Chapter 8 – Bhairavi
By the time he reached the cliffs,his feet were blistered.His mind — still. No questions.No prayers.Only breath. The air smelled of iron, incense, and something ancient. A small shrine stood at the edge —walls soaked in vermilion, skulls hung like garlands,and flames that did not flicker. She sat inside. Not waiting.Not watching.Burning. Her eyes were open.Not black. Not red.Just… awake—in a way that made time itself uneasy. The Saadhak knelt. But she laughed. “Why kneel, when I’ve already seen you naked from the inside?” He didn’t reply. She stepped forward. Each footfall sounded like a heartbeat breaking—and being reborn. She circled him.Like a lioness.Like a mother who remembers your karma better than you do. “You left your voice in the mirror,” she said.“Bring it back.” He opened his mouth to speak.No sound. She pressed her thumb to his throat. “Say it.” Still silence. Then… tears. Not of sadness.Of pressure. Like something locked deep inside, behind generations, was rising. He gasped. “I want to be free,” he whispered. She smiled. Not sweet. Not cruel.Real. “Then burn.” She placed her hand on his chest,and chanted— “Kreem Bhairaviye Swaha…” He screamed. Not in pain.In truth. All his guilt, all his rage held down for so long—caught fire like dry leaves. He convulsed.Fell. Then—stillness. A long, long stillness. When he opened his eyes, she was gone. But something remained. His breath sounded different. Like it belonged to a man who had died… and come back honest. Behind him, the cliff cracked. A path opened—stone steps leading downward,into the underground river where the final gate waited. A whisper rode the wind. “Now you meet the Guardian.The Rakshak.The one who decides if you walk out… or dissolve forever.”







