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Lost in flames Found in dark

Abishaa
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
"Lost in Flames, Found in Dark" Some love stories don’t begin with hello. They begin after the end. She was once the light in someone’s storm — wild, warm, unforgettable. Then, in a single moment, Shruti vanished. No note. No clues. Only a silence that shattered the hearts left behind. He searched for her like a man possessed. Burned down every lie, bled for every truth — until all that remained was rage... and a love too deep to bury. Years passed. And somewhere far from the wreckage of the life she once knew, a girl opened her eyes in a hospital bed. Her name was different. Her reflection — unfamiliar. But the ache in her soul? The flashes of another life? All too real. A scar she doesn’t remember getting. A voice she still hears in her dreams. And eyes — cold, broken, beautiful — that feel like home. He doesn't know her. Not anymore. But something in him stirs when she’s near. A storm. A memory. A promise not yet fulfilled. As their worlds collide once more, past and present bleed into one. The girl who shouldn't exist remembers a life no one believes. And the boy who lost everything now stands at the edge of rediscovery… and ruin. This isn’t just a second chance. It’s fate demanding what death tried to steal. Love. Longing. Pain. Fire. And a mystery that binds their souls beyond lifetimes. Because some hearts never stop searching. Some memories refuse to fade. And some love stories are written in scars. --- SNEAK PEEK The night air was sharper than she'd expected, and the thin fabric of her top did nothing to help—but she’d already refused his jacket with full drama ten minutes ago. Pride came before comfort, apparently. From the couch behind her, Dhruv watched in silence. Head slightly tilted, fingers resting near his lips. He didn’t comment. Yet. “You’re enjoying this, aren’t you?” she muttered. “A little,” he admitted. She rolled her eyes, still facing the balcony. “This is where a gentleman offers warmth. Maybe a hot drink. Or, you know... human decency.” “You rejected the jacket and the blanket. Can’t save you from yourself.” She opened her mouth to sass back, “Unbelievable.” Before she could finish being annoyed, she felt him. He was behind her—close. His body heat rolled into her back like a slow, deliberate wave. She gasped softly, more out of surprise than cold. His hands slid into hers with quiet certainty, wrapping them up gently. Then, his arms circled around her waist, pulling her lightly against him. Her breath caught as his chest pressed warmly against her back, the thin fabric of her top doing nothing to shield her from the way his warmth spread over her skin. “Dhruv!” she gasped, her voice half protest, half flustered mess. Her words scrambled as he leaned a little closer, breath grazing the side of her neck. “Better?” he asked, low and completely unaffected.
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Chapter 1 - Break Her

Shruti lost track of time in that hell. Day and night blurred together, swallowed by the thick darkness that clung to the room like a disease. There were no windows, only the sickly flicker of the dim, overhead light that barely stayed on. When it did, she almost wished it wouldn't-because then, she saw everything. The peeling, mold-infested walls. The rusty chains biting into her skin. The dried blood on the floor, some of it hers, some of it belonging to those who had been here before her.

She learned quickly that screaming was useless.

The first time, she had screamed herself hoarse, begging for someone-anyone-to hear her. She pulled at the chains until her wrists bled, until her shoulders felt like they would rip from their sockets. But the only response was laughter.

A deep, mocking chuckle from the shadows.

"I like that spirit," the voice had said.

"Let's see how long it lasts."

And so they began their work.

The Pain They Gave Her

Pain became her constant companion. They made sure of it.

Some days, it was the needles-long, thin, sliding under her nails one by one, twisting until she felt like she would pass out from the sheer agony. Other times, it was blades-sharp enough to slice into her skin but never deep enough to kill. They carved lines into her arms, her legs, her stomach, watching as blood seeped out in slow, lazy trails.

"She's pretty when she bleeds," one of them had said, tilting her chin up to make her look at herself in a cracked, filthy mirror.

She didn't even recognize herself anymore.

Bruises painted her skin in purples and blues, swelling until her face barely looked human. Her lips were always cracked, always dry, from the lack of water. Hunger gnawed at her insides, but when they did feed her, it was never real food-stale bread, rotting vegetables, or something worse that she refused to think about.

They shattered her bones when she disobeyed.

Once, she had spat at one of them, her lips curling in defiance even as her entire body trembled. The punishment was swift.

A hammer.

Her left kneecap.

The pain had been blinding, so intense that she nearly blacked out. But they wouldn't let her.

"No, no," the captor had whispered, pressing his fingers against her throat, forcing her eyes to stay open. "You don't get to leave just yet."

They never let her rest.

If she fell asleep, they would wake her with ice-cold water thrown at her face, or a boot pressing down on her already broken limbs.

"Can't have you getting too comfortable," they sneered.

The physical wounds hurt. But the psychological games were worse.

They made her listen to screams-some fake, some real, some that sounded too much like Dev.

They left her in darkness for days, shutting off even the flickering light, trapping her in an abyss where her own thoughts became the real torment. In that pitch-black prison, time ceased to exist, and the silence was broken only by the sound of her own ragged breathing. Her mind played cruel tricks on her-whispers that weren't there, figures moving in the corners of her vision.

Then they would drag her out, force her in front of a TV, and make her watch.

They had videos.

Of Dev's death.

Of Druve.

Her Druve.

They showed her images of him, alive and well, moving on. The sight of him was like a knife to her heart-he was searching, she could see it in his eyes, but he looked colder, harder. They twisted the knife further.

"He'll forget you," they whispered. "He already has."

She tried not to believe them, but doubt had a way of creeping in.

Her faith cracked.

Her mind splintered.

The Moment They Almost Won

At some point, Shruti stopped struggling.

She no longer fought when they dragged her from the room. She no longer flinched when the knives pressed against her skin.

She barely even reacted when they threw her into a tub of freezing water, holding her under until her lungs screamed for air.

She had stopped feeling.

Stopped hoping.

Until one day, they asked her, "What's your name?"

And she hesitated.

For the first time, she hesitated.

Because suddenly, she wasn't sure.

She was breaking. And they knew it.

And they smiled.