Genesis Maker: The Indian Marvel (Rewrite)

Chapter 24: Ch 23: The Breaking Point



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- Governor's House, Calcutta -

- March 11, 1936 – Evening -

The moment shattered in an instant.

Whitmore's hand darted to his revolver, his movements automatic, honed by years of discipline. He fired.

The gunshots roared through the room, each bullet slicing through the air toward Maheshvara's chest. Anderson flinched at the deafening cracks, but Maheshvara did not move—not to dodge, not to defend, not to even blink. Instead, his hand lifted in a slow, almost lazy motion, fingers spreading as the bullets met his palm.

The metal should have torn through flesh and bone. Instead, they stopped, caught effortlessly in his grasp. The force behind them vanished in an instant as if it had never existed. The bullets tumbled into his hand, clinking softly before he let them drop onto the polished wood of the Governor's desk.

Whitmore's eyes widened in disbelief. That was impossible. His mind rejected the sight even as his body tensed, refusing to accept what he had just witnessed.

Maheshvara sighed. "Predictable."

Then he moved.

Before Whitmore could react, one of the shadowed clones lunged, its movement a blur of unnatural speed. A hand wrapped around Whitmore's throat and lifted him clean off the ground. His legs kicked wildly, his fingers clawing at the grip that tightened like a vice. His breath came in short, desperate gasps as he felt his strength slipping away.

Anderson watched in silent horror. He had seen men hanged before. He had ordered executions, had watched rebels struggle as the rope stole the air from their lungs. But this—this was something else entirely. The clone held Whitmore up as if he were nothing, as if the Brigadier General of the British Empire weighed no more than a feather.

Maheshvara stepped forward, his expression calm, almost clinical. His voice, when he spoke, was barely above a whisper, yet it carried through the silent room with the weight of finality.

"You are fragile, Brigadier," he said, watching Whitmore's face twist in fury, in fear. "All it would take is a little more force, and you would break." His eyes flicked to Anderson, pinning him in place with a gaze that felt ancient, inevitable. "Just like your empire."

Whitmore's vision blurred, darkness creeping in at the edges as his struggles weakened. His body, trained and hardened by war, was failing him against an enemy he could not understand. And for the first time in his life, he knew—he was powerless.

Still, even as he dangled on the edge of consciousness, his pride clung to him like a disease. He forced air into his lungs, choked words escaping past clenched teeth. "The British Empire… will not fall… to the likes of you."

But his voice wavered. The steel that had once fortified his words was gone, replaced by something that had never touched him before—fear.

Maheshvara tilted his head, considering him for a long moment. Then he sighed, as if disappointed. "Is that what you believe?"

His eyes darkened, the blue within them shifting, swirling like the depths of an ocean swallowing the light. Whitmore, still gasping for breath, met that gaze—and the world around him shattered.

Pain.

Agony beyond comprehension.

In an instant, he was everywhere and nowhere, his mind trapped within a storm of endless suffering. He saw himself die—a thousand times, a million. Each death more horrific than the last. His body torn apart by unseen forces, burned, drowned, dismembered. Over and over. Again and again. Each second stretched into eternity, each death a new torment that seared itself into his very soul.

The floor beneath his feet no longer existed. The walls of the Governor's house were gone. He was adrift in a sea of his own demise, and there was no escape.

Outside the illusion, only a second had passed.

The clone released its grip, and Whitmore collapsed onto the floor in a heap. His body convulsed, his breath ragged, his fingers twitching as if trying to grasp something solid, something real. But there was nothing. His mind had been shattered, his will reduced to fragments of what it once was.

He did not rise.

Anderson took an involuntary step back, gripping his cane with both hands as he stared at the broken man on the floor. His thoughts raced, but they found no solution, no path forward. Whitmore—arrogant, unyielding Whitmore—was gone. The shell of a man remained, but his pride, his defiance, had been stripped away in an instant.

Maheshvara turned his gaze to Anderson, his expression unreadable. "Now," he said, stepping over Whitmore's trembling form. "Is it enough of the show to finally make you surrender, Governor?"

The Governor did not answer. He couldn't.

Because in that moment, as he looked into Maheshvara's eyes, he knew.

They had already lost.

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Maheshvara turned his gaze toward Governor Sir John Anderson, his piercing blue eyes locking onto the older man with an unsettling intensity. Anderson, still shaken by what he had just witnessed, struggled to steady his breathing. He had seen men break before, but never in such a horrifying, absolute way. Whitmore, the pride of the British military, reduced to a crumpled heap on the floor, twitching from the horrors he had endured in Maheshvara's illusions.

Anderson gripped his cane tighter, the polished wood slick against his damp palm. Maheshvara leaned back against the Governor's desk, his voice calm, measured, yet carrying an undeniable weight of authority. "You understand now, don't you, Governor? You are not in control here. You are a hostage in your own house. Your soldiers, your weapons, your Empire—none of it matters anymore. You will do as I say, and you will no longer take orders from the British Crown."

Anderson's throat felt dry as he swallowed, nodding ever so slightly. The words he wanted to form died before they reached his lips. The weight of Maheshvara's presence, the unnatural power he commanded, left no room for defiance. He knew that any resistance would be futile. Worse, it would be fatal—not just for him, but for his family. The thought sent a cold shiver through him. His wife, his children… they were somewhere in this very house, oblivious to the nightmare unfolding within these walls.

Maheshvara studied him for a moment before continuing. "From this moment forward, the governance of Bengal Province will be handed over to the BSS. They are the true power here, the ones with the people's loyalty. You will fully cooperate with them, ensuring a smooth transition. Consider this your only chance to make the right decision."

The Governor nodded again, this time with more conviction. "I understand," he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

Maheshvara held his gaze for another lingering moment before pushing off the desk. "Good." Without another word, he turned, his shadowy clones fading into nothingness as he left the office, stepping over Whitmore's unconscious form as if he were nothing more than an inconvenient obstacle. He knew, the Brigadier will never recover from the mental trauma he inflicted on him, and he didn't care.

After ensuring the transition was set in motion with the remaining British officials too terrified to resist, Maheshvara left the Governor's house, the weight of the night's events heavy but necessary. He met briefly with Shakti and Karna, exchanging a few words about their next course of action before ensuring they returned safely to their respective homes. Their mission was far from over, but for now, the foundation had been laid.

As he made his way back to his own house, the quiet of the night wrapped around him like a familiar cloak. The city was changing. He could feel it. The British grip on Bengal was slipping, and soon, it would be gone entirely. A new era was beginning.

And Maheshvara would make sure it was one written in their favor.

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