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(CHAPTER CONTD)
The directive came down like a quiet shift in doctrine—but everyone at Nal Air Force Station felt its weight immediately. Air Force cadets would now undergo commando training. Not optional. Not experimental. Institutional.
The future of the Garud Commando Force would be shaped from within the Air Force itself. And that meant one thing—Hemant and Dan were no longer just operators. They were instructors. The first day on the training ground was brutal. Not because the cadets were weak—they weren’t. They were already disciplined, already sharp. Pilots and engineers trained to operate under pressure. But this—This was different. This was weight. Recoil. Sweat. Close-quarters instinct.
"Again!" Dan barked, watching a group struggle with weapon transitions.
"You hesitate—you die. Simple math"
Hemant, meanwhile, stood at the gun range, overseeing the heavy weapons module. His presence was quieter, but no less intense.
"Control the weapon, don’t fight it. Let it move with you" he told one cadet calmly.
Then she stepped up. Kirti. She approached the station assigned to her—a heavy platform-mounted M16 rifle modified for sustained fire drills. Even for trained personnel, it demanded strength and control. She gripped it. Fired. The recoil pushed her stance off balance. She reset. Tried again. Same result. A flicker of frustration crossed her face. Hemant noticed. He walked over.
"Shift your footing, you’re absorbing the recoil wrong" he said, stepping beside her.
She glanced at him briefly.
"Show me"
He adjusted her stance—subtle, precise. One hand guiding the weapon alignment, the other correcting shoulder placement.
"Lock here...Not here" he said.
She followed. Fired again. Better. Still not perfect—but controlled.
"Okay… that helped" She exhaled slightly.
Before the moment could settle—
"Hey, Kirti"
The voice cut in smoothly. Vishal Agnihotri stepped in, confident as ever.
"Let me, You’re overthinking it" he said, already moving closer.
Hemant stepped back without a word. Vishal positioned himself behind her, hands guiding hers more directly.
“Relax your shoulders, You’re tensing up" he said.
Kirti didn’t object. She let him. They fired again. This time smoother. And she smiled. That didn’t go unnoticed. Hemant turned away. No reaction. No expression. He moved to the next cadet, continuing instruction like nothing had happened. But he saw it. All of it. The days that followed only reinforced it. Training sessions. Briefings. Downtime near the hangars. Vishal and Kirti—together more often than not. Talking. Laughing. Flying. There was ease between them. Familiarity growing.
And every time Kirti smiled—Hemant noticed. He never lingered. Never interfered. But he noticed. Duty became his shield. If there was work, he buried himself in it. Weapons drills. Tactical simulations. Engineering support. Anything to keep his mind occupied. Because when it wasn’t—It drifted. To things he didn’t want to confront. Then came the next turn. A call from General Bakshi.
Hemant and Dan stood in the briefing room, listening.
"You’ve been selected, Garuda Task Force will be deployed next month for a special UN charter peace keeping operations at Congo!"
Bakshi said, voice steady. Dan’s eyes lit up slightly.
"We’re going global" Dan couldn’t help it.
Hemant didn’t smile. Instead—
"Peacekeeping operations aren’t clean" he said quietly.
"Exactly" Bakshi nodded once.
The room fell silent. Because they both understood—This wasn’t escalation. This was exposure. New terrain. New enemies. Unknown rules. That night, the base buzzed quietly with the news.
"UN mission, yaar. That’s next level" Dan was still energized.
"Also next level danger" Hemant leaned against the railing, eyes distant.
"When has that stopped us?" Dan shrugged.
Hemant didn’t answer. Because something else was occupying his thoughts. The next morning—Sorties. Hemant stood near the runway, watching the sky. Two aircraft cut across the horizon—An Su-30 and a MiG-29. Victor and Kira. They danced in the air—maneuvers sharp, aggressive. Competitive. Alive. And once again—Kirti edged ahead.
Despite the disadvantage.Despite the odds. She outflew him. Clean. Precise. Hemant watched as the jets descended. And when they landed—He saw it. Vishal laughing. Kirti smiling back. That same smile. And this time—It hit differently. Not sharp. Not sudden. Just… there. Persistent. Unwelcome. He turned away. Again.
Days later—Hemant was called to the visitor deck. Unusual. He wasn’t expecting anyone. As he stepped in—He stopped. The man from Ladakh. Broad-shouldered. Calm. Wearing that same easy confidence. And those shades. The man smiled.
"Good to see you again, Commander"
"I've seen you in Ladakh" Hemant’s eyes narrowed slightly.
The man stepped forward, extending a hand.
"Name’s William J Irons. But you can call me Will"
Hemant didn’t take the hand immediately.
"Lets just say I was once a soldier like you. Just from another country. Former Marine to be exact"
Will added casually. That explained the posture. The presence.
"What do you want?" Hemant finally shook his hand.
"Straight to it. I like that" Will smiled faintly.
A pause.
"I know what you did in Bogdang"
That got his attention.
"More importantly, I also know you haven’t stopped thinking about it" Will continued,
Hemant said nothing. Because he hadn’t. Will reached into his pocket. Pulled out a small photograph. Placed it on the table. Hemant looked. The symbol. That same blue marking. His jaw tightened.
"You’ve seen this" Will said.
Not a question. A fact.
"Satan!" Hemant’s voice dropped.
Will leaned in slightly.
"We’ve been tracking it. Long before you stumbled onto it. So lets make it clear , whatever you're doubts are , its true. There is a larger set of players behind this operation. But this is way beyond your army paycheck. But like it or not , your actions in the military camp has brought you in their radar. Which is why I believe you will be more than willing to accept the offer I am giving you"
Global. Structured. Hidden. Hemant felt it again—that pull from Bogdang. That unfinished thread.
"You want answers" Will said quietly.
Hemant met his gaze.
"Yes"
Will smiled.
"Then I can give them to you"
Silence. Then—
"What’s the catch?" Hemant asked.
Because there’s always one. Will didn’t hesitate.
"You work with us"
A beat.
"Covert operations. Off the books. No chains. No bureaucracy"
Another step closer.
"You won’t be kept in the dark anymore. But you will become Darkness itself!"
The words landed deeper than expected.
"And in return?" Hemant asked.
Will’s voice dropped.
"You get closure. Something tells me this is the kind of things you prefer. A job where no one questions you , no one controls you. You get to do the right thing without anyone putting a leash!"
He tapped the photograph.
"So lets find out whats you're made of. Lets do some covert collaborations and see your talent and then we can make it permanent. What do you say? Ready for the new world order?"
A long pause. This was it. A line. Duty on one side. Truth on the other. Hemant didn’t hesitate.
"I’m in"
That evening—Dan listened. Every word. Every detail.
"And you just said yes?" he asked, stunned.
Hemant nodded.
"I had to"
"Or you wanted to?" Dan paced slightly.
A beat. Then—
"Is this about that symbol… or about escaping this place?" Dan asked carefully.
Hemant didn’t respond immediately. Because the question hit closer than expected.
"Or maybe, it’s about her" Dan added
Silence. Then—Hemant exhaled.
"…Partly"
He didn’t deny it.
"You’re unbelievable" Dan shook his head slowly.
Hemant looked up.
"Not everything you desire can be achieved , but this is something I know I can control and it only needs my consent. The life of adventure and on the edge? its calling to me!"
He said. His voice steadied.
"And this is my calling" he gestured vaguely beyond the base, beyond everything—A pause.
"The edge" Dan studied him.
"You think this is your path?"
"Yeah" Hemant nodded.
Quiet. Certain.
"Something tells me… this is where I’m supposed to go"
NAL Air Base had changed.
What was once a disciplined, predictable Air Force base had slowly transformed into something far more intense ever since the Garud commando training program began. At Nal Air Force Station, a new training yard had been carved out—ropes, obstacle rigs, firing pits, and endurance circuits replacing the quiet routines of cadet life. The air now carried the constant rhythm of boots hitting dirt, commands being shouted, and bodies being pushed past their limits.
The cadets adapted faster than expected.
They were already trained to handle pressure in the skies; now they were learning to survive on the ground. Bonds began to form in this new crucible—shared exhaustion, shared bruises, shared victories. Among them, Kirti seemed to thrive the most. There was something about this raw, physical challenge that suited her. She moved through the exercises with a quiet determination, pushing herself without complaint, embracing the grind rather than resisting it.
Vishal, on the other hand, struggled—but not in a way he would ever admit openly. The physical strain frustrated him, the loss of dominance irritated him, yet he showed up every single day with the same drive. Not for the training.
For her.
Hemant noticed.
From a distance, from the sidelines, from moments in between instruction—he saw the conversations, the shared glances, the easy laughter that now came more naturally between Kirti and Vishal. It wasn’t forced anymore. It was becoming something real.
One evening, as the cadets wrapped up a grueling drill, Hemant stood watching them disperse, his expression unreadable. That was when Rani walked up beside him, wiping grease from her hands with a cloth.
"You know, you never really had a chance" she said casually, following his line of sight,
"Didn’t know it was a competition" Hemant didn’t look at her.
"Everything is. You just don’t always realize it in time" Rani gave a faint smirk.
"They’re… similar. Same world, same upbringing. Defense families. Expectations. Pressure. People like them—they understand each other without needing to explain"
She leaned against the railing, her tone softening slightly. A pause.
"People like us? We’re just spokes on the wheel. We keep things moving, but we’re not the center"
She added quietly. That made Hemant turn. There was no irritation in his expression—only clarity.
“You might be right about the differences, But I’m not here to be just a spoke in the wheel"
He said. Rani raised an eyebrow. Hemant’s voice remained calm, but there was something firm beneath it.
"I intend to be the whole machine"
That lingered.
Rani studied him for a moment, something like intrigue replacing her earlier certainty. Then she gave a small nod, almost impressed, and pushed herself off the railing.
"Well, I am curious on how this machine works from the rest!" she said,
Hemant didn’t reply. He simply turned back to the field and resumed training the cadets, his focus sharper than before. A few days later, something else shifted.
Will returned. Hemant was called again, this time with less surprise but far more anticipation. When he reached the designated meeting area, Will stood waiting, as composed as ever.
"This is where things get real" Will said without preamble.
"They already are" Hemant crossed his arms slightly.
"Not yet" Will smirked faintly.
There was a pause before he continued.
'I told you who I was , now its time you knew who I am. And most importantly , what you are going to be a part of"
Will said. Hemant said nothing, but his attention sharpened.
"We’re called SENTINEL" Will revealed.
"A global military initiative operating under a special United Nations Security Council charter. Off-the-record operations. No bureaucracy. No delays. We handle threats the system can’t—or won’t—deal with. We operate outside the proper chain of command"
He stepped closer.
"Our purpose is simple. Eliminate the bad guys. Maintain global order of things and reduce the cause of chaos"
The weight of those words wasn’t lost on Hemant.
“And now, about your initiation" Will added.
"Understand this commander" Will confirmed.
"If you perform the way I think you will… doors will open for you. Not just here. Everywhere. You won’t be another soldier waiting for orders—you’ll be someone the system depends on"
Hemant considered that for a moment. Then spoke.
"I am ready for it but on one condition"
"Go on" Will tilted his head slightly.
"Dan comes with me"
There was hesitation this time. Will studied him, weighing the request.
"He’s not part of the selection" Will said.
"He’s part of me, If I’m in, he’s in" Hemant replied evenly.
A longer pause followed. Then Will exhaled.
"Fine. Dan will be part of our initial cordination missions with the GTF , but let me be clear , he will not be part of the Sentinel unit , because we're interested in only you. His responsibility in these missions is on you"
"It always is" Hemant said.
Will nodded once and shifted the conversation.
"Three days ago" he began.
"A Chechnyan separatist group hijacked an oil rig in the Chukchi Sea—right between Alaska and Russia"
Hemant listened carefully.
"On the surface, it looks like a political disruption, but intelligence suggests something deeper. They’re trying to create a choke point on Russian oil production. Force instability. Push decisions that could ripple globally"
Will continued.
"Their trying to stir the russian population with a manufactured crisis!" Hemant said.
"Precisely" Will agreed.
He leaned in slightly.
"And if it escalates…the consequences will be catastrophic!"
"So what’s the plan?" Hemant nodded once.
Will’s expression sharpened.
"SENTINEL inserts a strike team Zebra One to assault the base through an underwater approach. Silent. We take the rig back and neutralize the terror targets and neutralize the hostility"
"Underwater insertion into an active rig? Is that even possible in this day and age?"
Hemant frowned slightly. Will smiled.
"Well...it is now!"
A beat.
"We’re deploying the USS Virginia. The first of its kind Stealth Submarine designed by the United States. On paper , it is meant to be revealed on the October of this year , but our Operation will be its first unofficial naval campaign"
Hemant’s eyes narrowed slightly. That changed the scale of things.
"Custom tools, advanced grappling systems, silent ascent gear. In many ways , this operation will change the warfare you've experienced till now!"
Will added. Hemant absorbed it all. This wasn’t just a mission. This was a statement.
"You can brief what I have just said to Dan yourself. Be ready , I'll let you know once I've setup your travel arrangements"
Will said finally.
That evening, Hemant found Dan in their quarters. He didn’t ease into it. He told him everything. SENTINEL. The mission. The stealth submarine. The oil rig. Dan stared at him for a long moment.
"…You’re serious?"
"Completely"
"This isn’t just another op, Hemant. This is—this is global"
Dan ran a hand through his hair, pacing slightly.
"I know"
"And you already agreed?"
"I had to"
"Or you wanted to" Dan stopped pacing, looking at him carefully.
Hemant didn’t deny it. There was a brief silence before Dan let out a breath and shook his head.
"You remember what I told you?" he said.
"About being stuck with you in this life?"
Hemant gave a faint nod.
"Well… guess I meant it" Dan smirked slightly.
The tension eased just a bit. Excitement began to creep in.
"We’re really doing this?" Dan asked.
"Arctic waters…..covert global op....….oil rig…"
Hemant’s expression hardened slightly.
"Don’t romanticize it" he said.
"What we’re walking into… makes everything we’ve faced so far look small"
Dan held his gaze. Then nodded.
"Good, after all , that is what's living on the edge is all about!" he said.
A pause. And for the first time since Will’s proposal—Hemant allowed himself the smallest hint of a smile.
(TO BE CONTD)
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
The call to New Delhi came sooner than expected. Within a day, Hemant and Dan were flown out from Nal Air Force Station to report directly to higher command. The shift in environment was immediate—desert silence replaced by the controlled intensity of a military complex where decisions carried national weight. Neither of them spoke much on the way in; both understood this wasn’t just another briefing. This was about consequences.
Inside the office, General Bakshi listened without interruption as Hemant laid out the mission parameters from SENTINEL. The general’s expression remained steady, but there was a visible tension in his posture that hadn’t been there before. When Hemant finished, Bakshi leaned back slightly and took a moment before responding.
"I’ll be honest" Bakshi said, his tone measured.
"I don’t like this. Not the location, not the timing"
Dan shifted slightly but stayed quiet.
"Russia is one of our closest allies" Bakshi continued.
"Any operation involving our men with the Americans in their soil—even indirectly—can turn sensitive very quickly. If something goes wrong, it won’t just be about a failed mission. It becomes a diplomatic problem"
"Its not just America sir , this unit features operators from many countries" Hemant nodded.
"But they are using an American Submarine , if things go wrong guess who will be blamed"
"I understand sir" Hemant accepted his concern.
Bakshi looked directly at him.
"Then you also understand why I’m hesitant to send two of my men into something like this without a clear line of accountability"
Hemant chose his words carefully.
"Sir, our Indian identities won't matter. SENTINEL handles the operation. So , we'll be treated as their operators"
Bakshi gave a short, almost skeptical exhale.
"That’s exactly what worries me. The moment you step out under their banner, you’re on your own"
There was a brief silence before he added, more firmly,
"If this goes south, the government will not step in. Officially, you won’t exist in that situation"
Dan glanced at Hemant, but Hemant didn’t hesitate.
"I see your concern sir. But desperate times call for desperate measures , they chose us because we are familiar with the mission they are conducting. Right now , those oilrig workers need rescue , and India cannot be involved unless diplomatically"
He said.
Bakshi studied him for a few seconds, as if weighing more than just the mission itself. Then he nodded once.
"Sometimes you really surprise me Hemant. Alright, the reason I am agreeing for this arrangement is because SENTINEL is willing to share intel and techs to us and our interests as a favor for both of your roles. I am fully confident in both of you boys. Be careful though , because this is different from the threats you have faced before"
He said.
"Yes, sir"
The meeting ended there. No ceremony, no reassurance—just an understanding of risk. Outside the office, the two of them walked in silence for a while before Dan finally spoke.
"Well… that was encouraging" he muttered.
"He said yes. That’s what matters" Hemant gave a faint smile.
"Yeah. It just feels different this time" Dan nodded, though the weight of it was still settling in.
"It is" Hemant replied.
They split soon after, each heading in different directions within the complex to complete formalities before departure. Hemant moved through one of the corridors, his thoughts still partly on the mission, when he noticed a familiar face at the far end. He slowed down. The man stood speaking to another officer—composed, authoritative, someone who carried respect without needing to demand it.
Viren Raghuvanshi.
Hemant had only seen photographs ever since he learned he was Kirti's father, but there was no mistaking him. For a moment, he considered just walking past. It would’ve been easier. But something held him there.
Then he stepped forward.
"Sir" Hemant said politely.
"Yes?" Viren turned, slightly surprised at being addressed by someone he didn’t recognize.
"I’m Hemant Kumar" he said.
“I’m stationed at Nal Air Base.”
"A soldier stationed in an Air Base?" Viren’s expression shifted just a bit.
"Part of a special protective detail sir!"
"I am guessing you know my daughter"
"Yes, sir. I do. Wing Commander Kirti Raghuvanshi. We've met" Hemant nodded.
There was a pause, and Viren studied him more closely now.
"And you wanted to speak to me about…?"
Hemant hesitated for the first time that day. This wasn’t a battlefield, but it felt just as uncertain. Still, he had made up his mind.
"Sir, I’ll be direct" he said.
