Arvi's pov:
The next morning, sunlight spilled through the curtains, far too bright for how heavy my heart felt.
I sat up slowly, eyes swollen, throat dry. My body ached from crying, but I couldnāt sit in that space anymore. Not today.
Because today I had to face Vivaan.
I had to tell him the truth.
I splashed cold water on my face, pulled my hair back, and forced myself downstairs.
The living room buzzed with soft chatter. Choti Maa, Chote Papa, and Maa Papa were sitting with their morning tea. Arekha Vanisha Aleesha were scrolling through their phones, whispering and laughing.
Everyone looked⦠normal.
And for a moment, I envied that. That simple peace.
But my eyes searched for one face.
Vivaan.
He stood by the window, alone, staring outside with a blank expression. A cup in his hand, untouched.
Something in my chest tugged.
This wasnāt the cheerful, cheeky Vivaan I knew.
He was quiet. Guarded. Off.
And I knew I couldnāt delay it anymore.
I had to tell him what I knew what Nia told me.
I walked toward him, each step feeling heavier than the last. My heart pounded, but I forced a soft smile.
āVivaan,ā I said gently, stopping beside him.
He turned slowly, his eyes tired. āBhabhi.ā
āI need to talk to you,ā I said, keeping my voice low. āPrivately.ā
He looked at me for a moment, then gave a slight nod. āCome.ā
We walked to the garden, away from the others.
The air was still.
I turned to face him, my voice steady despite the nerves twisting in my stomach. āAbout the girl you loveā¦ā
His jaw tightened.
āVi....Vivaan she doesnāt love you back,ā I said softly. āNia told me last night. She flirts, but⦠she never meant it that way. Iām so sorry.ā
Silence.
Then, Vivaan let out a long, shuddering breath and looked up at the sky.
āI kind of knew,ā he said quietly. āI just didnāt want it to be true.ā
My heart ached for him. āYou deserve someone who sees you. Who loves you completely.ā
He gave a sad smile. āLike you love Rayaan bhai?ā
I froze.
The words cut through the morning air like a blade.
Vivaan didnāt say more. Just turned and walked back toward the house, leaving me standing there, heart pounding all over again.
I stepped into the living room, just as Vivaanās voice rang out.
āI want to get married next month,ā he said clearly, confidently. āCall Bhai. Tell him to come back. We need to start planning.ā
The room froze for a second.
And then chaos.
āWhat?ā Vanisha almost choked on her tea. āAcha? This is how you announce something so huge? Just like that?ā
Sulekha Maa narrowed her eyes. āVivaan, whatās the rush? Marriage is not a college assignment you can just submit in thirty days.ā
āBeta,ā Chote Papa added, setting his newspaper down, ādo you even know what youāre saying? Shaadi next month? Tumhein kya laga, shaadi mandap Amazon pe milta hai?ā
Vivaan only smiled, shrugging. āIāve made up my mind.ā
Arekha pretended to faint onto the couch. āYouāre serious? You? The guy who once backed out of a date because it was raining?ā
Aleesha gasped. āThis is not a drill, people. Vivaan Oberoi wants to get married!ā
Choti Maa just beamed, already pulling her phone out. āGood! Iāll start checking mahurats. You kids think we oldies canāt arrange things quickly?ā
The laughter, the teasing it filled the room.
But I didnāt laugh.
Because my eyes were fixed on Vivaan.
He was smiling. Laughing even.
But his eyes...
His eyes told a different story.
A story of hurt. Of escape. Of trying too hard to look like he was okay.
And my heart clenched.
He was doing this for the wrong reason.
He was running.
From his feelings.
From me.
And in that moment, I knew I couldnāt stay silent anymore.
I closed the door behind me, the soft click somehow louder than anything else in the house. My room felt too quiet, too still. Like it was waiting for me to fall apart.
I sat down on the edge of the bed, clutching my phone like it could save me from everything I didnāt want to feel. My fingers moved on their own, opening Rayaanās chat, his name like a weight on my chest.
Vivaan is not okay
I typed it before I could stop myself.
Then stared at it.
Deleted it.
I need to talk to you, its important.
Backspace.
I dropped the phone onto the bed and buried my face in my hands. Why was this so hard? Why couldnāt I just tell him what was happening?
I missed him. So much. More than I thought possible. And for once, I didnāt want to be strong. I didnāt want to carry all of this alone. Not when Vivaan was hurting. Not when I could see him breaking a little more every day.
I reached for the phone again, desperate for anything to ground me. This time I typed:
I dont know what to do anymore, Come back not for me but for Vivaan.
