpses of impossible structures—temples older than time, carved from stone that glowed with a sickly luminescence, etched with symbols that defied understanding. He saw faces twisted in agony, mouths stretched open in silent screams, their eyes empty but still staring, bearing witness to some unnameable terror. He knew, with the certainty that dreams sometimes bring, that these beings had been summoned, as he was now summoned, across continents and aeons, called to this land as if drawn by an invisible thread that wound through their very bones.

A sound filled the air, low and pulsating, vibrating through his teeth and skull until he thought he would go mad. It was a heartbeat—a rhythmic, relentless drumming that came from deep beneath the earth. Each beat resonated with an unbearable heaviness, as if some ancient, slumbering god were stirring, its breath rumbling through caverns miles below his feet. With every pulse, the world around him darkened, colors fading into shades of gray, until he stood alone in a land drained of life, with nothing but the creature before him, and that terrible, all-encompassing sound.

It was then that he felt his own heart falter, stuttering to match the rhythm of that infernal drumming. Panic seized him, but his body betrayed him, sinking into the rhythm, until his pulse was no longer his own, but an echo of that deep, primal force. He felt his will slipping away, his mind unraveling, and in its place, a terrible knowledge began to seep in—a truth that should have remained hidden, locked away in the void. The creature reached for him, its form stretching, folding in on itself, pulling him closer, until he could feel the cold radiating from its very essence.

As it touched him, he saw one final image: a cave, half-buried in the desert sands, carved with symbols that twisted and warped as he tried to understand them. And within the cave, a pit, a chasm that descended into darkness, deeper than sight, deeper than reason. Something was waiting there, its presence pressing against the edge of consciousness, vast and malignant. It beckoned, a void of infinite hunger, and he knew that if he looked, truly looked, he would fall forever.

The creature's grip tightened, dragging him closer to that endless night. And then, as he teetered on the edge, he woke, gasping for air, his heart pounding in time with that ancient, terrible beat.



The night hung thick around the train as it rattled along, a low, droning rhythm blending with the distant hum of insects in the fields beyond. Mohandas sat by the window, his gaze cast out into the darkness, watching the flickers of lamplight as they blurred past. He had come to South Africa with ideals, with a fierce vision of what was just and right, but tonight, as he felt the cold, judgmental stares of those around him, his ideals felt like a fading candle.

The door to his compartment swung open, and in stepped a man in uniform—a conductor with narrowed eyes, his posture bristling with purpose. Behind him trailed another passenger, a man dressed finely in a suit, his gaze sharp and accusing.

"I'm afraid you're sitting in the wrong seat," the conductor said, his tone thin and biting.

Mohandas met his gaze, holding it with a quiet intensity. "I have a first-class ticket."

The conductor's mouth curled into something that wasn't quite a smile. "That may be, but certain… accommodations aren't meant for everyone."

Mohandas felt his pulse quicken, a small flame of anger sparking in his chest. He clenched his fists, feeling the worn texture of his jacket beneath his fingers, feeling himself tethered to a calm he was determined not to break.

But then the man in the suit spoke, his voice a low, venomous hiss. "I will not ride in the same compartment as one of… his sort."

It was an almost practiced cruelty, polished and barbed. Mohandas could feel his teeth grind together, the muscles in his jaw tightening as he forced himself to hold his tongue. But the conductor had already made up his mind, his hands reaching to grasp Mohandas's arm, the grip firm and unyielding.

He was pulled from his seat, his body half-dragged toward the open door. The cool night air cut against his skin as they shoved him out, his feet stumbling on the gravel beside the tracks. He hit the ground hard, his palms scraping against the rough earth, feeling the sting bloom along his hands and elbows. The train moved on without him, its light dwindling into the distance, leaving him in a suffocating silence, alone under the vast, uncaring sky.

As he lifted himself from the dirt, he looked back toward the receding train, his mind seething with a new, dark determination. The faces of the men who had thrown him from his place burned into his memory like brands, each feature etched in vivid detail. He mouthed their names under his breath, feeling each syllable twist and curl, like a curse taking shape. They would pay for this. One day, somehow, he would hunt them down, and they would know the cold steel of justice.

But the feeling passed as quickly as it came, and he forced himself to take a breath, the resolve tightening into something steadier, something controlled. He began to walk along the tracks, his steps measured, ignoring the dull ache in his body, his mind already moving beyond anger to a strange, eerie calm.

