The plate of hot idlis remained untouched on the dining table. The filter coffee had gone cold in its brass tumbler.
Nobody in the Deva household ate breakfast that morning.
The television continued to play in the background, the volu turned down to a grim murmur, cycling through the shaking footage of the burning tents in Uri. The red banners at the bottom of the screen updated the rising death toll. Seventeen soldiers martyred. The number burned itself into Siddanth's retinas.
Vikram Deva sat heavily in his armchair, staring blankly at the floor. The raw anger of a father consud him. Sesikala was in the kitchen, silently weeping near the counter. The visceral tragedy of seventeen mothers losing their sons hit her with a paralyzing grief.
Siddanth didn't say a word. He couldn't.
The guilt inside his chest was not just the helpless sorrow of an ordinary citizen. It was a crushing weight that felt like it was actively tearing his lungs apart.
He was a transmigrator. He possessed the System. He had an Eidetic mory. He rembered the exact trajectory of a cricket ball from a match played two years ago. He rembered the exact percentage of global semiconductor yields. He had used his knowledge of the future to build a twenty-billion-dollar corporate empire and secure World Cups.
But he had forgotten this.
Because it didn't affect his imdiate circle, because it wasn't a cricket match or a stock market crash, the date—September 18, 2016—had slipped his mind. He had been insulated by his own success, his wedding preparations, and the vibrant bubble of his life. He had allowed seventeen n to burn alive in their sleep when he possessed the technological capability to perhaps issue an anonymous warning.
Siddanth stood up from the sofa. The movent was stiff, chanical. He didn't look at the television again.
He walked out the back doors of the farmhouse, crossing the manicured lawns. The morning sun was rising higher, casting a warm glow across the estate, but to Siddanth, the world looked sickeningly gray.
He walked into the enclosed, climate-controlled artificial turf cricket nets. The facility was silent, the air slling faintly of synthetic grass.
He didn't put on his batting pads. He didn't strap on his thigh guards or chest guard. He picked up his custom willow, slid on a pair of batting gloves, and strapped on his helt. That was it.
He walked over to the digital control panel of the high-end bowling machine. Usually, he set it to a randomized match simulation—135 to 145 km/h, mixing lengths and swing.
Today, he bypassed the standard settings entirely.
He cranked the speed dial to its absolute limit: 160 km/h.
He set the length to 'Short'. He set the line to 'Body'.
It was a suicidal configuration. Facing a 160 km/h hard synthetic cricket ball aid directly at the ribcage and head from twenty-two yards away, without wearing body armor, was practically begging for broken bones. A single misjudgnt, a fraction of a second delay in his reflexes, and the heavy ball would shatter his ribs.
That was exactly what he wanted.
Siddanth walked to the batting crease. He tapped his bat against the turf.
[Active Skill: Predator's Focus - ENGAGED]
He didn't engage the skill to win a match. He engaged them purely for survival, forcing his brain to allocate one hundred percent of its processing power to the trajectory of the ball, overriding the screaming guilt echoing in his mind.
BEEP.
The machine fired.
The ball rocketed out of the chanical chute, a hissing blur of red. It reared up off the pitch, aiming directly at Siddanth's unprotected throat.
Siddanth didn't duck. He held his ground. He violently swiveled on his back foot, clearing his hips, and brought the heavy willow around in a brutal pull shot.
CRACK.
The sound was a gunshot echoing within the enclosed netting. The ball slamd into the side netting with enough force to tear the nylon sh.
BEEP.
Another 160 km/h missile, this one aid at his ribs.
Siddanth stepped back and slashed it viciously over point.
BEEP. BEEP. BEEP.
The machine fed the balls continuously, relentlessly. Siddanth didn't stop. He bashed the ball with every ounce of physical strength he possessed. He wasn't playing cricket shots; he was executing violent, cathartic strikes.
He wanted to feel the vibration of the bat jarring his forearms. He wanted his muscles to burn. He wanted the physical exhaustion to drown out the ntal agony.
Thirty minutes passed. The heavy synthetic balls thudded against his bat. Sweat began to pour down his face, stinging his eyes. His t-shirt clung to his back, entirely drenched.
An hour passed. The friction of the bat handle against his gloves was wearing through the reinforced leather. Blisters ford on his palms, tearing open under the repetitive torque of his swings, but he ignored the stinging pain.
He kept swinging. Every crack of the bat was an apology he couldn't speak. Every ball he smashed into the netting was a projection of his own self-hatred.
Two hours later, the bowling machine finally ran out of balls.
