The Whispering Walls of Bhangarh
The highway stretched before Isha like a black ribbon, her headlights cutting through the October night. The engine had died three kilometres back, and the nearest town was a phantom on the map. Then she saw it: the crumbling silhouette of Bhangarh Fort against the starlit sky. She knew the stories. Everyone did. The curse, the jauhar, the forbidden nights. But her phone was dead, the temperature was dropping, and the darkness pressed in from all sides. The fort's main gate hung open like a jaw. Isha pulled her cardigan tight and stepped through. Inside, the air tasted of rust and time. Moonlight filtered through broken windows, casting skeletal shadows across stone corridors. She found a chamber near the entrance and sat on a weathered bench, telling herself the stories were just stories. Then she heard it. A whisper, soft as dust settling. Her name. "Hello?" The whisper came again, from the walls themselves. Not her name this time, but something else. Words in a language she almost understood, urgent and pleading. More voices joined the first—a chorus rising from the stone, from the earth beneath her feet. She stood up, moving toward the exit. The whispers followed, grew louder. They weren't threatening exactly, but desperate. Like voices calling from very far away, across an impossible distance. At the gateway, she turned back. In the courtyard she'd just left, figures moved through the moonlight. Not quite solid, not quite shadow. Their mouths opened, the whispers intensified, and Isha ran. She burst onto the highway just as a truck appeared, its driver slamming on brakes. When he helped her to the cab, his face was pale. "Madness," he muttered. "No one survives a night in that place." "I was only inside for minutes," Isha protested. The driver checked his dashboard clock. "It's 5:47 AM, beta. You've been gone for six hours." Isha's reflection in the side mirror showed her face unchanged—but her hair, which had been black that morning, now held a streak of grey at each temple. In her ears, very faintly, the whispers continued. They would continue for a long time.