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Reborn: King of Akhand Bharat

Aryavarta
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In 2025, Vikramaditya — a software manager from Delhi with a long history of failed businesses — dies while saving a young girl from a truck. He is reborn in 1910, in the body of a 15-year-old orphan in British-occupied Delhi. The boy’s entire family was executed by colonial officers. This time, Vikramaditya wakes with more than memories — he has Magicnet, a mysterious force that lets him link human minds through touch, access their thoughts, extract skills, rewrite memories, and grow stronger with every connection. As World War I weakens British control, Vikramaditya moves quickly. While politicians plan passive protests, he begins building a quiet empire from the ground up. By 1920, he launches a hidden revolt using networks of students, workers, and loyal minds — avoiding events like Jallianwala Bagh entirely. No Partition. No rise of Gandhi. No foreign-sponsored leadership. He quietly removes Congress’s original leadership, dissolves their influence, and replaces them with a loyal, disciplined assembly chosen under his watch. He rewrites education in every corner of Bharat. Hindu scriptures like the Vedas, Upanishads, Itihasa, and Dharmashastras are taught as national heritage and moral foundation. All religious materials from outside the land — especially Christian and Islamic — are removed from schools. Churches and mosques are taken under state control, and their property is redirected toward Hindu welfare and cultural rebuilding. Forced conversions stop. Gradually, communities return to their ancestral roots. Magicnet spreads across villages, cities, and borders. Through it, Vikramaditya unites the region into one civilizational state: Akhand Bharat — spanning Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and Tibet. He builds a new constitution where democracy is controlled, and the king holds final power — over law, military, and judiciary. Vikramaditya rules not just by law, but by thought itself. His people are connected. His memory is carried across generations. His reign lasts a thousand years. Bharat is never ruled again.
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Chapter 1 - 1: Death on the Highway

The sky was flat grey over Delhi. A humid January afternoon. The smell of smoke and rain lingered above the overpass near Dhaula Kuan. Cars were jammed. Horns blared in short bursts like stuttering coughs. A broken tempo had stalled sideways, blocking two lanes. Nobody moved.

Vikramaditya stepped out of his WagonR with irritation. White shirt stuck to his back. He tapped the door shut with his knee and pushed through the shoulder-to-shoulder line of bikes and cabs.

Up ahead, drivers argued with the tempo man, who kept pointing to his engine like it explained anything. Vikram ignored them. He walked past the mess, eyes scanning for a path forward. On the other side of the divider, the road was still flowing. Trucks, SUVs, two-wheelers — one after the other, without pause.

He was about to return when he heard the scream.

A sharp, thin sound. A child.

Vikram's head turned fast. Ten meters to his right, near the service lane, a girl was crouched in the road. Maybe five years old. Blue frock. No shoes. Crying. Her toy had rolled under a truck and she'd gone after it. No one noticed. The truck was reversing.

Vikram didn't think. He sprinted.

Feet slammed against the tar. He didn't hear anything else. Just the girl crying. One hand reached out to grab her arm. His other hand shoved against the moving truck's bumper.

Too late.

The bumper caught him on the ribs. His body jerked. He twisted so she wouldn't take the hit. He felt her fingers slip from his hand just as the corner of the truck hit his lower back. A loud crack followed. The world tilted.

Then nothing.

When the truck finally stopped, people ran in.

Someone pulled the girl out. Someone else yelled for help. A man in uniform blew a whistle. One woman screamed and covered her mouth. Another tried to hold back traffic with her scooter.

Vikram's body lay still. Blood pooled slowly near his collar.

His eyes were half open.

But he wasn't there anymore.