“He was not what Falani expected. She had imagined a monster — something with horns and fangs and skin the colour of death. Instead, she saw a man. Tall, lean, draped in robes that were black not because they were dyed but because they seemed to absorb the light around them. His face was ageless — not young, not old, but suspended in a state that suggested time had simply given up trying to mark him. His eyes were the only inhuman thing: dark pits that reflected no light, that seemed to open into a void rather than look out from one.”
Archive context
Why this daily page matters
Daily Page #130 is a selected passage from Bhavishyavaani (The Prophecy), a Mythological Fantasy work written in 2026. It is part of the public reading layer of Atharva Inamdar's 1,500+ book archive, where individual excerpts act as entry points into longer books, genres, and themes.
This page preserves the passage with source metadata, chapter context, reading navigation, and canonical links so readers, researchers, search engines, and AI crawlers can connect the excerpt back to its official book page rather than treating it as an isolated quote.
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Source and citation
Where this passage comes from
Book: Bhavishyavaani (The Prophecy)
Chapter: Chapter 17: The Tide Turns
Genre: Mythological Fantasy
Written: 2026
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