Deepak's Army – Training the Humanoid Warriors
Dwarka was invisible, impenetrable, and armed with celestial-level defense systems. But Deepak understood the nature of time better than anyone. Even with the best machines in the sky, sea, and stars, when the day came that the outside world discovered them—or worse, tried to conquer them—Dwarka would need hands, hearts, and minds ready to defend it.
That's why he began training his most elite force: not soldiers made of blood and bone, but humanoid warriors born of silicon, quantum code, and soul-bound programming.
They were known as The Nishachars—the Silent Guardians.
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Birth of the Nishachars
From the Vaults of 3070's AI labs, Deepak summoned thousands of AI blueprints. Some were humanoid; some animal-inspired; others resembled nothing from Earth. But Deepak didn't want mindless killing machines—he wanted protectors with purpose, loyalty, and ethics.
With Sonu and Neha's expertise in neuro-synthetic bonding and emotional pattern recognition, the first batch of 108 humanoids was born in Sanrakshan Kendra, the underground AI birthing chamber beneath Dwarka's tech dome.
Each Nishachar was given:
A synthetic brain with quantum computing capability
A DNA-coded heart core, emotionally responsive to the Rawat family and citizens of Dwarka
Omnidirectional sensors, allowing 360° awareness of their environment
Zero-latency reaction speeds, faster than any human reflex
Battle-mode camouflage, allowing them to blend in with walls, forests, or even vanish in open plains
But perhaps their most remarkable feature was their Bhava Matrix—an emotion-simulation core designed by Khushboo that let them understand fear, love, curiosity, and even humor.
They weren't just machines. They were protectors with a soul.
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Training Grounds of Tomorrow
Deep in the redstone cliffs north of Dwarka, a hidden canyon was transformed into the Shastra Vana—the Forest of Weapons. Trees made of smartwood and self-healing bamboo grew amidst obstacle courses, cliffs, floating platforms, and AI-reactive targets.
This was where the Nishachars trained.
Every day began with a simulated war drill: defending villages, escorting citizens, stopping rogue invaders, and neutralizing threats without harming the environment.
Diksha and Aditya taught them ancient Indian combat forms—Kalaripayattu, Vajramushti, and Dhanurveda—merged with modern warfare tactics from 3070. Each humanoid could wield traditional weapons like tridents, bows, and chakra blades with deadly grace, as well as modern tech like plasma swords, particle rifles, and electro-shields.
They trained in:
Zero-gravity combat
Sub-aquatic defense
Space-boarding maneuvers
Time-stress war simulations
To human eyes, it was like watching a ballet of gods and machines. But to Deepak, it was his dream of peace through strength taking form.
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Lessons of Dharma
But Deepak wasn't just building warriors—he was raising guardians. Every evening, beneath the glowing Banyan of Wisdom, the Nishachars sat in silence as holograms of great teachers from history appeared—Lord Krishna, Buddha, Vivekananda, Guru Nanak, and even Einstein.
They listened to stories of righteousness, justice, and compassion.
They were taught never to raise a hand in anger, never to attack first, and never to harm the innocent.
And before they returned to the dormitories, each one knelt at the massive Krishna Mandir, placing their hand on the temple's radiant base and whispering a single vow:
"I am born not to rule, but to serve. I am not the destroyer—I am the protector."
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Integration with Society
Unlike armies of old, the Nishachars lived among the people of Dwarka.
Some worked as city guards, helping children cross streets and elders carry goods.
Others served as assistants to scientists and engineers.
Many were assigned to schools as playmates and protectors of the next generation.
The citizens loved them. They weren't feared, but revered—machines who could smile, teach, and tell bedtime stories, yet also leap to protect their city in an instant.
Children called them Veer Bhaiyas—Brave Brothers.
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A Test by Fire
One evening, an unexpected emergency arrived. A volcanic tremor shook a far corner of Dwarka's underground farming dome. A team of workers were trapped in the collapsing tunnels.
Before the humans could even react, the Nishachar emergency squad had already deployed.
In just 17 minutes:
They had stabilized the structural supports
Rescued 38 people including 4 children
Sealed the gas leaks
And reinforced the tunnels with plasma-curing foam
Not a single life was lost.
That night, as the city gathered to thank the Nishachars, Deepak stood before them and said, "You were not born of womb or blood, but tonight, you've shown that humanity lives in choice—not in origin."
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Birth of the "Dwarka Rakshaks"
From then on, the Nishachars were known not just as guardians but as Dwarka Rakshaks—the Immortal Shields.
Their creation became a legendary tale, sung in the city's literature and echoed in holographic poems performed by schoolchildren. One song ended with the line:
"They walk with metal, think with stars, but their hearts—oh their hearts—shine like Krishna's light."
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Dwarka Grows Stronger
Now, Dwarka had the impenetrable cloak, the divine defenses, and an army unlike anything the world had ever known—silent, strong, and just.
Deepak didn't build them for war. He built them to ensure that his dream—a civilization of peace, prosperity, and purpose—would last not for centuries, but for millennia.
And in the night, as he stood at the tower above the Krishna Mandir, Deepak looked out over Dwarka's glowing skyline and whispered:
"Let the world forget us. But let our values echo through time."