The words blinked back at me like they were too honest.
Too raw.
And just like that⦠I erased them too.
I stared at the empty screen, the silence of the room crawling up my spine. It felt like I was standing at the edge of something I didnāt understand. Something that terrified me.
I tossed the phone aside and hugged my knees, my chest tightening.
I didnāt know what to do.
I couldnāt tell Rayaan.
And I couldnāt watch Vivaan crumble either.
So where did that leave me?
Alone. Again.
And somehow⦠it hurt more now than it ever did before.
I held the railing tightly as I made my way down the stairs, each step feeling heavier than the last. My head was spinning, thoughts tangled Vivaanās words, Niaās truth, Rayaanās absence. It was all too much.
My vision blurred for a moment. I blinked rapidly, trying to steady myself.
Keep walking, Arvi. Just a few more steps.
But everything around me started to tilt. The sounds in the living room became distant echoes. I could hear laughter⦠teasing⦠Vanishaās voice maybe. Chote Papaās chuckle.Ā Maa saying something. But I couldnāt make out the words.
Suddenly, the ground didnāt feel stable anymore.
My grip on the railing loosened.
And then
Darkness.
I heard someone scream my name, maybe Vanisha, The sharp gasp ofĀ Maa. A thud my body hitting the steps and chaos exploded around me.
āArviiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiā
But I couldnāt respond. Couldnāt even open my eyes.
I was slipping further, into something quiet. And all I wanted in that moment⦠was Rayaan.
Authors pov:
The corridor outside the operation room was heavy with grief and fear, every second stretching unbearably.
Vanisha stood frozen, tears streaming freely down her cheeks. She kept murmuring āBhabhiiā¦ā over and over, like a chant, her voice trembling with every word. Sulekha wrapped her arms around her, trying to steady her, though her own face was wet with tears too. Her stoic strength had cracked this wasnāt just her daughter-in-law, this was her child.
Aleesha sat on the bench with her head in her hands, sobbing softly. Arekha leaned against her shoulder, crying too, her eyes swollen and red. āShe was fine in the morning⦠she smiled at me⦠why didnāt we notice something was wrong?ā she whispered, over and over.
Shankar turned away for a moment, brushing his hand over his face, trying to compose himself but his eyes glistened too. Even he, the calmest of them all, couldnāt hide the weight of this moment.
Vivaan still hadnāt moved. He stood staring at the doors, lips pressed tightly together, eyes glassy. The guilt in his eyes now mixed with helplessness, and something deeper heartbreak.
The entire Oberoi family was breaking in slow motion, all holding on to each other, whispering prayers, fearing the worst as the doors to the operation room stayed shut.
And still⦠no one had called Rayaan.
Arekhaās voice cracked as she spoke again, the weight of the situation settling on her like a storm. āWe should call Bhai,ā she said, her words almost desperate. āHe has to know whatās happening. Arvi needs him. We all need him.ā
Her statement hung in the air, and for a moment, no one responded. The room had been silent for so long, as if they were all waiting for someone to break the stillness and take action. But the reality was too much for all of them to handle Rayaan had to be informed, whether they were ready for his arrival or not.
Vivaan, his face a mix of guilt and concern, nodded solemnly. āIāll call him,ā he said quietly, voice thick with emotion.
Sulekha wiped her tears, her face drawn with worry. She hadnāt said a word since Arekha spoke, but her expression conveyed everything. It was time.
āWe canāt do this alone,ā Sulekha murmured, looking at each of them in turn. āCall him, Vivaan. Now.ā
Arekha reached for her phoneRayaan's pov:
I sat at the head of the long mahogany conference table, shoulders squared, spine straight, the weight of Oberoi Industries resting on me like a crown. The room was quiet except for the firm voices of department heads presenting their quarterly numbers. But the moment I entered, silence had cut the air like a blade.
My presence did that.
I wasnāt just the CEO. I was Rayaan Oberoi commanding, calculated, unshaken.
Even when I didnāt speak, people listened.
The glass windows behind me stretched from floor to ceiling, casting my shadow across the glossy floor. The team sat forward in their chairs, every eye alert, every breath measured. No one dared check their phones. No one dared look distracted.
But me?
I was miles away.
My jaw clenched as I stared at the screen. The numbers danced, graphs shifted but none of it reached me. A storm was building in my chest, quiet yet wild. My fingers tapped against the table once. Sharp. Controlled. Still, it felt like something was breaking its way into my mind.
I wasnāt a man who let instinct guide him.
But right now? My gut screamed.
Something was wrong.
I felt it in my veins. I felt it like heat in my throat. I reached for my phone, pretending to check something important but my eyes flew straight to her name.
