By Ravi Ranjan* Tarun Bhatnagar, a senior civil servant in Madhya Pradesh who stands in India's distinguished litterateur-bureaucrat tradition, has produced in his short story "Zakhme-Kuhan"—an old wound that appears healed yet continues to seep from within—a work of remarkable philosophical depth. The story centres on a young boy named Sundar, his teacher Kshitij, a school, birds, a tree, and rain. Yet within this apparently simple narrative frame, Bhatnagar unfolds nothing less than a fundamental critique of modern civilisation's disciplinary mechanisms, its relationship with nature, its colonial inheritances, and its systematic erosion of human sensibility.