03-09-2025, 10:04 AM
Nice updates
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Adultery The Swamiji
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03-09-2025, 10:15 AM
04-09-2025, 10:51 AM
Scene 16A – Behind Closed Doors
The heavy door of her penthouse clicked shut, sealing the city’s noise outside. The cacophony of Mumbai, the distant roar of engines, the neon pulse, the chatter of nightlife, vanished. In its place, a profound silence wrapped around her, protective, almost sacred. The faint, rhythmic crash of waves against the rocks far below her balcony punctuated the quiet, each pulse echoing like a secret heartbeat beneath her feet. Rhea slipped off her heels at the entrance, the relief immediate, her bare feet meeting the polished wood. The small anklets around her ankles jingled softly, a delicate, musical counterpoint to the city’s absence. The living room sprawled wide and immaculate, white curtains shifting lightly with the breeze, books and magazines stacked with deliberate care on a glass table. A vase of fresh lilies sat in the center, their fragrance subtle yet insistent, mingling with the faint trace of her perfume lingering in the air, a scent she wore only for herself. Every detail of the space seemed curated, yet not in the flamboyant style expected of someone like her. This was her private realm, a sanctuary beyond cameras and admirers. Even here, she moved with the elegance that had become second nature. The silk of her evening gown whispered against her legs as she made her way toward her bedroom, a sound almost like a soft prelude to an unspoken ritual. Inside, she unfastened the gown with a precise, almost ceremonial motion, letting it cascade to the floor in one flawless sweep. She stood for a long moment in front of the full-length mirror, dbangd only in a pale nightgown that clung delicately to her form. The diamonds, the makeup, the orchestrated lights of a thousand cameras, none of it mattered here. And yet, even stripped of every artifice, Rhea was arresting. Her hair, once pinned and sculpted, now tumbled over her shoulders in soft, gleaming waves. Her skin, faintly flushed from hours beneath professional lighting, glowed with a natural luminescence, almost dangerous in its honesty. She lowered herself to the vanity, sitting with effortless grace, and began the slow, deliberate removal of the day’s remnants, lipstick, kajal, foundation, each gesture unhurried, precise, almost ritualistic. This was a private ceremony of shedding her public persona, the nightly reclaiming of herself. Yet her mind was far from quiet. The note, the first hint of intrusion into her otherwise meticulously ordered world, lodged itself in her thoughts. “Beauty can be a dangerous gift.” The words echoed relentlessly, shifting shape with each repetition, first curiosity, then a subtle warning, finally a chill that sank into her spine. She replayed the past few days in her mind: the following SUV, the untraceable texts, the slight misalignment of shadows in her apartment that suggested someone had been inside when she was elsewhere. None of it was overt, none of it tangible to anyone but her trained instincts, yet the weight of it pressed against her awareness everywhere. Rhea leaned closer to the mirror, eyes sharp, scanning every detail of her reflection as though it could reveal hidden truths. For the briefest instant, she thought she saw movement, just behind her shoulder, a shadow gliding across the curtains. She spun sharply, pulse jumping, but the room was empty. The pale dbangs swayed softly, nothing more. A low, breathless laugh escaped her lips, soft and amused. You’re letting them get to you, she whispered, shaking her head, forcing calm into her posture. Her gaze returned to the mirror, lingering longer this time. The nightgown clung to her frame like a second skin, outlining the quiet power of her body in repose. There was a different kind of beauty here, one unobserved, unphotographed, an intimate luminosity that no camera could ever capture. It was raw. It was potent. It was hers alone. Rhea rose from the vanity, stretching lightly, and moved through the apartment with the awareness of someone who knew every inch of the space as an extension of herself. She ran her fingers along the balustrade of the balcony, letting the cool metal anchor her to the present. The moonlight spilled across the floor, and the faint scent of the sea mingled with her lilies, creating a fleeting illusion of timelessness. Here, for a heartbeat, she could exist outside the machinery of fame, outside the constant scrutiny. Here, she was not Rhea Malhotra, queen of the screen, she was simply Rhea, a solitary presence commanding a world she had carved in quiet perfection. Yet the unease lingered. The words of the note, the untraceable messages, the silent SUV following her, they had planted a seed. Even in this sanctuary, the weight of someone else’s attention pressed against her senses. She could almost feel it, a patient, deliberate observation that didn’t merely intrude, it claimed. She picked up her phone, her fingers brushing the smooth surface with habitual care. No new messages, just the echo of the last one: “Soon.” The glow of the screen illuminated the sharp planes of her face, but she did not flinch. Instead, she placed it carefully on the vanity, setting it face down, an emblem of control in a world threatening to shift beneath her. Rhea returned to her bed, the silk sheets cool against her skin. She lay back, hands resting gracefully atop the duvet, and stared into the darkness. The lights of the city twinkled faintly beyond the balcony, distant and unreal. And yet, she remained alert, aware of every sound, every subtle movement of the night air. Her eyes, wide and reflective, mirrored the silver of the moon as she traced the rhythm of her own breath. Even here, behind closed doors, even in her most private hours, she could not escape the truth: vigilance was now inseparable from her existence. The world outside may have thought her untouchable, but Rhea knew differently. She felt the pulse of danger beneath the glitter, the invisible hands reaching toward her. And as her eyelids grew heavy, she remained poised on the edge between serenity and alertness, a sovereign in her fortress, a goddess who had yet to show the full measure of her power. -- oOo --
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04-09-2025, 01:45 PM
Scene 16B – Vigil in the Moonlight