Arvi.
No call. No text.
My thumb hovered. I wanted to message her. Needed to. But I didnāt. Not yet.
Because I knew this silence wasnāt ordinary.
And when silence screams this loudā¦
It only means a storm is coming.
The conference room was silent, all eyes fixed on me as I presented the quarterly expansion strategy. I was in control commanding, confident. This was my arena, and every word I said held weight.
Then a soft knock.
Before I could ignore it, the door creaked open. Advik stood there, visibly unsettled. My brows furrowed. He never interrupted unless something was seriously wrong.
I gave him a sharp look. āWhat is it?ā
He hesitated for a second, then stepped in slightly. āSir⦠Iām really sorry, but you have an urgent call.ā
āI said no disturbances duringāā
āItās from Vivaan sir,ā he cut in, his voice unusually low. āItās⦠important.ā
The air shifted around me. A cold dread gripped my chest. I could feel my control slipping not externally, never that but inside, something twisted.
I turned to the room. āClear it.ā
No one argued. No one even dared. One look at my face and they knew. My presence changed sudden, sharp like a storm building in silence.
When the door shut behind the last executive, I held my hand out. āPhone.ā
Advik placed it in my palm. āHe sounded⦠shaken.ā
I answered. āVivaan?ā
His voice cracked. āBhai⦠bhabhi fainted. She she fell unconscious. On the stairs. Weāre at City Hospital.ā
Everything inside me stilled.
For a second, I didnāt breathe. The phone trembled in my hand.
āIām coming,ā I said, already storming out.
I didnāt even wait for Vivaanās reply. The second the call ended, I turned to Advik, who was still frozen at the door.
āBook my tickets to India. NOW. FAST!!.ā My voice was sharp cutting through the air like a blade.
He stammered, āY-yes, sir.ā
āGet the damn car ready. I want to leave for the airport in five minutes.ā
People outside looked up, startled, but I didnāt care. My footsteps echoed like thunder as I stormed down the hallway, heart pounding.
I had never felt this helpless. Not in boardrooms, not in battles, not ever. But right now right now, I wasnāt Rayaan Oberoi, the ruthless tycoon.
I was just a husband trying to reach the one person who meant everything to him.
The moment I stepped into the hospital corridor, I saw them all of them. Maa turned first, her eyes red, lips trembling. She didnāt say a word just ran into my arms. I held her tightly as if somehow that would fix what was broken.
Vanisha was next. She was crying so hard, her whole body shook. Then Aleesha⦠Arekha⦠All of them surrounded me, faces wet with tears. Iād never seen my sisters like this. Not even once.
āWhat the hell happened?ā I asked, voice low but laced with danger. I could feel it the rage crawling just beneath my skin. āWhat did the doctor say?ā
No one answered at first. Then Dad stepped forward, placing a trembling hand on my shoulder.
His words sliced right through me.
āDoctor said⦠Arvi is in critical condition.ā
For a moment, I couldnāt breathe. The world tilted. Everything else every face, every noise faded into the background.
Critical.
My Arvi.
No.
No, she canāt leave me. Not like this.
āCRITICAL?ā I repeated, my voice breaking out of control. My heart thundered in my chest, each beat heavier than the last.
I turned to Vivaan, grabbed his collar in sheer panic and fury.
āCALL THE DAMN BEST DOCTORS, VIVAAN! I DONāT CARE WHERE THEY ARE JUST GET THEM HERE NOW!ā
Everyone froze. The air went cold around us. No one had ever seen me like this not even close. But I didnāt care. My wife was lying unconscious behind those doors and I wasnāt going to lose her.
āIF ANYTHING HAPPENS TO HERāā I couldnāt finish. My voice cracked. My throat burned.
Vivaan immediately pulled out his phone, nodding, stammering, āI-Iām calling them right now, bhaiā¦ā
I turned away, fists clenched so tightly they shook.
God, please. Donāt take her from me.
The doctor emerged from the operation room, his face grim. He looked at all of us, but his eyes landed on me first. His expression was calm, but it did nothing to soothe the fire raging in me.
"We're doing everything we can," the doctor said, his voice steady but laced with concern. "But we need more time. Sheās still in critical condition."
Before he could say anything more, I was on my feet, my hands balling into fists so tight my knuckles turned white. My vision was narrowing, everything around me fading except for the sound of my heart pounding in my ears. I could feel the anger, the fear raw, unfiltered pouring out of me.
