Nannaku Prematho | SECURE ★ |

Driven by a strange, furious hope, Arjun drove through lashing rain to his father’s empty house. The study was as he remembered: orderly, sterile. But behind a loose tile in the fireplace—a hiding spot from Arjun’s childhood—he found a metal box.

His father had been there. He had flown across the world, hidden in the crowd, and watched his son succeed from a distance. He had even paid a photographer to take the picture. nannaku prematho

For thirty years, Arjun had known his father as a mathematical genius and a cold, demanding architect of discipline. "Emotions are decimals," Raghuram would say. "Unnecessary precision." Arjun had left home at eighteen, vowing never to return. He built a life in Melbourne as a software engineer, far from his father’s quiet, suffocating house in Visakhapatnam. Driven by a strange, furious hope, Arjun drove

Inside: a single framed photograph. It was Arjun’s graduation day in Melbourne. He had stood alone, smiling at the camera, no family present. But in this photo, someone had photoshopped themselves into the corner, standing twenty feet behind him, blurred, wearing a disguise—cap, sunglasses, a fake beard. His father had been there

The bank? Raghuram had no safety deposit box. He was a retired professor who owned nothing but books.

Arjun stood outside the ICU, clutching a worn envelope. Inside, his father, Raghuram, lay motionless—tubes weaving in and out of his frail body like vines strangulating a dying tree. The doctors had said the next 48 hours were critical.

"He’s gone. I wanted to say, 'Don’t go.' Instead, I said, 'Don’t come back until you’re a success.' He looked at me with such hate. Good. Hate is fuel. Love is a cushion. He will succeed. And one day, when I am dust, he will find this. And he will know: every cold word was a knife I turned on myself first."