Still, she double-checked every lock and latch, tracing the edges of windows and balcony doors with fingers trained to detect the smallest flaws. Only when satisfied did she step out onto her balcony. The night air was cool, tangy with salt, brushing against her bare arms, catching the pale nightgown against her legs. From the twenty-second floor, the Arabian Sea stretched vast and silent, dark and glittering under the faint silver of the moon. Ships blinked far away, lonely stars floating on the black water. Usually, this view was her sanctuary. Tonight, even the waves seemed conspiratorial, whispering secrets just beyond comprehension, carrying something almost like a warning on the wind. She rested her elbows on the railing, gazing out. The city below, usually insistent in its chaos, felt oddly still. Neon lights blinked lazily, cars moved in deliberate rhythm, as if the world had paused for a fraction longer than normal. Her instincts prickled. Somewhere, buried in the hum of night, something watched, not casually, not blindly, but with calculation, precision, and patience. Her phone buzzed from the bedroom. She froze, spine stiffening, and a familiar, deliberate calm overtook her. Every motion, every decision in the coming moments carried weight. With smooth elegance, she walked back inside and picked up the device. This time, no number, no display, just the one word: “Soon.” The screen glowed in the dim light, casting a ghostly silver hue across her face. Her eyes were unreadable, calm, but the tension in her jaw betrayed nothing. She laid the phone down deliberately, controlled, and drew the curtains closed, shutting out the world entirely. Rhea slipped beneath the sheets, the nightgown clinging softly to her form, and lay still, facing upward. Her eyes remained wide open long after her body had stopped moving, reflecting the moon’s faint silver. Each sound, the faint hum of air conditioning, a car honking distantly, the whisper of wind through a balcony gap, registered like signals, like the footfalls of someone moving just beyond perception. Even in her private sanctuary, Rhea felt the first flicker of a truth she could not name: she was no longer merely observed, adored, or admired. She was being hunted. The past few days had layered subtle pressure atop her usual vigilance. Security teams doubled patrols outside her apartment, yet the shadowing continued. Her assistants had begun whispering, noting inconsistencies, a delivery that arrived unannounced, the faint trace of mud outside the service entrance, a light flickering in the building that should have been switched off. Each anomaly was minor, individually meaningless. But together, they formed a pattern her intuition recognized: someone was closing in, calculating, deliberate. She thought of the SUV trailing her, the untraceable texts, the elegance of the handwriting that had announced possession without asking. She allowed herself a fraction of fear, just enough to sharpen her senses. And then, as always, she let the fear fold back into control. She was Rhea Malhotra. Beauty, power, intellect, they were all gifts, all weapons, and they would not fail her now. She closed her eyes briefly, drawing a slow breath, letting the tension ripple down through her shoulders, her spine, her toes. She listened to the waves, the night, the emptiness of the room, and allowed herself a private acknowledgment: someone was waiting for the perfect moment. Someone patient. Someone who had marked her. And yet, she was not afraid. Not entirely. She was ready. When she opened her eyes again, they were wide, luminous, unyielding. The city outside, the sea, the night, all were silent witnesses to her vigilance. She did not drift into sleep easily, because sleep was a luxury she could not yet afford. Tonight, she remained awake, alert, an immovable presence in a room that should have been safe. Even under the soft glow of her bedside lamp, her figure seemed almost statuesque, a queen prepared for war, even within the quiet confines of her sanctuary. Hours passed, measured in small sounds: the faint clink of a glass from the kitchen below, a whisper of wind through a slightly ajar window, the distant wail of a horn. And through it all, she lay still, staring into the darkness, her mind a fortress. By the first light of dawn, she had not slept, yet her posture remained impeccable, her face serene. Every ounce of her being projected control, composure, and alertness. Rhea Malhotra, queen of the silver screen, untouchable star, and force of nature, had acknowledged the encroaching threat. She had measured it. She had watched it. And she would meet it, on her terms. Somewhere beyond the shadows, someone waited, patient and deliberate. And Rhea, alone in the quiet of her penthouse, allowed herself one thought: they would not find her wanting. -- oOo --
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04-09-2025, 04:09 PM
Scene 17 – The Private Dinner
The invitation had arrived in an envelope that looked more like an heirloom than a piece of paper. Heavy cream card stock, embossed with gold, sealed with dark wax. Kabir placed it on Riha’s marble-topped dining table with the same caution one might reserve for a court summons. Riha, barefoot in silk loungewear the shade of morning mist, picked it up between two delicate fingers. She didn’t open it immediately. Instead, she ran her fingertip over the raised lettering, as if sensing the weight of what it meant. “Another one?” she asked without looking at Kabir, her voice a calm stream in the quiet room. Kabir nodded. “This one isn’t ordinary, Riha. Malhotra saab himself. He’s hosting a closed dinner. Not even twenty guests. Ministers, foreign investors, two big directors. You’re on that list.” Riha’s lips curved in that half-smile she reserved for situations both flattering and suspicious. “Malhotra saab is generous with his invitations. And with his expectations.” Kabir frowned. “I know. That’s why I wanted to ask you first. We can decline. Politely.” Riha finally slit the envelope open. The faint scent of expensive ink drifted upward. She read the words with the steady gaze of someone trained to read between the lines: Private dinner at the Malhotra Residence. Attire: Elegant. Guests: Confidential. She placed the card down and leaned back in her chair, robe slipping slightly at the shoulder, revealing the flawless curve of skin beneath, soft, radiant, unguarded in the cool morning light. “Declining would make more noise than attending,” she murmured, mind already moving like a chess player. “And sometimes, Kabir, being in the room tells you more than staying outside.” - - -