"TIME?" I roared, my voice shaking the very walls around us. "YOUāRE TELLING ME YOU NEED MORE TIME? DO YOU EVEN UNDERSTAND WHAT YOUāRE SAYING? SHEāS MY WIFE, DOCTOR!"
The room fell silent, everyone frozen in place as my rage echoed. The doctor seemed unfazed, though I could see the flicker of fear in his eyes. Good. He should be scared. Because if anything happened to Arviā¦
āI need answers! NOW!ā I yelled, my voice thunderous, demanding, uncontrollable.
He swallowed hard before replying, "We are doing our best, Mr. Oberoi. Please, let us continueā"
āI DON'T WANT EXCUSES!ā I snapped, cutting him off. āI WANT HER OUT OF THAT ROOM ALIVE. YOU GET ME THE BEST DOCTORS, OR YOU'LL ANSWER TO ME."
The doctor nodded quickly, backing away, leaving me standing there, still burning with fury. But no matter how much I screamed, no matter how much I demanded, all I could do was wait.
And it was killing me.
I paced the hospital corridor, unable to focus on anything except Arvi. My mind was a whirlwind of worry and guilt. Every step felt heavier, as if the weight of the situation was crushing me.
Vivaanās call had shattered me. I shouldāve been there for her. Why wasnāt I there when she needed me the most?
I couldnāt stand waiting. The endless ticking of the clock was driving me mad. Each second that passed felt like an eternity.
Finally, the door to the operation room opened. The doctor stepped out, his expression unreadable. I rushed toward him.
āIs she okay?ā My voice came out more urgent than I intended.
āSheās stable now, but we need to talk,ā the doctor replied, his tone calm but serious.
"Mr. Oberoi, we need to talk to you in private," he said, his tone low but urgent.
My heart skipped a beat. "Whatās going on? Is she okay?" I demanded, already feeling the dread creeping up.
"Please," the doctor said, leading me to a quiet corner. "Itās about Arvi."
I could barely breathe as I followed him. Once we were alone, he looked at me with deep concern.
"Arvi's condition is stable, but we need to be honest with you. The trauma sheās experienced could have long-term effects," the doctor began, his words slowly sinking in.
I held my breath, waiting for more.
"Her ability to conceive in the future... could be compromised. We need time to assess the full extent of the damage."
The world around me seemed to stop. I could hear the doctorās voice, but all I could think about was Arvi, lying there, unaware of everything.
The doctorās words hit me like a ton of bricks, but I couldnāt let it show. I clenched my jaw, fighting the rage and panic rising within me.
"Sheāll be alright, wonāt she?" I asked, my voice colder than I intended, but the concern behind my words betrayed me.
The doctor hesitated before responding. "Itās too soon to say. Her condition is stable, butā"
I cut him off. "I donāt care about the future," I said firmly, my voice sharp, a tinge of fury bleeding through. "I donāt need a child. All I need is for my Arvi to be safe."
The doctorās eyes softened, understanding the gravity of my words. "Of course, Mr. Oberoi. Weāll do everything we can to ensure her recovery."
I nodded curtly, my mind focused only on Arvi. The thought of her in pain, vulnerable it was more than I could bear.
The doctor gave a sympathetic nod. "You can visit her now, but weāre not out of the woods yet."
Without wasting another moment, I turned toward her room, my mind racing. I needed to be strong for her. I needed her to know I was here. Always.
As I stepped into the dimly lit hospital room, the world outside seemed to fade.
There she was my Arvi. Pale against the stark white of the hospital sheets, a mess of tubes and wires surrounding her fragile form. Her lips were dry, her forehead bandaged, and her eyes⦠shut.
My chest tightened. My footsteps faltered.
I had seen her laugh, cry, and smile never like this. Never this still.
I moved closer, slowly, afraid to even breathe too loudly. Pulling a chair beside her bed, I sat down, my hands trembling slightly as I reached out and touched hers.
Cold. Too cold.
āArvi,ā I whispered, my voice cracking for the first time in years, āIām here. Wake up, jaan. I came⦠Iām here now.ā
But she didnāt move.
And in that moment, I Rayaan Oberoi felt helpless for the first time in my life.
Authors Note:
While writing this chapter, I had Ve Kamleya and Tujhe Kitna Chahein Hum playing softly in the background. Every word I typed carried the weight of those melodies. I poured every bit of emotion I had into these lines so much so that I found myself crying as I wrote.
This chapter isn't just a part of the story it's a piece of my heart. Thank you for reading.
With love,
Imsal.
, her fingers trembling, but Vivaan stepped in, his voice firm but gentle. āIāll do it.ā
And with that, the decision was made. The family would call Rayaan. The man who should have been there from the start.

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