"I've been noticing her for months. And she is a formidable woman , she carries every difficuilties and hurdles with grace and faces challenges with a confidence I've never seen before. She is an inspiration for every young girl and woman who are seeking to serve the country. Which is a pretty longer way to say that....."
Viren braced as Hemant finished his sentence.
"I have....feelings...for Kirti"
Viren didn’t react immediately, but the surprise was clear.
"I haven’t told her" Hemant continued.
"And honestly I don't know how. But since I saw you here I felt the need to tell this truth to you because....."
He took a breath before going on.
"Because I felt that if I ever had to say this, it should be to you first. Because it’s not just about two people. It’s about families too. A union between two people is not just between them , but also their families."
Viren’s gaze didn’t soften, but it didn’t harden either. He was listening.
"I don’t come from an illustrous background like yours" Hemant said honestly.
"No influence, no legacy. I grew up in a small town in Kerala. My parents were farmers. Everything I am today, I’ve built it with total dedication and hardwork"
He paused briefly.
"When it comes to the field , I push myself to be the absolute best!"
Another pause.
"Which is one of the reason why I admire and respect her. I see my same level of dedication and focus she has on her own service. In a way I find compatibility between us. So its not just a fling or a spur of the moment. My feelings for her is genuine. That’s all I wanted you to know"
For a few seconds, there was no response. Then Viren exhaled slowly.
"That’s… not something I expected to hear today" he admitted.
"I understand, sir. I just wanted you to know that when it comes to a bond between two people , sometimes it also involves both the person's families. So through admiring Kirti , I admire you and the legacy she represents"
Viren looked at him more carefully now, not as a stranger—but as someone worth evaluating.
"You should talk to her" he asked.
"I can't"
"Why not?"
"Because I don’t know how? Even though I had relations in the past but when it comes to love , I am quite vulnerable and weak in expressing it"
Hemant answered honestly. That answer lingered. Viren gave a small nod, as if acknowledging the thought behind it, even if he wasn’t fully convinced.
"Hemant , in my experience , I always expected men of your age to be bold and daring , and never to be bothered with the woman's family. But you are different , the fact that you confessed your feelings to me before telling her is quiet commendable. But at the same time , when it comes to love , you have to take the hard steps. And here hard steps means telling her. I cannot have an opinion about your love and feelings , the opinion that matters is of Kirti's. So tell her your truth and find out whether she is willing to accept your feelings. Then I will come in the picture!"
He said finally. It wasn’t approval. But it wasn’t dismissal either.And for Hemant, that was enough.
Later that day, Viren found himself sitting across from General Bakshi. The two men greeted each other like old colleagues, the conversation beginning with familiar ground—shared postings, old operations, names that only they seemed to remember. After a while, Viren leaned back slightly and said.
"I met one of your men today. Hemant Kumar"
"You would’ve eventually" Bakshi gave a faint smile.
"He didn’t say much about his work" Viren raised an eyebrow.
"Well , its because its a freshly made Task Force with not a full on discrete role so chain of command has dictated the designation classified"
Bakshi replied.
"So I’ll ask you" Viren said.
"Who is he?"
Bakshi was quiet for a moment before answering.
"He is a Garud Commando Viren. He is part of the Garuda Task Force , a combat unit designed to protect and safeguard India's defence airspace and air network.But since it is also a prototype , we are using his force for classified operations with Special Forces"
Viren nodded slowly, taking that in.
"And turns out he is too good , because certain Global outfits are seeking his skills for some black ops"
Bakshi added.
"SENTINEL?" Viren asked.
"You’ve heard" Bakshi looked at him, slightly surprised.
"For military folks like us they're not easy to ignore. They've been collecting assets across the globe, building and armada for the UN Peace Keeping Obligations"
Bakshi leaned back.
"They’ve taken an interest in him. Which means he’s likely to be involved in missions that won’t officially exist"
"And you’re okay with that?" Viren folded his arms.
"Honestly no. But I understand that if their mission has to succeed then Hemant is the best choice! When it comes to the field ops , he is something else!"
Bakshi said calmly. There was a pause before Viren asked.
"So how is he as a soldier?"
Bakshi thought about it for a moment.
"On paper , a big headache. He doesn't exactly operate well with the chain of command. Very Anti-Beurocracy. Every time command looses their calm with his missions. But he is still around because of his 100% track record. Every mission he has participated in , he accomplished it. His unit also suffers zero casualty. His method of warfare is very different , his approach questionable. But in the field , he himself is an absolute unit. His results are the reason he is still in the force"
He said.
"That doesn’t sound reassuring" Viren frowned slightly.
"It depends on what you value, remember that conversation we had about warriors?"
Bakshi replied. He leaned forward slightly.
"That the world needs not just patriots. But people who can look beyond instructions and understand what’s right. People who won’t fold under pressure—political or otherwise"
A brief pause.
"I see that in him. The perfect warrior. That's him. Who is not defined by a nationality or patriotism. But is the right man to get the job done. The man who we know will do the right thing!"
Viren listened carefully now.
"What is his history?"
"Nothing extra ordinary, He grew up in a small village town of Panthalam in Kerala , culturally rich. Small farming family. Parents—Damodaran and Shalini Nair. They named him Hemant Kumar because his dad was a big fan of old hindi music and named him after the famous music composer. Moved to Mumbai for higher studies but maintained connection to the mainland through summer vacations. On paper its a simple origin. Except"
Bakshi continued
"Except?" Viren asked.
"Except he was trained in Kalaripayattu from a young age by one of his uncle Madhavan Nair , a renowned Martial Art Teacher in his village. So from an early age , his passion for combat grew. Later, in college—St. Xavier's Mumbai—he joined an MMA circuit with the club WFLF. Built himself up. Physically and mentally. Where once he even considered to seek a career in Pro Wrestling but later switched to joining the army. There he learned kick boxing and some Muai-Thai. In many ways a perfect student in physical combat!"
Viren nodded slowly.
"He’s always chased something more. And that shows in his missions since he takes death defying risks in achieving goals , something Command is not comfortable with"
Bakshi added.
"Do you like him?"
Bakshi didn’t hesitate.
"Absolutely , he might be a handful. But his heart and mind is in the right place"
A pause.
"Like I said....the perfect warrior. That's him" Bakshi said.
Viren leaned back, absorbing all of it. For a moment, he didn’t say anything. Then, quietly—
"You know....I think I like him too!"
"Of course. Who Wouldn't!" Bakshi gave a faint smile.
When Viren left the room later, his thoughts were different from when he had entered. The initial surprise from Hemant’s confession had settled into something more reflective. Surprisingly Viren thought he actually met a suitable men that he has pictured for his daughter. He had seen clarity. Hemant already impressed him with his honesty and words. But after hearing Bakshi—He understood something else. Hemant wasn’t just some soldier. He was a man with untapped potential and in many ways a man meant for glorious purposes.
And as that realization settled in—Viren found himself feeling something unexpected.
Respect.
FEW DAYS LATER AT NAL AIRFORCE BASE
Nal settled back into its routine, but for Hemant, nothing felt quite the same anymore. The training yard buzzed as usual with cadets running drills, instructors barking instructions, and aircraft engines roaring in the background. He was adjusting equipment for the day’s session when he noticed Kirti Raghuvanshi walking toward him. Her stride was sharp, her expression tight. He didn’t need long to guess what had triggered it—her father.
She didn’t wait for pleasantries.
"How dare you!" Kirti lashed out.
Hemant stayed silent.
"You dare to say you have feelings for me to my father.What exactly were you trying to do?"
She asked, her tone firm and controlled, but clearly irritated.
"Going to my father instead of talking to me?"
"I wasn’t trying to go around you. I just thought—" Hemant stayed composed.
“You thought it would make things easier? Or that it would give you an advantage?" she cut in.
"That’s not what this is, I just wanted to be respectful" he said.
Kirti shook her head, unconvinced.
"Doesn't feel respectful at all , to me it seems like manipulation. You were trying to influence my parents so that you can make it easy to approach me"
"That is not my---" He tried to explain again, but she wasn’t in a place to listen.
"Enough....just to make it clear....I don't like you!!" she said finally, her voice flattening.
"From this moment on.....keep your distance from me....period!!"
There was hostility in the last line, a clear boundary. She turned and walked away without waiting for a response. Hemant stood there for a moment, letting it settle. He didn’t argue further. But it stayed with him. The next few days were awkward. Hemant tried to fix things in small ways, keeping it light so it wouldn’t become heavier than it already was.
A folded paper with a simple “sorry :)” left on her workbench.
Another near the shooting gallery she used regularly. Nothing dramatic—just an attempt to say he knew he’d crossed a line. Kirti didn’t take it well. Sometimes she ignored them completely. Other times she’d pick one up, glance at it briefly, and tear it without saying a word. When their paths crossed, she didn’t engage. At best, a cold look. At worst, complete indifference. He didn’t push it beyond that. After a point, he stopped leaving notes. What made it harder wasn’t just the silence—it was how normal everything else seemed for her. Hemant noticed how she continued interacting with Vishal Agnihotri, if anything, a little more openly than before. They trained together, joked around near the hangars, and often stayed back after sessions. None of it was overdone, but it was visible enough. Hemant didn’t comment on it. He didn’t need to.
A few days later, Rani mentioned casually that Kirti had gone out of station for a short camping trip with Vishal and a few other cadets.
"Kirti usually never does this....but she is going with the group for some off-time activities"
She said, checking a maintenance log.
"Good for them" Hemant nodded.
He meant it. Or at least, he chose to. The timing helped in one way—his focus shifted back to something else entirely. The SENTINEL mission. That took priority now. Hemant and Dan spent long hours going over what they knew, filling gaps with assumptions, preparing for variables they couldn’t fully predict. The idea of an underwater approach, hostile takeover, and zero-error execution wasn’t something you improvised on the field.
"Entry is the tricky part" Dan said one evening, sketching rough layouts on a notepad.
"Though the risk only gets higher after that"
"And that's not it" Hemant replied.
"An oilrig in itself is a complicated structure. And we have zero experience in those kinds of situations. So we need to be ready for the unpredictable and unexpected surroundings. Our senses need to be in high alert until the mission is accomplished. We cannot afford recklessness"
They ran through scenarios—silent breaches, compromised entry points, fallback options. It wasn’t just planning; it was conditioning their thinking to react the right way under pressure.
A week later, routine training resumed at full scale. Hemant and Dan were assigned to field-test the laser designation system with aerial coordination.
A section of land, marked “Tango 1,” had been prepped a few miles out from base. Scrap vehicles, mock structures, and scattered targets created a simulated hostile environment. From the ground, Hemant handled target marking for Kirti’s aircraft, while Dan coordinated with Vishal.
The sky above came alive soon enough—two jets cutting through the desert air, executing maneuvers with precision.
"You two still not talking?" Dan glanced sideways while adjusting his scope.
"Yup...she is pretty pissed" Hemant kept his focus on the laser marker.
"I mean...i don't blame her. Talking to her dad before her is a rookie mistake" Dan said.
"I just didn't want to have the same Sanjana situation. I had to do it" Hemant almost smiled.
"I get it , maybe give it time. She might come into her sense later" Dan shrugged.
"Later....yeah" Hemant repeated.
They didn’t dwell on it. The exercise demanded attention, and both men returned to work. Back at base, Rani had her own conversation. She caught Kirti near the hangar later that evening.
"You need to understand him Kira....he had no sinister intentions"
Rani said, not accusing—just stating. Kirti didn’t deny it.
"Don't come for his defense"
"He didn’t mean it the way you think" Rani added.
"Dan told me what happened"
"Please Rani , stay out of this" Kirti sighed, clearly not interested in revisiting it.
Rani nodded. A pause.
"Okay....but please Kira. Don't jump to conclusions and see the bigger picture"
Kirti didn’t respond to that directly.
"I have no interest right now Rani, let’s just leave it there" she said.
Rani didn’t push further. Later that day, Kirti joined Vishal and a few cadets who were discussing plans for the weekend.
"Hey , we're planning a short cold trip to Manali this weekend since we have non sortie days coming. You interested?"
Vishal said.
"Sounds good....definitely need more breaks right now" Kirti nodded.
"Something bothering you?" Vishal asked concerned
"Appreciate the concern Victor. But this is something you cannot solve"
Their conversation drifted easily, until a deep engine sound cut through the air. All of them turned instinctively toward the runway. A large aircraft was descending—unfamiliar in presence.
"That’s a C-130 Hercules" one cadet said.
"But it’s not ours, it has none of our defense markings" Vishal added, narrowing his eyes.
Another cadet pointed out modifications along the fuselage.
"I know about these aircraft makes and......That’s not standard configuration either"
"Seems to me this is covert ops" Rani, who had stepped out by then, watched quietly.
The aircraft landed smoothly, rolling to a controlled stop at a restricted section of the runway. Then they saw them. Hemant and Dan, carrying their gear, walking toward the plane. No insignia on the personnel waiting for them. No formal exchange. Just a brief acknowledgment and immediate boarding procedures.
"Where are they going?" Kirti frowned slightly.
"Might be their next assignment" Rani folded her arms.
"Assignment?" Kirti looked at her.
"Do you seriously still believe they're just some Base Security Unit?"
Rani gave a small, knowing look. Kirti processed that quietly.
"They're not a normal squad Kirti. If the Garuda Force is being created for the Air Force and its infrastructure defense , then no doubt the current squad members are probably recruited for their best service. From what I can deduce , they have some involvement with the Special Forces. Hemant and Dan are part of a bigger strategy!"
Rani added, her tone softer now. Kirti didn’t reply. Her eyes followed Hemant as he climbed into the aircraft. There was a moment—brief, almost unnoticeable—where he paused near the ramp and glanced back toward the base. Not searching. Just… looking. Then he stepped inside. The ramp closed. The engines roared louder. Within minutes, the C-130 lifted off the runway and disappeared into the sky.
Kirti remained standing there a moment longer than the others. Something about it didn’t sit the way she expected. Not guilt.Not regret.Just… curiosity.Because for all the time they had spent at the same base—She realized she didn’t actually know him. Not really. And now—He was gone on something she couldn’t even define.
(TO BE CONTD)
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
JULY 18th, 2004. 50 MILES OFF THE COAST OF VANKAREM , RUSSIA
The Chukchi Sea stretched endlessly under a grey, unforgiving sky, its waters cold enough to kill within minutes. Rising out of that frozen expanse stood the oil rig—steel bones creaking under the weight of wind and salt, now held hostage by a well-armed group of Chechen separatists. The platform had been turned into a fortress. Men in heavy snow gear patrolled every level, their rifles slung tight, eyes scanning the horizon for any sign of retaliation. They expected ships, aircraft, maybe even a direct assault.
They never thought to look beneath them.
Inside the rig, the situation was worse. The workers had been divided into five groups and locked into separate compartments. Their hands bound, mouths gagged, fear hanging thick in the air. Guards rotated between the rooms, keeping watch with mechanical discipline. Explosive charges had been rigged at key structural points—not just leverage, but a final threat if anything went wrong.
A mile out, far below the surface, something else moved in silence.
The USS Virginia hovered at approximately 120 feet beneath sea level, its presence completely undetectable. No noise, no signal—just a shadow in the water. From its forward tubes, two cylindrical pods were deployed, slipping out into the dark like predators leaving cover. They began a slow, controlled ascent toward the rig.
Inside those pods, the SENTINEL strike team waited.
The vehicles reached the submerged lower structure of the platform and locked into position. The hatches opened, and one by one, the operators stepped out into the freezing water, their movements precise and practiced. They moved upward along the rig’s skeletal frame, using specialized climbing rigs to scale toward the maintenance level just below the surface.
Two guards stood near the lower railing, unaware.
They didn’t hear the water shift.
They didn’t see the hands that reached out.
Each was pulled down in a single motion, dragged beneath the surface before they could react. Blades flashed briefly in the dark water, and both bodies went still before sinking into the depths.
The strike team entered through the lower access point without raising an alarm.
Inside the rig’s basement corridor, the team removed their underwater gear and regrouped. Masks came off, breathers detached, weapons checked. The dim lighting flickered slightly, casting long shadows along the metal walls.
William J Irons stood at the front, steady as ever. Beside him, Hemant and Dan adjusted their gear, now fully transitioned into combat mode. Two additional operators stood with them—Sharon, codename Phoenix, and Sachiko codename Jinx, silent and focused.
Dan glanced briefly at Sachiko, still carrying a hint of distraction from when he’d first seen her back at the Alaska facility. Hemant noticed, but didn’t comment.
"Check in" Will said quietly.
"King, ready" Hemant responded.
"Stallion, good to go" Dan added.
Phoenix and Jinx confirmed as well.
Will gave a small nod.
"We move fast and quiet. Five rooms, five groups. Same pattern throughout"
Hemant took point without hesitation. The team moved upward through a narrow staircase, boots landing softly despite the metal structure. Every corner was cleared with precision, every movement deliberate. Hemant slowed near the next landing, raising a hand slightly.
"There’s someone above" he said into comms, voice low.
Dan shifted position behind him.
"Clear Shot"
"Smoke em"
Hemant leaned just enough to get a clear line. A suppressed shot followed—clean, controlled. The militant dropped instantly, his body collapsing against the railing before slipping into the sea below. No alarm. They continued. The first hostage room was located along the mid-deck corridor. Sharon stepped forward, checking her thermal reader.
"Two inside, armed. One near the door, one towards the back" she said.
"We take them together" Sachiko moved beside her, weapon ready.
There were two entry points. The team split accordingly.
Hemant and Will positioned themselves at the far door while Sharon, Sachiko, and Dan took the near one. Charges were set quickly, each team syncing their timing through silent hand signals.
"Three… two… one"
Both doors blew open in perfect coordination.
The entry was fast and controlled. Will neutralized the first guard before he could react, while Sharon took down the second with a clean shot. Sachiko covered the room, scanning for movement, while Dan moved straight to the hostages.
"Clear" Hemant confirmed.
They worked quickly, removing restraints and disabling the explosive triggers placed near the group. Will signaled into comms for extraction support.
