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- Samrat Bhavan, Delhi -
- May 4, 1937 | Evening -
The sun had dipped below the horizon, casting long, warm shadows across the stone walls of Samrat Bhavan, the temporary imperial seat of Bharat's governnt in Delhi. Inside, silence reigned—broken only by the occasional rustle of parchnt, the faint clink of a pen holder, and the slow turning of pages thick with ink and resolve.
Aryan sat at his broad teakwood desk, shoulders slightly hunched, the golden lamplight softening the sharp angles of his jaw. The last signature of the day had been laid down. He leaned back in his chair, exhaling slowly. Outside his office window, the lights of Delhi flickered like stars caught in a web of streets—alive, pulsing, burdened with hope and mory.
It had been three days since the construction of Kamal Aasthaan, the lotus-shaped palace that would one day stand at the heart of Ujjain—the new capital of a reimagined Bharat. A beacon of heritage woven with the threads of the future. But for now, Delhi still bore the weight of governance. The vast machinery of bureaucracy, legislature, and diplomacy still thrived within its well-worn corridors.
Aryan closed the final folder and stared at it for a mont, then pushed it aside.
He needed stillness.
Not the stillness of empty rooms or quiet courtyards—but the kind that ca from looking inward, from allowing his thoughts to breathe.
His gaze drifted to a small silver fra on the edge of his desk. A photograph—recent—of a smiling Shakti, his mother Anjali, and Karna grinning crookedly as always. He picked it up and smiled faintly, the ache of longing blooming briefly in his chest.
The nation was changing.
He was changing.
But beneath it all—between policy drafts, infrastructure plans, diplomatic cables, and secret missions—lay sothing older, sothing deeper. A truth only he and a few others knew.
The Hidden Fla.
His secret organisation.
Mutants. Inhumans. Superpowered individuals.
n and won gifted—or cursed—with powers beyond understanding. Beings from fractured bloodlines, awakened ancestries, or even different planes of existence. They operated in silence, working not for gold or glory, but to protect the dream Aryan was building.
Karna, ever the anchor to his storm, currently served as Assistant Commander, overseeing operations when Aryan couldn't. Loyal. Wise. Fierce. The brother fate forgot to give him.
But Aryan knew it wasn't enough.
They needed more.
More training. More power. More clarity of purpose.
The future would not be kind. And when shadows returned—as they always did—it would not be armies or parliants that stood in the gap. It would be these hidden warriors.
He stood up slowly, walking toward the tall glass window that overlooked the manicured gardens below.
His mind wandered to sothing he had seen weeks ago, tucked away within the sprawling archives of the Celestial Forge's System Store.
A manual of Breathing Techniques—a synthesis of ancient cultivation thods and the refined breathing arts from another world. The kind that had trained demon-slayers. The kind that could make even an ordinary soul shine with strength, clarity, and endurance.
Only 200 ta Points.
With these techniques, even the powerless could awaken latent potential. Breath by breath. Step by step. It would not grant them cosmic might, but it would give them a fighting chance.
And in the coming war between light and shadow—sotis, that's all that mattered.
Aryan whispered softly, activating the system interface only he could see.
| Creation of Breathing Manual – 200 MP |
| Confirm? |
"Confirm," he said aloud, and a soft hum filled the room as invisible circuits of possibility rearranged themselves.
Knowledge flowed into him like a slow-burning fire. Techniques etched in muscle mory, in spirit, in rhythm. The nas were poetic yet precise—Sun Fla Breathing, Moon Pulse Style, Earth Root Flow, and more. A hybrid art designed to harmonise with the user's constitution, ntal state, and surrounding environnt.
He could already picture it.
A hidden headquarters, carved into the listone cliffs near Ujjain—shielded from the world by enchantnt and science alike. A place where these breathing techniques would be taught. Where his agents could train, grow, heal, and bond.
A temple.
A forge.
A ho.
He would call it: Agnisthal – The Hearth of the Hidden Fla.
His people would no longer be wandering weapons.
They would beco guardians.
Disciplined. United. Alive.
Aryan turned back to his desk, setting the silver photo fra down with reverence.
He would begin drafting the plans tonight—lay out the foundation stones for Agnisthal, assign Karna the task of selecting instructors, and begin shortlisting those most attuned to inner cultivation.
Sowhere far in the night, Delhi slept.
But in this one room, in this one man's heart, sothing had awakened.
A fire made not of rage or vengeance—
—but of hope, breath, and purpose.
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- Hidden Base, Delhi -
- May 4, 1937 | Evening -
The world bent.
