"When the fire refuses to die, the wind begins to fear
it."
Days turned into weeks. The bruises on Karikalan's body
faded, but the fire in his heart only grew stronger.
He stopped arriving late. In fact, he was now the first to
enter the classroom—quietly taking his seat, opening his books, and immersing
himself in learning.
He began reading voraciously—philosophy, mythology,
history. He filled notebooks with stories—tales of forgotten warriors, of gods
who fell and rose again, of mortals who defied fate.
And every morning, before the sun rose, he trained. Push-ups.
Pull-ups. Squats. Sprints. His body, once mocked, began to
change—slowly, steadily.
"If I keep myself busy,"
he told himself, "I won't have time to care about their hate."
From the shadows of the corridor, Elara
watched.
He saw the change. The way Karikalan no longer flinched.
The way his shoulders no longer slouched. The way his belly began to shrink,
his eyes began to sharpen, his presence began to grow.
Elara clenched his jaw.
"After everything we did… he still walks with his head
high?" "He's becoming something else. Something dangerous." "If this continues…
we—the rich, the powerful—we'll be the ones exposed."
He turned to his closest confidants, his voice low and
cold.
"It's time. I have a plan. If it works, Karikalan will
never have the guts to step foot in this college again."
A cruel smile curled on his lips.
"Let's see how long his little fire lasts… when we drown
it."
Karikalan, unaware of the storm brewing, continued his
quiet rebellion. He helped the librarian organize books. He volunteered to
clean the orphanage on weekends. He even began to write a story titled "The
Boy Who Spoke to the Stars."
But fate was watching. And so was Elara.
Scene: February 14 – The Day of Hearts
The college campus was buzzing with color and laughter. Red
roses, heart-shaped balloons, and couples walking hand-in-hand filled the
corridors. It was February 14—Lover's Day.
Karikalan walked in as usual, his bag slung over one
shoulder, his eyes tired but focused. He had no plans for the day. No
expectations. Just another day to survive.
But something felt… off.
He noticed Elara—already seated in class.
"That's strange,"
Karikalan thought. "He usually strolls in ten minutes before the bell. Why
is he here so early?"
Then it hit him.
"Oh… right. It's Lover's Day.He and Rani… of course. That explains it."
He tried to ignore the thought, but it lingered like a
shadow.
As Karikalan stepped into the classroom, Elara turned to
him with a wide smile.
"How are you, my brother?"
Karikalan froze.
"Brother? After everything?Why is he acting like nothing happened?"
He forced a polite nod.
"Yeah… I'm fine."
Elara leaned in, his voice low and smooth.
"Listen, I've been thinking about what happened that day.
We went too far. I felt guilty. You didn't deserve that kind of treatment."
Karikalan's eyes widened. Was this… an apology?
"I know you've been trying to change. Studying hard. Coming
on time. You want to be accepted, right? You want to be friends with everyone?"
Karikalan nodded slowly.
"Then I have a solution," Elara said, his tone suddenly
serious. "Apologize to Rani. Properly. Kneel before her. Ask for forgiveness."
Karikalan blinked.
"Kneel? Why? I can just say sorry with words."
Elara chuckled.
"Rani's not just any girl, Karikalan. She's the daughter of
a millionaire. A high-class woman. Even I had to kneel to propose to her. It's
not about humiliation , it's about respect."
He leaned closer.
"Do this, and I promise… she'll forgive you. She'll even
ask the class to accept you. Isn't that what you want?"
Karikalan looked down at his hands. The same hands that had
fed stray dogs. That had written stories of hope. That had wiped his own tears
in silence.
"Is this what it takes to be accepted?To kneel before the very people who broke me?"
But then he remembered the laughter. The isolation. The
ache of being invisible.
"Maybe… maybe this is the price of peace."
He looked up.
"Okay. I'll do it."
Elara smiled.
But behind that smile, something darker stirred.
"Good," Elara thought. "Let's
see how far you'll go to be loved."
