avacado_1374
Arnav Singhania does not believe in second chances-not after betrayal taught him that love is fragile and trust even more so. Cold, composed, and emotionally distant, he chooses control over connection, silence over vulnerability. For him, feelings are liabilities he cannot afford.
Ira Malhotra has spent her life searching for a place where she belongs. A classical dance teacher by profession, she has always been told she is "not enough"-not successful enough, not important enough, not worthy enough of being chosen. When she is forced into a marriage neither she nor Arnav asked for, she enters his world with no expectations, only quiet resilience.
What begins as resentment slowly turns into familiarity.
And familiarity, into comfort.
Between unspoken conversations, shared routines, and moments that feel unexpectedly safe, Arnav finds parts of himself he had buried long ago. Ira, in turn, discovers warmth in a man who never knew how to give it.
Their relationship grows not through grand gestures, but through patience, understanding, and the choice to stay.
But the past has a way of returning when happiness feels closest.
A single moment, misunderstood and painfully timed, threatens the fragile trust they have built. This time, love is not tested by hatred-but by silence.
Sukoon is a story of healing, of love that is learned rather than claimed, and of two broken people finding peace not in perfection, but in each other. It is about the kind of love that feels like home-quiet, steady, and finally, at rest.
second book of the betrayal series ( SUKOON)