"First group secured. Send in retrieval"
Within moments, a secondary SENTINEL unit began moving in to escort the freed workers. The process repeated across the next three compartments. Each room presented slight variations—different guard placements, tighter spaces, more complex rigging—but the team adapted without slowing down. Hemant’s awareness stood out. He picked up on subtle movements, faint sounds, and potential threats before they fully formed, allowing the team to stay ahead of the situation. By the time they cleared the fourth room, the operation had gone nearly perfect. Almost too perfect.
The shift came suddenly. An alarm triggered across the rig, sharp and loud, breaking the silence they had maintained. Somewhere, something had tipped off the remaining militants.
"Looks like Stealth is optional now!" Dan said.
"Last group is at the top" Will replied.
The upper levels quickly became more difficult to navigate. Militants began repositioning, setting up defensive angles and deploying gas canisters along key corridors. Thick smoke started filling sections of the rig, reducing visibility.
But SENTINEL had anticipated that.
Their secondary optics activated—infrared cutting through the haze. Hemant led the push upward, movements sharper now, faster but still controlled. Each engagement was decisive. Targets were identified and neutralized before they could coordinate a proper defense. Dan covered angles from behind, ensuring no one slipped through.
Sharon and Sachiko maintained flanks, clearing corners with efficiency. The resistance was stronger—but not enough. The final room sat at the highest enclosed section of the rig. This time, there was no stealth left. The team breached under pressure, taking out the remaining guards in a rapid exchange. Within seconds, the space was secured.
"Last group clear" Hemant said.
Hostages were freed, restraints cut, explosives disarmed. For the first time since the mission began, there was a brief pause.
Then Will spoke.
"That’s it. We’re done here"
Extraction moved quickly.
The team made their way to the helipad as the sound of approaching aircraft cut through the wind. Two SENTINEL transport helicopters descended, stabilizing against the harsh Arctic gusts.
"Russian forces are inbound" Will said.
One by one, the operators boarded. Hemant stepped onto the helicopter last, taking one final look at the rig below—now quiet, secured, no longer under hostile control.
The mission had gone clean. Efficient. Exactly as planned.
As the helicopters lifted off and turned toward open waters, the oil rig shrank beneath them, soon becoming just another structure in the vast emptiness of the Chukchi Sea. Inside the cabin, no one celebrated. They simply checked their gear, reset their focus, and prepared for what came next.
SENTINEL OPERATIONS BASE , ESPENBERG , ALASKA
The cold carried the same sharp edge of the Temporary Operations Base here. The bay stretched out in front of the base, grey water meeting a pale horizon, the kind of view that made everything seem still even when it wasn’t. Hemant stepped out briefly before reporting in and noticed Dan standing near the viewing deck, talking to Sachiko. Their conversation looked easy, unforced—Dan gesturing animatedly, Sachiko responding with the occasional nod and a faint smile. It was enough to make Hemant pause for a second before turning away. Whatever this place was, it was already starting to leave its mark on both of them in different ways.
A call came through soon after, directing Hemant to the command center. Inside, the atmosphere shifted immediately from calm to purposeful. William J Irons stood near a central table, with Sharon reviewing data on a screen. Around them were several sealed crates stacked in an orderly manner. Hemant’s attention went straight to them—not because of their placement, but because of what was stamped on their surface.
The same blue symbol. The one he hadn’t been able to get out of his head since Bogdang.He walked closer, studying it briefly before asking.
"These from the rig?"
"Part of what we recovered" Will nodded.
"Are they smuggline Weapons?" Hemant tapped lightly on one of the crates.
"Its actually something....Worse" Will gave a slight shake of his head.
Sharon keyed in a command, and one of the crates was opened. Inside were tightly packed, sealed packages. Even without being told, Hemant understood what he was looking at.
"Cocaine. Safe to say its originated and produced in Russia , with its destination somewhere else"
Will said plainly. Hemant’s expression tightened slightly.
"So the rig wasn't just a hostage crisis"
"Exactly , the takeover was meant for a safe passage of these drugs to the United States"
Will replied. He stepped closer to the table and brought up a set of files.
"Mr.King , Its time you knew what who you're opponents were!"
Hemant listened without interrupting.
"The symbol you’ve been seeing—it belongs to a network we’ve been tracking for years"
Will continued.
"In the whispers and intel , we learned this organization is called AZRAEL. Named after the six heads of its leaders and their place of origin. Not a typical syndicate. No public structure, no visible leadership. It goes back to the Cold War—in the chaos of a massive unrest around the world. This empire rose in those chaos!"
He paused briefly, letting that settle.
"They used that environment to build something bigger than smuggling. Though majority of their smuggling included Drugs , it evolved into arms, human trafficking—everything runs through different layers. The Chechen group on the rig? Just one of those layers. They move product across routes like Alaska into North America. In return, they get weapons, funding, support"
"Interesting that they chose the name Azrael , they've taken the name inspired from the ---c and Jewish mythos. The legendary Angel Of Death , Azrael. Though in the folkore , he is an angel who takes the soul from the dead. Here , the definition is twisted. This syndicate is just a plague of death , anyone and everyone that tried to expose it as either vanished or dead"
Hemant folded his arms slightly.
"I knew you were special , and yes , you are right. They are giving a twisted meaning to AZRAEL here"
Will said.
"And the more terrifying part is—we still don’t know who ‘they’ are"
Sharon added.
"There are links. Fragments. Some connections to elements within the Russian Bratva. Some to Chinese Triad networks. But nothing solid enough to point to a central command"
Will continued.
"The Central Intelligence Agency has been trying to piece it together. So have others. But AZRAEL stayed buried. No faces. No confirmed identities. The heads of this snake always stayed below the ground. It simply functioned with its minions carrying and doing their dirty work"
"Which makes them harder to track and neutralize"
Hemant looked back at the crate, then at the symbol again.
"And more dangerous" Will said.
"Because they’re expanding. Invisibly around the world , hiding from everyone's eyes. AZRAEL is corrupting big techs , world leaders and is forming a large web of control and power around the globe. If they're not stopped now , they will be too powerful and become the new world order!"
There was a brief silence before Will shifted the conversation.
"This is why I asked you to come here, because I don't see just a good soldier , I see a perfect warrior that can hunt and destroy this empire of shadows with your skillset"
He said. Hemant didn’t respond immediately.
"We need people who can operate outside limits, people who won't be corrupted by these shaodws and eventually bring light in erasing it"
Will continued.
"People who can step into situations like this and push back before it spreads further. More than a soldier , more than a spy. Someone who can face them head on and won't falter. Which is my proposal to you Mr.Kumar"
"I want you to join SENTINEL. I want you to level up , and serve a higher purpose. One that will not only save your country but the entire world!"
He held Hemant’s gaze. The offer wasn’t dramatic. It was direct. Hemant exhaled slightly before answering.
"I already have a purpose. To the Garud Commando Force. To my unit"
Will nodded, as if he expected that answer.
"I get that Mr.Kumar. I was committed too. I was a proud US Marine. Same for Sharon. That doesn’t change overnight. But we had to because we knew no one were more capable of doing this than us. Sometimes we have to evolve from what we are for the greater good"
"All for a higher purpose. To save the world!" Sharon added quietly,
"This isn’t about replacing where you come from. It’s about where you can be more effective. What you can actually influence"
Will continued, he gestured toward the crates.
"AZRAEL is not just a powerful organization , its a Virus. And its spreading its corruption across the world. If we don't contain or destroy it now , tomorrow it will be too late for any of us..."
Hemant remained thoughtful, not dismissive—but not convinced either.
"I’m not asking you to decide now" Will said.
"Just understand what’s out there. And what you’re capable of doing about it"
The conversation ended there. No pressure, no insistence. But the weight of it stayed. Outside, the cold air felt sharper than before. Hemant walked back toward the open deck area, his thoughts quieter but heavier. Dan was just stepping away from Sachiko, hands in his pockets, looking unusually relaxed.
"What's the matter? planning to hook up with her Tonight?" Hemant gave him a slight look.
"Mind your business Mr.Know it all. It ain't like that. But I have to admit , I always believed japanese women are something but.......she basically proves it true"
Dan smirked.
"Well.....I hope you had a good time" Hemant replied.
"Good times are yet to come"
They started walking back together. On the return flight later that day, the tone shifted back to something more familiar. The hum of the aircraft, the long stretch of sky, and the knowledge that they were heading back to Rajasthan.
"So… what’s going on in that head of yours?" Dan leaned back in his seat.
"Nothing urgent" Hemant looked out the window for a moment before answering.
"That usually means something’s definitely going on" Dan raised an eyebrow.
"We’re heading back to our favorite oven in Nal. That is something that must be going on"
Hemant gave a faint smile.
"You know , I would agree with you before. But after spending months there , I don't think that tracks anymore. Nal might be a steaming furnace , but I think I like the heat now!"
Dan laughed lightly. That made Hemant glance at him.
"Oh , so you like Nal now huh?"
"Yeah , its growing on me" Dan admitted.
Hemant nodded slowly, taking that in. That was the thing—Nal had started to feel familiar. Predictable. In some ways, even grounding. And yet, what he had just seen in Alaska didn’t fit into that world. As the aircraft moved steadily toward Rajasthan, Hemant leaned back and let the thoughts settle without forcing an answer. One path was clear, structured, defined by duty and command. The other was uncertain, wider, and carried a different kind of responsibility.
He didn’t choose between them yet.
But for the first time, he was seriously considering that he might have to.
The return to Nal Air Force Station was quieter than their departure. The same unmarked Lockheed C-130 Hercules touched down on the runway under the harsh Rajasthan sun, its engines winding down as if nothing extraordinary had just happened beyond the horizon of ordinary duty. For everyone else on the base, it was just another arrival. For Hemant and Dan, it marked a subtle shift—something had changed, even if it wasn’t visible yet.
Near the hangars, Pranali 'Rani' Gupta was the first to greet them. She walked up with her usual ease, wiping her hands on a cloth, her tone light as ever.
"You two finally back" she said.
"Hangar’s been too peaceful. I almost missed having someone do the heavy lifting for me"
"You mean you missed free labor" Dan chuckled, adjusting his bag.
"Same thing" Rani smirked.
Hemant gave a brief nod, the kind that acknowledged the moment without stepping fully into it. The rhythm of the base resumed almost instantly. Orders were picked up, routines fell back into place, and within hours, the Garud squad was once again part of the system—guarding, maintaining, observing.
On the surface, nothing had changed.
Inside the hangar, Hemant returned to work with a focus that felt sharper than before. Tools in hand, systems laid out in front of him, he moved with quiet efficiency. The environment was familiar—the hum of machinery, the smell of fuel, the distant sound of aircraft engines—but his attention stayed locked on the task in front of him.
Kirti Raghuvanshi was there too. And for the first time since they had met, Hemant didn’t acknowledge her presence. Not even in passing. No glance, no pause, no moment of hesitation. He worked as if she wasn’t there. At first, it went unnoticed. Then it didn’t. Kirti picked up on it gradually—the absence of something that had once been constant. Those brief exchanges of eye contact, the quiet awareness they had of each other, even the awkwardness—it had all disappeared. In its place was something colder. Not hostility, not anger—just distance.
And it unsettled her more than she expected. Hemant’s detachment wasn’t only about her. Part of it came from her words that day—clear, firm, leaving no room for misunderstanding. He had respected that boundary. But beyond that, something else had taken over his thoughts.
SENTINEL.
The conversation with William J Irons hadn’t faded. If anything, it had settled deeper. The idea of stepping beyond structured duty, of operating without limits, of confronting something like AZRAEL at its root—it aligned too closely with the life he had always imagined for himself.
The edge. The unknown. The purpose beyond routine. In his spare time, that restlessness began to take form. At one corner of Rani’s hangar, away from the usual workflow, Hemant started working on something of his own. It began with a simple concept—a tool he had used before, something instinctive to him. A hatchet. But this time, he modified it. Reinforced the head, balanced the weight, and attached it to a chain instead of rope, welding the links himself to ensure durability.
The result wasn’t just a weapon—it was something more personal. A memory translated into steel.
He remembered being fifteen, back in Panthalam , Kerala. Despite moving to Mumbai , the summers still spent in his native lands. Where rice fields and nature dominated the aroma and ambience , Hemant trained in Kalari at his uncle's training grounds, when his uncle had first handed him the Kalaripayattu weapon known as the urumi—a flexible, whip-like blade that required precision, control, and complete awareness of movement. It wasn’t just about striking; it was about flow.
This new weapon—hatchet and chain—felt like a modern echo of that.
A blade that could control and unleash chaos.
When Rani noticed him working on it one evening, she paused, watching him test the balance.
"That doesn’t look standard issue" she said.
"It isn’t" Hemant replied.
"You made this?" She stepped closer, studying it.
"Weapon smithing is something of an expertise for me. I've grown attached to hatchets since my first deployment. This is me honoring my legacy and my roots"
He nodded. Rani raised an eyebrow.
"Didn’t know you were into this"
"Even though I was raised in a small village in Kerala. It had significance and divinity. I grew up learning about the legendary young warrior Manikanda who is worshipped as Lord Ayyappa to the world . From a young age I loved martial arts , and my families connection to Kalari through my uncle made me an easy influence. Even after moving to Mumbai for higher studies didn't stop my training in the summers at Kerala. Though my mother claims my liking towards it helped her in me never becoming a naughty and spoilt child!!"
He said. There was no showmanship in how he said it—just quiet confidence. Rani nodded slowly, taking it in.
"You are full of surprises Hemant Kumar!"
Meanwhile, the distance between him and Kirti continued to widen. At first, she tried to ignore it. Then she tried to counter it. She spent more time around Vishal, leaning into conversations, laughing a bit louder, staying back a bit longer. It wasn’t entirely forced—but there was an intent behind it now. She expected a reaction. There wasn’t one. Hemant didn’t look. Didn’t pause. Didn’t acknowledge. And that… began to bother her. More than his earlier attention ever had. Over time, that unease started to affect her focus.
It showed in small ways first—slight delays in response, minor miscalculations during simulation drills. Then it became more visible. During sorties, her precision slipped just enough to be noticeable. Not enough to fail—but enough to raise questions. One afternoon, after a less-than-clean run, a senior officer pulled her aside.
"Everything alright Kira?" he asked.
"Yes, sir" Kirti nodded instinctively.
"Doesn't seem to me judging from your performance lately" he replied calmly.
She acknowledged it, but the conversation lingered. Because she knew. Something was off. Back in the hangar, Hemant remained unchanged. Focused. Detached. Moving from one task to another with the same steady discipline. If he noticed her struggle, he didn’t show it. His attention had shifted entirely toward what lay ahead.
The upcoming deployment under a United Nations charter in Democratic Republic of the Congo was approaching fast. Briefings had started, logistics were being finalized, and the Garud unit was preparing for another transition—from base duty to active field operations. For Hemant, it was more than just another mission. It was movement.
Forward.
And somewhere beneath all of that—quiet, unresolved, but present—Was the question he hadn’t answered yet. Whether he belonged here… or somewhere far beyond it.
The days leading up to deployment grew heavier at Nal Air Force Station. What had started as a standard international assignment was quickly evolving into something far more serious. Briefings became longer, more frequent, and far more detailed. Hemant and Dan found themselves spending less time in routine duties and more time studying maps, intelligence summaries, and contingency plans.
The update came during one of those briefings. Their stay in Kinshasa had been reduced—from one month to just one week. No one needed to ask why. The intelligence reports made it clear. The situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was deteriorating rapidly. Illegal extraction and smuggling of gold and coltan had surged, fueling the rise of armed militias that appeared and disappeared just as quickly. Loyalties shifted overnight, alliances broke without warning, and entire regions were slipping into chaos. What was once a volatile environment had now become a pressure cooker.
The United Nations wasn’t just observing anymore—they were reacting. The decision to deploy a relatively new unit like the Garud Commando Force into such a situation reflected both urgency and calculated risk. There was no room for prolonged engagement. The mission would be short, precise, and highly controlled.
Hemant and Dan adjusted accordingly.
Their discussions shifted from broad strategy to tight execution. Entry protocols, extraction timing, communication discipline—everything was refined. There was an understanding between them that this wasn’t a place where mistakes could be corrected easily. The margin for error was thin.
"Seven days" Dan said one evening, reviewing their notes.
"Things might be quiet intense for them to reduce the timeline that small"
"I've been reading the news. Things are pretty tense there , that country is still recovering from a bloody civil war few years back , even their government is in shambles...the humanitarian crisis is out of control which is why UN stepped in with assistance to the poor"
Hemant replied. Dan nodded.
The day of departure arrived with a different kind of atmosphere.
Unlike their previous missions, this one wasn’t hidden. The involvement of Garuda had been announced, at least within military circles. People knew they were going. That alone changed how the base felt. There was more attention, more quiet observation, and a sense that this mission carried expectations beyond just execution.
Transport aircraft lined the runway, ready.
The squad assembled near the boarding area, gear checked and rechecked. New members who had recently been integrated into the Garuda unit stood alongside Hemant and Dan, some focused, some quietly processing the weight of what lay ahead.
Goodbyes were brief but meaningful.
Rani approached first, arms folded as usual, but her tone softer than usual.
"Try not to come back with more work for me" she said.
"No promises" Dan smiled.
"Take care of them" She looked at Hemant.
"Always" He nodded.
Vishal Agnihotri stepped in next, offering a firm handshake.
"Heard it’s rough out there...Just… stay sharp" he said.
"We will" Hemant replied.
There was mutual respect in the exchange—no competition, no tension. Just acknowledgment. Kirti stood a little apart. Kirti Raghuvanshi didn’t approach immediately. She watched as the others finished their exchanges, her expression composed but quieter than usual. When Hemant finally walked toward the aircraft, their paths crossed naturally.
She spoke first.
"Take care"
Simple. Direct. Hemant nodded slightly.
"You too"
There was a brief pause before he added, almost matter-of-factly,
"Focus on your sorties...this base and this country need its best pilots...and you are one of them!"
Kirti didn’t react immediately, but she understood what he meant. There was no judgment in his tone—just observation.
"I will" she said.
That was it.
