Chapter 9
The Wake of the Storm
One Week Later...
Pritam slowly opened his eyes, blinking against the harsh white lights above him. The sterile scent of antiseptic filled his nostrils, and it didn't take long for him to realize—he was in a hospital bed.
His throat was parched, voice hoarse, but he managed to croak, "Help..."
Within moments, Nitin and Monty burst through the door, their faces lighting up in relief.
"Pritam! You're awake!" Nitin rushed to his side.
Monty leaned in, smiling faintly. "How are you feeling, buddy?"
But Pritam didn't spare a second for himself. "Where is my family?" he asked, his voice fraught with urgency.
That question wiped the smiles clean off their faces.
Their expressions fell—an unmistakable shadow of sorrow clouded their eyes. They looked at each other, silently urging the other to speak, but neither did.
Pritam's chest tightened. "I'm asking again—where is my family?"
Still no answer.
Frustrated and fearful, he began to lift himself off the bed. Alarmed, Nitin and Monty quickly restrained him.
"No, no, Pritam! Lie down. We'll tell you," Monty said, voice soft but grave.
Pritam's pulse quickened. He could sense something was terribly wrong.
Nitin exhaled deeply. "Pritam... it's been a week since we brought you here. You've only just regained consciousness today."
Monty added quietly, "And in that one week... everything changed."
Pritam stared at them, eyes wide with dread. "Tell me what happened."
Nitin looked down, gathering strength. "Beeji... you knew she had already survived two strokes. Her health was fragile. The drug overdose... it pushed her beyond her limit. Her blood pressure shot up, and she suffered a massive heart attack. She didn't make it, Pritam. She passed away that same night."
Pritam's breath caught in his throat.
Monty continued gently, "Your mother... she survived the drugs. But her immune system was shattered. With this virus going around... she got infected almost immediately. She fought hard. But two days ago... she lost the battle."
Tears welled up in Pritam's eyes, overflowing and tracing silent paths down his bruised cheeks. He felt the ground slip from beneath him, though he was still in bed.
He wiped his face, trembling. "And... Vishaka? Rahul?"
The question seemed to strike another blow to Nitin and Monty. Their eyes dimmed, their silence heavier this time.
"Tell me!" Pritam shouted. "Have they... have they left me too?"
"No!" Nitin rushed to say. "They're alive..."
"But..." Monty began.
"What is it?" Pritam pressed, his voice nearly breaking.
Monty hesitated. "Vishaka... isn't herself anymore. After witnessing Beeji and your mother's deaths—and seeing what happened to Rahul—she broke. Completely."
Pritam's heart pounded. "What happened to Rahul?!"
Monty didn't respond fast enough.
Grabbing him by the collar, Pritam snarled, "What happened to my son?! Tell me!!"
"RAHUL IS IN A COMA, PRITAM!" Nitin burst out, unable to bear it anymore.
Pritam froze. His grip loosened, and his hands fell limply to his sides.
Monty added softly, "The overdose damaged him deeply—physically and neurologically. The doctors say even if... even if he wakes up, he might never be the same again."
The words hit like a freight train. Pritam stared blankly at the wall, the noise around him vanishing into a hollow silence. He whispered, "Leave me alone... please."
"Pritam—"
"Get out," he said, louder this time, voice shaking.
Nitin and Monty hesitated, then silently stepped out of the room, shutting the door behind them.
Left alone, Pritam curled into himself on the bed, clutching a pillow to his chest. He buried his face into it, muffling the raw, guttural sobs that tore from his throat.
His mind swirled with memories—Rahul's first steps, the first time he called him "Papa," their giggles during bedtime stories. And then... that last moment, Rahul's tiny arms outstretched, screaming Papa before falling limp in the arms of evil.
"Papa failed you, my son," he whispered through his tears. "I promised I'd be your everything... but I couldn't protect you."
He held the pillow tighter, sobbing until his body could no longer take it.
Later that evening, Nitin and Monty wheeled Pritam toward the ICU where Rahul was being kept.
As they entered, Pritam's breath caught in his throat. His little boy lay motionless under the weight of machines, a ventilator supporting every breath. His face was pale, a shadow of the joyful child he once was.
Pritam broke down, gripping the wheelchair armrests, trying to hold in the scream building in his chest.
Nitin placed a comforting hand on his shoulder. "You need to stay strong, Pritam. For Rahul."
Pritam nodded faintly, tears never stopping.
Then a thought struck him. "Where's Vishaka?"
Both Nitin and Monty exchanged that familiar, dreaded glance again.
Pritam turned sharply to them. "Where is she?"
Nitin looked away, and Monty finally spoke. "She's not the same, Pritam... not anymore."
Government Mental Health Centre, Delhi
Inside a dimly lit cell, Vishaka thrashed wildly, her screams echoing through the sterile corridors. Nurses and doctors struggled to hold her down as she howled in anguish.