That evening, the Malhotra estate glowed like a palace in the Mumbai night. Manicured trees lined the private driveway, wrapped in fairy lights that shimmered like captured stars. Valets whisked away Bentleys, Rolls-Royces, and a Lamborghini that purred like a jungle cat before falling silent. Riha stepped out of her understated car, Kabir and two security men flanking her. She wore a midnight silk gown, cut to perfection, elegant, bold, yet modest enough to silence gossip. Diamond earrings caught the light as though the stars themselves had bent down to follow her. The guards stiffened. Heads turned as she walked in, chin high, stride measured. She didn’t seek attention; it followed her like tide. Inside, the dinner hummed with polished laughter, clinking glasses, rare wines, saffron-spiced hors d’oeuvres. Business tycoons and political giants conversed in hushed tones. But when Riha entered, the air shifted. “Ah, Riha ji!” boomed Malhotra saab himself, rising at the head of the mahogany table. Silver-haired, broad-shouldered, suit stitched from power. “You make the night brighter.” Riha inclined her head. “You are too kind, Malhotra saab. Thank you for having me.” Her voice was warm, melodic, accessible without being available. The guests leaned subtly closer, admiration, envy, professional curiosity, as eyes lingered on her figure. Riha glided to her seat, fluid, unhurried. She laughed where appropriate, listened more than spoke, and when she did speak, her words landed with precision. As courses progressed, saffron soup, lobster tail, lamb cooked for twelve hours, she felt the undercurrents: questions disguised as pleasantries, veiled propositions. Then Malhotra saab leaned slightly closer, voice dropping beneath the din: “You know, Riha, power is like a hand extended. When you hold it, doors open that no beauty, no fame, can unlock alone.” Riha’s smile was clear as moonlight. “And when you don’t hold it, saab?” Malhotra chuckled. Yet his eyes held steel. “Then sometimes… the doors close forever.” Riha raised her glass. “Fortunately, saab, I’ve always believed doors meant for me will never close.” Polite laughter rippled across the table. Inside, Riha felt a faint shiver, recognition of the subtle line she walked daily. Kabir’s eyes met hers. No words were necessary: every smile carried hidden weight. And somewhere, someone was watching too closely. - - -
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04-09-2025, 06:12 PM
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After the fourth course, the guests drifted, bar, balcony, night air scented faintly with rain. Musicians played a soft raga, sitar and flute weaving a veil of sound. Malhotra saab gestured for Riha to follow him to a quieter corner. His hand never touched her, yet the invitation in his eyes was unmistakable. Riha rose with serene grace. Midnight silk flowed like water. She glanced briefly at Kabir: I know what I’m doing. He remained watchful. The corner Malhotra chose, lined with tall windows, reflected chandeliers and the silhouettes of power. Moonlight softened Riha’s features, giving her an ethereal glow. “You know, Riha ji,” Malhotra began, tone conversational yet deliberate, “it is a rare thing, what you have. Talent, beauty, grace. Many actresses have one or two. Very few have all three.” Riha tilted her head. “You are generous with your words, saab. But it’s a gift that comes with responsibility too.” Malhotra’s eyes narrowed in appreciation. “And yet,” he said smoothly, “responsibility alone won’t keep you where you are. Mumbai is a city of shifting sands. Today’s queen can be tomorrow’s forgotten headline. Unless, of course… unless she chooses the right friends.” Riha met his gaze calmly. “Friendship is beautiful, saab. But it cannot be bought or bargained.” He chuckled low. “True. But alliances… alliances can change everything. A word here, a recommendation there, a door opened at the right time. I could open such doors for you. Doors others wouldn’t even dare knock on.” Riha’s smile didn’t falter, though her fingers tightened around her gown. “Saab, I am grateful. Truly. But every step I’ve taken has been with my own effort, my own discipline. My family raised me to believe what comes from hard work stays longer than what is given freely.” Malhotra’s mask slipped briefly, a flicker of irritation, replaced by warm laughter. “Ah, such fire. I admire that. Still… fire can burn bright, but it can also burn out quickly.” Riha lifted her glass, eyes soft but unyielding. “And sometimes, saab, fire lights the path for others to follow.” Silence stretched between them. Around them, the party carried on, but here, in this corner, it was a duel fought with smiles and courtesies. Finally, Malhotra inclined his head. “Very well, Riha ji. You are… wise beyond your years. I’ll only say this, my doors will always remain open to you.” Riha bowed slightly. “That is all one can ask for, saab. Thank you.” - - -
The drawing room had quieted. Malhotra Saab leaned back, glass swirling in hand, calm, yet his eyes held something far deeper. “You are truly the jewel of this city, Riha ji,” he said, authority and affection intertwined. “The kind people admire from afar, bow to in silence, whisper behind closed doors. A rare blessing.” Riha smiled politely, but the weight of his gaze pressed harder than his words. “But you know how it is… the brighter the jewel, the more hands try to reach for it.” His tone softened, indulgent, but every syllable lingered: Some hands caress… others snatch. Riha’s smile faltered just enough. She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear, masking sudden tightness in her chest. Malhotra leaned forward, voice dropping, private: “In Mumbai, no one disappears by accident, Riha ji. Sometimes it is choice. Sometimes… arrangement.” Words hovered, stretching into silence. He chuckled softly, leaving their weight unspoken but inescapable. When she excused herself, the sweetness of his smile followed her out the door. But so did the shadow of his warning. - - -
Outside, the night air was cool, scented faintly with jasmine from the garden. Riha inhaled deeply, hoping it would wash away the heaviness. Her heels clicked softly against marble, Kabir just behind, speaking of the next day’s schedule. She barely heard him. Malhotra Saab’s words refused to leave her. The brighter the jewel, the more hands try to reach for it. In Mumbai, no one disappears by accident. They echoed like a rhythm only she could hear. She pressed her dupatta closer, aware of the vulnerability of her skin, the cool silk beneath, diamond bracelet catching passing streetlights. For the first time in years, the city she had conquered felt less like a kingdom… and more like a cage. -- oOo --
