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The Vengeance of Indra

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by Shatrujeet Nath




  Published by Jaico Publishing House

  A-2 Jash Chambers, 7-A Sir Phirozshah Mehta Road

  Fort, Mumbai - 400 001

  jaicopub@jaicobooks.com

  www.jaicobooks.com

  © Shatrujeet Nath

  VIKRAMADITYA VEERGATHA: BOOK 3

  THE VENGEANCE OF INDRA

  ISBN 978-93-86867-57-5

  First Jaico Impression: 2018

  Third Jaico Impression (New Cover): 2021

  No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.

  To

  Vijayam mami, Chitra mami and Raghu mama.

  Without you, Kochi, 1988, would never have happened,

  and life wouldn’t have taken such an interesting turn.

  Index of Major Characters

  (In alphabetical order)

  Humans

  The Kingdom Of Avanti

  Aatreya merchant of Malawa

  Ajanya commander of the Imperial Army

  Amara Simha councilor of Avanti

  Angamitra captain of the samsaptakas

  Aparupa daughter of Aatreya

  Atulyateja garrison commander of Udaypuri

  Brichcha father of Shanku

  Chirayu lackey to Governor Satyaveda

  Dattaka commander of the Sristhali command centre

  Dhanavantri councilor of Avanti and royal physician

  Dveeja Aparupa’s companion

  Ghatakarpara councilor of Avanti; nephew of Vikramaditya and Vararuchi

  Greeshma bandit; escapee from the Dandaka Forest

  Kedara captain of the Imperial Army

  Kalidasa ex-councilor of Avanti

  Kshapanaka councilor of Avanti; sister of Queen Vishakha

  Kubja labourer at Aatreya’s shop

  Kunjala physician at Avanti’s palace

  Mahendraditya late king of Avanti; father of Vikramaditya, Vararuchi and Pralupi

  Mithyamayi Vismaya’s niece; maid to Pralupi

  Mother Oracle Shanku’s grandmother; head of the Wandering Tribe

  Pralupi sister of Vikramaditya; Ghatakarpara’s mother

  Pulyama captain of the Imperial Army

  Satyaveda governor of Malawa province

  Shanku councilor of Avanti; granddaughter of the Mother Oracle

  Sharamana garrison commander of Musili

  Subha Second Captain in the garrison of Udaypuri

  Suhasa commander of the Imperial Army

  Udayasanga samsaptaka warrior

  Upashruti mother of Vikramaditya and Pralupi; second wife of Mahendraditya

  Ushantha mother of Vararuchi; first wife of Mahendraditya

  Varahamihira councilor of Avanti

  Vararuchi councilor of Avanti; half-brother of Vikramaditya

  Vetala Bhatta chief councilor of Avanti; royal tutor

  Vikramaditya king of Avanti

  Vishakha wife of Vikramaditya; Kshapanaka’s sister

  Vismaya chief of the Palace Guards

  The Kingdom of Magadha

  Asmabindu councilor of Magadha

  Daipayana general of the Magadhan army

  Kapila second son of late king Siddhasena

  Shoorasena king of Magadha; elder son of late king Siddhasena

  Siddhasena late king of Magadha

  The Kingdom of Vatsa

  Chandravardhan king of Vatsa; ally of Avanti

  Himavardhan brother of Chandravardhan; father of Ghatakarpara

  Piyusha Shashivardhan’s bodyguard

  Shashivardhan son of Chandravardhan of Vatsa

  Yashobhavi councilor of Vatsa

  The Kingdom of Kosala

  Adheepa general of Kosala’s army

  Bhoomipala king of Kosala; ally of Avanti

  Gajaketu travelling musician

  Kadru courtier of Kosala

  Kirtana courtier of Kosala

  Pallavan envoy and councilor of Kosala

  The Kingdom of Heheya

  Harihara king of Heheya; ally of Avanti

  Rukma daughter of Harihara of Heheya

  Sumayanti queen of Heheya

  The Kingdom of Matsya

  Adri garrison commander of Kasavati

  Baanahasta king of Matsya; ally of Avanti

  The Anarta Federation

  Yugandhara chief of the Anarta Federation; ally of Avanti

  Manidhara chieftain of the Anarta Federation

  The Republic of Vanga

  Bhadraka Vanga chieftain

  Sudasan chancellor of the Republic of Vanga

  The Hunas

  droiba Huna shaman

