Nishaan – Instant Download
There was no one left to kill.
She looked at his empty hands. “What is your mark now, my son?” nishaan
Every morning, Arjun would walk to the edge of the village, where a single, ancient ber tree stood against the rising sun. On its trunk were a hundred small knife marks—the tally of his practice. He would draw a circle of wet red clay on the bark, step back twenty paces, and throw. His weapon of choice was not a gun, but a chakram —the steel, circular disc of his ancestors. It was his nishaan of truth. When it flew, it sang a low, humming song. There was no one left to kill
“The mark is all that is left of him, Mother,” Arjun would reply. On its trunk were a hundred small knife
He threw it high into the air, a silver ring against the vast, indifferent sky. It spun, catching the sun, and then sailed far, far away, landing with a soft thud in the tall grass of the Yamuna’s bank.
In the dusty, saffron-hued village of Kheri, where the Yamuna river bent like an old woman’s back, the word nishaan meant everything. It meant a mark, a sign, a target. But for the men of the Rathore family, it meant one thing: revenge.