No extended conversation. No unresolved tension surfacing. Just two people acknowledging each other before going their separate ways. Boarding was quick. Inside the aircraft, the atmosphere shifted from personal to professional. Seats were taken, gear secured, final checks completed. The engines roared to life, and within minutes, the plane began its ascent. As the base shrank below them, Hemant leaned back slightly, his focus already moving ahead.
"Back to work" Dan glanced over.
"Yeah" Hemant said.
Outside, the landscape changed gradually as they gained altitude, the familiar terrain of Rajasthan giving way to open sky. Inside, conversations quieted.
Each man and woman onboard understood what this mission represented—not just for themselves, but for the Garuda unit as a whole. This was their first major international deployment under global scrutiny. Expectations were high. And the environment they were heading into would test more than just their training.
Hemant closed his eyes briefly—not to rest, but to center himself. The distractions, the uncertainties, the unresolved thoughts—they all took a step back. Because what lay ahead demanded clarity. And in that moment, as the aircraft carried them toward a continent defined by conflict and complexity, there was only one thing that mattered.
Execution.
(TO BE CONTD)
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
KINSHASA , CONGO
The first two days in Kinshasa were relentless in a way that no briefing could fully prepare them for. The city carried a constant tension—streets that looked normal at a glance but felt unstable underneath. The Garuda teams moved in tight formations, escorting convoys, securing perimeters, and coordinating closely with the World Health Organization medical units who were operating in high-risk zones. Every movement required planning. Every halt required vigilance.
Even with aerial coverage from the Royal Air Force, there was no real sense of safety. The skies were monitored, but the ground told a different story. Local militias shifted positions unpredictably, and intelligence updates changed by the hour. Sleep came in short, uneven stretches. Weapons stayed within reach at all times. By the fourth day, the pressure on operations had increased enough that command decided to split the Garuda contingent.
One unit, led by Avinash Tiwari, was assigned to oversee security for the WHO teams operating deeper within volatile zones. It was a significant responsibility for someone relatively new, but his performance during training had earned him that trust. Hemant and Dan were assigned elsewhere.
They, along with the rest of their unit, were tasked with securing a UN-sponsored technology summit being coordinated alongside the FARDC. The event had drawn international presence—engineers, diplomats, and strategic partners. That made it a high-value target.
The setup was tight. Entry points were controlled, patrol patterns established, and communication lines kept open with both local forces and RAF surveillance overhead. Hemant and Dan took position near the main entrance, maintaining a steady watch as delegates moved in and out under layered security.For a while, everything held. Then it broke.
The first sign was the crash.
A truck rammed into the rear gate with sudden force, tearing through part of the barricade. The sound alone triggered immediate response. Hemant and Dan, along with several others, moved quickly toward the breach, weapons raised, scanning for follow-up threats. For a brief moment, it looked like a direct attack. It wasn’t. It was a diversion.
Almost simultaneously, reports came in from the front entrance—multiple armed vehicles approaching at speed. By the time Hemant redirected, the attackers had already begun their assault.
Leading them was Bosco Katanga, known locally as “The Cannibal,” a name tied to his brutality and loyalty to the Union of Congolese Patriots. His men didn’t hesitate. They pushed forward aggressively, firing into defensive positions and overwhelming the FARDC soldiers guarding the perimeter.
Gunfire echoed through the compound. Civilians scattered. The summit was no longer secure.
Hemant and Dan moved to intercept, coordinating with their team to break the momentum of the assault. They managed to slow the advance, cutting down several militants before they could fully establish control inside the building. But Katanga’s group had already reached deep enough to create chaos.
Inside the summit hall, panic had taken hold. And in that confusion, Katanga made his move. One of the Indian delegates—a VIP attendee—was pulled from the group and taken hostage. The militants began a rapid withdrawal, using the hostage as leverage. They moved toward their vehicles with practiced urgency. By the time Hemant reached the front, the convoy was already pulling away. He watched it for less than a second. Then he turned to Dan.
"Secure this place" he said.
"Don’t do anything reckless" Dan understood immediately.
Hemant didn’t respond. He was already moving. The chase began on foot. Hemant cut through side alleys, narrow streets, and crowded passages, using his knowledge of urban movement to close distance. The convoy had a head start, but they were restricted to main routes. He wasn’t. He moved fast, pushing through the chaos until the sound of engines grew closer.
Then the situation escalated again.
A technical—a pickup mounted with a machine gun—cut into his path, blocking his advance near a crowded local market. Without hesitation, the gunner opened fire. Bullets tore through stalls, sending civilians scrambling in every direction. Hemant dropped behind cover instantly, assessing. If that gunner wasn’t stopped quickly, the casualties would multiply. He shifted position deliberately, drawing fire toward himself, making his presence obvious. The gunner adjusted, focusing on his movement. That was the opening Hemant needed. He pulled a grenade and tossed it toward a nearby corner. The explosion diverted the gunner’s attention just enough.
Hemant moved.
Using the wall beside him, he pushed off into a jump, bringing his rifle up mid-air. His shots were controlled but rapid, cutting through the gunner before he could recover. The technical fell silent. Without wasting time, Hemant moved in, pulled the body aside, and took control of the vehicle. Through his comms, he reached out.
"Status on the convoy?"
"Moving north. Approximately two kilometers ahead" The RAF feed responded quickly.
"Copy"
He accelerated hard. The engine roared as the technical pushed onto the main road, weaving through traffic and debris. Within minutes, the convoy came into view—two vehicles moving fast, clearly not expecting pursuit. Until they noticed him.
Gunfire erupted again, rounds striking the body of the technical as Hemant ducked low behind what little cover he had. He closed the distance anyway. At the right moment, he swerved and rammed the trailing vehicle. The impact was violent. The vehicle flipped, rolling across the road before coming to a stop in a twisted heap.
One down.
The second vehicle didn’t slow.
Hemant made a quick decision. He locked the accelerator, then climbed out of his seat and onto the moving vehicle itself. Wind tore against him as he steadied his footing. Timing it carefully, he leapt. He landed against the side of the fleeing vehicle, gripping onto the frame just long enough to pull himself up. Inside, the militants reacted too late. Two shots. Both precise. Both final. But without a driver, the vehicle lost control almost instantly. It veered off course, crashing through the railing of a bridge and plunging down into the water below.
The impact was hard. Disorienting. But Hemant pushed through it, forcing his way to the back of the vehicle. He found the hostage, unconscious but alive, and managed to drag him free before the wreck submerged further. They broke the surface seconds later. Hemant swam hard, pulling the man with him until they reached solid ground. The hostage wasn’t breathing properly. Hemant didn’t hesitate.
He began CPR immediately—steady compressions, controlled breaths. Seconds stretched, then finally—A response. The man coughed, gasping for air. Alive. Relief came only briefly. FARDC reinforcements arrived soon after, securing the area and taking over medical support. Hemant stood up slowly, catching his breath as the situation stabilized.
Back at the summit site, the damage was contained. But the mission wasn’t over. Dan met him as he returned, his expression serious.
"There’s been another hit" he said.
"Where?" Hemant frowned.
"The WHO team. They attacked the other team of Garuda"
A pause.
"They took Avinash!!" Dan added.
For a moment, Hemant didn’t say anything. The noise around him faded slightly—not completely, but enough for the weight of the information to settle. Two coordinated attacks. Two objectives. One successful recovery from failure. One a total failure. He looked toward the gathered Garuda team, now regrouping under pressure. This wasn’t random. And it wasn’t over. Hemant’s focus sharpened again, this time with a different edge.
A few hours later, the atmosphere inside the temporary command center in Kinshasa felt heavier than it had all week. The room was filled with layered voices—radio chatter, low conversations, the occasional sharp instruction—but none of it cut through the tension that had settled after the news about Avinash Tiwari. Hemant and Dan stood across the table as General Bakshi joined the briefing remotely, his presence commanding even through a screen.
Bakshi didn’t waste time.
"All units will stand down from any independent offensive action" he said.
"Primary focus is containment and protection of remaining personnel"
"Sir, with respect, every hour we wait—" Hemant’s jaw tightened slightly.
"I’m aware of the situation" Bakshi cut in.
"Then you also know delay reduces his chance of survival. We need to move now"
Hemant held his ground. Bakshi’s tone remained controlled.
"I’ve already coordinated with external assets. The S.A.S and other special forces are being looped in for a joint operation. Planning is underway"
"That will take time" Hemant replied, steady but firm.
"Because it needs to be done right" Bakshi said.
"Sir, time is exactly what we don’t have" Hemant shook his head slightly.
There was a brief pause before Bakshi spoke again, this time more measured.
"Avinash is a soldier. Just like you. We all understand the risks when we step into this line of work"
Hemant’s expression hardened.
"We’re trained to fight and protect, not to sit back and wait for one of our own to be executed"
The room went quieter. Bakshi’s voice dropped a degree.
"Watch your tone, Commander"
"Sir , give me few hours , I can retrieve Tiwari with my unit!" Hemant didn’t step back.
"Denied" Bakshi replied immediately.
"Garud is not a personal strike team you can deploy at will"
Hemant exhaled slowly, but his stance didn’t change as Bakshi continued.
"You will hold position. Further orders will be issued once the joint operation is finalized"
There was nothing more to say. The call ended. Outside the command center, the air felt different—hotter, heavier, like the city itself was pressing in. Dan walked alongside Hemant, his usual composure replaced with something more unsettled.
"This isn’t good" Dan said quietly.
Hemant didn’t respond right away as Dan continued.
"I spoke to Captain Adjani. He gave me more details about the guy we’re dealing with"
Hemant glanced at him.
"His name is Bosco ‘The Cannibal’ Katanga. His base is at the age of the city , an old scrap yard. He doesn’t just kill people. He… drags it out. Makes a show of it. Human torture and suffering is his favorite pass time!"
Hemant’s gaze sharpened.
"Adjani says he runs a fight pit on his domain. No rules. No oversight. People who tend to go there....never returns"
That was enough. Hemant didn’t ask anything else. He already knew what that meant for Avinash. Back in his quarters, the noise of the outside world faded. Hemant shut the door behind him and stood still for a moment, letting the silence settle. The order to stand down echoed in his head—but it didn’t sit right.
It never did.
He thought about Avinash—young, capable, someone who had earned his place in the unit. He thought about the briefing room, about waiting for a coordinated response while a clock ticked somewhere else. And then, almost instinctively, his mind went back to something else. A different voice. A different conversation. Not about orders. About purpose. About choosing when to act.
Hemant walked over to his bag and opened it. Inside, wrapped carefully, was the weapon he had built in the hangar. The hatchet, its edge sharpened, the chain coiled around it like a sleeping thing waiting to be used. He picked it up, feeling its weight, familiar in a way that went beyond training.
He secured it around his left wrist, tightening the grip. Next came the firearms.
From a locked storage crate containing confiscated weapons, he selected what he needed—two Zastava CZ99 pistols, extra magazines to sustain a prolonged fight. Nothing excessive. Just what he could carry and control. He changed quickly—black t-shirt, camo trousers, minimal gear. No insignia. No identifiers. This wasn’t an official operation. As he stepped out, Captain Adjani was already approaching, having clearly been alerted.
"What are you doing?" Adjani stopped in front of him, eyes scanning the gear.
"You already know" Hemant didn’t slow down.
"Are you crazy...this is suicide!" Adjani shook his head.
"Don't tell me you wouldn't do the same thing if it was one of your men...he has killed some of your men in the morning remember?"
Hemant adjusted his grip on the pistol.
"I haven't forgotten that commander. But you need to understand. These people—Katanga’s psychos—they’re not like street thugs"
Adjani said, voice firm.
"They are the worst of the worst. They don’t stop. That place he runs… it’s not just a base. It’s the final gateway to people who've went there"
Hemant met his gaze, calm but unyielding.
"These theatrics can scare other people....but not me!"
"You better be....many have dared like you in the past...even with an army but none survived that hellscape. Its not just the Cannibal's Kingdom. Its a domain of Monsters!"
Adjani stepped closer, lowering his voice. There was a brief pause. Then Hemant said quietly.
"Everyone claims to be a monster… until the Hunter steps in!!!"
Adjani didn’t respond immediately. There was something different in Hemant’s tone—not reckless, not emotional. Just resolved. Hemant moved past him, heading toward the outer perimeter. Before leaving, he added.
"You didn’t see me"
"And when this goes wrong?" Adjani turned slightly.
"Then add me to the list of casualties. But if it goes the other way , send med teams in an hour"
Hemant didn’t stop. That was all. As Hemant stepped into the dim streets of Kinshasa, the city felt different again—not like a place to secure, but like terrain to move through. Somewhere beyond the lights and noise, Bosco Katanga had built his domain.
A place people feared. A place no one walked into willingly. But tonight , that place was no longer going to be a gateway to hell. It was about to become his Hunting Grounds!
THE CANNIBAL'S KINGDOM
The scrap yard at the edge of Kinshasa looked less like a hideout and more like a kingdom built from rust and fear. Mountains of dead vehicles rose like steel cliffs under the moon, their jagged frames casting long shadows over lanes of mud and oil. At the front gate, two militants stood with rifles hanging lazy at their sides, convinced the night belonged to them. Beyond them, dozens of armed men wandered through the maze of wreckage, laughing, smoking, trading threats like currency.
At the center of it all, a circular patch of cleared dirt had been turned into an arena. Bosco Katanga sat above that arena on a throne welded from axles and engine blocks, a machete laid across his lap. They called him the Cannibal, and tonight he wore the title like a crown. Below him, two desperate men hacked at each other with crude blades, every breath ragged, every swing slower than the last. To either side of the ring, Bosco’s men held the fighters’ loved ones at knifepoint. The Cannibal watched with a grin, feeding on the agony in front of him.
At the gate, the two guards exchanged a nod—the last thing either of them would ever do. Hemant appeared behind the first like he had been born from the dark itself. His combat knife slid across the man’s throat so fast the guard didn’t even have time to scream. At the same instant, Hemant’s other arm snapped forward. The chained hatchet spun through the air and buried itself in the second guard’s neck with a wet, brutal crack. He yanked the chain once. The body dropped. The hatchet came back into his hand.
Then he vanished into the scrapyard.
What followed was methodical slaughter. A sentry rounding a corner caught a knife under the jaw. Another was dragged behind a stack of ruined buses and left with his own rifle sling biting deep into his throat. A lookout perched on a stripped van barely had time to turn before Hemant’s hatchet opened him from collarbone to chest. He moved like a ghost, but every strike was brutally precise. One by one, Bosco’s empire began to bleed in silence, and nobody at the center even noticed.
Hemant moved deeper into the yard, rigging fuel canisters as he went. TNT bricks disappeared beneath piles of tires, under truck frames, inside the hollow bellies of burned-out engines. Each fuse took flame with a quiet hiss. Each one became a countdown. The Cannibal still sat at his throne, amused, while the trap around him tightened like a noose.
In the arena, one fighter finally drove the other to his knees. Bosco rose forward, eyes glittering.
"Kill him"
The victor hesitated. His arms trembled. He looked at the man before him—looked at the woman being held with a knife at her throat.
"I’m sorry" he whispered. The kneeling man shut his eyes.
"It’s alright"
He never got the chance to die. Gunfire ripped through the night. The militant holding the woman dropped first, a hole punched clean through his forehead. Another spun backward, chest exploding red. Then Hemant stepped into the open, both pistols barking fire. Every shot found flesh. Men who had spent years ruling the scrapyard suddenly fell like butchered cattle. He advanced through the chaos, emptying magazines with terrifying calm until the survivors finally answered with a storm of bullets.
Hemant dove toward the edge of the arena and came up behind an old tribal shield mounted as decoration. Rounds hammered into the ancient wood, splinters flying past his face. He fired from behind it, dropped another two men, then the first explosion hit. A tower of flame erupted from the far end of the yard.
Then another.
And another.
The entire scrapyard convulsed. Fuel tanks burst. Tires ignited. Cars launched doors and shards of metal into the sky. Bosco’s kingdom became an inferno in seconds. People screamed and scattered, convinced an army had descended on them. The two fighters ran. Civilians fled. The Cannibal didn’t move. He just stared. Hemant stepped into the center of the burning arena.
Smoke curled around him. Fire painted his face orange. In one hand he held the tribal shield. In the other, the chained hatchet hung loose, heavy with blood. He didn’t say a word. He didn’t need to.
The challenge was written in the way he stood there. Bosco’s closest men answered first.
They circled him with machetes, cleavers, hooked blades, rusted maces. Then they rushed. Hemant exploded into motion.
The shield smashed the first attacker’s nose flat. Before the man hit the dirt, Hemant’s heel cracked into another’s knee and folded the leg backward with a sickening snap. The hatchet whistled, buried itself in a third man’s temple, then ripped free with a spray of blood as Hemant yanked the chain back. A cleaver came for his neck—he slipped inside it, drove an elbow into ribs until something caved, then hammered a knee up under the attacker’s chin hard enough to drop him dead before he landed.
More came.
A mace slammed into the shield, nearly ripping it from his grip. Hemant answered with pure violence. He pivoted low, swept the man’s feet, then brought the shield down on his throat until cartilage gave way. Another lunged from behind. Hemant caught the wrist, twisted, and drove the attacker’s own machete deep into his belly. He fought with Kalari’s angles, kickboxing’s brutality, and the savage efficiency of a soldier who had long since stopped counting bodies. By the time the last of them crawled backward through the blood, Hemant was breathing hard, bruised, cut, but still standing.
Then only Bosco remained.
The Cannibal rose from his throne with a hammer that looked more suited for crushing engines than skulls. The first swing hit Hemant’s shield and blasted him backward. The second caught his ribs. Pain lit through his body. Bosco pressed forward like a beast, hammer crashing down again and again. Hemant landed shots, but the bigger man kept coming. A backhand sent him sprawling. The hatchet flew from his grip. He hit the dirt hard, blood spilling from his mouth.
Bosco stood over him, breathing like a bull.
"I know you" he said, grinning through sweat and firelight.
"The soldier from the summit. The one who killed my roaches" He leaned closer.
"I believe you're here for your friend. He is inside. Still breathing. Barely. He didn’t enjoy the last torture session!!"
Something in Hemant broke. He punched the dirt and forced himself up.