A ripple passed through the fabric of space, and from the quiet corner of Samrat Bhavan, Aryan stepped through the void.
He erged into the dark stone corridors of the hidden underground base—his organisation's beating heart nestled beneath Delhi's surface. There was no flash of light, no dramatic sound, just a quiet folding of reality, as if the world simply accepted his presence. Void Step, the evolved form of his shadow teleportation, made travel seamless now, thanks to his new attunent to Void Arcane—the darker, colder cousin of his previous skill Dark magic, born from everything that lay between worlds.
Here In the base, things were never still.
Soone was always training. Always preparing.
And that's exactly why Aryan was here.
He walked through the main hallway, the walls lined with crystalline lights, quietly pulsing like a heartbeat. Though mostly silent, the air carried traces of energy—kinetic vibrations from distant training chambers, muffled voices, the sound of movent, breath, power.
He knew exactly where to go.
Karna.
His best friend. His brother in all but blood.
He was probably already halfway through a spar or grumbling about needing stronger opponents.
Aryan smiled.
Karna had never taken defeat lightly. After being left behind—power-wise—by both Aryan and Shakti, he had pushed himself to the brink. Never out of jealousy, but out of sheer determination. That was Karna. Always fighting forward, even if it ant bloody knuckles and sleepless nights.
Aryan turned the corner and stepped into the wide training hall—a vast chamber layered in reinforced stone and protective wards. It could take punishnt and dish it back if needed.
His eyes Imm'diately found them.
Karna wasn't sparring at the mont.
Instead, he stood off to the side, arms crossed, watching a battle unfold with that familiar focused scowl.
In the center of the room, two figures blurred in motion—
Shakti and Nalini.
The sight made Aryan pause, just for a second.
They danced like twin storms.
Shakti, glowing faintly, the Power Cosmic around her subtly distorting the air. Her movents flowed like water, but each strike carried reality-shifting weight. Now and then, her attacks bent probability—a missed punch curving into a hit, a dodge that sohow happened before the attack ca.
Nalini, on the other hand, moved like the earth itself—steady, rooted, yet unpredictable. Vines burst from the floor at her command, walls of stone lifted, petals turned to blades. Her connection to nature was almost spiritual, and her training under the Sorcerer Supre was evident in how she read the battlefield. She adapted quickly, her mind as sharp as her thorns.
Aryan watched with quiet pride.
Nalini and Shakti were evenly matched, their friendship clear in the way they grinned between blows, pushed each other without holding back. Princesses, yes. Warriors, definitely. But more than that—sisters by choice. Their bond had grown naturally, and sohow, it reminded Aryan of his own with Karna.
A flicker of light drew his gaze to the side—
Karna, his photokinetic aura flaring slightly, sensing Aryan's arrival.
He turned, brow lifting.
"Took you long enough," Karna said, walking over with his usual mix of sarcasm and warmth.
Aryan chuckled. "You missed already?"
"I was hoping you brought stronger recruits. I'm running out of people to beat up."
Aryan studied him closely. Karna's build was leaner now, tighter. His aura was more focused. Gone was the raw, scattered energy from earlier days. Now it shimred—controlled, precise. He had broken into Tier 4 (Mid). Not quite at Shakti's level, who had reached Tier 4 (Peak) thanks to her Cosmic affinity, but Karna was catching up fast.
"You're pushing too hard," Aryan said softly, though without criticism.
Karna shrugged. "Soone has to. You and Shakti keep pulling ahead. I don't want to be the guy left behind holding your coats while you fight gods."
Aryan nodded, understanding.
Karna wasn't jealous. He just refused to be useless.
"Then I've got sothing that might help," Aryan said, pulling a small crystal drive from his pocket. "A breathing manual. Hybrid system—cultivation ets demon-slaying techniques. Just learned it myself."
Karna took it, curious. "You're sharing secret techniques now?"
Aryan smiled. "They're not just for you. I'm going to train everyone who's ready. These thods... they can turn even powerless agents into sothing more. We're building a future, Karna. I need more than just gods and weapons. I need people who can stand on their own—no matter what cos."
Karna's smile was faint but real. "Then let's get to work."
Together, they turned back toward the training chamber. The battle between Shakti and Nalini was nearing its crescendo, a clash of light and life, cosmic force against primal nature.
Aryan didn't interrupt.
He just watched, heart steady, purpose clear.
This was more than a base.
This was where the future of Bharat was being forged—one breath, one bond, one battle at a ti.
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