The Unfinished Man
Rajnesh had a good life. That was the problem. By every external metric, he had arrived. At thirty-four, he was a senior analyst at a reputable bank, the kind of job that made his parents nod approvingly during video calls. He owned a two-bedroom apartment with floor-to-ceiling windows in a high rise apartment outside the city. His wife, Meera, was brilliant and kind. Their son, Avi, was healthy and loud and wonderful. And yet. Every morning, Rajnesh woke up with a small stone pressing against his sternum. Not pain, exactly. More like absence. A hollow where something vital should have been. He told himself it was nothing. Just fatigue. Just the weight of responsibility. Just the natural disappointment of adulthood. But the stone grew. It began slowly, as these things always do. Rajnesh had once loved jazz guitar. On weekends, he used to lose himself for hours, fingers dancing across frets, chasing melodies that felt like conversation with his younger self. Now the guitar sat in its ca...