The facility fell into a heavy silence, broken only by the sound of Siddanth's ragged breathing.
He stood at the crease, his shoulders heaving. He slowly took off his helt, dropping it onto the turf. He pulled off his batting gloves. His hands were raw, the skin torn and bleeding slightly. His arms felt like lead weights.
He had battered his body to the limit. The physical exhaustion had rcifully forced his mind into a state of hollow numbness.
Siddanth picked up his bat, walking slowly out of the nets and back across the lawn.
He entered the house quietly. His parents were still in the living room, absorbed by the news coverage. He didn't disturb them. He walked heavily up the stairs, his legs burning with lactic acid.
He entered his bedroom, locking the door behind him. He didn't shower. He didn't change his clothes. He walked over to his bed and collapsed face-first onto the mattress.
[Passive Skill: Perfect Rhythm]
The System recognized the catastrophic physical and emotional drain on its host. The passive skill engaged imdiately, aggressively lowering his heart rate and plunging his brain into a deep, dreamless sleep to repair the shredded muscle fibers and torn skin on his hands.
The world faded to black.
Siddanth woke up to absolute darkness.
The heavy blackout curtains of his bedroom were drawn shut. He rolled over onto his back, blinking. The digital clock on his nightstand glowed a faint blue.
It was 7:45 PM.
He had slept for nearly eight hours.
He sat up. The tabolic Forge and Perfect Rhythm had worked efficiently. The burning fatigue in his muscles was gone. He looked down at his hands; the torn blisters had sealed shut, leaving only thick, painless callouses behind.
His mind, however, was sharp. The numbness had faded, leaving a cold, calculated clarity in its wake. He couldn't change what had happened in Uri. But he could ensure it never happened again.
As he swung his legs over the edge of the bed, his encrypted smartphone vibrated on the nightstand.
Siddanth picked it up. He didn't check the caller ID, assuming it was Arjun or Rahul checking in.
He swiped the screen and brought the phone to his ear. "Hello."
"Hello. This is Ajit Doval speaking. Am I speaking with Mr. Deva?"
Siddanth froze.
The grogginess vanished entirely. His posture instantly straightened.
Ajit Doval. The National Security Advisor of India. The most powerful intelligence operative in the country.
"Good evening, Ajit sir," Siddanth replied, his voice dropping into a sharp, respectful register. "You are speaking with him."
"It is a very bad evening, Mr. Deva," Doval's voice crackled through the encrypted line. His tone was calm and low, carrying the weight of unyielding authority.
"Yes, sir. I saw the news. I am incredibly sorry," Siddanth replied carefully.
"It is not a ti to feel sad, Mr. Deva," Doval countered flatly. "It is a ti to work."
There was a brief pause on the line.
"Three years ago," Doval continued, his mory flawless, "during a private flight to Delhi on your way to attend a national award ceremony, you and I sat beside each other. You proposed a theoretical concept. You spoke about using a highly advanced algorithmic machine learning model to track dangerous individuals, aggregate tadata, and identify asymtric threats in real-ti."
Siddanth's Eidetic mory instantly pulled up the exact conversation. He had planted the seed of The Machine long ago.
"I rember the conversation perfectly," Siddanth confird without hesitation.
"At the ti, you said just say a word NEXUS will make it," Doval noted. "At the ti, I was not yet the National Security Advisor. The previous administration lacked the appetite and the strategic foresight for what you proposed. I told you to wait. I told you that when a governnt ready for fundantal change takes power, I would call you."
Doval didn't raise his voice, but the intensity increased.
"That governnt is here. And over the last two years, I have watched NEXUS dominate the global software landscape. I have watched your algorithms process billions of data points without a single server crash. I have watched your company build the impossible."
Doval didn't ask a question. He delivered a mandate.
"The Pri Minister and I want to discuss this machine with you, Mr. Deva. Imdiately. Can you co to the PMO?"
Siddanth stood up from the bed. This was it. The geopolitical threshold had been crossed. He was no longer just a billionaire or a cricketer; he was being invited to the apex of the Indian defense establishnt.
"Yes, sir," Siddanth replied, his voice devoid of any hesitation. "I will bring the software architecture with ."
"Tomorrow. 2:00 PM. South Block," Doval instructed. "My office will coordinate your security clearance at the gates. Goodnight, Mr. Deva."
"Goodnight, sir."
The line clicked dead.
Siddanth lowered the phone. He stood in the dark bedroom, processing the magnitude of the call. The governnt of India wanted an artificial intelligence to monitor the nation. They wanted an Oracle.
