ramayantika
Ancient India. 600 BCE. The age of the sixteen great kingdoms. The age of questions that would shape civilizations.
From the sacred ghats of Kashi to the great university city of Takshashila - where students from every corner of the ancient world come to learn, to debate, to become - this is the story of one girl's final year at the edge of everything she has known.
Smriti carries her city in her bones. Kashi: the luminous one, the city of Shiva, the place where the sacred and the everyday are the same thing - gave her its hunger for questions, its refusal to accept easy answers, its understanding that knowledge and beauty are not opposites but the same force moving in different directions. She dances this knowledge. She debates it. She carries it through the corridors of Gyanpith like a lamp she is not sure she is allowed to set down.
Smriti's final year at Gyanpith, the great seat of learning at ancient Takshashila, should be should be her finest. Instead it becomes the year she must answer the one question she has always outrun: She is everything - but which everything is she allowed to be?
When Ekaksh of Avanti - prince of the fierce western kingdom, painter of extraordinary precision, a man of such complete stillness that rooms reorganize themselves around him, finally looks at her and asks a question about her dance that no one has ever thought to ask, something shifts in the architecture of her world.
And suddenly Smriti, who is afraid of nothing except her own uncertainty, is afraid.
Because Ekaksh doesn't want the dancer or the budding philosopher or the merchant's daughter or the girl from Kashi. He wants all of it. All of her. At once. Without asking her to choose.
Which means she has to.
And Smriti, who has always known her own mind, does not yet know her own heart well enough to trust what it is telling her.
Before the crown. Before the choice. Before everything - there is a girl who must first learn who she is.