His hand found the chained hatchet. With one savage kick, he knocked the blade loose from the handle. Metal clattered away. He wrapped the chain around his wrist instead. Bosco roared and swung the hammer. Hemant slipped just outside its path, the head slamming sparks off the ground.
Then Hemant’s fist crashed into Bosco’s face.
This time the Cannibal staggered.
And Hemant did not stop.
He drove punch after punch into Bosco’s jaw, his cheekbone, his throat. A kick smashed into the left knee. Bone cracked. Bosco screamed and dropped. Hemant stomped the right leg next. Another snap. The Cannibal collapsed, crawling, hammer slipping from his fingers. Hemant grabbed the left arm and wrenched until it bent the wrong way. Then the right. The arena filled with Bosco’s screams, but Hemant heard only Avinash’s name in his own head.
He mounted him and kept punching.
Again.
Again.
Again.
Bosco’s face disappeared under blood. Teeth broke loose. Flesh split. The Cannibal, who had ruled through fear, had been reduced to a twitching ruin in the dirt of his own arena.
Hemant finally stood, chest heaving. He unwound the chain from his wrist, looped it around Bosco’s neck, then threw the other end over the hook of a nearby crane. Every muscle in his battered body screamed as he pulled. Bosco clawed at the chain, legs kicking uselessly, eyes bulging. He spasmed there above the blood-soaked ring, hanging over the place where he had made others die for sport.
Then he stopped moving. Hemant tied the chain to the crane's handle , leaving the Cannibal's corpse dangling in the air.
Hemant turned away.
Inside the main shack, he found Avinash strapped to a metal chair, shirtless, bruised, his skin marked by cuts and burns. His head hung limp. For one awful second Hemant thought he was too late. Then Avinash stirred. Barely. Hemant cut the restraints with shaking hands and caught him before he fell.
"I’ve got you" he said, voice rough as gravel.
Together, one half-conscious and the other half-broken, they walked out of the burning scrapyard. By the time they reached the road, sirens were already closing in. Emergency crews. Congolese security officer. FARDC soldiers. Captain Adjani stepped out first—and stopped dead when he saw Hemant walking out of the fire with Avinash over his shoulder.
"Commander!!" Adjani said, staring past him at the inferno.
"What did you do?!"
Hemant, bloodied from head to toe, managed the faintest crooked smile.
"The Cannibal.....is finished!"
Adjani gave a breathless laugh, half disbelief, half awe.
"You’re not human"
Hemant winced as medics rushed forward and helped take Avinash’s weight.
"I wish that were true" he muttered.
"Because right now, I feel every part of being human"
As Hemant and Avinash were led toward the ambulance, Adjani climbed the rise overlooking the scrapyard. Bosco Katanga’s empire was gone—reduced to twisted metal, fire, and smoke. And above the throne, silhouetted against the flames, hung the corpse of the Cannibal himself. For the people of Kinshasa, fear had ruled that place for too long.
Tonight, something else had walked in. And it had brought justice.
THE MORNING A FEW DAYS LATER
For two days, Hemant knew nothing.
There were no dreams, no memories, only a heavy blankness that held him under. When consciousness finally returned, it did so slowly—first the distant hum of machinery, then the sting of antiseptic in the air, then the weight of bandages wrapped around his ribs and shoulder.
He opened his eyes and stared at a pale ceiling he didn’t recognize. The effort of breathing reminded him before memory did. Then he turned his head. Dan was there, slouched in a chair near the bed, half-awake, half-irritated in the way only someone who had been worrying for too long could be. Hemant tried to speak, but it came out as little more than a rough murmur.
Dan straightened immediately.
"You’re awake"
Hemant swallowed. His throat felt dry enough to crack.
"How’s Avinash?"
Dan let out a short breath, almost a laugh. Hemant looked at him. Dan shook his head.
"He’s alive. Stable. Doctors say he’ll recover"
For the first time since opening his eyes, some of the tension left Hemant’s face. He shut his eyes briefly and nodded. Dan leaned forward, arms folded over his knees.
"most people wake up after nearly getting themselves killed and ask how bad they look"
Dan said, quieter now. Hemant managed a faint smile.
"Didn’t have time to think about that"
"You didn’t have time to think about anything" Dan muttered.
"You went into that place alone"
"He was one of ours"
"That doesn’t mean you just walk into potential death!"
"I know. But I could not sit there knowing Avinash's moments were numbered , I could not"
Hemant turned his face toward the ceiling again. There was a pause before he added.
"I also know command’s not going to like this so I could not risk you or anyone else of this unit in trouble"
Dan didn’t deny it.
"Command's definitely not liking this" he said.
"You disobeyed a direct order, went off-grid, and nearly started an international incident. General was furious"
Hemant gave a small, tired exhale.
"When is he not!!"
Dan looked at him for a moment, then nodded once.
"Honestly , now I understand why General Bakshi hates your guts" he said.
By the next morning, Hemant could walk—barely comfortably, but enough. Every movement reminded him of the night at the scrap yard. His knuckles were bruised, ribs stiff, one side of his face still swollen. Still, when word came that command wanted him present, he got dressed and made his way to the temporary operations center.
The room was fuller than usual. Members of the Garud unit stood assembled, fatigue visible on every face but something else too—anticipation. At the front stood General Bakshi. Bakshi let the room settle before speaking.
"The mission in Kinshasa has been officially declared successful" he said.
"The UN peacekeeping command has acknowledged the role of Garud in stabilizing the immediate crisis. Based on the outcome, the Government of India has approved a structural transition. Effective immediately, Garud will fall under the full authority of the Indian Air Force"
A low current of excitement ran through the room. Bakshi continued.
"Command of the unit will be formally handed over to Air Chief Marshal Krishnaswamy"
For the younger men especially, it landed like a moment of arrival. What had begun as a prototype task force had now become something permanent. Hemant felt genuinely glad for them. Then Bakshi looked at him.
"And now the other part"
The room went quiet.
"Commander Kumar" Bakshi said, voice flatter now.
"You are hereby relieved from Garud Force with immediate effect"
No one moved. Bakshi held Hemant’s eyes.
"Command wanted a court-martial. I argued otherwise"
Hemant said nothing.
"Because you see, men like you are a bad example to soldiers"
Bakshi paused.
"So instead of a court-martial, you’ll receive a different kind of punishment when you return to NAL Air Force Station"
There was no elaboration. No one asked for one. Hemant simply nodded.
"Roger that, sir"
Bakshi gave the slightest inclination of his head, as if that was all he expected. Later, as preparations began for the return to India, the mood among the Garud men had split into two currents. One was excitement. The other was quieter. They talked about what it meant now—that they were officially part of the Air Force structure, that the unit had survived its trial phase, that future batches would be trained with what they had built here as precedent.
Hemant listened, even smiled when someone joked that now at least they’d get better aircraft and worse paperwork. He was happy for them. But beneath it all was the steady realization that whatever waited for him at NAL might be the first real wall he had hit since joining this life. For the first time in a long while, the road ahead felt uncertain. He was fastening the last buckle on his duffel bag when someone approached.
It was Avinash Tiwari. He still looked rough—fresh bruises, slower movement—but alive. For a second he just stood there, awkwardly. Then he said.
"I wanted to thank you"
Hemant looked up.
"You don’t have to"
"I do"
Avinash shifted his weight.
"I’ll be honest. Back at NAL… I didn’t really get you. I spent too much time around Vishal and the others. They used to joke about you. About Kirti. About how much of a terrible romeo you are to Kirti. And the whole facade and theatrics of Garud Force surrounded around you"
Hemant said nothing. Avinash looked faintly embarrassed.
"I believed some of it"
He paused.
"Then I saw what you did"
Hemant’s expression stayed calm.
"Its okay Avinash...no need to make it a big deal"
Avinash shook his head.
"No. It must be"
He held Hemant’s gaze now.
"I get it now Hemant , you're not just the best of us. You're the blueprint for a soldier to be!"
That landed more quietly than praise usually did. Hemant stood and adjusted the strap of his bag.
"You got a second chance" he said.
"Use it properly"
Avinash nodded.
"And carry Garud forward"
As he walked toward the transport line, another man stepped into his path. For a moment Hemant didn’t place him. Then memory clicked. The hostage from the tech summit. Up close, he looked older than Hemant remembered—middle-aged, well-dressed despite the travel wear, eyes carrying the kind of exhaustion that came after narrowly escaping death. Before Hemant could say anything, the man stepped forward and embraced him. It caught him off guard.
"Thank you" the man said simply.
"I was doing my job" Hemant pulled back slightly.
"No, you were doing more than that" the man said.
He spoke quickly, as if he didn’t have much time.
"My son still has a father. My wife still has a husband. That doesn’t disappear because you call it duty"
Hemant didn’t know what to say to that. The man reached into his coat, took out a card, and pressed it into Hemant’s hand.
"If you ever need anything" he said.
"Anything at all—money, help, contacts—call me"
"That won’t be necessary" Hemant replied.
"Maybe not" the man said.
"But keep it anyway. My door will always be open for you!"
He gave a final nod. Then he was gone, moving quickly toward another convoy. Hemant looked down at the card. It was simple, understated. But the name made him pause.
Mr. Vardhan
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
BACK AT NAL AIR BASE
The engines of the troop carrier still hummed with the heat of Africa as it cut across the night sky toward Bikaner. Inside, the men of Garuda Force were louder than the turbines. Someone had managed to produce packets of sweets from a field ration crate, and laughter rolled through the cabin in bursts. Their mission in Kinshasa had ended in success, and the bigger news had set the whole aircraft buzzing—Garuda Force was now under the direct command of the Indian Air Force.
"About time" Dan shouted over the noise, knocking his shoulder against another soldier.
"Now we are totally legit!"
"You only care because now you can brag you’re Air Force" Avinash laughed.
"Exactly" Dan grinned.
But a few seats away, Hemant sat motionless.
He barely heard them. His fingers were clenched so tightly around the edge of the bench that his knuckles had gone pale. Last night, before they had boarded, the order had come. Officially relieved from Garuda Force. No ceremony. No debate. Just one line on paper for defying direct orders in Kinshasa. Every laugh in the aircraft sounded farther away than the stars outside the porthole.
"What do you think they’ll do?" Dan asked quietly, leaning toward him.
Hemant gave a dry smile that didn’t reach his eyes.
"Well, thankfully its not a court martial!"
When the aircraft finally touched down at Nal Air Force Station, the wheels struck the runway with a violent jolt that seemed to drag Hemant’s thoughts back into his chest. The rear ramp lowered. Warm desert air rushed inside.
Outside, cadets were already lined up.
"Avinash!"
Rani called first, running forward the moment she saw him. Beside her stood Vishal and Kirti. Vishal slapped Avinash on the back so hard he almost stumbled.
"You idiot, heard you got yourself taken hostage" Vishal laughed.
"And still came back prettier than you" Avinash shot back.
"Thank God you’re back" Dan stepped down next, and Rani threw her arms around him.
"Never thought I’d miss sand this much" Dan exhaled, looking at the familiar lights of Nal.
Then Hemant emerged. The conversations faltered. He walked down the ramp alone, shoulders straight, face blank. Everyone at the base knew already. The news had spread faster than the aircraft itself.
"Hemant… at least you made it back" Rani stepped toward him, forcing a smile.
"Yeah" He nodded once.
Nothing more. Kirti took a half-step forward. For a second it seemed she might say something—anything. But Hemant was already moving, walking faster, as if the runway itself was on fire behind him. She stopped. Her hands tightened at her sides.
"Leave him be Kirti....he is in both kinds of pain right now!" Dan glanced at her.
In his quarters, the silence felt heavier than gunfire. Hemant opened his locker and began packing methodically. Spare clothes. A notebook. A battered torch. A photograph he didn’t even remember keeping. Then, slowly, he removed the Garud uniform. For a moment he simply held it, staring at the insignia stitched over the chest.
A few minutes later he stepped outside wearing a simple striped shirt and faded denim jeans, the folded uniform cradled in his hands. From across the courtyard, Dan and Rani watched him heading toward the base command building.
"He looks like he’s going to a funeral" Rani said softly.
"In a way...it is" Dan replied, eyes fixed on Hemant’s back.
Farther away, Kirti stood under the shade of a corridor pillar. She watched him go, and guilt pressed like a stone against her ribs. She remembered turning him away, the brutal verbal lashout on him, his immediate disconnection, the silence after. Now he looked like someone leaving a life behind.
The office of Air Commodore Prajapati was colder than the desert outside. Hemant entered, shut the door behind him, and stood at attention. Prajapati looked older than he had before Kinshasa. Without a word, Hemant stepped forward and placed the folded Garud uniform on the desk.
"Sir" he said, voice firm.
He saluted.
"I am here to handover my uniform. Considering my removal from Garuda , protocol demands to return the uniform. Would like to cordinate with command regarding my punishment assignment"
For a long moment, Prajapati did not answer.Then he leaned back in his chair, studying Hemant with something strangely close to pity.
"You are a terrible soldier Hemant. One that questions every rules , every protocol. Good soldiers follow orders. But you seem to always like to think with your heart. And look where it got you. General Bakshi did say there will be a punishment. But I am afraid I have a feeling you might like it!"
Prajapati said at last. Hemant’s brow tightened.
"Sir?"
"I cannot defend what you did in Kinshasa" Prajapati said.
"You disobeyed orders. You crossed lines you had no authority to cross"
His voice hardened.
"But…..you are also the reason Garuda Force succeeded in its international mission"
He exhaled slowly. The room went still. Then Prajapati opened a drawer and took out a small key attached to a metal locket. He placed it on the desk between them.
"Take this"
Hemant stared at it.
"Go to Bikaner town , a few miles from here. Near the Highway. Your punishment is waiting there"
Prajapati said. Hemant picked up the locket. At first he only saw the scratches on the metal. Then he turned it over. And his breath caught.
SENTINEL.
For a second, the office vanished.
He was somewhere else—he was back in Alaska when he and Dan were present at the mission briefing of the hostage rescue. Then it shifted , he was in that oil rig. Taking down militants with precision. THE Sentinel , the very organisation that took him to unexplored waters. The organisation that gave him his recent hauntings regarding the mysterious blue Satan symbol. That Sentinel was now approaching him.
"Sir… this—" Hemant looked up sharply.
"Like I said...this is probably a punishment you will like!" Prajapati gave the faintest smile.
Hemant stood frozen, the weight of the little key suddenly greater than any medal he had ever worn. A few minutes earlier, he had walked into this room believing he had reached the end of his road.
Now he understood. It was not a wall. It was a door.
And that door was about to open.
The desert wind carried dust across the empty highway as the rickshaw carrying Hemant rolled past the faded milestone reading BIKANER – 14 KM. The engine hummed steadily, but his thoughts were louder. Every kilometer behind him felt like another piece of his NAL life being buried beneath the sands of Rajasthan.
Garud Commando Force.
The name still echoed in his head with bitterness. Suspended. Disgraced. Removed. Officially, he was no longer a soldier. Hemant tightened his grip on the passenger railing of the rickshaw. The address folded in his pocket had only one line written on it—Sector Road 8, outskirts east of Bikaner. No explanation. No sender. Just instructions. Typical military fashion.
The highway gradually emptied until civilization became little more than scattered electric poles and distant mud houses. Then he saw it. A lone modern house standing in the middle of barren land.
The rickshaw stopped at its gateway as Hemant picked up his luggage and paid the driver as he drove off. The structure looked absurdly luxurious for its location—smooth sandstone walls, tinted windows, a shaded porch, and a silver SUV parked silently outside the gate like it had been waiting for him. There were no nearby homes except for a few tiny settlements far beyond the dunes.
"Not gonna lie....place is not bad!" Hemant muttered under his breath.
He scanned the surroundings automatically, old instincts refusing to die. Highway to the west. Open terrain to the north. Minimal cover. Quiet. Too quiet.
The front door was slightly open. His eyes narrowed immediately. Hemant approached carefully and pushed the door wider. The cool air inside contrasted sharply against the desert heat outside. The living room was spacious and fully furnished, with leather couches, dim yellow lighting, and a massive television mounted against the wall. And sitting calmly in the center of it all was General Arvind Bakshi. The old military head sat with one leg crossed over the other, holding a cup of tea like he owned the place.
"…Sir?" Hemant froze.
"You took longer than expected" Bakshi looked up casually.
Hemant shut the door behind him slowly.
"With all due respect, General, last I checked suspended commandos don’t usually get invited to luxury homes"
Bakshi gave a faint smirk and gestured toward the couch opposite him.
"Sit down, Hemant"
There was something unusually relaxed about the General today, and somehow that unsettled Hemant more than battlefield tension ever could. Hemant sat carefully. For a few moments, silence filled the room. Then Bakshi spoke.
"I am disappointed in you"
Straight to the point. Of course. Hemant leaned back slightly.
"That makes two of us, sir"
Bakshi ignored the remark.
"But here's the thing. I am not disappointed in just you but also in myself. Because I failed to understand where your true potential were. As a soldier you were always a liability. You disobeyed direct orders in Congo. You compromised operational command. You crossed international boundaries without authorization"
He paused and looked directly into Hemant’s eyes.
"And you nearly created a tense ground level situation inside Kinshasa"
"I could not leave Avinash at that monster's hand sir" Hemant exhaled sharply through his nose.
"You were ordered to wait for extraction"
"And you already know , that extraction would be worthless and he would've been slaughtered"
Bakshi’s stare hardened for a moment. Then unexpectedly, he nodded.
"Yes, time was our enemy at that moment. And even though you failed as a soldier at that moment , you were the person needed at that moment. You didn't walk there as an Indian Army Soldier , you walked in there to make things right. And you didn't let the brutality and savagery to stop you"
He said quietly.
"That is exactly why I expected you to do what you did"
Hemant blinked in surprise. Bakshi placed the teacup down carefully on the table.
"Because of your actions, Garud Force did not lose a single soldier in Congo"
His voice lowered.
"And because of your actions… Bosco ‘The Cannibal’ Katanga is dead.....liberating the people of Kinshasa from a Tyrant!"
The room suddenly felt heavier.
