MayaKashyap2007
She was never meant to become a tale of blood and broken crowns.
Devyani was a woman of rhythm. A celebrated dancer whose world was woven from the delicate music of ghungroos, the fragrance of jasmine in her hair, and the quiet discipline of a life devoted to art. She entered Hastinapur not as a warrior, not as a politician, but as a teacher invited to share beauty with a princess.
But in the halls where power wore silk and gold, one man's desire was enough to turn a sanctuary into a prison.
One night.
One abuse of authority.
One decision made by a prince who believed his title placed him above consequence.
And the woman who once spoke through dance was left to gather the fragments of a life she no longer recognized.
Yet even among the ashes of hatred, guilt, and grief, fate had written a path she never expected.
For when the world saw only a woman touched by tragedy, one man saw the person who had existed long before her suffering.
A man she should have hated.
A man whose blood was tied to the very family that had destroyed her peace.
A man bound by dharma, duty, and the unbearable weight of loving someone whose wounds were carved by his own kin.
Yudhishthir.
The prince who offered neither pity nor ownership, only a hand and the freedom to decide whether she wished to take it.
Their love was not born in innocence.
It was born in the shadows of betrayal, in quiet conversations, in shared silences, and in two souls who knew that sometimes the greatest act of courage was allowing oneself to be loved again.
This is not the story of a woman who was broken.
This is the story of a woman who survived, a prince who chose truth over blood, and a love that dared to bloom where it never should have.