  Ga’ur Thra’akha Kalidasa’s Huna name

  Khash’i Dur chief of the Hunas

  Zho E’ramilate Huna chief; Kalidasa’s father

  The Kingdoms of Odra and Kalinga

  Abhirami queen of Odra; sister of Veerayanka

  Veerayanka king of Kalinga; brother of Abhirami

  Devas

  Agneyi apsara and chief of the fire-wraiths

  Brihaspati royal chaplain of the devas

  Dasra captain of the Ashvins; twin brother of Nasatya

  Gandharvasena a deva

  Indra lord of the devas; king of Devaloka

  Jayanta son of Indra

  Manyu palace keeper of Devaloka

  Matali a deva

  Menaka apsara of Devaloka

  Narada envoy of Devaloka and advisor to Indra

  Nasatya captain of the Ashvins; twin brother of Dasra

  Shachi wife of Indra; Jayanta’s mother

  The Ashvins elite cavalry of Devaloka, led by Nasatya and Dasra

  The Maruts the seven sons of Diti

  Urvashi apsara of Devaloka and mistress of Indra

  Asuras

  Amarka asura general; son of Shukracharya

  Andhaka the blind rakshasa

  Chandasura asura general; son of Shukracharya

  Diti sorceress and matriarch of the asuras

  Hiranyaksha lord of the asuras; king of Patala

  Holika sister-consort of Hiranyaksha and witch queen of Patala

  Shukracharya high priest of the asuras

  Veeshada the thief of the Halahala

  Others

  Ahi the serpent-dragon

  Betaal the Ghoulmaster; lord of the Borderworld

  Kubera lord of the yakshas

  Shalivahana lord of the danavas

  Shiva the Omniscient One

  Takshaka lord of the nagas

  Tribhanu lord of the kinnaras

  Glossary of Indian Terms

  (In alphabetical order)

  akashganga the Milky Way

  amlika tamarind tree

  angavastram a stole or light shawl to cover the torso

  apsara a beautiful, supernatural female being in Hinduism

  badi-maa elder mother; a form of address

  barasingha swamp deer

  chakram a throwing weapon, circular in shape

  danava a mythical race in Hinduism

  danda a walking stick

  devadaru a species of cedar

  dhoti traditional men’s garment

  ghat steps leading down to a body of water like a holy river

  gurudev master or teacher; also a form of address

  jal-yantra an Indian percussion instrument

  kashayam a brewed Ayurvedic medicine

  katari a fist dagger

  ketaki fragrant screw pine

  kimshuka flame of the forest

  kinnara a legendary tribe in Vedic India

  mahaguru grandmaster or teacher; also a form of address
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  mandala a spiritual and ritual symbol in Hinduism representing the universe

  naga a legendary tribe in Vedic India

  parijata coral jasmine

  pishacha a mythical flesh-eating demon in Hinduism

  pranaam salutation

  rajasuya yajna ritual sacrifice performed by ancient Indian kings before being anointed emperor

  raj-guru royal tutor; also a form of address

  rakshasa a mythical humanoid being in Hinduism

  roti Indian bread

  rudra veena an Indian string instrument

  salmali red silk-cotton tree

  samrat emperor or overlord

  samsaptaka a tribe of mythical warriors

  soma Vedic ritual drink

  suryayantra a heliograph

  tamalpatra Indian bay leaf quail

  teetar mark

  tilaka worn on the forehead by Hindus

  urumi a longsword with a flexible whip-like blade

  vaidya / vaidyanath physician; also an honorific and form of address

  vamsi a bamboo flute

  yaksha a mythical spirit in Hinduism

  Author's Note

  When I began writing the tale of Vikramaditya in 2013, I had estimated that the story would spread over three volumes, which is why the series was titled and marketed as The Vikramaditya Trilogy. But by the time I was through with The Conspiracy at Meru, my publisher and I were left in no doubt that the series would end up spanning four books. The story had grown in its telling, and several vital and interesting sub-plots had emerged that needed space of their own to breathe and blossom.