After a few miles, a faint light appeared ahead—the glow of a small station, isolated and worn, barely more than a shack on the edge of the wilderness. He reached it, his steps growing slower as he felt a strange sensation—something like being watched, as though the station itself was waiting for him.

As he approached, a figure emerged from the shadows, seated on a bench beneath the flickering lamplight. The man was thin, pale, his face drawn and contemplative, a faint scowl set upon his lips as he glanced up from his book. Mohandas hesitated, but the man's gaze softened, and he motioned toward the bench beside him.

"Rough night?" the man asked, his voice low and deliberate, with a slight New England drawl.

Mohandas nodded, unable to find words, though he felt the air around this man, this stranger, was somehow heavy, charged with an energy he couldn't name.

The stranger shut his book, revealing the embossed title on the cover—"The Shadows Over Innsmouth"—before slipping it into his coat. "They're quick to remind you of your place, aren't they? This place… it does that to you." He paused, his gaze distant, as if seeing something far beyond the station. "I'm Lovecraft. Howard, if you like."

"Mohandas," he replied, his voice barely a whisper. For reasons he didn't understand, he felt compelled to sit beside this man, as though something beyond reason had drawn them together.
 
Heartless Victim
The first thing Sir Charles Montgomery felt was the sharp, cold bite of rock beneath him. His head throbbed with a pain so deep it blurred the line between waking and nightmare.

When his vision cleared, terror gripped him.

He was sprawled on a jagged slab of black stone, its surface cold despite the heat of the fires that encircled him. Above him loomed a colossal idol of Kali, her fierce eyes seeming to burn through the haze of incense and smoke. Her outstretched tongue glistened, her necklace of severed heads swayed faintly in the air. Around him, a throng of shadowy figures murmured in unison, their voices an unsettling harmony of reverence and menace.

He tried to scream, but his tongue, he remembered with a jolt of horror, was gone. Only a guttural, wet sound escaped his lips, drawing the attention of those closest to him. They stared with a mixture of reverence and loathing, as though he were both sacrifice and scourge.

A hush fell over the crowd as a young man stepped forward, parting the sea of bodies like a prophet. He was tall and lean, his eyes fierce with purpose. His turban marked him as a Punjabi, but his clothes were simple—a white kurta, spattered with what looked like dried blood. In his hands, he carried a blade. It gleamed in the firelight, its curved edge catching and twisting the flames into something sinister.

The man stopped at the foot of the stone, gazing down at Montgomery with an expression that was neither hatred nor pity. His voice was calm, resonant, as he spoke, addressing not the Governor, but the idol towering above them.

"Ma Kali, devourer of demons, accept this offering. May his blood cleanse the earth of his sins and nourish your fury."

Montgomery thrashed against his bindings, his eyes wide, his muffled cries growing frantic. The crowd began to chant, their voices building into a fevered crescendo. The young man raised the blade high above his head, the fires casting long shadows across his face.

For a moment, time seemed to freeze. Montgomery's panicked gaze darted between the young man and the statue, his mind struggling to comprehend the madness of it all. The idol's eyes seemed alive now, blazing with an intensity that seared his soul.

The blade came down.

And someone who was watching from the sidelines Laughed.


In a shocking and audacious incident that has sent ripples across the British administration in India, Sir Charles Montgomery, Governor of Calcutta, was reportedly kidnapped late last evening from his official residence. The incident follows mere days after his controversial decision to violently suppress a peaceful protest in the city's central square.

Eyewitnesses recount that the protest, which had been organized by a coalition of local nationalist groups, turned into a scene of chaos after police forces were ordered to disperse the gathering with batons and gunfire. Dozens were injured, and several unarmed civilians were killed, sparking outrage among the populace. Sir Montgomery's public defense of the crackdown, in which he referred to the protesters as "rebellious agitators unworthy of negotiation," had further inflamed tensions.

The kidnapping occurred under mysterious circumstances. Officials from the Governor's mansion claim that Montgomery retired to his chambers after an evening meeting but was discovered missing by dawn. Signs of a struggle were evident: an overturned chair, shattered glass, and traces of blood leading out of a side entrance. The mansion's guards, including armed sentries stationed at key points, reported no suspicious activity during the night.