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04-09-2025, 06:17 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-09-2025, 06:18 PM by shailu4ever. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
Scene 18 – The Private Gathering
The evening after the Malhotra dinner, Riha found herself summoned to another private gathering. The mansion was set far from the city’s noise, perched on a hilltop where the glittering lights of Mumbai looked like a fallen galaxy. The drive up passed through iron gates that opened only for the chosen few. Her car rolled forward past security that didn’t even ask for IDs — tonight, everyone belonged to the inner circle. Riha stepped out, Kabir by her side, her bouncers hanging discreetly in the shadows. She wore a deep emerald gown that flowed like water, catching the chandeliers’ glow. The silk hugged her frame just enough to remind the room that she was beauty personified, while the high neckline and elegant dbang made clear she had no need to bare herself to command attention. Her presence itself silenced conversations. The host, Minister Deshmukh, a veteran in politics with a smile too rehearsed, greeted her with folded hands. “Riha ji, Mumbai is brighter tonight.” His tone carried respect, yet something proprietary, as though her presence were a personal favor. “Namaste, Deshmukh saab,” she replied, polite but firm, lowering her eyes briefly before reclaiming her poise. Inside, the gathering was small — a dozen men in starched suits, a handful of women dbangd in couture, and a couple of foreign businessmen whose names rarely appeared in newspapers. Conversations hummed around stock markets, upcoming elections, and the film industry’s influence in shaping public mood. Every so often, someone’s eyes flickered to her. She knew the look — admiration, desire, calculation. She smiled gracefully at compliments, deflecting with precision: “Riha, if beauty could be patented, you’d bankrupt us all,” an industrialist remarked. “Good thing it can’t be patented, saab, or the world would be very poor indeed.” Laughter rose, but a few faces tightened. She had deflected without surrendering. Later, in a quieter corner, Arav Malhotra appeared. Leaning close enough for only her to hear, he murmured, “You know, Riha… in this city, beauty isn’t enough. Sometimes, to stay where you are, you must belong to someone.” Her smile didn’t falter. Sipping her wine, she said softly, “Sir, I already belong… to my work, and to the audience who made me. That’s enough for me.” Polite. Respectful. Absolute. Minister Deshmukh rejoined them with another guest, introducing Riha to Mr. Kapoor, a global tycoon. His handshake lingered a second too long, his compliment veiled with intent. “Your films travel farther than you do. Maybe someday, you should let me take you places your beauty deserves.” A faint prickling ran along her skin. The air felt heavier. She offered a light laugh, masking the alarm: “Cinema already travels everywhere, Kapoor saab. I just follow its light.” .
04-09-2025, 06:49 PM
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Inside, a quiet alarm rang. The evening continued. She smiled, conversed, dazzled — yet the polished laughter, subtle remarks, and glances suggested walls closing in. They weren’t asking. They were circling. As she turned to leave, her heels clicked softly against the polished marble. The night air met her like a cool whisper — it should have been refreshing after chandeliers and velvet voices, yet felt heavier, like a pause before a storm. Kabir guided her gently, coordinating with the driver, while her bouncers flanked her with quiet precision. Their presence, strong and steady, had always been enough. But tonight, Riha felt the invisible gaze of the world pressing harder against her back. Almost at the door, Minister Deshmukh’s voice floated after her: “Riha ji… the world you shine in… it adores you, yes. But remember — adoration is a tricky thing. The same hands that clap today can reach out tomorrow for something more.” The words landed gently, but tightened her breath. She paused, turned back with a courteous smile: “I will remember that, Deshmukh saab.” Her voice perfectly poised, even as a strange shiver rippled under her skin. He added, almost lazily, yet cutting deeper: “Of course, you’re fortunate… not everyone has such loyal people around them. The strongest chains, they say, are broken from within.” The words clung to her long after the car door shut. Leather and silence wrapped around her as the city lights blurred past. Kabir sat beside her, focused on his phone, face half-lit by its glow. All appeared steady. All seemed safe. Yet Deshmukh’s warning burrowed in like a thorn. For the first time, she looked at the faces in her own circle — the driver, Kabir, the men in the SUV — and wondered: what if the danger was not outside, but sitting right next to her? The car hummed down the quiet stretch of Peddar Road, city lights scattering like restless stars. Riha leaned back, shawl drawn tight, Deshmukh’s words still coiling in her mind: The same hands that clap today can reach out tomorrow for something more. The strongest chains are broken from within. Her gaze flicked toward Kabir. Phone in hand, calm, efficient — yet she noticed the subtle detail: he wasn’t scrolling. He was watching her, quietly, steadily. When their eyes met, he shifted instantly, thumb gliding across the screen, a faint smile in place. “Everything alright, madam?” he asked smoothly, voice warm, practiced. Riha returned the smile, though her throat tightened. “Yes, Kabir. Just a long evening.” That fraction of a second — when his gaze had lingered, unreadable — echoed louder than words. Was it nothing? A trick of glass? Nerves? Or was Deshmukh right — could shadows creep even within the circle she trusted most? Her eyes closed, rest refused her. The city rolled by, glittering and deceptive, while inside the car silence stretched like a blade. For the first time in years, Riha felt less like a star carried home safely… and more like a jewel being watched. Somewhere, in the shadows of the city she thought she commanded, a presence lingered, patient, deliberate, and unseen. And Riha, even wrapped in luxury and security, felt the first tremor of a truth she could not yet name: tonight, the game had only just begun. -- oOo --
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04-09-2025, 06:56 PM
Wow!!! Taut and gripping!!! Awesome skill you have ma'am!!
