Zaiwritez_
In the old city of Bhopal, where the lakes mirror both moonlight and secrets, two names have always carried weight.
Rathore.
Malhotra.
One is sunset-coloured pride, Rajput blood that still remembers the clash of swords and the smell of gunpowder from 1857. The other is midnight money, power that grew in the shadows after independence, built on construction contracts by day and whispered deals by night.
They were never meant to touch.
Colonel Vikram Singh Rathore once wore the olive green with honour, stood ramrod straight at the Republic Day parade, and taught his daughter that a Rajput's word is his fortress.
Reyansh Malhotra learned early that fortresses can be bought, burned, or broken; and that the only word worth trusting is the one backed by fear.
Between them stood forty lakhs, four years of interest, and one girl who sketched dreams in silk thread.
Zara Rathore wanted to conquer runways.
Reyansh Malhotra decided to conquer her.
This is not a love story.
It is the story of a debt that was never about money,
of a ring that was slipped onto the wrong finger,
and of a war fought in whispers, touches, and locked doors,
where the only victory is surrender,
and the only escape is falling.
Welcome to the night the princess became the prize,
and the monster discovered he still had a heart to lose.
Turn the page.
The lake is dark, the city is watching,
and the story has already begun without your permission.