Unconfirmed reports suggest that the abductors might have exploited an insider within the Governor's retinue, though colonial authorities have refused to comment on the speculation. "The Lord would be Rescued," declared a spokesman from the administration. "And Rest assured, we will bring these anarchists to justice."

Interestingly, some witnesses claim to have seen a small group of men moving furtively near the banks of the Hooghly River hours before Montgomery's disappearance. Others allege they heard the muffled sound of an engine, possibly a motor vehicle, in the area during the early hours of the morning.

The incident has gripped the city with fear and speculation. A chilling rumor has begun circulating that Montgomery was taken to a clandestine location by a shadowy revolutionary group with ties to spiritual leaders. While such claims remain unverified, they echo the rising influence of nationalist factions using symbolic and divine imagery to rally resistance against British rule.

Prominent nationalist leaders have denied involvement in the abduction. However, sources within the freedom movement suggest that some radical elements are now willing to take extreme measures to oppose colonial oppression.

The British administration has deployed additional troops and intelligence operatives across Calcutta, enforcing strict curfews and conducting raids in key neighborhoods. These measures, however, have only deepened the sense of unrest among citizens...

-Hindustan Times, January 15, 1925
 
Savarkar
In a unknown place deep within some unnamed forest a question of morality and existence was being ponderd upon by a man while, white prisoners knelt in terror, their hands bound, their faces pale with dread.

That young man stood nearby, his jaw clenched, his hands trembling as he clutched a bloodied blade. His white kurta, once pristine, was spattered with crimson streaks. His breathing was shallow, his heart pounding like a war drum.

One of the prisoners, a young British officer, screamed as blood began to seep from his eyes. The man convulsed violently, his screams piercing the cavern until they became gurgles, and finally, silence. His lifeless body slumped to the ground.

That young man who's name was Savarkar recoiled, his chest heaving. He turned to the man standing beside him—a towering figure draped in saffron robes, his face obscured by shadows. This was the Guru, the enigmatic force that had drawn Savarkar into this nightmare. The man's presence radiated an unsettling calm, as though he were the eye of a storm.

"Guru," Savarkar's voice cracked, his words trembling with desperation, "was this necessary? This… this..?" the words didn't left his lipes but the question was already asked.

The Guru did not immediately answer. Instead, he stepped forward, his bare feet splashing into the growing pool of blood around the altar. He crouched by the lifeless body of the officer, dipping his fingers into the dark liquid and smearing it across his forehead like war paint. Then, he rose, his deep, gravelly voice echoing in the cavern.

"You ask if this was necessary?" he began, his tone almost gentle. "Was Kurukshetra necessary? Was the Ganga's flow into the sea necessary? You speak of necessity as though you are above it, Savarkar. But necessity is the wheel that turns this world."

The Guru turned to face him, his eyes like embers beneath the saffron hood. "Do you not recall the words of the Sacred Bhagavad Gita? 'For the preservation of righteousness, and the destruction of evil, I manifest myself, age after age.' is this not what we do here? Manifest righteousness through sacrifice?"

Savarkar's fingers tightened around the hilt of the blade, his knuckles white. "But this… this isn't dharma. This is…" He faltered, unable to put his revulsion into words.

The Guru stepped closer, placing a hand on Savarkar's shoulder. His grip was firm, unyielding. "Dharma is not peace, my child. It is war. It is blood. You dream of a free Bharat, yet you hesitate to take what must be taken. Look around you." He gestured to the prisoners, their muffled sobs filling the air. "Do they hesitate when they burn our fields, starve our people, and hang our sons? Do they pause to question their righteousness?"

Savarkar looked away, his stomach churning.

The Guru leaned in, his voice a low growl now, tinged with menace. "You cannot forge freedom without fire, Savarkar. And fire demands fuel. "

Savarkar swallowed hard, his mind a whirlwind of doubt and duty. The Guru released his shoulder and stepped back, his gaze unwavering.

"Now, take the blade," the Guru commanded, his voice cold, final. "Take it, and carve your doubts away. Or leave, and be remembered as a man who dared to dream but lacked the courage to act."

Savarkar's eyes burned with unshed tears as he turned back to the altar, the weight of the blade in his hand heavier than ever. The cries of the prisoners seemed distant now, their humanity a blur against the overwhelming force of the Guru's words.

He raised the blade once more, his soul screaming louder than the terrified man before him, as the wheel of necessity turned again.
 
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