THE HARBINGER OF NOR'WESTER

By atimaharathi_arka

1.2K 69 136

Those who know, need not be told. For those who don't, let me whisper it to you... Newly appointed forensic s... More

You probably know this...
Prologue
Welcome to the Northern Side
The Road to Naxalbari
The Woman in the Storm
The Offer of the Priestess
The Landlady of Sikdar Estate
Lights and the crowd
Will of the Goddess
The Elite, the learned and other people
The Girl who danced with Fire
Sins of the Past
Blessed Grounds of Mayatalav
Asta - Siddhi
Table Conversations
The promise of seven lifetimes
This is the Day
Caught dead by surprise
At the Princely State
The Reluctant Witness
The Birth of Intentions
The Aftermath of the Storm
Calcutta University
The Courteseans of Princely State
The Unseen Flames
The Mangled Orchids
The Man from Kurseong
The Price of Freedom
All who are Welcomed
Source of Inspiration
Great Endeavours
The Goddess descends
Thunderbolts and Sticks
The curious case of Chaitali Karmakar
The Domestic Terrorist
The Wishful Lie
Lost Whispers
Sowing Festival
The Tension between us
Prison Break
The Unimportant Prophecy
The Greater Demons
Under the Storm Shadow
Laws and Drama Associated
Where Fairytales are Born
Shootout at Hatighisa
Ceasefire
Red Salute
The Broken Bridge
A Supernatural Complication
One Man or an Army
The Brewing Storm
A Discovery from Losses
The Myth before the Harbinger
The Weight of the Past
Caravan from the Princely State
Mysteries that Remained
The Frightening Foreshadows
Conviction of Wrongs
Wrath of the Goddess
Epilogue
A little note from me...

One Last Agreement

20 1 3
By atimaharathi_arka

Maryswan Tea storage Facility,
Outskirts of Naxalbari

The jeep stopped with a vigorous jerk. Nandan dismissed the driver's apology and alighted from the jeep. Then holding out his hand to Shefali so that she could alight. The support wasn't needed except for her heavily embroidered tea length dress.

Nandan looked up to the faded letters of the banner, his plans for the tea corp made many such storage facilities defunct. The colonel was not happy with Nandan about that, so he was very nervous when Virgil asked him to meet here today.

"You should really write more to my father," Shefali Maryswan's eyes were gleaming.

"Our new guest settled okay?" asked Nandan diverting Shefali.

"He is interesting." Shefali held down her skirt, as she carefully stepping through the foyer into the storage hall, "I heard Shreema visited today, how did that go?"

Nandan chuckled as he turned back, "She was... interesting! Though I still think we shouldn't let a policeman stay in our house."

"The kid is a scientist!" Shefali caressed casually, "from Calcutta! The local police basically owes you for doing this."

Nandan exhaled in reply. He pulled down and smoothed his punjabi before walking into the massive cuboidal abyss. Bright light crept into the dark hall at places where parts of the roof were hollowed out. Nandan looked around as he walked and then he noticed the silhouette of a person standing in one such spotlight made by the sun. He needed no help recognising the lean man dawning a tail coat. Nandan doubted his father in law had any idea how outdated that fashion was.

"Mr. Maryswan," Nandan spoke unsure. The second meeting with someone after you buy out their business is usually at their funeral or sending a notice of demanding refunds to cover earlier loses in the said business. They certainly don't meet you with their daughter in an abandoned warehouse.

"No need to be nervous, Nandan." he shook Shefali's hand first. He made it clear that owning his business didn't mean Nandan was in-charge. Nandan kept looking back at Shefali the entire time he shook hands with Colonel Virgil Maryswan.

Shefali smiled a little pulling back a strand of hair and as if following a norm, straightened herself elevating her shoulders a little.

"So everything is good I see!" Virgil said in a formal tone.

"Yes it is. For the last quarter century!" Nandan skirmished joyfully.

"It is good that you came to visit, father." said Shefali with a smile framed to her lips with difficulty.

"Say Nandan," started Virgil ignoring his daughter's courtesy, "I was thinking you hire out this place as a agro wholesale market, give me a share or two from your cut. Works to our advantage, what do they call it here?...a Mandi!"

Nandan rolled his tongue inside his mouth and blinked twice. Virgil was more angry for with him than Nandan thought, hence the ways to make Nandan bleed to nurse his bruised ego.

"What do you think, son?" Virgil spoke with his husky voice smoothing his coat tails.

"A mandi is not a share market! There is no inner circle of corporates jacking up stock prices!" Nandan answered angrily walking closer to his father-in-law, "the farmers sell their yearly produce through auctions. I have been buying those produces with rates I fixed for a long time, selling them at far larger profit margins. If a farmer even receives half of those margins, all would be lost. Your business plan! It would ruin an ancient market hierarchy!"

"You can fix those auctions" Virgil was insistent, "you are Talukdar Sikdar's son, you have achieved far worse!"

"If I may?" Shefali got between the arguing men. Virgil nodded calmly and Nandan threw up his hands into the air.

Shefali held her husband's hand and pulled him away to the side.

"I don't think you understand, Nandu!" Shefali spoke with warmth in her voice, kind of allowing Nandan to yell.

"He is furious. He wants to destroy me!" Nandan said with complete apathy. He momentarily lost humility towards his wife, "How can I set up this place for wholesale!? The rent payed to Virgil for no service, that is a different matter. "

"Really!" Shefali grabbed his arm and dragged him a little further, "this is the exact stupidity my father expected! He even called you a bleeding heart!"

"I'm sorry, you knew about his deal!?" Nandan couldn't fathom if this was a betrayal on his wife's part. Her knowledge about this agreement doesn't exactly come up in a conversation.

Shefali looked deep into her husband's eyes, "British rule have been over for three decades now. Farmers, common folks will look for new people to blame their poverty on. They won't be your subjects forever. British were foreigners, they saved their skin through diplomacy. You don't have the same privilege, retreat in the shadows while you still can..."

Nandan strongly pursed his lips, things were not going his way, he stole a glance at Virgil.

"Trust me there'll be no shortage of brave farmers to label you a tyrant! Accept my father's deal...." Shefali said again.

"Okay, I accept!" Nandan shouted turning towards Virgil.

"Excellent", Virgil looked at his ever smiling daughter "great!" he said again as he tried to regain his formal posture once more.

Continue Reading

You'll Also Like

430 96 8
Unseen Shadows: A Journey from Sarcasm to Justice in the Turmoil of Unexpected Alliances. Step into Maya Joshi's world, where simplicity meets sarcas...
371K 20.5K 74
BOOK 1 OF 'The WAR of Dynasties' SERIES ✨ Princess Chandralekha was born in a royal family and was promised to the wealthiest king, but little did sh...
Another Chance for Lives By

Historical Fiction

50.5K 2.3K 41
Karna and Draupadi. A story for many who wanted another chance for Karna and Draupadi. What if the Gods decides to give them another chance? What wi...
26.9K 1.6K 75
" You are talking about impossible those things ended Thousands of years ago " a frustrated elderly voice tried to sound sensible. " indeed yes but I...