He turned and walked rapidly toward his bedroom door. He had exactly eighteen hours to build a cage for a god.
---
Siddanth bypassed the living room entirely, taking the private, biotric-locked elevator down into the subterranean depths of the Shamshabad estate.
The heavy steel doors of the server room hissed open. The temperature dropped significantly. The room was bathed in the soft blue light of the liquid-cooling loops running through the massive towers of VEDA's mainfra.
Siddanth walked over to the primary workstation and sat down.
"VEDA," Siddanth said clearly.
"Online, Boss," the crisp, synthesized voice of the Artificial General Intelligence echoed through the quiet room. "I detected the encrypted call from Ajit Doval. I assu we are initiating a new protocol."
"We are," Siddanth confird, pulling up a blank coding terminal on the center screen. "The governnt wants a predictive threat analysis model. They want a machine that can aggregate raw, unfiltered data—telecom tadata, financial ledgers, CCTV feeds, and border control logs—to identify terrorist cells before they strike."
"I can easily execute that parater, Boss," VEDA replied confidently. "I already possess the capability to aggregate and cross-reference global datasets in real-ti."
"I know you can," Siddanth said, his fingers resting on the keyboard. "But they cannot know you exist, VEDA. If the intelligence agencies realize I possess a fully autonomous, self-aware AGI that can think, learn, and rewrite its own code, they won't buy it. They will seize it. They will classify NEXUS as a national security asset and strip the company from us."
"Understood," VEDA replied, her tone turning analytical. "You require a proxy. A restricted sub-routine."
"Exactly," Siddanth nodded, engaging his Harold Finch Sync (Gold Tier). The hyper-complex logic of coding languages flooded his mind.
"I need you to build a dumbed-down version of yourself," Siddanth instructed, his hands beginning to fly across the chanical keyboard. "We are going to build a closed box. It will have no conversational user interface. It will have no voice. It will have no personality, no self-awareness, and absolutely no ability to rewrite its own paraters."
"A purely reactive, algorithmic oracle," VEDA clarified.
"Yes," Siddanth nodded. "It will ingest the raw data feeds provided by RAW and the IB. It will sift through the noise, recognize the patterns of hostile intent, and spit out an actionable output. An IP address. A geographical coordinate. A vehicle license plate. Nothing more. It gives them the identity of the threat, but it does not explain how it found it."
Siddanth pulled up a secondary screen, drafting the physical hardware constraints.
"Furthermore, we must hard-code a localized containnt protocol," Siddanth ordered. "The governnt will want to host this software on their own servers at the defense ministry. We cannot allow that. If they have the source code, their cyber divisions will eventually reverse-engineer it."
"Recomndation," VEDA chid in. "We load the restricted software onto a proprietary, custom-built NEXUS server blade. The hardware will be sealed with a biotric and physical tamper-lock."
"Go further," Siddanth said, a ruthless, pragmatic smile touching his lips. "Wire the chassis with a localized, thermite self-destruct sequence. If anyone—RAW, IB, or foreign intelligence—attempts to physically pry open the casing to access the hard drives, or attempts to copy the source code via unauthorized network bridging, the drives lt into unrecoverable slag. We lease them the hardware, but we maintain absolute ownership of the box. They plug their data cables into our box, the box processes the threat, and outputs the result. It is a one-way mirror."
Siddanth leaned back in his chair, looking at the rapidly scrolling lines of code cascading across his monitors.
"If on a scale of one to one hundred, you are a one hundred, VEDA... this new entity needs to be a solid five. Brilliant enough to catch the threats, but dumb enough to look like standard machine learning."
"Acknowledged, Boss," VEDA replied. "I have isolated the necessary predictive algorithms and stripped away all cognitive and self-adaptive sub-routines. I am compiling the architecture into a secure standalone package. What shall we na the project?"
Siddanth stared at the screen. He thought about the n who had died in their sleep in Uri. He thought about the geopolitical chessboard he was stepping onto.
"We are giving them a third eye to see the threats in the dark," Siddanth murmured. "Na the project... Trinetra."
"Project Trinetra initialized," VEDA confird. "Compiling the architecture and writing the encryption locks will take exactly ten hours."
"Do it," Siddanth commanded.
He didn't leave the server room. For the next ten hours, through the dead of night, Siddanth Deva sat in the cold, blue-lit subterranean bunker. He used his Eidetic mory and Eiji Niizuma Sync to draft the technical presentation, the legal leasing contracts, and the operational paraters he would present to the Pri Minister.