04-09-2025, 09:51 PM
Scene 19 – The Day of the Vanishing
Morning light filtered through the penthouse curtains, pale and deliberate, revealing the faint tension etched into Rhea’s sanctuary. The city hummed below, relentless as always, but here it felt distant, muted—as if holding its breath. Rhea moved with deliberate grace, bare feet silent on polished wood, anklets jingling softly. She checked the locks, the windows, the balcony doors. Every gesture was precise, a ritual she clung to when invisible threads of unease tugged at her thoughts. The memory of Minister Deshmukh’s words lingered: “The same hands that clap today can reach out tomorrow for something more… The strongest chains are broken from within.” She dressed with quiet efficiency, sliding into a tailored ensemble that commanded respect. Her hair fell in perfect waves, her skin glowing; every detail a subtle armor. Her reflection met her gaze—beauty had always been her shield. Today, it felt fragile. Her phone buzzed. A single word, anonymous: “Soon.” Rhea’s lips curved in a fraction of a smile. She set the phone down, mind cataloging possibilities. Her pulse remained steady. By mid-morning, she was moving through Mumbai, accompanied by Kabir and her security team. Cameras flashed, fans cheered, the city adored her. Yet, in every shadow, in every lingering glance, she felt the encroachment she had sensed for days. The SUV she had glimpsed before lingered somewhere in the periphery, untraceable but undeniable. Appointments, meetings, appearances—each a choreography of poise and words measured to perfection. Every conversation was a thread; every gesture, a potential trap. Evening brought her back to the penthouse. The sanctuary that had once felt invincible now seemed tinged with tension. She drew the curtains closed, shut out the city, and moved through her apartment with heightened awareness. Her thoughts circled the cryptic messages, the shadows in mirrors, the SUV. Beneath it all pulsed a singular awareness: someone was near. Patient. Calculated. Deliberate. At the balcony, the night air brushed cool against her, carrying the distant rush of waves. She drew a long, steadying breath. Then—subtle, imperceptible—a shadow flickered where none should have been. The vanishing began as a slow, unrelenting awareness. Her body reacted before her mind could fully process: a sharp intake of breath, pulse racing, eyes scanning. The apartment was empty, perfectly staged. And yet… she knew. Rhea Malhotra, accustomed to adoration, control, and power, now confronted the one uncertainty she could not master. This disappearance was not sudden. It was a declaration, a signal, a beginning. She felt it in the faint echo of movement that never fully appeared, in the tightening air, in the unnameable weight pressing at her chest. Her last thought, precise and deliberate as everything she had ever done: “They will not find me unprepared.” -- oOo --
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04-09-2025, 11:12 PM
(04-09-2025, 06:56 PM)readersp Wrote: Wow!!! Taut and gripping!!! Awesome skill you have ma'am!! Hello Sir Thank you so much! I really appreciate your kind words and encouragement. It means a lot to hear that the story kept you engaged. As you know I’m still learning, so feedback like this truly motivates me to keep improving. Thank you once again for your continued support. With warm regards -- Shailu
04-09-2025, 11:15 PM
Scene 20 – Vanishing Day: The Arrival
The city pulsed beneath her like a living organism, Mumbai, restless, glittering, impatient. Through the tinted windows of the black Maybach, Rhea Malhotra watched streaks of neon and amber blur past, reflecting off wet asphalt, each light a heartbeat she counted in silence. The driver guided the car with precise, measured skill, hands steady on the wheel, eyes trained on the road, but Rhea’s attention was elsewhere. Kabir sat beside her, quiet, composed, a shadow of vigilance. Security, manager, confidant, he was all that and more, yet tonight, even his calm carried weight. Every subtle shift of his gaze, every barely perceptible movement, was attuned to her, a silent promise that nothing would go wrong, or that he would at least try. The engine hummed like a restrained predator, a low vibration that matched her own controlled breath. Tonight, everything had to unfold flawlessly. Every gaze, every whisper, every flash of a camera needed to land exactly where she intended, or vanish from memory altogether. Her fingers brushed the emerald silk of her gown resting across her lap. The fabric shimmered even in the dim interior of the car, flowing like liquid, alive under the faint overhead light. She had rehearsed the steps in her mind: the glide of her heels, the lift of her chin, the subtle, calculated smile that would say everything to the right people and nothing to the wrong ones. The city’s noise faded behind the tinted glass, replaced by the soft hum of tires and distant horns. She closed her eyes for a heartbeat, savoring the stillness, the control. Everything is aligned. Everything is ready. ---
The Maybach rolled to a gentle halt at the foot of The Grand Imperial Hotel. The red carpet stretched ahead like molten velvet, bordered by spotlights that painted the night in gold and white. Fans pressed against barricades, their faces illuminated by the glow of anticipation. Cameras raised, flashes ready, all waiting. Rhea moved first, one foot in a silver stiletto, sharp and commanding. The emerald gown followed, cascading down her legs like molten silk, catching every flash from the relentless photographers. A faint shiver ran through her, not fear, but the acute awareness of every eye and lens focused on her. The world was ready to consume her, yet she remained untouchable. Kabir fell slightly behind her, a silent sentinel. He was there, always there, ever watchful, but he did not lead, did not guide. She led herself, every movement deliberate, every gesture a quiet command of the space around her. Her hand rested lightly on the car door for balance, the diamond cuff catching the light, scattering sparks into the night. With