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Eclipse Hearts ; When The Devil Loves Too Deep

Suraj_Kumar_6327
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Synopsis
In the haunted ruins of Bhangarh, 2025 CE, Dr. Rasmika Sen—brilliant, skeptical, and burdened by a lineage of silence—unearths something the earth itself seemed desperate to hide: a mirror carved in obsidian and bone, veined with something alarmingly red. It bleeds when touched. It hums with ancient sorrow. And when Rasmika dares to look into it, it doesn’t reflect her—it remembers her. But the memories aren’t hers. They belong to a serpent-crowned princess from a forgotten kingdom. They belong to bloodied battles and betrayed oaths. They belong to a girl whose name no longer exists in any archive. As dreams begin to leak into waking life, Rasmika finds bruises she doesn’t remember getting, wounds that feel ceremonial. She starts speaking in a language long extinct. And then there's Raahi—a drifter with ash in his voice and centuries in his eyes. He seems to appear wherever the mirror does. He claims to know nothing. But he never leaves. In the year 3027 AD, across a fractured world rebuilt as the city of Akhirbhoomi, memory is currency. The rich trade in nostalgia, the poor auction their childhoods, and love has been outlawed—it interferes with productivity. Here, cloned enforcers known as Echo Agents ensure emotional compliance. But one of them—Raahi_09X—is broken. He glitches. He dreams. He remembers Alira, a girl he’s never met but feels carved into his code. Her voice leaks through forbidden archives. Her laughter distorts surveillance footage. Her grief pulses like a virus in his neural core. Haunted and hunted, Raahi_09X descends into the city’s underbelly—what’s left of myth, memory, and mourning. There, he uncovers a splintered truth: he is not a clone. Not entirely. He is the memory echo of a girl who once defied a curse. A girl who chose love over prophecy. A girl who never truly died. And long before either of them, in 1700 CE, in the serpent-worshipping kingdom of Takshak, Princess Alira—born under an eclipse and cursed by birth—falls in love with Aryan, a rakshak sworn to protect her from the very fate she tempts. When a tantric is murdered and a forbidden ritual interrupted, time collapses in on itself. The curse meant for Alira consumes the entire timeline. Aryan, mid-sacrifice, is frozen in a moment stretched across centuries. Alira is erased from history—body, name, and future—but her soul remains stubborn, scattered like embers across time. Now, as a cosmic eclipse draws near again, time begins to unravel. The mirror in Bhangarh weeps with memory. The skies above Akhirbhoomi flicker with ancient omens. And a soul caught between identities, timelines, and centuries must make an impossible choice. Rasmika, slipping deeper into memories that aren’t hers, becomes the unwitting key to a curse centuries in the making. Raahi_09X, glitching between duty and desire, must decide whether to save the world that created him or the girl whose love defied it. And Princess Alira, scattered across time but never erased, begins to claw her way back—not just to be remembered, but to rewrite destiny itself. This is not just a love story. It’s a chronicle of rebellion, reincarnation, and ruin. A tale where: Time bleeds, refusing to heal. Mirrors remember, even what history wants to forget. Love breaks protocol—and reality itself. And justice is not bound by time, only by memory. In the collision of myth and machinery, memory and prophecy, past lives and future crimes, who you were is never truly gone. And sometimes, the devil isn’t the villain—just someone who loved too much, too deeply, for too long. In the end, Raahi must choose: Break the curse. Rewrite history. Or fall in love again—and risk the apocalypse.
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Chapter 1 - Akhirbhoomi Where Memories Refuse To Die

The desert didn't welcome her.

It watched.

Wind moved in slow, circular drifts—not forward but around, like it had forgotten the direction of time. It whispered—not in gusts, but in syllables. Half-names. Fragments of stories.

The road to Bhangarh twisted like a half-buried serpent in the sand — a path forgotten by time, chewed hollow by wind and age. As the jeep rattled into the desert outskirts, the sky above was a sullen bruise: black clouds hunched over the horizon like beasts waiting to pounce.

Rasmika stepped out of the jeep like a blade drawn too early. Her boots hit the sand with dull indifference. She didn't pause to admire the horizon or adjust to the dry burn behind her eyes. She didn't look up. She only noted: heat index spiking—ambient pressure low—smell of iron and stale incense.

From the corner of her eye, she noticed a girl standing by the broken well, half-shadowed, watching without expression. She looked away before their eyes could meet.

