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Rudraa : The awakening of Global Mythology

Chandan_8502
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Synopsis
In the quiet village of Karanjia, nestled between golden farmlands and an ancient forest in Odisha, eighteen-year-old Rudraa lives a simple life with his grandparents. The villagers respect the forest but avoid going too deep inside it, for the elders say the trees remember things that humans have long forgotten. Rudraa, however, dismisses such stories as old folklore. The only unusual thing about him is a small golden pendant shaped like a gada, passed down through generations of his family. His grandparents treat the pendant as something sacred, but to Rudraa it is merely an old heirloom. Until the night the forest begins to watch again. When livestock mysteriously vanish and the village dogs howl in fear before falling silent, something ancient begins to stir deep within the forest. At the same time, the pendant around Rudraa’s neck begins reacting to an unseen presence — a presence tied to the divine power of Hanuman. What begins as a local mystery soon reveals something far more terrifying. Across the world, forgotten beings of myth are awakening. Rakshasas, Asuras, Nagas, and spirits from ancient realms begin crossing into the human world as the boundaries between dimensions weaken. Governments struggle to understand the supernatural chaos spreading across continents, while hidden spiritual traditions prepare for a conflict they feared would one day return. At the center of this growing storm stands Rudraa. As he discovers the true origin of his pendant — forged from a drop of divine blood belonging to Hanuman — Rudraa’s destiny begins to unfold. The pendant awakens within him powers drawn from ancient siddhis, allowing him to channel supernatural abilities tied to devotion and spiritual strength. But Rudraa is not alone. Across the world, nine young women chosen by the power of the goddess Durga awaken as divine bearers of her avatars. Each carries a fragment of celestial energy, and together their combined power holds the key to opening a path to Maa Parvati, the cosmic mother of creation. Yet as these divine forces rise, so too does a terrifying enemy. An ancient Asura known as KaalVakra emerges from the shadows of forgotten ages. Through dark boons gained from powerful gods and centuries of penance, he seeks to gather armies from multiple realms — Rakshasas, Danavas, and ancient war clans long thought extinct. His goal is nothing less than the conquest of worlds. To stop him, Rudraa must journey beyond the human realm itself. From sacred cities like Varanasi to hidden realms like Shambhala, from ancient temples to the terrifying depths of the seven lower worlds of Hindu cosmology, Rudraa confronts creatures of legend while learning the true meaning of strength, devotion, and Dharma. In the depths of the cosmic underworld, he faces armies that once challenged the gods themselves. But the greatest battles are not fought with power alone. They are fought with faith. And as the war spreads across realms and dimensions, Rudraa must decide what it truly means to carry the blessing of Hanuman — and whether a single human can stand against a force powerful enough to threaten the balance of the entire Omniverse. Because the forest that once watched silently… has now awakened.
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Chapter 1 - Rudraa : The awakening of Global Mythology

Chapter 1 — The Forest That Watches

The village of Karanjia rested quietly between farmland and forest, as if it had been placed there centuries ago and simply never moved.

To the east stretched wide rice fields that glowed gold under the late afternoon sun. Farmers slowly gathered their tools as the day ended, their silhouettes moving against the fading light. Beyond the fields, a dusty road led toward the nearby town where buses came and went, carrying news of the outside world.

But to the west stood something older.

The forest.

Tall sal trees formed a thick wall of green and shadow. Their trunks rose straight and silent, their branches weaving together high above like the ribs of a giant sleeping creature. Even in daylight, parts of that forest looked darker than they should.

Most villagers avoided going too deep inside.

Not because of animals.

But because of stories.

Rudraa stood near the forest edge, kicking a loose stone across the dirt path while watching the sunlight slowly disappear behind the trees.

He was eighteen years old, tall for his age, with messy black hair that refused to stay in place no matter how many times he pushed it back. Around his neck hung a small golden pendant shaped like a gada. The tiny mace glinted faintly in the dying sunlight.

He rubbed it absentmindedly between his fingers.

The pendant had been in his family for generations. His grandparents treated it like something sacred, but to Rudraa it was just a cool old necklace with strange carvings.

Carvings that looked like scratches unless you looked closely.

"Rudraa!"