slow, deliberate grace, she stepped onto the red carpet, heels clicking against polished surface, the rhythm echoing faintly, drawing attention without effort. Cameras fired in a frenzy, yet her gaze remained calm, scanning, calculating. A single breeze lifted the silk near her shoulder; she let it fall, a whisper of motion hypnotic to those who caught it. The crowd murmured, some forgetting to cheer, caught in the subtle spell she wove. Every step was measured, precise, magnetic. She did not walk; she commanded the moment, bending it subtly, reshaping it with her presence alone. As she approached the Grand Imperial doors, anticipation coiled in her chest like a living thing. The flashes tried to trap her, the gazes tried to hold her, but she knew what they could not. Tonight, the unseen would claim her before the applause reached its peak. She lifted her chin, allowed a soft, unreadable smile to curve her lips. Every heartbeat, every flicker of light, every rustle of silk was part of the choreography she alone understood. The Grand Imperial waited, the city waited, but she was already elsewhere, in mind and in intent, beyond expectation. -- oOo --
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05-09-2025, 12:14 AM
05-09-2025, 01:08 AM
Scene 21 – Vanishing Day: Grand Podium Arrival
The Grand Imperial Ballroom shimmered like molten gold. Chandeliers fractured the light across marble floors. Rhea inhaled, tasting the faint mix of jasmine, rosewater, and her own perfume, a signature she had worn to every red-carpet event, now part of the night itself. Kabir was at her side, alert, steady, an anchor she had trusted for years. Her driver had already blended into the shadows, unseen but reliable, leaving her free to step into the world she had mastered. She began walking along the red carpet, heels clicking softly, a rhythm measured and confident. Cameras pivoted, whispers floated, yet her attention was partly elsewhere. What did the producer mean yesterday, “She’ll need to make a choice soon”? Arav’s words… The faint echo of conversations from the last few days threaded through her mind, lingering like distant thunder, unsettling only because it reminded her that not everyone played by the same rules. Still, she greeted those closest with warmth and precision. Rajiv Mehta, the oil tycoon, straightened as she approached; her hand rested lightly on his as she offered a brief nod. “He’s still thinking about last week’s proposal… careful, careful.” A soft smile, enough to acknowledge him, no more. Two politicians from rival parties exchanged glances as she passed, each sensing her subtle command. A nod here, a quick word there, she left them wondering what thoughts flickered across her unreadable expression. Her emerald gown flowed like liquid silk, every fold catching the light. Each movement was deliberate: the sway of her hips, the lift of her chin, the subtle, controlled grace of her hands. Dev Khanna, the actor, caught her gaze. Their eyes met for a heartbeat, a silent acknowledgment of force and elegance; no words needed. In that instant, the crowd’s attention felt irrelevant, and yet her orbit carried them all. She paused briefly to exchange a few quiet words with a director, recalling a remark from days prior: “Trust the script, trust the timing… not everything is as it seems.” She nodded subtly, outwardly polite, inwardly absorbing lessons she had learned the hard way, the delicate interplay of perception and reality. Every brush of her sleeve, every handshake, every faint lift of a chin was part of the dance she had rehearsed for years. Yet beneath the ease of public performance, she carried the subtle residue of caution, memories and warnings collected from the last few days, threading through her mind like a soft pulse. Nothing she could name, nothing she could act on, just awareness, the kind that comes from knowing the world watches, waits, and calculates. The Grand Podium loomed ahead, polished wood gleaming under the spotlight. She drew in a measured breath, feeling the faint vibration under her heels, subtle and almost imperceptible. Not danger. Not yet. Just… displacement, a reminder that the night might not unfold entirely on familiar terms. She stepped forward, palms occasionally brushing guests’ hands, her smile perfect but unreadable, eyes briefly flicking to her surroundings without locking on any one face. Cameras flashed; whispers trailed her. Her inner voice counted the steps in rhythm with her heels, reviewing lessons, reflections, fragments of advice and caution: “Control perception. Know your path. Do not underestimate the invisible.” At the microphone, she rested her hands lightly on the podium, pausing just long enough to center herself. Her voice flowed calm, warm, controlled: “Good evening. It’s a strange thing, standing here… about to hand an award to someone whose work I grew up watching… while wondering if I’ve grown up at all.” A ripple of laughter met her words, soft, fleeting. She let it settle before continuing: “Life is a journey of becoming, and unbecoming. We spend our days chasing dreams, only to find the path we thought we were following leads us to a version of ourselves we never imagined. That’s the magic of this industry: it allows us to rise, to be reborn, again and again.” Even in her controlled delivery, a fractional awareness prickled, a subtle shift in the air, a whisper of something slightly off, but she dismissed it. Tonight, she was here to command, to exist fully in the moment. The Grand Podium, the crowd, the lights: all were hers to navigate. And yet, in the quiet rhythm of her own breath, a tiny, unnamable tension lingered, the faintest hint that this night might not entirely belong to her. -- oOo --
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05-09-2025, 07:02 PM
Scene 22 – Between Light and Shadow
