The Sunborn Parva: The Wheel and the Warrior
The earth gnashed and groaned beneath him, like a mother refusing to let her child go to war again. He heaved once more, arms blazing with fire, but the soil clutched the wheel tighter — as if the battlefield itself wanted him to stay, to bow out, to stop being what he had always been: indomitable. His charioteer stepped forward again, hesitant. “Kar—” Karna yelled, “NO!” He didn’t even look at him. There was no time to explain. But his thoughts were clear, firm, echoing in the silence of his own soul: If I must fall… let me fall as a warrior of my own doing. His hands, bleeding now, clutched the wheel with reverence — not desperation. This was not panic. This was choice. And then, like a wind from the other world, a whisper stirred his soul — unbidden, yet clear. "Even mountains fall, if God wishes it." And there He was — Krishna. Standing with Arjuna, his chariot motionless in the distance, but the wind of destiny had already reached Karna’s face. ...