"Pritam Choudhary... I won't leave him!" she shrieked, eyes blazing with fury. "He destroyed my life— my dreams, my child, my family! I lost everything... all because he chose his damn duty over us!*"
The medical staff tightened their hold, but her rage only grew more unhinged. "I won't spare that man!" she howled, attempting to break free.
Just then, at the end of the corridor, Pritam appeared—frail, leaning on a walking stick, flanked by Nitin and Monty. The moment Vishaka's eyes fell on him, her aggression halted. A strange calm washed over her, unnerving in its suddenness.
The staff hesitated, then slowly released her arms.
Vishaka walked to the gate of her enclosure, her eyes locked on Pritam's. The fire in her voice simmered down to a low, haunting tone.
"Why, Pritam?" she asked, almost tenderly. "What did I ever do to deserve this? You showed me a dream and then drowned it... just like that. You gave an orphan a family, only to tear it away piece by piece. Why?"
Pritam couldn't meet her gaze. Her words sliced through his chest like a blade. His eyes dropped to the floor as guilt consumed him.
After a long pause, he gathered the courage to speak. "I'm... I'm sorry, Vishaka."
Vishaka's expression changed in an instant. Rage returned like a tidal wave. She charged forward, grabbing his collar through the bars.
"Sorry?" she spat. "Is that all you have left, ACP Pritam Chaudhary? Just that one pathetic word?"
Tears streamed down her face as she shouted, "You promised you'd help me fulfill my dreams. You promised you'd be both mother and father to Rahul. And what did you do? You sacrificed him... our son... for your duty!"
She wept uncontrollably, trembling with grief. "He needed you, and you weren't there! I needed you, and you abandoned me!"
Her rage escalated—she scratched and hit Pritam in fury. Nitin and Monty rushed to pull her off him while doctors and staff intervened again.
As they restrained her once more, she screamed furiously, "It was our hatred for drugs that brought us together—and now that very hatred has torn us apart! You've only seen my love till now, Pritam Choudhary... now you'll see my hatred. I'll destroy you the way you destroyed me!"
The doctors exchanged a glance, then gave a grim nod. One of them prepared the sedation equipment.
As Vishaka was strapped to the bed and given electric shock therapy, her screams faded into twitching silence. Pritam, unable to bear the sight, stumbled away from the cell. He collapsed against a wall, crouched, covering his ears in anguish, and let out a guttural scream:
"Aaaahhhh!"
Present Day – Sakhuja House
Pritam jolted awake, gasping for breath. He found himself in the familiar, warm room of the Sakhujas. Sweat clung to his forehead, and his heart was pounding.
A soft, melodic hum reached his ears—Amrita was humming a lullaby to her unborn child. The sound, gentle and full of hope, stirred something deep in his soul.
Tears welled in his eyes as he thought of Rahul—his little boy who once clung to his fingers, called him Papa, and now remained only in memories... and in legal files.
Vishaka's words echoed in his mind.
"She was right," he whispered. "I did lose everything... because of my loyalty to duty. But she never saw the whole truth. I never chose duty over family—they were both my world. I just didn't get the chance to save either."
He sat up, staring at the ceiling. "I always tried to see her side, to support her... but she never tried to see mine. She just kept blaming me."
His heart clenched as he recalled what followed her release from the mental health centre. In the year that followed, she transformed her love into vengeance.
When Rahul finally came out of coma, Pritam had planned a birthday celebration to make up for all they had lost. But Vishaka took Rahul away, filed false charges, and placed him in a child welfare home—cutting Pritam off completely.
Then came the divorce petition—against his will. A bitter custody battle followed, where she accused him of negligence and abuse. She didn't stop there—false complaints to the department cost him his post.
But Pritam never stopped serving his country. Stripped of his badge but not his purpose, he went undercover with his loyal friends, Nitin and Monty—his Changu-Mangu. Disguised as low-life drug peddlers, they infiltrated cartels, risking their lives every day.
It was during this phase that Mansoor Uncle, his confidant, helped him rent the Sakhuja's room. That little space became his sanctuary.
In time, the Sakhujas became more than just landlords. Pritam found brothers in Angad, Kabir, and Sonia. A family in Sukhbir, Santosh, and Guneet. Even Nimrat, who had once been wary, began to see him as her own son.
The pain of losing one family had begun to heal in the warmth of another.
Love and Hate—Two Sides of the Same Coin
When you love someone with all your heart, and they wound you deeply—whether knowingly or unknowingly—that love can curdle into hatred. The deeper the love, the sharper the hate.
And so it was for Pritam and Vishaka.
Once united by their mutual mission to rid the world of drugs, they had built a life on shared ideals. But when that mission destroyed what they held dearest, their love turned to ashes... and from those ashes rose vengeance, bitterness, and grief.
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To be continued.
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