apps for board games perils The car is moving fast on the highway and Ishika is enjoying the air rushing through her hair. She looks at Dev, innocently sleeping Dev. His snoring is loud enough to interrupt the music, but she loves it. It has its own melody. She plays with hairs. His head on her lap and body squeezed to fit in the back seat. He looks like a baby. She utters to herself,’ who could tell this is the same man who put down 25 men in a row.’ She looks out of the window. Her mouth still has a taste of tea which gives her the essence of being in Himachal Pradesh. It felt like home, the tea breaks remind her of her childhood. Traveling was fun those days because those days were innocent. We didn’t demand anything more than a plate of pakora. ‘Those days were nice’, she says in her mind. Absolutely lost in her past, Ishika doesn't hear her phone ringing. Dev wakes up and shakes her. She comes out of her past and answers t...
‘Justice for Some’ — A Story That Dares to Put the System on Trial. There are stories that entertain. There are stories that disturb. And then, there are stories that quietly sit beside you… and refuse to leave. This book is not merely a thriller. It is not just a courtroom drama. It is a deeply unsettling exploration of what happens when justice does not fail dramatically—but erodes silently, file by file, life by life. And that is precisely what makes it dangerous. A Story That Begins Where Justice Ends At the centre stands Prabhu Raj Naidu—a man whose life is not defined by ambition, but by endurance. A young student once. A falsely accused ‘terrorist’ later. A prisoner for ten years—without guilt, without closure. And when he is finally acquitted? Nothing returns. Not his youth. Not his father. Not the years swallowed by a system that needed a culprit more than it needed the truth. Because the system does not always ask: Who is guilty? Sometimes, it only asks: Who ...