The smell of soldering iron and old copper was the only thing that made Amandeep feel at home in Rawalpindi. To his neighbors, he was Tariq, a hardworking tailor with a slight squint and a gentle disposition. He was the man you went to when your wedding sherwani needed a last-minute adjustment or when your trousers lost a button.
He burned his notebooks, dismantled the radio, and sat in the dark. As a knock echoed on the door, he whispered a final prayer for a home he could never return to, and a woman who would never know his real name. The smell of soldering iron and old copper
Aman began his journey to the outskirts of the restricted zone. He wasn't a soldier with a rifle; he was a ghost with a camera hidden in a bag of wool. He spent weeks mapping the movement of trucks, noting the frequency of power surges in the local grid, and befriending the low-level guards who craved the illicit Indian films he claimed to smuggle. He burned his notebooks, dismantled the radio, and
One rainy evening, the radio hummed to life. The "Bluebird" had been spotted. Aman had confirmation of the centrifuge facility. But the net was closing in. The local intelligence agency had started door-to-door sweeps of the neighborhood, looking for "unregistered" inhabitants. He wasn't a soldier with a rifle; he