The applause washed over her like thunder, endless and expectant, ricocheting off the chandeliers and gilded arches. Flashes burst across the auditorium, each one freezing her in fragments of light, perfect smile, emerald silk, diamond cuff scattering prisms. Rhea stood steady at the Grand Podium, her heart rate calm, her breath measured. To anyone watching, she was the image of serenity. But inside, she was listening, not to the applause, not to the host fumbling beside her, but to the timing of the stage itself. She knew exactly what was coming. The rehearsals had drilled it into her. Step here. Hold there. Do not react when the darkness falls. Trust the rigging. Trust the crew. Trust the illusion. Her right heel shifted half an inch onto the hidden mark etched in the stage floor, invisible to the audience. The faintest gleam of silver tape caught her eye, a beacon only she was trained to notice. From the wings, a crew member’s hand flicked up in confirmation. Her cue. She inhaled once, slow and deliberate. And then, the blackout. The world collapsed into darkness so sudden it pulled gasps from hundreds of throats. A woman shrieked in the balcony. Phones slipped from hands. Cameras clicked blindly, their flashes wasted against nothing. But Rhea did not move. She did not tremble. From above, the platform descended silently, a square of shadow breaking loose from the rafters. She stepped backward, smooth, practiced, onto the platform as it met the soles of her heels with mechanical precision. A hiss of hydraulics whispered through the dark. A second later, she was rising, drawn upward into the rafters, the velvet dbangs swallowing her whole. The air shifted as she ascended. The scent of dust and hot lights replaced the perfume-soaked air of the auditorium. Below her, the crowd was nothing but a restless sea of noise, whispers clashing with disbelief. To them, she had vanished. To her, this was choreography. Then, the lights returned. A collective gasp tore through the audience. From their perspective, the Grand Podium stood empty. The host blinked under the glare, his smile faltering. The veteran actor frowned, his gaze darting side to side. Everywhere, faces turned, searching, disbelieving. Cameras fired in desperation, capturing only the emptiness where she had stood seconds before. “Where is she?” someone whispered loudly enough to echo. “She was right there!” Chaos rippled, but Rhea remained untouched. Up above, suspended in shadow, she adjusted her posture on the narrow platform. A stagehand in black moved toward her silently, his expression unreadable in the dark. From his hands gleamed the golden statuette. “Here,” he whispered, steady and professional. She accepted it with both hands. The award was cold, heavier than expected, the polished surface slick beneath her grip. She centered it against her torso, gown arranged flawlessly around it. No rush. No fear. This was part of the act. The blackout struck again. The sound of the crowd below swelled into panic, screams, chairs scbanging, a child crying out. But for Rhea, this was merely the return. The platform lowered smoothly, carrying her down through the dark. Her heels touched the stage floor softly, right on her mark. She stepped forward, just as the platform retracted upward, vanishing back into the rafters. And then, the lights came roaring back. Gasps turned to wild, unrestrained cheers. The crowd erupted in hysteria, the disbelief breaking into awe. Cameras flashed with such intensity the stage was bathed in constant strobe. People leapt to their feet, shouting, clapping, some even crying. Rhea stood tall, flawless, the emerald silk glowing as though lit from within. And in her hands, the statuette gleamed, undeniable proof that she had returned with something that had not been there before. She lifted it effortlessly, her smile luminous, perfectly timed. Her voice rang steady, deep, resonant: “They say cinema is about illusion. That it makes us see what isn’t there… and forget what is. But tonight, tonight we are not watching an illusion. We are witnessing a truth. A truth written in light, in time, in legacy.” The hall trembled with applause, the frenzy crashing like waves against her control. She had them. Every camera, every breath, every heartbeat belonged to her. And yet… Somewhere beneath the boards, a vibration stirred. Soft at first, almost imagined. A faint hum that pulsed through the soles of her shoes. It didn’t belong to the hydraulics, nor the rigging, nor the careful machinery of stagecraft she had trusted all evening. This was different. Organic. Uneven. For the first time that night, a sliver of unease pressed at her composure. But she did not falter. She let the crowd devour the moment, her every gesture flawless, her every pause measured. They saw magic. They saw mastery. Only she felt the faint tremor beneath the stage, like a second heartbeat rising to meet her own. -- oOo --
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05-09-2025, 11:20 PM
Scene 23 – The Second Cue
The applause was still rolling through the hall like waves against a shore when the lights flickered once again. Rhea’s eyes lifted subtly, her practiced instinct kicking in. Another cue. Her mind raced, but only in the disciplined rhythm she had trained into herself. Strange. They’ve already done the illusion. The statue has already been handed over. Why another blackout? A fleeting thought passed through her: Perhaps an encore? Perhaps the organizers want to heighten the drama, extend the magic of the night? Her face betrayed nothing. She smiled as if she were still basking in the afterglow of applause, her heels pivoting gracefully as she slipped back toward the exact mark on the stage. Only she and the crew knew it. The tiny circle of tape was invisible to the audience, but her eyes found it instantly, her body aligning with it as naturally as breathing. The blackout came. Perfectly on time. Her heart remained steady. She stepped forward, onto the platform that had risen beneath her before, the mechanism groaning softly, just audible beneath the hush of the darkened hall. She placed her weight fully, confident, every motion smooth and deliberate. And then, up. The familiar lurch of the rig pulling her into the shadows above the stage. She bent slightly, keeping balance as she had rehearsed countless times in other illusions. The audience would be gasping