• ISHAAN •
THREE DAYS LATER…
“What?” I almost yelled in a way that could gain everyone's attention after hearing the bad— errr… worst— news from Ved. “Uh… When did this happen?”
“Yesternight.” Though he sounded coherent due to his wobbling, I understood what he was trying to say.
“Okay. Are you at your home or hers?” I asked, already packing my things to see my devastated friend and his dead wife.
“Our house,” he replied, emphasizing on the word “our house”, indicating that he was at the house Ved's father had gifted them for the wedding. “I have already informed Mehak's parents of this.”
“Oh.” I ran as fast as I could from my office canteen to the parking lot and started to ride my car, my mind barely worried about the wrath I would earn from my boss in the future. But, it's okay. He would understand, unlike Aadya Chatterjee. “Okay. You don't worry. I'll be there soon. Love you. Bye!”
I disconnected the call and continued riding the car cautiously faster, remembering how Mehak Trivedi Singh and the baby in her womb died in a car accident the previous night.
I couldn't help but blame God for bringing Ved into this plight. Ved may be the sunshine of his loved one's lives, but Mehak was the sunshine of his. Especially after her getting pregnant with his baby, Ved thought that God was being extremely kind with that guy and was raining sunshine on his side.
Until she died.
Be it in Advika's world or in mine, Gods were total sadists. Don't blame me. It was just my agnostic self doing all this talk. But anyways, if one could be more cruel than your sworn enemy towards you, it's God. And, especially in my life, God was just more cruel than Aadya Chatterjee.
That was when the realisation dawned on my dumb ass and I halted my car almost in an urge. If Gods were the ones who are the reason behind everything that happens in our life and if they were the one who determine everything in our life, then was Aadya Chatterjee— the one who created this world and was determining everything that has to happen here— the God of this universe? So, was she the one who planned the death of Mehak and her unborn baby?
But, why would she do that after all that “Ishaan is my baby” drama she created?
***
The first thing I saw when I reached Ved's house was not Mehak shrouded in a white cloth— just as I didn't expect. Ved, leaning on the wall, rested his head on his knees. His body was shaking due to him crying, though he didn't make any noise. His mother sat near him, placing her hand on his shoulder while his father and Mr Trivedi sat on the couch with their eyes holding no light and life.
“Ved.” He looked up at my call as I went to him and sat next to him, questions on Mehak's existence looming over my mind.
“Ishaan,” he called with his tone wobbling more than I heard over the call. “Police said that Mehak's body was missing. We searched for her body throughout the night. All we could find was her car and her belongings.” And, he went on to cry more while I couldn't help but curse at Aadya Chatterjee for doing all of this. “God!” He looked up at the ceiling and exclaimed. “You must have taken me away. What did my Mehak do? What did my baby do?”
The moment he mentioned God, I couldn't help but tell him something that was hovering on my mind for a very long time. “Ved. You think that God is a celestial being, that he knows everything, and that he's perfect. No. First of all, God is a woman.” As he frowned at me for uttering stuff at the most inappropriate time, I added, “God is a human being. Just like you and I.”
YOU ARE READING
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FantasyFEATURED: New Adult by @Romance Ambassador's Monthly Pick (July 2025) by @AmbassadorsIN Advika Bansal is that 20-year-old effortlessly juggling between her internship and college life while getting time to do things she likes (at the cost of sacrifi...