  Naturally, the series couldn’t be called a trilogy any longer. I was dead against terming it a ‘quartet’, so after scratching our heads a bit, we agreed on Vikramaditya Veergatha — veergatha meaning a song of valour or an epic poem.

  I bring this up because there is a degree of confusion among readers, some of who assume this is the last book in a trilogy. No, it isn’t. This book is Volume Three in a four-book series and will be followed by The Wrath of the Hellfires, the final Vikramaditya book.

  As always, there are so many people to thank for having supported me in the creation of this series. I shall reserve the roll of honour for the last book, but there are a few names that deserve special mention here. Blogger and reviewer Debdatta Sahay, for all her support and faith. My friends Ravi Balakrishnan and Varsha Naik, for reading the manuscript and sharing their thoughts and suggestions. My wife and editor Pragya Madan, for putting up with all the typos and tantrums. Lastly, the superb team at Jaico headed by Akash Shah, Sandhya Iyer, Sonal Surana and Vijay Thakur, for giving this series wings.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Index of Major Characters

  Glossary of Indian Terms

  Author’s Note

  1. Rescue

  2. Ghatakarpara

  3. Ransom

  4. Ga’ur Thra’akha

  5. Lost

  6. Frontier

  7. Search

  8. Revelation

  9. Gandharvasena

  10. Promise

  11. Vararuchi

  12. Droiba

  13. Bangle

  14. Arrest

  15. Yah’bre

  16. Greeshma

  17. Rebellion

  18. Escape

  19. Departure

  Rescue

  There was nothing to see in the inky-black sky, from where a cold, numbing drizzle had been coming down right after sunset. Still, Vikramaditya crinkled his eyes against the needle-pricks of rain and studied the great blot of darkness overhead. Somewhere above the stacks of rainclouds was the new moon, he knew, ready to inch into the sky like a shy bride.

  A new moon that would usher a calamitous end to everything, should they fail in their mission tonight.

  Fate had granted them this one chance to rescue Betaal and save Borderworld. This, scarily, was also their last hope of holding out against the savages from the Marusthali. Failure tonight would render everything that Avanti and its allies had strived for meaningless. The hard, stubborn years of resistance; the countless bitter battles fought to reclaim land from the invaders, inch by bloody inch; the martyrdom of so many of Sindhuvarta’s bravest warriors — all of it would amount to nothing.

  Dropping his head, Vikramaditya turned to his left where Kalidasa’s form was barely visible in the dark, lying flat on his stomach. Everything hinged on their beating the new moon — and beating the large Huna force massed between them and the banyan tree growing at the centre of Ujjayini’s cremation ground, where Betaal was being held captive.

  Everything depended on Kalidasa being able to get past the heavily guarded cordon around the droiba, the Huna shaman, and slaying him first.

  “It will be done, brother,” murmured Kalidasa, as if reading Vikramaditya’s mind. “You focus on getting the ghoul out of there”

  “Ghoulmaster,” Vikramaditya corrected, his gaze returning to the dozen-odd fires scattered across the cremation ground. The light was sufficient to make out clumps of Huna warriors standing guard and the shapes of the horsehide tents pitched all around the ground.

  The barbarians’ bid to capture the cremation ground nearly a month ago had made little strategic sense to the defenders of Avanti. Since then, the Hunas had dug in and fortified their position there — sometimes at the cost of yielding critical ground to Avanti’s troops elsewhere — and had proved impossible to dislodge. What merit the Hunas saw in holding the cremation ground was lost on Vikramaditya and his council.

  Two nights ago, they had finally learned the answer. When it was almost too late.

  “Ghoulmaster! What kind of Ghoulmaster lets himself be trapped by a shaman?” Kalidasa snorted in irritation. “Then, although he knows you are his only hope, he waits until everything is nearly lost before he starts seeking your help. How is he the protector of Borderworld? Don’t they have anyone better for the job?”