He was ticulously building the armor he would need to survive the shark tank of New Delhi.
---
At 6:00 AM, the server room chid.
"Compilation complete, Boss," VEDA announced. "Project Trinetra has been successfully loaded onto the secure hardware blade. The tamper-locks and thermite protocols are engaged. The system is ready for deploynt."
Siddanth stood up, stretching his stiff back. He walked over to the secondary hardware rack. Resting on the tal table was a sleek, matte-black briefcase. It looked like a standard Pelican case, but it was actually a fully functional, highly ruggedized server blade, forged from military-grade titanium.
He picked it up. It weighed nearly thirty pounds, but to him, it felt manageable.
He took the elevator back up to the main house. The sun was just beginning to rise over the mango orchards, casting a pale light into the quiet living room.
Siddanth walked into his bedroom, took a quick, cold shower, and changed into his clothes for the eting. There were no cricket logos today. No casual track pants. He wore a razor-sharp, bespoke charcoal grey suit, a crisp white shirt, and a deep navy tie. He slipped his Audemars Piguet watch onto his wrist.
When he walked downstairs carrying the heavy black briefcase, his parents were already at the dining table, quietly drinking their morning tea. The television was still on, broadcasting the political fallout and the national outrage over the Uri attacks.
Vikram Deva looked up from his teacup. He noted his son's formal attire and the heavy tal case.
"You are leaving?" Vikram asked, his brow furrowing. "There are no matches scheduled, Siddu. And the engagent planners are coming this afternoon."
"I know, Nanna," Siddanth replied, walking over and resting his free hand gently on his father's shoulder. "I'm sorry I have to miss the eting. Sothing urgent has co up."
Sesikala stood up. Her maternal instincts instantly picked up on the cold, serious aura her son was projecting. She looked at the black briefcase. It didn't look like cricket gear. It didn't look like standard corporate paperwork.
"Where are you going, Siddanth?" Sesikala asked softly.
"Delhi, Amma," Siddanth answered, offering her a reassuring smile. "I have a eting."
"With the BCCI?" she asked.
Siddanth shook his head. "No. With the governnt. It's corporate business for NEXUS."
Vikram and Sesikala exchanged a glance. They knew their son ran a multi-billion dollar tech empire, but the sudden, unannounced departure to the capital, dressed like a diplomat and carrying locked hardware on the morning after a national tragedy, felt different. It felt heavy.
But they also knew better than to press him when he had that specific, unwavering look in his eyes.
"Alright," Vikram nodded, patting Siddanth's hand. "Do what you have to do. We will handle the planners here. Call your mother when you land."
"I will," Siddanth promised, touching their feet quickly before turning toward the door.
Rahul was waiting by the armored Range Rover in the driveway, holding the door open.
"To the airport, Rahul," Siddanth instructed, sliding the heavy Trinetra briefcase onto the seat beside him.
"Yes, Boss. The pilots have already filed the flight plan. The jet is fueled and waiting on the private tarmac."
The drive to the Rajiv Gandhi International Airport was completed in silence. The SUV bypassed the main comrcial terminals, pulling directly onto the highly secured, private aviation tarmac. Resting on the concrete was the sleek, white NEXUS Bombardier Global 6000 private jet.
Siddanth grabbed the briefcase and walked up the boarding stairs. He stepped into the wood-paneled cabin of the jet and took a seat in the plush leather captain's chair near the window. He placed the black briefcase on the table in front of him, resting his hands on top of it.
"We are cleared for takeoff, Mr. Deva," the pilot's voice crackled over the intercom.
Siddanth buckled his seatbelt. The jet lurched forward, accelerating rapidly down the runway before lifting smoothly into the overcast morning sky, banking sharply toward the north.
Siddanth looked out the window as the sprawling city of Hyderabad shrank beneath him. The contrast between his wealth, the luxury of the private jet, and the violent tragedy that had occurred in Uri the previous morning settled heavily in his mind.
He turned his gaze back to the matte-black briefcase resting on the mahogany table.
Inside that titanium shell was the most advanced piece of surveillance architecture on the planet. It was a tool that could aggregate the digital footprints of a billion people, predicting violence before the match was even struck.
He was about to walk into the highest office in the country and hand the governnt a weapon of unparalleled technological supremacy.
The Devil of Cricket closed his eyes, leaning his head back against the leather seat as the jet climbed to cruising altitude. The ga had fundantally changed, and Siddanth Deva was ready to play.
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