Hemant remembered the blood-soaked scrap yard. The screams. Katanga laughing while human bones burned in barrels nearby. And the mayhem that culminated. His lifeless corpse hanging over his throne. That monster deserved worse. Bakshi leaned forward slightly.
"On paper" he continued
"You have been removed from military service permanently. Forced early retirement. No command authority. No official operations"
A pause followed.
"That is the punishment the Indian government will acknowledge publicly"
"Publicly?" Hemant frowned.
Bakshi’s expression changed subtly.
"But unofficially…..you will be working for India as a Freelance Operator hired by SENTINEL....every operation you accomplish , every target you neutralize. The credit will not be given to you but Garuda Forces. For your services to SENTINEL , they will provide us intel and other defense proposals that benefit India and its interests"
He said. The General reached into his coat and tossed a black file onto the table between them. One word was printed on the cover.
SENTINEL
Hemant stared at it silently.
"SENTINEL is a multinational covert military unit" Bakshi explained.
"Off-record operations. International crisis intervention. No flags. No politics. No bureaucratic chains"
He gave Hemant a long look.
"Which makes it the perfect place for someone like you. You will have complete freedom , no burdens of responsibility or orders over your head. You can carry out your missions with your input. Though the downside? We will not acknowledge you....you are one of the unknown for Indian Defence...but as a deal towards SENTINEL right now....you have been designated HVI (High Value Individual) to NAL Air Base as an asset to Indian Defence's interest. That is the only protection you'll get here in Bikaner!"
"Interesting presidential treatment" Hemant let out a dry laugh.
"But let me be clear" Bakshi replied immediately.
"You are a terrible soldier"
Hemant actually smiled at that.
"You are reckless, rebellious, insubordinate, and an administrative nightmare"
Bakshi stood up slowly.
"But you are effective. You have the right attention , most importantly , you do the right thing."
He walked toward the window and looked outside at the desert horizon.
"People in Kinshasa are sleeping peacefully tonight because you killed a savage that even governments feared touching. And you didn't face him as a Garud commando. You faced him as yourself. That is your world Hemant , a world where you can shift the balance and bring order to the world. A Perfect Warrior!"
His voice remained calm, but every word carried weight.
"You function better without the uniform, Hemant. This is your path. The Path of a warrior!"
Hemant looked at the file again.
SENTINEL.
A new gateway. New challenges and adventures in the horizon. Bakshi turned toward him one final time.
"This house belongs to you now. The SUV outside is yours. SENTINEL will provide you with every resource you require"
Then his eyes sharpened.
"And every victory you earn from this point onward will quietly strengthen the reputation of Garud Force"
"The Higher Purpose" Hemant said softly.
"Exactly. You are strengthening this nation's defense in a unconventional way"
Bakshi nodded once. The General walked toward the exit before stopping near the door.
"I will be watching your progress carefully" he said without turning around.
"Just don't reshape the world during your first month"
"No promises, sir"
That finally earned a small chuckle from the old veteran. Then he was gone. The sound of the SUV engine faded into the distance, leaving Hemant alone inside the massive house. For the first time in months, there was no mission briefing waiting for him. No commanding officer barking orders. No uniform hanging nearby.
Just silence.
Hemant slowly walked through the house, taking everything in—the polished kitchen, the weapons locker hidden behind a sliding panel, the upstairs balcony overlooking the desert highway.
He stepped out onto the balcony as the evening sun sank into the dunes, painting the horizon orange and crimson. The warm desert wind brushed against his face while trucks thundered far away on the highway below.
His duties at Nar Air Base was done. But a different kind of commitment and responsibility is engraved on him now. One that is beneficial to not just this nation , but to the world. His GARUD life had ended at the gates of Nal Air Force Base. But something far more dangerous had just begun.
The next morning, after moving the last of his belongings into the house outside Bikaner, Hemant found himself driving back toward the familiar gates of Nal Air Force Base. He hadn’t planned it. At least that’s what he told himself. But some part of him needed one last look—one last reminder that the place where he had slept, laughed, and guarded still existed, even if he no longer belonged to it.
The guards at the gate recognized him instantly and waved him through without question. Inside, the base felt strangely hollow. The tarmac shimmered under the desert sun. A few ground crew moved about lazily, but the usual noise was missing. No Dan yelling at cadets. No Avinash complaining about drills. No sarcastic remarks from the younger recruits. No sign of Kirti striding toward the hangars with that cold, impossible confidence.
Hemant walked slowly past the parked aircraft, hands in his pockets. For the first time since Congo, he felt truly alone.
"You look worse than when you came back from Kinshasa"
The voice made him stop. He turned. It was Rani, standing beside a maintenance trolley with grease on one cheek and concern in her eyes.
"That obvious?" Hemant managed a tired smile.
"You landed here with the best brooding look I've ever seen"
Rani stepped closer. She tilted her head.
"What happened?"
Hemant stared past her toward the runway for a few moments.
"I did what I thought was right" he said quietly.
"I killed a savage monster and got 'punished' for it. Its actually more complicated than that!"
"Try me" Rani folded her arms.
He exhaled slowly.
"I got upgraded"
"Upgraded?" she repeated.
"To SENTINEL"
Her expression changed immediately.
"The global operations unit?" she asked, almost disbelievingly.
Hemant nodded.
"I’m with them full time now. Off the books. No uniform. No official military ties"
He let out a dry laugh.
"Only condition is… whatever I achieve out there gets credited to Garuda Force"
Rani stared at him for a second, then smiled faintly.
"That sounds less like punishment and more like they’ve unleashed you"
"The general said something similar too" Hemant muttered.
His eyes drifted around again.
"Where is everyone?"
Rani followed his gaze.
"Oh...Command gave most of the recruits and Garuda squad a day off" she said.
"Some of them were pretty shaken up after Congo. Especially after everything that happened in Kinshasa"
Her voice softened.
"They’ve gone to a lake camp not far from here. A much needed break from their heavy turmoil"
The words landed harder than Hemant expected. A day off. A lake. Laughter. Friends. And somehow he was outside of it now. He nodded once, but said nothing. Rani caught the shadow passing over his face.
"Hemant…"
He forced a smile that fooled neither of them.
"If Dan comes back before I see him" he said, turning away.
"Tell him where I’m staying"
He pulled a folded slip from his pocket and handed it to her.
"My new address"
Rani took it carefully.
"You could still go to the lake" she said quietly.
Hemant shook his head.
"No , I've caused enough trouble for them with Congo. Let them write their own adventures"
He said. By late afternoon he was back at the house. The silence inside felt heavier than before. He dropped himself onto the couch and stared at the ceiling, but his thoughts refused to stay still. He imagined the lake. Dan was probably already making an idiot of himself trying to impress some female cadets. Avinash would be pretending he wasn’t still rattled from being held hostage. The younger recruits would be retelling the Congo operation for the hundredth time, exaggerating every gunfight.
And Kirti…
That thought hit harder. He closed his eyes. He could almost picture her there by the water, hair loose in the evening wind, laughing in a way she never laughed around him. And Vishal beside her. The golden boy of the base. The ace pilot. The man everyone admired. He remembered the cadets whispering about them. Best among the best. He clenched his jaw. For one ugly moment his imagination betrayed him—Kirti leaning into Vishal’s shoulder, both of them somewhere beautiful, far away from blood and dust and war. He opened his eyes immediately, irritated at himself.
"Enough" he muttered.
His phone buzzed. A message. From Will. Hemant sat up.
First official assignment confirmed. Kazakhstan. Transport lands tomorrow morning at Nal Air Base.
Be ready.
He read it twice. Kazakhstan. First mission. The first step to another world. The thought cut through everything else. Nal was behind him now. Garuda was behind him. Whatever came next belonged to SENTINEL. And deeper than duty, deeper even than the thrill of action, was the thing that truly sharpened his focus—
AZRAEL.
The hidden syndicate. The unseen faces moving wars from the shadows. For the first time that day, Hemant felt something close to purpose. By evening, the doorbell rang. Hemant opened the door and nearly laughed. Dan stood there in civilian clothes, staring past him at the house.
"You bastard , what is this?!!!!" Dan said.
"Come in" Hemant stepped aside with a grin.
Dan walked inside, eyes widening. He looked at the polished floors, the leather couch, the staircase, then through the window at the silver SUV outside.
"I cannot believe this!" he declared.
"I’m sleeping in a glorified concrete box at HQ while you’re living like a smuggler king"
"High risk....high rewards!" Hemant chuckled.
Dan dropped onto the couch. Then his grin softened.
"They made me lead commander"
Hemant looked at him.
"Garuda Force?"
Dan nodded.
"Since you were relieved. They saw me as the perfect replacement. Avinash has jumped to my former rank"
For a moment there was no humor in either of them. Then Hemant crossed the room and handed him a mug of coffee.
"Then they have the right choice who can lead Garuda Force in its glory!"
"Says the man who got promoted to an international black-ops unit" Dan snorted.
Hemant sat opposite him.
"Sure...but its not easy as you think"
Dan raised an eyebrow. Hemant explained the arrangement with Bakshi. When he finished, Dan let out a low whistle.
"So every time you take out a bad guy, Garuda gets the medal" Dan said,
"Looks that way"
"General Bakshi. That old fox." Dan lifted his cup.
They drank. After a while, Hemant said.
"You know you should stay here. You can take advantage of these amenities for me!"
Dan shook his head immediately.
"No chance. I need to be at the base if I’m running things now" He looked around again.
"Though I hate to admit it… this place is far better than HQ"
Hemant smiled faintly.
"I went to the base this morning" he said.
"Couldn’t find anyone"
Dan nodded.
"Yeah. Command sent most of them off for recovery. Congo hit some of the boys harder than they’re willing to admit"
He looked down at his coffee.
"Avinash especially. What happened at the scrap yard… that messed him up"
Hemant nodded slowly. Then, almost casually, he asked,
"And Kirti?"
Dan’s head snapped up. A grin spread across his face.
"You’re still stuck on her"
Hemant rolled his eyes.
"Just asking"
Dan leaned back smugly.
"Relax. Kirti and Vishal got called to Delhi this morning. Some special training sortie...for the upcoming Air Force Day or something"
Hemant blinked.
"Delhi?"
"Yeah. Flew out right after the orders came"
For reasons he didn’t want to examine too closely, Hemant felt some of the tightness in his chest ease. So the lake had been only that. A lake. Not whatever his mind had invented. But the relief was incomplete. Because Kirti was still with Vishal. Still somewhere beyond his reach. He hid the thought behind another sip of coffee. Dan noticed anyway, but wisely said nothing. Instead, he lifted his mug.
"To new duties"
Hemant looked at him. Tomorrow morning, a transport would land. Tomorrow, Kazakhstan. Tomorrow, SENTINEL. He raised his cup and tapped it against Dan’s.
"To the future" Hemant said.
The cups clinked softly in the quiet house. And for a little while, between old wounds and new wars, that was enough.
(TO BE CONTD)
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
THE NEXT MORNING
The noon sun over Nal Air Force Station hit the concrete hard enough to make the entire air base shimmer. Inside the canteen, the usual clatter of steel plates and loud cadet chatter rolled through the room like background fire. A moment later, the door swung open and in walked Kirti and Vishal, fresh off their assignment in Delhi. Cadets straightened instinctively. Even members of the Garuda unit looked up. Dan, Avinash, and Rani were the first to greet them, dragging them into the center of the crowd before either of them could sit down.
"So?" Avinash asked, leaning forward.
"What was so important they sent both of you?"
Kirti shrugged with a grin, trying to sound casual.
"It was just a training exercise. Some…. new and interesting sorties for the upcoming Indian Air Force Day celebrations"
"Interesting?" Vishal snorted.
"That’s one way to put it. The higher-ups were more impressed with her than me"
Kirti immediately flushed and smacked his shoulder.
"Will you stop talking?"
Dan laughed, folding his arms.
"He’s not wrong. For me, you’ve officially overtaken Vishal as the top ace of this base"
Vishal only smiled, taking the blow with theatrical dignity, while Rani’s grin widened at Kirti’s obvious embarrassment. But Kirti wasn’t listening anymore. Her eyes had already begun scanning the canteen. The cadets. The officers near the far table. The men stepping out into the heat. Searching. Restless. Dan noticed first. He always did. A slow grin spread over his face.
"Who are you looking for?" he asked, loud enough for everyone nearby to hear.
"Your boyfriend’s standing right next to you"
He jabbed a thumb toward Vishal. Kirti turned so sharply her chair almost scbangd backward.
"He is not"
Vishal clutched his chest and staggered half a step.
"Ouch" he said, deadpan, earning a ripple of laughter.
But Kirti didn’t laugh. Her eyes were still searching. Dan’s grin faded just enough to sharpen.
"If you're looking for Hemant, then he's not here"
He said. The words landed heavier than they should have. Kirti’s expression dimmed. Dan saw it. For once, he didn’t press.
"He is no longer part of Garuda. That’s why I’m sitting in his position now"
For a moment, even the canteen felt quieter. Then Dan added, almost casually,
"Relax. It’s not what you think. He’s got a bigger job now. They’ve designated him HVI for the base. Hemant isn’t out. He’s become a military asset"
Everyone knew what HVI meant. The short form for High Value Individual. Something shifted inside Kirti. Relief first. Then pride. Quiet, reluctant pride. The kind she didn’t want anyone to see. Before anyone could say another word, a rising commotion spilled in from the airfield. Chairs scbangd. Heads turned. The entire canteen seemed to empty toward the windows. Out on the blazing tarmac, a sleek private Cessna Citation XL rolled to a stop, absurdly elegant against the harsh military backdrop.
"That’s an unusual sight here....what is a civilian aircraft doing in an Air Force tarmac?"
Rani muttered. Her finger pointed toward the tail fin. A strange insignia gleamed there—a Roman sentinel helmet. Dan’s eyes narrowed, and for the first time all afternoon, even he sounded impressed.
"That" he said quietly.
"Is the one and only Sentinel. A UN backed blackops operations unit. Also…..Hemant’s new workplace"
"Really?" Kirti asked amused.
"Indeed...what he did in Kinshasa really impressed them to which he is getting this 'promotion' in disguise of a 'punishment'...."
"Heh...you don't say" Avinash interrupted them as he continued.
"The things I saw he did to those scums....my torture chamber had a live TV feed of the fighting grounds...it was like I was watching someone superhuman....the way he swung that weird weapon!"
The canteen had gone dead silent by the time he appeared.
He stepped onto the tarmac like he owned the sunlight. Blue checkline shirt left open. Black V-neck beneath. Blue jeans. Aviators hiding his eyes. One travel bag slung over his shoulder like the weight of the world didn’t mean much to him anymore. He didn’t look back. Didn’t hesitate. Didn’t even slow down.
A group of armed men bearing the same sentinel crest emerged from the jet and walked straight toward him. Their boots hit the ground in clean, measured rhythm. The one in front stopped, gave a sharp nod, and said,
"Welcome to Sentinel Sir. Your ride is here"
And every cadet watching understood the unspoken part. This wasn’t transport. This was extraction.
From behind the glass, Kirti could only stare at Hemant. There had been a time when he stood in this same base with dust on his boots, reckless in his grin, heart stupidly honest enough to hand to her. She had turned it away. She had told herself it was the right thing. Standing there now, watching armed internationals escort him like he belonged to a larger map than any of them could imagine, that certainty didn’t feel so solid anymore. It wasn’t regret exactly. It was heavier than that. A sharp, private ache wrapped in admiration. He looked untouchable now—like the kind of man nations borrowed when something somewhere had gone terribly wrong.
The engines ignited with a deep metallic roar. Heat blasted across the tarmac as the jet began to move. Nobody in the canteen spoke. Not Dan. Not Vishal. Not even the cadets who usually found jokes for everything. They simply watched. Watched as the aircraft gathered speed. Watched as it tore free from the earth.
AUGUST 11th 2004 TIAN SHAN MOUNTAIN RANGES , KAZAKHSTAN
The Tian Shan range swallowed sound.
Blizzard winds tore across the western spine of Kazakhstan, smearing the world into a white void where sky and mountain became the same frozen abyss. Buried into that wilderness sat the airbase—a Russian ghost installation carved into rock and ice, loyal not to Moscow but to General Barkov’s private war machine. Beneath floodlights and drifting snow, Sukhoi fighters crouched like iron predators on the elevated runway. Hidden directly beneath its edge, fingers locked into frozen stone, Hemant codename King—waited.
Above him, the roar of a departing jet ripped across the storm.
King glanced sideways. Will codename Wolf—hung there beside him, half-buried in shadow. Wolf pulled the cigar from his mouth, watched the orange ember fight the wind, then flicked it into the abyss below.
"Show Time!!" he muttered.
That was all either of them needed. Their ice hooks bit deep. They climbed like phantoms, scythes and climbing claws chewing into the mountain face. Snow lashed their Sentinel stealth suits, but the white camouflage turned them into shifting pieces of the storm itself. In less than a minute they were over the lip of the runway, crouched low as two Russian patrolmen emerged through the veil of snow.
Two muffled coughs.
King and Wolf fired at the same instant. Suppressed HK416s spat tiny flashes that vanished in the blizzard. One guard dropped before he even knew he was dying, a clean shot through the eye. The second staggered, blood misting hot and black into the snow, before Wolf’s follow-up round punched through his throat and folded him silently to the ground.
They advanced.
The storm covered everything—footsteps, bodies, muzzle flashes. Patrol after patrol disappeared into the snow. King moved with terrifying economy, every pull of the trigger measured, every burst ending in collapse. Wolf drifted beside him like a hunter born in war, never wasting a bullet. Men died without alarms, without shouts, without even seeing the faces of the ones killing them. At the edge of the runway, their route split. Wolf climbed onto a jagged ridge overlooking the compound.
"Clear that building Mr.King , I'll provide overwatch!"
He whispered over comms. King descended alone toward the first building. He slipped inside.
Warm air hit him, carrying oil, gunmetal, sweat. A corridor opened ahead. Two soldiers died before they could turn. A third stepped out of a side room and caught a glimpse of movement—just enough to tense, not enough to react. King’s suppressed rifle coughed once. The round tore through cheekbone and spine. The man dropped twitching.
