Chapter 14 — The System Awakens
Age: 9 Years Old
Time in Kolkata doesn't move cleanly.
It folds.
Monsoon becomes winter becomes heat again.
But near Dakshineswar Kali Temple, one thing stayed constant:
Riddhiman Paul kept changing.
At nine years old, he no longer looked like a child trying to learn cricket.
He looked like someone testing it.
Every match, every drill, every throw— was no longer practice.
It was data.
The Ground Reality Shift
The local ground had changed around him.
Earlier:
boys mocked him
ignored him
underestimated him
Now:
they watched him carefully
avoided direct competition
argued before bowling to him
Because something had become clear:
"You cannot trap him the same way twice."
Box Theory (Now Operational)
Riddhiman no longer consciously "thought" Box Theory.
He executed it automatically.
The field in his mind was now divided instantly into:
opening zones
pressure zones
collapse zones
safe rotation zones
But now there was a new layer:
trigger zones
Areas where field movement could be forced.
The Match That Confirmed It
It was a regular para match.
Nothing special.
Until the chase became tight.
Required: 18 runs from 12 balls.
Older boys thought: "We have him now."
But Riddhiman just adjusted gloves slowly.
No panic.
No urgency.
Only calculation.
First Ball
Full length.
He didn't attack.
He observed.
Field shifted slightly.
Mid-off moved in.
Second Ball
Short ball.
He left it.
No shot.
No emotion.
Third Ball
They tried spin variation.
Riddhiman stepped forward late.
Single.
Simple.
And then it began.
Field Collapse Effect
By fourth ball, something strange happened.
Fielders started moving incorrectly.
Not because of error.
Because of pressure.
Because he was not reacting to their field…
He was forcing their movement patterns.
Ghosh Kaku narrowed his eyes.
"Ei ta hoye gelo…"
(This has started happening…)
The Critical Moment
Fifth ball.
Bowler overthought.
Tried yorker.
Missed length slightly.
Riddhiman saw it early.
But instead of attacking immediately…
he waited.
One extra fraction.
That fraction changed everything.
Fielders committed too early.
Gap opened behind point.
Late adjustment.
Soft wrist.
Controlled placement.
FOUR.
Silence.
Not celebration.
Calculation.
Because everyone realized something:
He didn't hit the gap.
He created it.
Ghosh Kaku's Realization
The old coach stepped forward slowly.
He looked at the pitch.
Then at Riddhiman.
Then spoke quietly:
"Ekhon bujhlam…"
(Now I understand…)
Pause.
"You don't play cricket."
Long pause.
"You make cricket react to you."
Riddhiman didn't respond.
He was already thinking ahead.
Next ball.
Next pattern.
Next collapse.
Final Over
Required: 6 runs from 4 balls.
Normal pressure.
But not for him.
First ball: single.
Second ball: single again.
Third ball: field panic starts.
Captain adjusts too late.
Fourth ball.
Riddhiman waits.
Longer than usual.
Bowler rushes.
Mistake.
Half-volley.
He steps in.
Not power.
Not aggression.
Just timing.
Ball disappears into gap.
Match over.
Aftermath Silence
No celebration chaos like before.
Something changed.
Even opponents didn't speak immediately.
Because the match didn't feel like it was won.
It felt like it was solved.
Ghosh Kaku's Final Line
As they walked away from ground, the coach said softly:
"Tor cricket e ekta jinish bhoy lage."
(One thing about your cricket is frightening.)
Riddhiman looked up.
"Ki?"
(What?)
The coach paused.
"Tor against khela possible na."
(Playing against you feels impossible.)
Ending of Chapter 14
That night, on the rooftop, Riddhiman practiced shadow batting under a silent sky.
No emotion.
No celebration.
Only repetition.
But inside him, something irreversible had formed:
Box Theory was no longer theory
It was becoming instinct
And instinct was becoming dominance
And somewhere deep inside his mind, a new realization began to form quietly:
"If I can control field movement…"
"Then I can control entire matches."