The voice snapped him out of his thoughts.

He turned to see his grandmother walking toward him along the dirt path, carrying a basket of vegetables from the garden.

She stopped when she reached him, her expression stern but tired.

"How many times have I told you not to stand near the forest when evening comes?"

Rudraa shrugged casually.

"Dadi, I'm just standing here. Nothing's going to happen."

She followed his gaze toward the darkening trees.

"You say that because you don't know what this forest used to be."

Rudraa smiled faintly.

"I've heard the stories."

"You heard them," she replied quietly. "But hearing and understanding are different things."

She turned and started walking back toward the village.

Rudraa grabbed the basket from her hands and followed.

"Dadi, most of those stories are hundreds of years old," he said. "Things like demons and spirits don't exist anymore."

She glanced at him sideways.

"Or maybe people stopped seeing them."

Rudraa didn't reply.

The village appeared ahead of them, small houses clustered around narrow paths, smoke rising from cooking fires. Children ran through the streets while elders sat outside their homes talking about the day.

Life here moved slowly.

But tonight, something felt different.

When they passed the small tea stall near the crossroads, Rudraa noticed a group of men gathered there speaking in tense voices.

"Another one gone," someone said.

"From where?"

"Mahadev's farm."

"A goat?"

"Yes."

Rudraa slowed his steps.

"That's the third this week," another man muttered.

"Leopard?" someone suggested.

Mahadev shook his head.

"No tracks. No blood trail either."

The group fell silent.

Rudraa exchanged a quick look with his grandmother before continuing home.

Their house stood near the outer edge of the village beneath an old neem tree.

His grandfather sat outside on a wooden chair, slowly grinding herbs with a stone mortar. The rhythmic scraping sound stopped when he saw them approach.

"You heard?" the old man asked.

His grandmother nodded.

"Another animal."

His grandfather's face remained calm, but something in his eyes sharpened slightly.

Rudraa noticed.

"What's the big deal?" he asked. "Animals get taken by predators all the time."

His grandfather wiped his hands on a cloth.

"Yes," he said.

"But predators leave signs."

"Maybe villagers just didn't see them."

"Maybe."

But the old man didn't sound convinced.

Night came slowly.

One by one the lights inside houses flickered on while darkness swallowed the fields beyond the village.

Inside the house, Rudraa sat on the floor scrolling through his phone while his grandparents talked quietly near the kitchen.

"…not normal," his grandmother whispered.

"We should watch a few more days," his grandfather replied.

"And if it comes closer to the village?"

Rudraa looked up.

"What are you two talking about?"

The conversation stopped instantly.

His grandfather smiled.

"Nothing important."

Rudraa rolled his eyes.

"You always say that."

"That's because most problems solve themselves if you leave them alone."

"Like missing goats?"

His grandfather met his gaze.

"Yes," he said calmly.

"Exactly like that."

Later that night the village grew silent.

Crickets chirped in the fields while distant dogs barked occasionally.

Rudraa lay on his bed staring at the ceiling.

Sleep refused to come.

Something about the tension in the village bothered him.

After a while he got up and stepped outside.

The night air felt cool against his skin.

The sky was clear, stars scattered across the darkness like distant sparks.

He leaned against the neem tree and looked toward the forest.

From the village it looked like a black wall stretching across the horizon.

Suddenly the dogs began barking.

Not just one.

Several.

Their voices echoed through the night in sharp bursts.

Rudraa frowned.

Dogs barked at everything.

But this sounded different.

More frantic.

More afraid.

Then suddenly…

Silence.

Every dog stopped barking at the same time.

The sudden quiet felt unnatural.

Rudraa felt a strange chill run down his spine.

And then the pendant around his neck became warm.

He grabbed it instinctively.

"What the…"

The warmth faded after a few seconds.

He looked toward the forest again.

Nothing moved.

No sound.

No light.

Just darkness.

After a moment he shook his head.

"Probably nothing," he muttered.

He went back inside and closed the door.

Deep inside the forest, something enormous moved slowly between the trees.

Branches cracked under its weight.

Its breath came out in slow, heavy bursts.

And far beyond where human footsteps had reached for generations…

something ancient opened its eyes.