Two local workers stood murmuring near a stone arch.

"Woh jagah jeeti hai," one said.

That place lives.

She heard it, logged it, said nothing.

She was not here for myths. She was here for anomalies, carbon dating, and measurable shifts.

But something in her ribs paused.

It was nothing. She wrote it off.

The ruins stood ahead, fractured like memory, half-swallowed by dune and time. A haveli not built but bled into the earth. The walls leaned in like they'd heard a secret they couldn't unhear.

The locals had already begun to retreat. They always did. By sundown, not a soul would remain within five miles of the ruins.

"Woh jagah jeeti hai," the old driver muttered, more to the cracked steering wheel than to her. That place is alive.

Rasmika said nothing. Her hands, gloved and steady, clutched her field journal like a relic. Logic kept her spine straight. But her eyes — sharp, haunted, scanning — betrayed the quiet tension wrapped around her ribs.

The wind howled unnaturally, dragging the heat with it like a fevered breath. Cactus plants stood twisted and dried, their spines blackened, red-stained at the tips — like they'd been thirsting for something deeper than water, longing for blood the earth would not give. A cluster of bats erupted from the ruins in a panicked spiral, screeching overhead.

The compass in her hand spun violently before freezing, dead north. Her tablet flickered. A seismometer on the assistant's belt shrieked into static.

"EM disturbance," she muttered. "Solar flare maybe."

But she wasn't convinced.

She opened her notebook and wrote as clinically as one might report rainfall:

Site: Akhirbhoomi. Temp: 43°C. Wind: Unstable. Locals report haunted cognition. Recommend observation.

Dust curled around her like a creature without form. It smelled faintly of burnt almond and wet copper—too unnatural for weather, too subtle for gas leaks. Still, she told herself: everything has a reason.

But the locks on the haveli's main door were rusted from the inside.

That had no reason.

She clicked her pen closed. That was the only sound she allowed herself.

Ryan, the American field liaison, shouted something from behind about gear delays. She didn't answer. His voice always sounded like ego, even when it asked questions. Instead, she turned toward the crumbling steps that led into the haveli's outer courtyard.

As they neared the crumbling façade of the haveli — an old mansion clawed halfway out of the sand like the spine of a buried god — birds launched skyward in a synchronized terror, leaving behind a silence too exact to be natural.

Her boots crunched against the gravel as she stepped out of the vehicle. The air smelt burnt, metallic. Something older than the dust breathed through the ruins. Her team began unloading equipment, trying to keep it clinical, professional.

But her eyes were already on the haveli.

It wasn't just a structure.

It watched.

A low, almost imperceptible thrum vibrated through her soles. The kind of silence that comes not from the absence of sound — but the holding of breath.

She approached the iron-wrought gate alone. The air grew colder the closer she stepped.

She caught a flash of red—movement—just beside a cracked pillar.

The girl again.

Now crouched, head tilted, like she was listening to something Rasmika couldn't hear. She still hadn't spoken.

"Dr. Sen?" someone called from behind. "You're going to want to see the courtyard markings—there's something off with the perimeter alignment."

She barely heard them. Her gaze had locked onto a stone archway where a half-collapsed mural shimmered under the gathering clouds. Not shimmered like light.

No — shimmered like memory.

She blinked. For half a second, the mural changed.

A woman — tall, wrapped in blood-red silks, stood at the balcony with snakes coiled around her wrists.

She blinked again. Gone. Just dust and peeled paint.

Must've been an afterimage, she thought. A trick of contrast—light on moisture, or retinal memory.

This is scientific, she reminded herself. You're here to document, not to dream.

But the wind whispered a name she did not yet remember knowing:

"Alira…"

Behind her, the girl was no longer crouching. She stood now, framed in the narrow corridor of broken sandstone, her eyes still, too old for her face.

Rasmika gave her the smallest nod.

The girl didn't move. Just said, very softly,

"Woh wapas aayi hai."

She's come back.

Rasmika turned toward the haveli without asking who she was.

Some things don't need answers.

Not yet.

She wasn't afraid.

She didn't do fear.

She did patterns. Hypotheses. Analysis.

And this place was... misaligned.

As if history itself had hiccupped.

She stepped forward, into shadow.

The wind followed.

Far beneath her, in the underbelly of the haveli,

something ancient stirred — thrilled that she had returned.