Vikramadithyan
“I am no one,” said the poet. “I have no kingdom. I have no army. I have only a promise I made to a dying crow—to sing to its nest every morning.”
The nymphs smiled. For they remembered the real Vikramadithyan. He was not just a king who pushed the borders of his empire from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean. He was the king who once gave his own turban to cover a dead beggar, who delayed his own coronation to rescue a merchant’s lost child, who returned from a victorious war and wept not for the enemies he killed, but for the mothers who would now weep. Vikramadithyan
“Who are you?” they asked.
Legend whispered that each of the thirty-two steps was inhabited by a celestial Apsara (nymph), and each held a single condition. One would ask, “Are you free from pride?” Another, “Have you kept your word even when it cost you everything?” A third, “Can you see the face of an enemy and still offer him water?” “I am no one,” said the poet