Then a fourth guard farther down the hall froze. Too far for the rifle without risking noise. King’s hand moved. The hatchet flew. Its chained blade spun through the dim light and buried itself deep in the man’s neck. Bone cracked. Blood sprayed across the wall in a dark fan. The soldier clawed weakly at the steel as King strode forward, planted a boot against his chest, and yanked the weapon free with a wet ripping snap. He scanned the rooms. Nothing.
"No ACS here" King murmured.
"I see a Hangar far side ahead. Heavy at the front. Dead at the rear. The ACS Module is likely to be there , race you there , Wolf out!"
Wolf’s voice came through the static. King ran. Not openly—he became the storm. The snow-covered stealth suit blurred him into the white chaos as he crossed the open ground at speed. Searchlights swept past and found nothing. Wind hammered his face. The hangar loomed out of the blizzard like a steel fortress.
At the back entrance, Wolf was already waiting.
"Took the scenic route, huh?" He smirked.
Inside, only two guards. One never saw Wolf’s knife until it punched up beneath his jaw. The other turned at the sound and saw King for half a second before the hatchet buried itself in his temple with a hard metallic thunk. Both bodies hit the concrete almost together. The hangar smelled of fuel and scorched metal. A jagged section of the shattered satellite lay on the floor like the carcass of something dragged from orbit.
"I’ll check the wreckage" Wolf said.
"Check the tech room upstairs. Go"
King climbed the steel stairs two at a time. The tech room was empty. Monitors flickered over banks of equipment, cables, and classified telemetry. He moved fast, scanning. Then he saw it. The ACS module. Cold, compact, deadly. Beside it sat a hardened military drive loaded with extracted satellite data. King snatched both, sliding them into his pack. Mission complete. Then the comm hissed.
"King?" Wolf said.
There was something wrong in his voice.
"I've been compromised....keep a low profile!"
At that exact moment the hangar doors thundered open. Floodlights exploded inward. Engines roared. Outside, rows of gunmen spread out behind armored vehicles, rifles leveled straight at Wolf in the center of the floor.
"King...go to Plan B" Wolf snapped.
King’s eyes dropped to the backup detonator clipped to his vest. Armed. Blinking. And suddenly he understood. Every step to the hangar, every dead corridor, every shadowed wall—Wolf had seeded the route with C4 satchel charges. King didn’t hesitate. He pressed the detonator. For one frozen heartbeat, nothing happened. Then the mountain erupted.
A chain of coordinated detonations ripped through the base. Fire punched out of buildings. Concrete split apart. Fuel lines became rivers of flame. The blast wave smashed into the hangar as Russian heavy weapons vanished in blooming orange fireballs. Men were hurled screaming through the snow. Sirens shrieked. Searchlights died. The entire airfield descended into chaos.
"Move!" Wolf barked.
They ran through hell.
Russian soldiers poured through smoke and debris, firing wildly. King and Wolf answered with surgical violence. King’s rifle hammered three men off a stairwell, then he buried his hatchet into another soldier’s collarbone and ripped downward. Wolf stitched a controlled burst across a line of advancing troops, dropping them in the firelight like cut marionettes. They carved a path through bodies, sparks, and shattered steel, never slowing. At the runway edge, they rappelled off the cliffside and hit the snow below running. Snowmobiles were already coming. Headlights slashed through the trees.
King and Wolf split into the woods, using trunks and blizzard cover like living cover. One pursuing rider took a round through the visor and cartwheeled into a drift. Another clipped a buried rock and launched into a pine, breaking in a spray of blood and shattered machine parts. Within seconds, the hunters had become the hunted.
They stole two snowmobiles and gunned the throttles.
Now the chase truly began.
More Russian riders burst from the burning base behind them. Overhead, two Chinook gunships descended through the storm, their mounted weapons lighting the snow with streams of tracer fire. Ice exploded around King and Wolf as they weaved between trees, drifted around boulders, and skimmed over frozen ravines. Wolf keyed his comm.
"Overlord, this is wolf. The heat is too hot , I need you to bring in the rain!!"
"Be advised Wolf , you're still close to the blast radius. This will be a danger close"
Mission command warned instantly. Wolf grinned through the wind.
"Solid copy Overlord...Send it"
Ahead, an ice glacier rose like a wall of glass. King brought his snowmobile alongside Wolf’s.
"Time for shock and awe" Wolf looked over.
Then the sky came apart. MLRS rockets screamed out of the storm. They slammed into the glacier in a rolling barrage of fire, turning the mountain into a collapsing inferno of ice, steel, and pulverized rock. The shockwave swallowed the Russian pursuit whole. Snowmobiles vanished in blossoms of flame. One helicopter caught a direct hit and broke apart in midair. The second clipped the collapsing ice wall and spiraled into the white abyss.
For a moment, everything disappeared inside smoke and fire.
Then, from the burning cloud, King burst out first. His snowmobile tore through the flames like something born of them. Wolf sat on the back, one hand gripping the frame, the other reloading calmly as if the apocalypse behind them were just weather. They reached the plateau. A black Buzzard helicopter hovered there, rotors chopping through the blizzard. Sharon—Phoenix—leaned out from the open side door.
"Get in!"
King drove straight up the loading skid. Wolf jumped first, hauled himself inside, then dragged King in as the snowmobile fell away into the dark. The helicopter banked hard and climbed.
Below them, the base was dying.
The C4 chain had touched fuel reserves, ammunition dumps, missile storage. Secondary explosions rolled across the entire installation. Hangars collapsed inward. Fire spread beneath the storm until the whole hidden airbase burned like a wound carved into the mountain.
Phoenix looked down at the inferno.
"That’s going to be a problem"
King peeled off his frost-covered gloves and stared through the open door.
"Not exactly. On record, that base never existed. This thing will be buried in the history books"
He said quietly. Wolf laughed, pulling off part of his rig.
"We did it. ACS is ours"
King reached into his pack. He held up the ACS module first. Then the hard drive.
"I've plucked some of their data!" he said.
For the first time since the mission, the Wolf gave a genuine smile.
The Buzzard vanished into the storm, carrying them eastward. Behind them, the flames of the secret airbase were slowly swallowed by the blizzard—buried beneath snow, silence, and history that would never admit it happened.
SENTINEL EUROPE DIVISION HEADQUARTERS , HEREFORD
By the time Hemant Kumar reached SENTINEL HQ in Hereford, the cold from Kazakhstan had long left his skin, but not his thoughts. The hard drive recovered from the Tian Shan operation sat open across a bank of monitors in the intelligence wing, its contents unfolding line by line in pale blue light. Hemant stood alone, sleeves rolled, eyes fixed on maps and encrypted manifests. At first it looked like noise—shipping codes, false invoices, satellite timestamps—but the deeper he went, the clearer the pattern became. He found smuggling corridors running through Oman and Turkmenistan, routes carefully masked through commercial freight lanes. Hidden among them were stash houses, offshore fronts, and transit hubs tied to AZRAEL. Narcotics. Human trafficking. Weapons components. But one route caught his attention more than the rest. It didn’t match the Indian networks he had spent months dismantling. This one was newer. Cleaner. Built for something bigger.
Hemant called Will down to the analysis floor.
Wolf leaned over the terminal, studying the route overlays in silence while Hemant broke down the data. Cargo moved from the Gulf, crossed inland through Turkmenistan, then vanished into dead zones near the Russian sphere of influence. It was too deliberate to be coincidence. Hemant pointed at a cluster of movement markers and spoke quietly.
"I just found the smuggling route from the land among the north countries..their destination is Shanghai , China....to be handed over to the Triads..they are using hidden cave systems and the terrain as cover in their smuggling routes....which would also explain me finding them in Ladakh since India-Pakistan has still unexplored hidden cave systems in their border mountains..but that is not the concering part....I found a notable name who is associated with AZRAEL in Russia!"
Wolf’s face hardened as he listened. Then he reached over, dragged another file onto the main display, and gave Hemant the missing piece.
"Barkov......General Barkov!"
The name hung in the room like smoke.
Will explained that the data recovered from the Russian base confirmed what SENTINEL had only suspected before. General Barkov wasn’t merely associating AZRAEL—he was doing business with them. In exchange for weapons sourced through black-market channels and other illicit networks, Barkov had been providing protected movement corridors, safe storage, and operational cover inside Russian-controlled territory. Suddenly the mountain base made a lot more sense. It had never just been about the ACS module. Barkov was using the chaos of civil conflict to build a private ecosystem of war, and AZRAEL had become part of the machinery.
Before either of them could say more, the doors slid open and Sharon—Phoenix—walked in carrying a tablet under one arm.
"You’re both going to want to see this" she said.
With a flick of her fingers, a fresh set of files appeared across the screens. Financial transfers. Shipping registries. Corporate fronts. She had been tracing a separate line out of Russia and had landed on something bigger. The trail connected Barkov to the Tarasov Crime Family, one of the most powerful names in the Russian underworld. But it didn’t stop there. Phoenix zoomed in on a cluster of encrypted transactions and shipping manifests moving east.
"Tarasov’s negotiating with a faction of the Chinese Triads, and the location they've chose is not exactly remote"
She said. The location flashed on the screen. Macau. A luxury resort district. High money. High secrecy. A perfect place for empires to shake hands without ever admitting they met.
Will folded his arms and looked from Sharon to Hemant.
"Is Tarasov part of AZRAEL?" Hemant asked.
"Not just part , they are the Founders. Specifically the main head Evan Tarasov , who started that crime family which evolved into the Syndicate that is today. He is long dead though. Killed in 1988 by a US funded hitjob with no records!"
"And let me guess , he built his empire by taking advantage of the collapse of the USSR"
"Precisely, and if Tarasov and the Triads are building a pipeline for AZRAEL, we need eyes inside before they lock it down"
He tapped the display, enlarging the date of the meeting.
"This isn’t a smash-and-grab. The meetup is being planned in a month so we must build some short term influence and gain some intel on the ground"
Then he looked directly at Hemant.
"You’re going undercover. And you won’t be alone"
"I am already working on it Will. I've learned about AZRAEL tie up to the Triads through my own investigation regarding the supply chain from India to Nepal on my first day in SENTINEL. Those girls we liberated months ago , they were meant to reach Shanghai. I've build some ground level contacts within the Triads. People who have our best interests. Fed them our intel for their benefit in return for a favor for us in the future. Turns out not all the Triads are on board with AZRAEL!"
"Now that's my man Mr.King. Always planning ahead. But its time you get some backup"
Hemant already knew who was coming before Wolf said the name.
"Jinx will join you!"
For a moment, Hemant said nothing. He stared at the glowing map of Macau while the implications settled into place. He has been studying the Triad's operations for weeks , interacting with someone who wants to bring change in the ranks. Now with the right angle and planning , he feels this will solve a lot of troubles in that country. But the rules are different , this isn't a battlefield , there is no tactical approach or heavy gun battles. No rifles in a blizzard. No shadows to disappear into. Just silk suits, false names, smiling predators, and one wrong move away from a knife in the dark. For Hemant this was different , but one thing he was known for , always prepared. A new kind of adventure excited him but at the same time alerted him. This was the edge. And more importantly , his glorious purpose. And he was now ready to step into a different kind of warfare. One that is close to the notorious underworlds and espionage. Somewhere inside Macau, AZRAEL was preparing to expand its empire. And now, for the first time in months, Hemant felt it—that quiet certainty in his chest. He wasn’t chasing ghosts anymore.
He was finally getting close.
(TO BE CONTD)
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(CHAPTER CONTD)
SEPTEMBER 23 , 2004. MACAU, CHINA
The Red Dragon Hotel stood at the heart of Macau like a jewel dipped in blood. Flashbulbs cracked against polished marble. Wealth, perfume, and false smiles flowed beneath chandeliers the size of small moons. Tonight’s charity gala looked almost noble from the outside—red carpet, silk gowns, camera flashes, men laughing too loudly—but Hemant knew better. Behind those golden doors, girls disappeared. Behind those smiles, the syndicate called AZRAEL sold human lives to the highest bidder.
A black Hongqi Qijian CA7460 eased to a halt at the entrance. The rear door opened, and Hemant stepped out, every inch the part. Black tuxedo. Crisp collar. Shoes that caught the hotel lights. A killer disguised as a gentleman. He handed his entry pass to the valet.
"Welcome to the Red Dragon, Mr. King"
Hemant gave a faint nod and crossed the threshold. In his hidden earpiece, Will’s voice crackled with amusement.
"The bowtie doesn’t work on you at all"
Hemant’s mouth barely moved.
"Yeah? Guess I’m not cut out to be James Bond"
A low, smoky female voice slid into the channel.
"No" she said, amused.
"You’re too rugged to be Bond. But you’ve got certain qualities"
Hemant’s gaze shifted—and found her. Jinx. Already inside. Already working. She stood beside a crystal pillar in a violet gown that hugged every curve like a secret. The slit rode high enough to reveal toned legs as she crossed them with deliberate elegance, and the neckline was dangerous enough to make powerful men forget caution. Her lips curved when their eyes met.
Not affection. Not exactly. Just the kind of dangerous understanding that only came from surviving hell together. Then she turned away, drifting back into the glittering crowd, hunting monsters with a smile.
They split. Hemant was guided through a private corridor toward the upper levels. Plush carpet swallowed every footstep. A masked attendant handed him a lacquered black half-mask.
"For discretion, sir"
He slipped it on and entered the auction room. Inside, every face was hidden, every suit expensive, every silence predatory. Hemant scanned the room. He couldn’t identify them, but instinct screamed at him—Chinese Triads, maybe even men tied to the Russian Mafia. Somewhere below, Jinx was getting close to one of AZRAEL’s brokers, her beauty turned into a blade.
Then the auction began. One by one, girls were brought onto the stage beneath white light. Bare shoulders. Painted lips. Eyes hollow with terror. Hemant sat absolutely still while disgust crawled under his skin like acid. Every bid made him want to break someone’s jaw. But not yet. He had to play the part. Then one girl stepped into the light—young woman, trembling, but unlike the others she wasn’t completely broken. Her eyes were alert. Conscious. Watching. Hemant raised his paddle. Another bidder challenged him. Then another. He kept going, voice calm, heartbeat cold. Finally the hammer fell. Sold.
A masked escort led him to a private room higher up in the hotel. When the door shut, Hemant stood alone in silence and reached into his pockets. Tiny pieces. Two screws hidden in the first buttons of his shirt. A spring in the cuff seam. A sliver of machined steel in the lining. He assembled them with practiced hands. By the time the girl entered, he was seated calmly, the makeshift pistol hidden behind his leg. She froze when she saw him. Terror widened her eyes.
"It’s all right" he said quietly.
"I’m not here to hurt you"
It took a minute. Then another. Her breathing slowed.
"Do you know where the others are?" he asked.
She nodded, barely. Hemant showed her the weapon.
"Good. Then I’m getting you out"
They moved through the hall like shadows. Hemant fitted a suppressor onto the tiny gun. No elevator. Too exposed. Stairwells only. Every turn was a coin toss. Once, voices drifted close—guards laughing, keys jingling. Hemant pressed the girl against the wall, one arm around her shoulders, the other holding the pistol low. They passed without seeing them. Three floors down. Service corridor. Kitchen exit. Rain hit them the second they stepped outside into the neon glow of Macau. Twenty minutes later, the girl was inside a SENTINEL safe house, wrapped in a blanket, shaking but alive.
Jinx arrived moments later, breathless, heels abandoned somewhere between here and the hotel. A few strands of dark hair clung to her cheek, and for the first time all night she looked less like a socialite and more like the operator she truly was. Relief flashed across her face when she saw the rescued girl. Then the girl spoke.
"Someone else tried to save us" she whispered.
"A priest. The bad uncles took him. To the cemetery. They said… they’ll kill him there"
The room went still. Hemant felt something cold settle into his bones. Will got the confirmation minutes later.
"Father Dominic. Priest from London. He was in Macau for some Missionary work. He tipped SENTINEL off about the trafficking network. If the Triads have him, they’ll make an example of him"
"We need to get him" Hemant said immediately.
"No" Will snapped.
"Our objective is the girls. We use the witness, convince the authorities, bring in the raid. We cannot compromise the mission for one man"
"Hemant… he’s right" Jinx stepped closer.
He looked at her, and something in his expression made her stop talking.
"SENTINEL doesn’t have a choice" he said.
"I do"
He crossed to his bag and unzipped it. Steel whispered. Out came his signature weapon—a hatchet chained at the base of the grip, dark metal hungry for blood.
He slid a QSZ-92 into the back of his waistband. Jinx caught his wrist. For a second, the room narrowed to just the two of them. Her perfume, rainwater on bare skin, the warmth of her hand against his pulse.
"Don’t do this" she said, voice lower now.
"You’ll blow everything"
Hemant leaned closer, so close he could see the storm in her eyes.
"No" he said softly.
"I’m going to end their partnership"
He placed his phone in her hand.
"If I’m not back in an hour, dial the last number. Take her to PJ Law Enforcement HQ. Get the paperwork moving"
Then he turned and walked toward the door.
Jinx stood there, fingers curled around the phone, watching him disappear into the Macau night. Neon bled across the rain-slick street outside. Somewhere beyond the city lights, in a cemetery full of stone dragons and dead men, Father Dominic was waiting to die. And Hemant King—tuxedo stained with rain, chain coiled at his side, murder in his eyes—was coming for him.
AN HOUR LATER AT ST MICHAEL CEMETERY , LAZARUS STREET, MACAU
Midnight had long strangled the city in silence.
At the forgotten edge of Lazarus Street, the ancient grounds of St. Michael Cemetery slept beneath drifting fog and flickering sodium lights. Rainwater glistened across cracked stone pathways, reflecting rows of weathered gravestones like shattered mirrors. Above them all towered the great statue of Archangel Michael—wings spread wide, sword lowered in judgment—as though the cemetery itself waited for sinners to be weighed.
The peace broke beneath the sound of chains scbanging pavement.
