NEMESIS_OF_ALL
There are men who succeed because they are ruthless. There are men who succeed because they are lucky. And then there is Aman Sharma, who succeeds in a way that nobody around him can fully explain - not his Chief of Staff, who has worked beside him for twenty years and still cannot predict his next move. Not the investigative journalist who spent two years tracing his empire back to a newspaper advertisement in June 2002 and found, at the end of it, a twenty-three-year-old woman and a classified ad. Not the government regulator who deploys every institutional weapon available and watches them fail one by one against the wall of twenty years of clean records.
What Aman has is not luck. It is not ruthlessness. It is something quieter and stranger than either: a certainty about how things will unfold that he has never explained to anyone, and a system of rules - appearing to him as plain white text on the morning this story begins - that rewards him for losing money and offers no explanation for why.
He builds from a single cyber cafe in Greater Kailash to a conglomerate that touches every major sector of the Indian economy. He does this without ever selling a share of his companies, without ever paying a bribe, without ever taking a partner, and without ever raising his voice in a boardroom. He gives his employees salaries above market rate, fires anyone who harms another employee on the first offence, and funds a charity whose name is not connected to his in any public record. His personal wealth grows in a separate silence that not even his closest associate knows about.
He is not a good man performing for an audience. Nobody is watching. That is the point.
Empire of Closed Eyes: The Capital Reversal Saga is a novel series built on a single question that will not be answered until its final pages: who is Aman Sharma, really - and where is he telling this story from?