The courthouse loomed like a fortress against the gray morning sky. Its tall pillars and cold stone walls seemed to mock Birju as he was led inside, handcuffed, flanked by two officers. Cameras flashed as reporters jostled for position, scribbling notes and murmuring excitedly about the “Professor Murder Case.” Whispers followed him through the corridors—“killer,” “ghost story,” “madman.”
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Birju’s heart pounded. He adjusted his spectacles, feeling the weight of every gaze upon him. For years, he had lectured students about logic, evidence, and reasoning. Today, he would face a jury that would measure him not by truth, but by appearances.
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The courtroom was packed. Friends, colleagues, villagers, and curious onlookers filled the benches. The judge, a stern man with graying hair and sharp eyes, presided over the proceedings, his gavel poised like a sword of judgment.
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“Order!” the bailiff called. The murmurs subsided, replaced by an uneasy silence.
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The prosecution wasted no time. The lead lawyer rose, pacing before the jury with practiced authority. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he began, “what we have here is not merely a case of murder. It is a story of deceit, of opportunity, and of arrogance. Professor Birju, a man once respected, stood over a dead body—blood on his hands, a knife in the victim’s chest. The witnesses saw him. The evidence speaks for itself.”
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Birju’s palms were sweaty. He gripped the edge of the table, knuckles white. “But… it’s not true,” he whispered to himself. “It’s impossible to explain…”
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The prosecutor continued, laying out the sequence of events with ruthless clarity: the path Birju had taken, the discovery of the body, the villagers’ statements, the police report. Each point, each detail, tightened the invisible noose around him.
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When it was his turn, Birju’s lawyer attempted to defend him. “Ladies and gentlemen, Professor Birju is a man of science, of intellect. He has no motive, no history of violence. There is reason to believe that what occurred that night is not what it appears. Circumstantial evidence does not equal guilt.”
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But the jury’s expressions were unreadable. They had already heard enough to form opinions, and in small towns, rumors travel faster than facts.
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Birju himself was called to the stand. His steps were slow, measured, as if every motion could betray him. He sat, fingers folded, heart racing.
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“Professor Birju,” the judge intoned, “please tell the court exactly what happened on the night of the incident.”
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Birju inhaled deeply. “I… I was walking home from the college,” he began, voice steady despite the turmoil inside, “through the graveyard. It was late. I saw a man lying on the ground, already dead. And there… there was a girl, young, standing near him. When I approached, she disappeared… like smoke. I tried to reach her, but she was gone. I did not kill him. I did not…”
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The room erupted in whispers. Some scoffed, others shook their heads. The judge’s gavel brought temporary silence.
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“Professor,” the prosecutor said sharply, “are you claiming a ghost killed this man?”
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“I… I don’t know what it was,” Birju admitted. “Something beyond my understanding… something that defies the rules of this world. But I did not kill him. I swear.”
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Rao, sitting in the back, observed quietly, his expression unreadable. Even he could not deny the sincerity in Birju’s eyes—but the law did not bend to sincerity alone.
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The prosecution called witnesses one by one. Villagers recounted seeing Birju near the corpse, the blood, his trembling hands. One student described how he had been absent-minded that evening, distracted, but none could testify to the supernatural events he described.
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The defense argued tirelessly, emphasizing his spotless record, his decades of service to education, his lack of motive. But against the damning circumstantial evidence, the jury’s doubts were insufficient to save him.
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Hours bled into one another. The air was thick with tension. The judge listened patiently, occasionally glancing at Birju, whose eyes betrayed a storm of fear, confusion, and despair.
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Finally, the prosecution presented the most damning piece: a photograph of the corpse, the knife, and the professor standing nearby. The image captured the villagers’ perspective perfectly—an elderly man over a dead body, alone, with no one else in sight. It was the visual proof that haunted the room.
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Birju’s lawyer tried to argue that it was misleading, that context was missing. But the courtroom had already decided its narrative.
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When closing arguments began, the prosecutor’s words were merciless: “We have seen a man at the scene of a murder. We have witnesses, evidence, and circumstance. Whether he admits it or not, he is guilty. Justice demands that we act. Let the law be clear: no one, not even a respected professor, is above it.”
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Birju’s lawyer pleaded for compassion, for reason, for acknowledgment that truth sometimes lies beyond what eyes can see. He spoke of science, of anomalies, of the human capacity to misinterpret. But the weight of public perception was too great.
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The jury deliberated briefly. When they returned, the verdict was unanimous: guilty.
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The judge’s voice rang out, final and unyielding: “Professor Birju, for the crime of murder, this court sentences you to fifteen years in prison.”
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Birju’s chest tightened. Words failed him. His mind raced. Fifteen years for a crime he did not commit. Fifteen years trapped in a world of disbelief and ignorance.
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As he was led out of the courtroom, reporters shouted questions, villagers gawked, and students whispered among themselves. The world he had known—the world of logic, order, and reason—had turned its back on him.
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In the cell that night, Birju lay on the hard bench, staring at the ceiling. Memories of Niru, of the girl, of the impossible events in the graveyard, swirled in his mind. Something was calling him—something beyond the living world, beyond science. He could feel it in every fiber of his being.
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And somewhere, deep in the darkness of his despair, a tiny spark of hope flickered. Perhaps, just perhaps, there was a way to prove his innocence. Perhaps there was a path that led beyond human understanding.
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He didn’t yet know what that path was.
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But he knew one thing: he would not rest until the truth was revealed.