A battered middle-aged man groaned as he was dragged through puddles and broken gravel. His wrists were bound in rusted handcuffs, chains wrapped cruelly around his chest like shackles for the damned. His priest’s collar was stained with dirt and blood, his face bruised from interrogation. Yet despite every bruise and every staggered breath, Father Dominic refused to bow his head.
Dragging him by the chains with a sneer carved across his scarred face was Johnny Ratface, one of the feared lieutenants of the 18K faction of the Triads. Rings glittered across his fingers as he shoved Dominic toward a freshly dug grave waiting like an open mouth in the earth.
"You should’ve minded your business" Johnny spat.
"Thought you could save our girls?" He kicked Dominic hard into the mud.
"You have no clue what kind of monsters run this operation. People disappear because of men above me"
Dominic coughed blood into the dirt but still raised his eyes.
"If innocent people are suffering, then someone must stand for them. I would make the same choice again"
He said quietly, His voice carried no fear. Johnny barked out laughter as the surrounding Triad thugs joined in.
"And where did that courage get you?" Johnny gestured to the grave.
"Right here, Father. Your final resting place" He pointed toward the towering Michael statue looming through the fog.
"You talk about God, justice, angels. But look around. This city belongs to devils. Even your precious saint watches and does nothing"
Dominic slowly lifted his bruised face toward the dark sky.
"He is a saint only for the innocent and the beloved" he whispered.
"For scum like you.....he is the raging fire of Justice!!!!"
Johnny crouched beside him with a grin full of rotting arrogance.
"Then lets see if his fire reaches here when I bury you six feet under.....there is no God here!!!!"
He spread his arms across the cemetery. Dominic shut his eyes. He prayed weakly into the freezing air.
"My lord......please… bring justice to this place...."
And that was the moment an eery silence filled for roughly a second. After which footsteps echoed. Every thug froze. Slow. Measured. Heavy.
Across the cemetery entrance, beyond the statue of Michael, a silhouette emerged through the fog. Streetlights behind him stretched his shadow impossibly long across the graves. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in a charcoal suit dark enough to vanish into the night itself.
A hatchet hung from a chain wrapped around one arm. Its steel edge glimmered. Hemant Kumar walked forward without hurry. The cemetery felt colder.
"Who the hell are you?" Johnny narrowed his eyes.
Hemant stopped beside the towering Michael statue. Fog curled around him like smoke rising from a battlefield.
"You must be Johnny right?" he said evenly.
"You goddamn right.." Johnny replied with pride and twisted cruelty before adding
"And you are"
Hemant's response was a grin , a grin that could be devilish but in Dominic's eyes it was assurance. That things will be right from now on. For Dominic, battered and half-conscious, the moment felt unreal. The statue behind Hemant seemed brighter somehow—light catching strange against rain and stone. Standing beside the archangel, the stranger appeared like an extention of the archangel. With that same grin Hemant responded.
"I am the one that kills Johnny!"
Johnny laughed again.
"This guy is funny. Boys , lets show him I am in no mood for comedy!"
He shouted to his men. The cemetery exploded into motion. Triad enforcers charged with cleavers, rusted machetes, iron rods, and Chinese batons. Hemant moved. The chain snapped through the air with terrifying speed. The hatchet spun outward like a guided blade and buried itself deep into the face of the first attacker with a wet crack. Bone burst apart as the man collapsed instantly. Hemant yanked the chain back violently—the weapon ripping free in a spray of blood before smashing into a second thug’s jaw hard enough to twist his neck sideways.
Three more rushed him.His Kalari instinct took over. Hemant stepped inside the first swing, twisted low, and drove the hatchet upward beneath a thug’s ribs. The blade punched through flesh and emerged slick with crimson from the other side. Before the body even dropped, Hemant pivoted and slammed an elbow into another attacker’s throat, crushing cartilage with a sickening crunch.
Steel flashed toward him. He ducked. The cleaver missed. Hemant answered by wrapping the chain around the attacker’s wrist and pulling hard. Bones cracked. The weapon fell. One brutal hatchet strike followed—clean and merciless—sending the thug crumpling beside gravestones painted red.
The cemetery became chaos.
Rain mixed with blood across old marble. Men screamed. One tried charging from behind only for Hemant to hurl the hatchet backward without looking. The blade buried itself in the attacker’s chest, pinning him against stone before Hemant retrieved it with another violent pull of the chain.
Johnny’s confidence evaporated.
"This psycho—kill him!" he shouted.
Another group rushed. Hemant met them head-on. A baton shattered against his shoulder but he ignored the pain, grabbing the attacker by the collar and smashing his face into a gravestone hard enough to split skin and teeth. Another lunged with a sword—Hemant caught the wrist, twisted until the arm bent wrong, then buried steel into the man’s neck.
One strike. One body. Again. Again. Until only Johnny Ratface remained. Breathing hard, soaked in rain and panic, Johnny backed away.
"You have no idea who you’re messing with"
Johnny growled, suddenly drawing a hidden knife and lunging in desperation. Hemant was already moving. The hatchet flashed once. Johnny screamed. Then again. His legs collapsed beneath him. Blood spilled violently across the mud as he crashed near the open grave, horror replacing arrogance. Hemant stood over him. Johnny coughed desperately.
"The Triads will hunt you—"
Hemant tilted his head.
"Don't worry Johnny....your Overlords....they will let you know who I am when I send them to you to the place you are going right now!"
He said quietly. One final kick sent Johnny tumbling into the grave. He landed hard, bleeding into the soil prepared for Dominic.
"In Hell!" Hemant finished with him.
No prayer came for him. Only silence. Hemant turned and broke Dominic’s chains.
"You alright?" he asked.
Dominic stared at him, shaken.
"Who are you?"
"A man who is interested with some devious activities here" Hemant answered.
"I rescued one of the girls from the Red Dragon Hotel. She told me about you"
Dominic’s face darkened.
"There are more...girls… women… held at a warehouse not far from here" he said urgently"
Hemant looked toward the city lights.
"Show me the way!"
The warehouse crouched near the waterfront like something abandoned by time. Rust bled down corrugated walls. Salt wind howled through broken windows. Dominic led Hemant through a side entrance, his breathing uneven as distant waves crashed somewhere beyond the industrial district. Inside, the silence felt wrong. Then they heard it. Whimpering. Behind stacked crates and concealed steel plating lay a hidden chamber secured with thick chains. Hemant shattered the lock with the back of his hatchet.
The door creaked open. Inside were frightened girls and women huddled together beneath flickering lights.Bruised. Terrified. Some barely looked old enough to understand what had happened to them. Dominic immediately rushed to comfort them.
"You’re safe now" he said softly.
Hemant turned toward the warehouse floor. Something felt off. Then the side door burst open.
"About damn time"
Jinx stepped through carrying tactical gear slung over one shoulder. Gone was the glamorous party attire from earlier. Now, Jinx wore combat armor fitted tight for movement, a rifle hanging against her back and pistols holstered at her waist.
"Took care of the surveillance blackout" she said.
"You look terrible"
Hemant glanced down at blood splattered across his suit.
"Not all of it are mine" he replied.
His eyes drifted toward a massive enclosed fishing truck sitting near the rear loading dock.
"Did you call the number?" he asked.
"Yeah. Nobody picked up" Jinx nodded.
"Noone's supposed to" Hemant said.
Her expression shifted.
"That number? It was your research work few days back isn't it?"
"Exactly , and that contact will help us clear this thing in whole" Hemant replied.
He pointed toward the rescued captives.
"Take Father Dominic and the girls to the PJ Law Enforcement headquarters. Use the truck and leave through the back"
That was when engines thundered outside. Headlights flooded broken windows. Vehicle doors slammed. Voices shouted in Cantonese. Jinx swore under her breath.
"They're here!"
Hemant calmly looked toward the warehouse entrance.
"Take them and go"
"What about you?"
He walked toward stacked crates.
"I’ll buy time. Give them a taste of the traditional SENTINEL shock and awe!"
The front shutter exploded inward. Triad gunmen stormed through carrying rifles, machetes, and iron weapons. One shouted the order to kill everyone. Hemant’s eyes landed on stacked crates filled with smuggled rifles. AK-47s. Illegal imports. He cracked open the crate and pulled one free. The firefight erupted. Automatic fire ripped through the warehouse.
Hemant moved like something ancient and merciless. Controlled bursts dropped the first wave before they even understood what was happening. Men crashed through stacked boxes as bullets tore through cover. One attacker rushed too close. Hemant dropped the rifle, swung his chained hatchet, and buried steel into the man’s shoulder before slamming him into shelving hard enough to collapse it. Another charged with a blade.
Hemant sidestepped and answered with brutal efficiency. Close combat became carnage. The warehouse floor transformed into a battlefield of overturned crates, shattered lights, smoke, and screaming steel. Triad enforcers expected fear. Instead they met a storm. Gunfire. Chain strikes. Broken bodies. Blood streaked across concrete. Every step Hemant took carved deeper panic into their ranks. Rumors were already beginning. Some whispered Johnny Ratface had been butchered by a ghost. Others claimed an executioner had come for the underworld. Tonight, fear gained a face. By the time the truck escaped through the rear gate carrying Dominic and the survivors, Hemant stood alone among wreckage.
The remaining enforcers hesitated. He used that hesitation. A flashbang taken from confiscated cargo detonated. Chaos followed. Hemant disappeared into the alleyways of Macau. But not before half the warehouse burned. The chase lasted minutes. Black SUVs flooded narrow streets. Gunmen poured out. Hemant vaulted fences, ducked through neon-lit alleyways, and fought his way across backstreets until he finally reached a dead end near the waterfront. Footsteps surrounded him. Weapons raised.
"End of the line" one enforcer sneered.
Then came headlights. A long black limousine drifted into the street like something from another world. The rear door opened. No hesitation. Hemant sprinted, slid inside, and the limo peeled away before gunfire could land. Inside sat Jiu Mey. The Current Red Pole of the Sun On Yee faction watched him quietly, dressed sharp despite the late hour.
"You really made a mess tonight" she said.
"They were trafficking children" Hemant leaned back, breathing steady.
"I heard" She nodded once.
The city blurred outside as the limousine carried them toward the coast. Eventually they stopped near a rocky seaside overlook where crashing waves struck black stone. Jiu stepped out first.
"You know, I was curious with your proposal when you came to me weeks ago. We were concerned you were a spy until what you proposed what we did and what you wanted in return. Your insight and intel helped our influence in many ways"
She said, lighting a cigarette against the cold wind. Hemant folded his arms.
"You took Water Street in Shanghai" Hemant stated.
"And two more territories, Sun On Yee’s stronger now" she answered.
She studied him.
"But 18K is getting desperate. More violent. This recent uprising from our side could be catastrophic"
Hemant stared toward the ocean.
"It has to, my interest is not in the 18k taking over the Triads" he said quietly.
She raised an eyebrow.
"You sound idealistic for someone covered in blood"
"Even if you're a hunter , you cannot keep your hands clean killing monsters"
Hemant answered.
"Desperate times need desperate measures!"
He looked toward her.
"Build a crew. People loyal to you. People willing to dirty their hands if it means protecting something better"
"I already have some" Jiu nodded.
"But if I move, I will become the next target" she added.
"Then make me the target" Hemant gave the answer without hesitation.
"What?" Her expression shifted.
"Don’t tie this to Sun On Yee" Hemant said.
"Create a new threat, someone that is believed to be the new enemy of the Triad coming from the sea across. An outside force determined to shake the Triads and its chain of leadership of crime!"
He stepped closer.
"A ghost. A mythical hunter who butchered Johnny Ratface. Someone coming after the worst of the underworld. A new danger to the triads. And when the overlords of 18K and the oblivious Triad masters are trying to find this new threat, the Sun On Yee can climb ranks and grow its influence in this chaos"
Fear was currency. Stories were weapons. Hemant intended to weaponize both.
"Turn me into a symbol of new challenge for the Triads. Make me a force they must be concerned!"
He continued. Jiu slowly smiled.
"You want me to build you into a legend?"
"No" Hemant replied.
"I want you to build a false crisis that will concern the Triads giving the Sun On Yee the opening to grow their worth!!!"
The next morning aboard a SENTINEL C-17 aircraft bound for Hereford, Hemant and Jinx stood in the control room watching international news. Macau law enforcement had launched massive raids. Trafficking warehouses were being dismantled. Arrests spread across criminal networks tied to 18K. National inquiries had begun. Jinx crossed her arms.
"So, this was your strategic masterplan?" she said
Hemant allowed himself the smallest smile.
"SENTINEL was made to maintain order of the world , and Shanghai's order lays in Sun On Yee's success. Its a bigger victory in the long road!"
Somewhere in Shanghai hours later, Jiu Mey assembled trusted figures in an underground meeting hall. Father Dominic stood nearby, protected and awaiting transport to England. Names were assigned. Territories discussed. Orders given. One man stood out.
Ricky Tan. A local operator chosen to help command the new movement. Mey’s people already whispered about Hemant. His SENTINEL codename—Mr. King—passed from mouth to mouth. Still, something about it felt incomplete. Then Dominic arrived carrying newspapers from Macau. Front pages displayed images from St. Michael Cemetery. Most focused on the massacre. But one image lingered. The statue. Archangel Michael standing above the fog. Dominic placed the clipping before Jiu.
"The name you are looking for is right here!!!" he said.
Jiu looked up.
"He came when darkness ruled as a beacon of justice , with ruthless strikes and burning vengeance"
Dominic said softly.
"I see the Archangel in him!!"
Jiu stared at the photo. Then smiled. Moments later she called a news contact. The reporter asked the question everyone wanted answered.
"Do you know who killed the Triads?"
Jiu leaned back. Her voice carried calm certainty.
"Yes , I know who the killer is!"
She paused just long enough for anticipation to grow. The city held its breath.
"His name…...is King........Michael King!!!"
END OF CHAPTER 34
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(04-05-2026, 08:10 AM)RCF Wrote: 1 turned to 2 then it turned to 3 now weekend 4 is empty with no updates. Wish I could leave this story here forever and move out.
Harry, If you are planning to come one day, I suggest you write the whole story and come back when you are ready with update for week.
~RCF
I apologize for the delay. But in a way , this delay was very much needed for me personally as it helped regain my lost health and vigor in activities. Weekly updates will be regular from now as health is alright. And promise is a promise , not matter what happens , LSW : Age Of Darkness will be a completed story one day. As for your issue with Sonarika's arc. I understand , her arc doesn't hold the magnitude to Hemant's. But this narration is important because this is the final leason to Sonarika to understand her husband better so that she can finally find closure in her own vulnnerability and move on.
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(20-05-2026, 05:54 PM)Harry Jordan Wrote: I apologize for the delay. But in a way , this delay was very much needed for me personally as it helped regain my lost health and vigor in activities. Weekly updates will be regular from now as health is alright. And promise is a promise , not matter what happens , LSW : Age Of Darkness will be a completed story one day. As for your issue with Sonarika's arc. I understand , her arc doesn't hold the magnitude to Hemant's. But this narration is important because this is the final leason to Sonarika to understand her husband better so that she can finally find closure in her own vulnnerability and move on.
Welcome back!
All we ask is a message before you go into woods for a sabbatical lol
~RCF
The following 1 user Likes RCF's post:1 user Likes RCF's post
• Demeter
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(20-05-2026, 06:45 PM)RCF Wrote: Welcome back!
All we ask is a message before you go into woods for a sabbatical lol
~RCF
Is this story worthy of our time? Is it erotica? Suggest a page number which may be interesting for me
-Pickup, drop, escape.
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(20-05-2026, 08:19 PM)Hornytamilan23 Wrote: Is this story worthy of our time? Is it erotica? Suggest a page number which may be interesting for me
Yes it could interesting to you if you like below things
1. Main character cheating her spouse
2. Main male lead is not cuck or dumbass or Beta
3. Lot of action episodes like movies and cinematic verse explored with actual heroines and steamy scenes with them ( Alia, Kirara, Mrunal)
4. Main lead hero has strong background and his character is revealed slowly towards the end
~RCF
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Hello Harry... You don't know how I feel now man.. you gone through lots of stuff man.. Which i don't have that much of knowledge man.. A long chapter.. You know what I had head ache man... Happy to have you back.. kudoos to you.. keep it up..
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(20-05-2026, 08:19 PM)Hornytamilan23 Wrote: Is this story worthy of our time? Is it erotica? Suggest a page number which may be interesti It's worth a lot man.. first theree pages you should be patience then you won't stop.. Trust and try
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(20-05-2026, 11:33 PM)Parthibajeeva Wrote: Hello Harry... You don't know how I feel now man.. you gone through lots of stuff man.. Which i don't have that much of knowledge man.. A long chapter.. You know what I had head ache man... Happy to have you back.. kudoos to you.. keep it up..
I am glad to give you a relief with a lengthy chapter with this one.....I too enjoyed it especially to have a chapter with no sex in it LOL.....but that will be the highlight for chapter 34 only.....from Chapter 35 sex will return since we have to see the best of Kira after all!!!!
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Expecting for Saturday man.. Hope you won't disappoint us ..
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Waiting for Saturday.. pls update regularly..
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I’m not a big fan of ‘heroes and epics’ stories, the sort you associate with Rambo. Nevertheless, I appreciate and enjoy this story as a whole.
The narrative flow is straightforward and easy to follow, and it has staying power, which means it also has a positive long-term effect on the writing.
The sensual scenes are both exciting and passionate, regardless of who is with whom and under what circumstances they take place.
For these reasons, I have become a fan and friend of this story and its main protagonists, Hemant and Sonarika ...
However, I view some plot elements with a very critical eye: in my opinion, the drawn-out lesbian sex scenes are too long and simply do not fit the context.
Another point is that I do not approve of Hemant’s sexual escapades, as they seem forced and appear to be driven by a desire for revenge and a need to prove himself.
Hemant has no need to let himself go, for he still loves his Sonarika, who fills his heart completely, and there is no room in his heart for another woman.
I therefore expect him to show more backbone, more sincerity and loyalty to himself and to his wife, who is the mother of his child.
Finally, it should be noted that it would be desirable for Hemant to be more present in his role as a respectable, private, business-minded, loving husband and caring family man than Michael King is in that regard.
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Demeter
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