  Vikramaditya shifted and flexed his arm to maintain circulation. Under him, the grass was damp and uncomfortable. He feared an arm or a leg might go to sleep just when it was time to launch the attack.

  “To be fair to him, Betaal had been trying to reach out to me for nearly a week.”

  “Umm.”

  Vikramaditya could tell that his friend was still most unimpressed with Betaal. But in truth, the Ghoulmaster had been striving to get through to Vikramaditya every day of the past week. Or every night, to be precise.

  The first two nights that Betaal had approached him in his sleep, Vikramaditya had barely registered the occurrence, putting it down to just another dream. It was only after Betaal’s third appearance in a row that its significance had dawned on him.

  “It is the thing with its hair made of fire, raj-guru,” he had told Acharya Vetala Bhatta on waking up. “The same thing that brought me back to the palace.”

  “You mean...” The Acharya had looked at Vikramaditya sharply, “...when you were a little boy? The time you had brain fever...?” Seeing the young king nod, the raj-guru scratched his nose in surprise. “The Ghoulmaster. After so many years. If he is so persistent, he must want to tell you something, Vikrama.”

  That night, as the Acharya had kept watch, Vikramaditya had slept, and allowed Betaal to come to him again. And Betaal’s account of all that had transpired — and all that would happen if he were not rescued before the night of the new moon — had left the king and his chief councilor shaken. The council was hastily convened, but with only one intervening night to the new moon, there was hardly time for deliberation. Decisions were taken, a course of action plotted, and as an outcome, Vikramaditya and Kalidasa lay on the sodden earth, staring at the Huna fortifications.

  “This droiba... did the Ghoulmaster describe him?” Kalidasa’s gaze flitted between the burning fires.

  “He wears a headdress made of vultures’ feathers,” Vikramaditya said, trying hard to recall the details of Betaal’s conversation.r />
  “Many of these savages do that,” Kalidasa grunted. “Anything else?”

  “Yes. His face is painted blue. Blue streaks, I think.”

  “Blue streaks?”

  Vikramaditya nodded and Kalidasa expelled his breath in exasperation. “How can I possibly find a face painted blue in such darkness?” A moment’s pause, then, “Why couldn’t the Ghoulmaster have been more specific about the shaman’s whereabouts?”

  Betaal had actually been generous with information, even if dread had made him a little incoherent. “The Huna shaman will sacrifice me two nights from now to take Borderworld,” he had blurted out in fear and relief the moment he had Vikramaditya’s attention. It had taken quite a few probing questions for the king to piece together the problem they were up against.

  The droiba was cunning, for he had managed to trick Betaal into leaving Borderworld and coming to the banyan tree in the cremation ground. He was obviously powerful too, for not only had he taken Betaal prisoner, he intended offering the Ghoulmaster as a sacrifice, something that Betaal appeared powerless to prevent. Once the relevant Huna gods had been appeased, the shaman would assume control of Borderworld.

  “Why does he want Borderworld?” Vikramaditya had asked Betaal.

  “So that the Hunas can vanquish the kingdoms of Sindhuvarta,” came the chilling reply. As Betaal revealed the Hunas’ diabolical scheme, Vikramaditya had felt his skin crawl even in his sleep.

  Borderworld, everyone knows, separates the world of the living from the world of the dead; a bridge, a space of transition. All dying things first pass into Borderworld, where they are tended to by the ghouls under the Ghoulmaster, who dispose of whatever is physical before sending the spirits on their way.

  “When the dying come to Borderworld, they aren’t alive, but they aren’t dead either,” Betaal had explained. “They are undead. It is my ghouls who destroy the flesh, so that these undead can cross into the world of the dead. But what if the undead aren’t destroyed in the flesh, but are preserved and revived with the aid of sorcery? What if such undead are sent into battle against the armies of Sindhuvarta? Imagine, king of Avanti. By mastering Borderworld, the Huna shaman gets access to an endless supply of the undead, who can be used in war against you. Imagine losing troops in battle today and having them return tomorrow as the undead, fighting on the side of the Hunas. What chance do you and your allies have of winning such a war, good king?”

 

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