Saavri
This tale unfolds as an autobiographical document penned in the voice of Soumitra Banerjee, culminating in a thrilling twist. As it reaches its climax, the story’s central figure awakens to the realization that, in reality, he has been asleep on his bed in his room all along. Yet, in a virtual realm, he has unraveled every secret of a enigmatic man named Soumitra Banerjee—a cursed soul who finds liberation from his tormented existence through this very proxy.
Everything in the story transpires within a simulated world, yet it draws from the genuine pasts of key characters, laced with layers of mystery and adrenaline at every turn. These figures feel utterly real in their essence, but they exist not in the physical world—rather, in a virtual domain conjured within the mind, where their powers border on the infinite.
It’s the story of a matrix that doesn’t operate in the tangible outer world but thrives inside the human psyche. Here, the narrative’s dominant forces can drag other characters into this realm against their will, where they can indulge in romance, inflict physical harm, or even claim lives.
On his twentieth birthday, Soumitra Banerjee—raised by an English couple—encounters a mysterious girl named Saavri during his ride home from the party. She reveals the truth of his birth, guiding him toward a diary safeguarded by his father, Soumik Banerjee, meant specifically for this day.
Through the diary, Soumitra uncovers his father’s reality: a man from a prominent Calcutta family, estranged due to his eccentric pursuits. Soumik had staked his life on mastering a mythical power called Agashi, hidden in the depths of Assam’s jungles, leading him to a limbo state—neither among the living nor the dead.
In the past, Soumik joined a band of like-minded obsessives, all seekers of dark forces, on a perilous journey into Africa’s shadowy forests. Their quest: to acquire a vital power essential for taming Agashi. Amid encounters with cannibalistic tribes and harrowing ordeals, all but Soumik perished. Yet, he emerged victorious, returning alone with the coveted strength.
Emboldened, Soumik ventured into Assam’s wilds, only to confront Agashi’s dominion—a being not of this world. She was a princess who had died millennia ago, dwelling in an alternate dimension. At her command was a deadly army of nocturnal creatures, who hunted humans to sustain themselves on blood and flesh, granting them eternal life and boundless power.
Soumik challenged them, aiming to subdue Agashi and seize her immortality. Despite his valiant efforts, the battle ended inconclusively: he gained neither her full powers nor fell victim to her consumption. But immortality he did attain—one of his goals—though its curse soon bred a desperate yearning for release. In pursuit of this, he preserved a diary chronicling his experiences for his son, born by chance, and hid it securely in Calcutta.
Now, the time had come for Soumitra to complete his father’s unfinished quest: to conquer Agashi. He was being summoned to those Assamese jungles. Saavari appeared as his father’s emissary to beckon him—but that was not the full truth. Soumitra struggled to prepare himself, yet by departure time, he felt compelled, as if enchanted. Unbeknownst to him, his will played no part; he was being orchestrated from afar.
As he embarks on this journey, a new antagonist enters: Maling, who, with his minions, pulls Soumitra into dreamscapes and attempts to assassinate him. Amid these relentless threats, Saavri steadfastly aids him, turning each crisis into a rare opportunity for Soumitra to hone his skills, readying him for the ultimate confrontation with Agashi.
Who truly prepared him to stake his life on this perilous path? If Saavri wasn’t who she claimed, then who was she—and what was her motive in luring him along? Who was Maling, and why was he hell-bent on Soumitra’s demise? How could one conquer Agashi, a force nonexistent in the real world? Her realm was her creation—a virtual domain where she reigned supreme, dragging real-world souls in to devour them. How could a mere human overcome such an entity? What fate awaited Soumitra on this odyssey? Could he withstand a power like Agashi’s?

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