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Veils of Maya

K_Vishnu_Prasad
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
When two brothers of the Paniya tribe wander into the dense forests of Wayanad, their lives fracture in a single moment of fate. Arul, the younger, falls into a hidden chamber and is left crippled. Aadi, the elder, follows—and in touching a forbidden shrine, he is thrust into a vision where his soul separates from his body. What he encounters there shatters his understanding of reality. Their grief only deepens when their father, the chieftain of the tribe, dies mysteriously the same day. The tribe mourns, but Aadi begins to sense a darker pattern behind these tragedies. Guided by Angoor, the tribe’s elder, he learns that the shrine was not holy at all, but a prison—built to contain Rahu, the immortal asura severed from time itself. As Arul’s condition worsens, Aadi is forced to make impossible choices. Rahu tempts him with whispers of forbidden power, offering a way to heal his brother. But each step Aadi takes draws him closer to breaking the ancient locks that hold the asuras at bay. The gods descend from the heavens, armies clash, and the forest itself trembles as Maya—the great veil of illusion—begins to unravel. Caught between gods who preserve illusions and demons who promise freedom, Aadi must decide: Will he risk the world to save his brother, or sacrifice his last kin to protect humanity?
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Brothers of the forest.

The forest of Wayanad was home to many secrets, but to Aadi and Arul, it was also a playground. Born to Kelappan, the proud chieftain of the Paniya tribe, the brothers had grown up running through its tangled roots and whispering canopies. Aadi, the elder, carried his father's quiet strength and his mother's faith in the gods. He would bow before ancient trees and shrines, offering silent prayers, believing the forest itself listened. Arul, on the other hand, was fire and storm—rebellious, quick to laugh, and quicker to anger. Where Aadi trusted, Arul doubted; where Aadi prayed, Arul cursed.

Yet despite their differences, the two could not be parted. Together they hunted birds with makeshift bows, carved paths through the undergrowth, and watched sunsets bleed across the horizon. The tribe spoke of them as one soul in two bodies: one bound by reverence, the other by defiance.

That evening, Aadi had suggested a walk toward the old Thirunelli temple road—a place shrouded in silence, where only the boldest ventured. "They say the gods walk unseen there," Aadi whispered as they made their way along mossy stones. Arul smirked. "Or perhaps it's only shadows. Don't be fooled by tales, brother."

As they moved deeper, the air grew cooler, the forest denser, and the path less certain. Neither of them knew that this journey would split their lives apart forever.