Ficool

Ashes of the Forgotten War

KsaiTV
28
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 28 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
679
Views
Synopsis
In the shadows of India’s sacred cities, an ancient war stirs once more. Aarav, a young artist burdened by visions of battles he never fought, is pulled into the hidden war between the Circle of Light and Rakshasas who hunger for dominion. From the ghats of Varanasi to the sanctums of Shaktipeeth, Aarav discovers his gift is more than sight—it’s a weapon, a key, and perhaps a curse. But as bonds are forged within the Circle, whispers of betrayal threaten to tear them apart. When the past collides with the present, Aarav must face the truth: the line between savior and sacrifice is thinner than he ever imagined.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 – The Sketches Nobody Buys

Aarav sat hunched over the wobbly table in his one-room flat, sketchbook spread open, pencil

smudges staining his fingers. The fan above creaked with every slow spin, scattering pencil

shavings onto the floor. Rent was due in three days. He had exactly six hundred rupees in his

account and a packet of instant noodles left in the cupboard.

He should've been job-hunting. Instead, he was drawing again.

On the page was a figure with lion eyes and ash-gray skin, muscles coiled like stone ropes,

carrying a mace that looked far too heavy for any human. The figure's mouth stretched into a

grin that was half-snarl, half-madness. Behind him, a battlefield burned.

Aarav stared at the sketch, annoyed.

"Where the hell do you even come from?" he muttered.

The truth was: he didn't know. The images just arrived in flashes — sometimes while he was

half-asleep, sometimes in the middle of a crowded metro ride. People his age are worried about

EMI payments or dating apps. Aarav? He worried about why he couldn't stop drawing monsters

that looked like they belonged in some forgotten mythology textbook.

He tried once, when he was younger, to tell his cousins about the dreams. How he remembered

fighting creatures no one else could see. How he felt like he had lived another life before this

one. The teasing had lasted for years — "Reincarnation Boy," they'd call him. After that, he

stopped telling anyone. Better to keep quiet. Better to say it was "just art."

His phone buzzed. A WhatsApp message from his mother:

Maa: "Any updates on job interviews? Don't waste time drawing useless things, beta."

He typed out a reply — "Working on it" — then tossed the phone aside.

The ceiling fan groaned louder, like it might collapse any second. Outside, the sounds of

Hyderabad's evening traffic bled in through the half-open window: auto horns, temple bells, a

street vendor calling out about samosas. Life went on, indifferent to his stuck existence.

Aarav picked up the sketch again. The figure's eyes seemed to glint in the dim light. He almost

expected the creature to step off the page and speak.

"Useless," Aarav whispered, tearing the page out. He crumpled it and tossed it into the corner,

where dozens of other crumpled visions already lay like corpses of forgotten battles.

But when he turned to a blank sheet, the same image came back. The mace. The lion eyes.

The burning battlefield.

It always came back.

Aarav pressed his palms into his face. He needed a job, not hallucinations. Tomorrow he would

check job boards again, maybe apply for another ten positions that would never call back.

Tonight he'd just eat his noodles and try to sleep.

Still, as he crawled into bed, the sketch sat on the table, half-finished. In the shadows, the

creature's grin seemed wider.

And somewhere far away, beyond the noise of the city, something ancient stirred.