In a cluttered corner of old Delhi, there was a bookshop with no name. Its owner, a blind old man named Fareed, never used a cash register. Instead, he judged a customer’s soul by the three books they picked.
Ayaan never published the exposé. He published a memoir instead. It was called Three Books . And on the cover, below the title, it read:
He returned to the shop a week later. Fareed was gone. In his place was a note: “The three books were never random. You chose them because your heart already knew the way. Now write the rest.”
He read Faiz the next night. The verses he’d once mocked now cracked his ribs open. By the third night, he opened the blank journal. Instead of writing an exposé, he wrote a single line: 3 kitab
Ayaan laughed nervously. “That’s a parlor trick.”
Furious, Ayaan paid and left. That night, stuck in a power outage, he had no choice but to light a candle and open The Little Prince . He finished it by dawn, weeping.
“I am afraid of becoming the man I’ve become.” In a cluttered corner of old Delhi, there
“Then prove me wrong,” Fareed said. “Read them. Not as a journalist. As a son.”
“Three books,” Fareed whispered. “They tell me you are a liar. Not because you are evil, but because you are afraid.”
Ayaan stiffened. “I’m a journalist. I deal in facts.” Ayaan never published the exposé
For Fareed. For my mother. For the man I almost didn’t become.
Fareed slid the books back across the counter. “ The Little Prince is the truth you buried—your mother taught you to see with the heart, but you chose logic. Faiz is the love you ran from—you stole it because you couldn’t earn it. And the blank journal… that is your future. Still empty. Still honest.”