now, murmuring in disbelief, their wonder filling the dark void like thunder. But something was off. The ascent slowed, jerkier, less precise than before. A faint tremor shivered through the platform, not the usual glide but a hesitant, uneven pull. Her brows furrowed, invisible in the darkness. Maintenance issue? No… this isn’t how Kabir’s team operates. She smelled it then. Not the faint metallic tang of cables and grease she had grown used to, but something else, sweet, cloying, almost floral. It drifted around her in the enclosed space above the rig, subtle at first, then thickening, coating her throat. Her breath hitched. She coughed softly. The sweetness invaded, filling her lungs with every inhale. Her training told her to move, to resist, to call out, but her body betrayed her. Limbs heavy, head spinning, the edges of her vision blurring. The applause below had become a muffled drone, distant and warped, as if she were underwater. Hands. Not the usual gloved, careful stagehands who had practiced this with her. These were rougher, firmer, unhesitant. They steadied her against the platform, but not with the caution of colleagues, they gripped her, purposeful, possessive. Her lips parted, words struggling to escape. “Wait, this isn’t, ” The world tilted. Darkness thickened. The sweetness pressed harder against her senses. And then, with one last shallow breath, she felt herself slipping. The cue had come. But this time, it wasn’t her team waiting in the shadows. This time, the trick was no illusion. And as the lights blazed back on the stage below, Rhea Malhotra was already gone. -- oOo --
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05-09-2025, 11:59 PM
Scene 24 – The Journey into Darkness
Rhea drifted between consciousness and shadow, her mind foggy, her body light, almost as if suspended in water. Shapes passed around her, muted and indistinct. She felt herself being moved, gently, but with an unyielding purpose. Each shift of the vehicle beneath her sent a soft vibration through her bones, the rhythm oddly calming, like a heartbeat echoing in a cavern of silence. A faint chanting reached her ears, low and reverent, echoing softly around the space. The words were indistinct, but their tone carried weight and solemnity, like an unseen ritual unfolding in deliberate order. Along with it came a subtle, fragrant waft, the heady, sweet aroma of incense curling into her senses, mingling with the faint warmth of sandalwood and a hint of crushed flowers. Her chest rose and fell with each inhale, the scent anchoring her somewhere between dream and reality. Her eyelids fluttered. She caught a glimpse of figures in saffron robes, moving slowly and deliberately, their movements synchronized, hands folded or gesturing with calm authority. The dim light glimmered off the folds of their robes, illuminating the lines of care and ritual etched into their presence. The world was muted, filtered through the haze of her half-conscious mind, yet the air hummed with a solemn energy, each breath a quiet pulse that guided her through the darkness. A gentle voice broke through, soft but firm: “She’s waking,” one of them whispered. Her eyes cracked open. Light flooded in, soft, golden, almost holy, refracted through curling incense smoke that danced like liquid gold. She tried to lift her hand, to speak, but her body felt light, detached, as though responding to some unseen current. Every sound, the rustle of fabric, the soft footfalls of the saffron-robed figures, was amplified, each note echoing in her chest like a careful drumbeat. And then she smelled it again, the sweet, floral scent, stronger now, curling through the room and sinking into her lungs. It was the same aroma that had clouded her senses earlier, enveloping her, almost tangible in its weight. Her head tipped back, vision narrowing, and before she could even register the sensation fully, the darkness swept over her once more. Her body went limp, and the world dissolved into silence, shadows, and drifting incense. She was safely cradled, the saffron-robed figures moving with the precision of guardians, carrying her deeper into the unknown. Her ears caught the faint clink of metal, perhaps chains, pulleys, or the rigging of some hidden contraption, but their movements were smooth, measured, unhurried, almost ritualistic. The journey felt endless, yet secure, each step guided by invisible hands. The last image lingering in her mind was of folded hands, gentle chanting, and the curl of fragrant smoke, a strange comfort mingled with fear, before unconsciousness claimed her completely. Somewhere in the shadows, figures waited, still, silent, and patient, guardians of a world she did not yet see, yet whose eyes glimmered with purpose in the soft glow of the sacred space. And in that final moment, a calm reassurance washed over her, a subtle, unseen presence that felt protective and unbreakable. Despite the uncertainty and darkness, Rhea sensed she was safe, secure, And watched over by beings whose intentions were deliberate, yet gentle, a fragile, sacred trust in the midst of a journey that had only just begun. -- oOo --
06-09-2025, 12:07 AM
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End of Chapter 1 – The Red Carpet Vanishing
~~~~ oOo ~~~~
08-09-2025, 09:13 AM
Feeling Let Down
I just returned from traveling from India to the US today (Sunday), and finally logged back into this site. What I found was honestly frustrating, no interaction in this thread, no acknowledgment of the updates I’ve been sharing. It makes me wonder: does anyone even care about this story anymore? If it doesn’t matter to you, I can stop and put my energy somewhere else. Engagement once made this space vibrant... now it feels like I’m just posting into a void. If this community still values the effort I’ve put into this story, it’s time to actually show it. Otherwise, I need to rethink whether this story even belongs here. Thank you to everyone who offered encouragement in the beginning. But now, it feels cold and empty. With great disappointment, -- Shailu |
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