In a secluded, futuristic compound shaped as a perfect circle on the edge of the Red Sea-lush with fruit-bearing orchards, floral geometry, and silent drones that deliver coffee and music-a gathering unlike any other unfolds. Ten extraordinary individuals from the world's great faiths and philosophies are summoned by a mysterious scroll to the Garden Circle, a magical sanctuary where truth must be debated before an age ends.
Each of the twelve chapters explores a debate-not of fists, but of fire-tongued words on elevated stages framed by light and myth. The Israeli-Palestinian question erupts first, with raw, historical anguish. Religion follows, as Christians assert singular truth, only to meet the deep-rooted pluralism of Hindu mystics and the proud faith of Muslim imams. Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Hindus confront each other and themselves, laying bare ancient tensions, misinterpretations, and the Devil's deceptions.
At the heart of the novel is a mystic teacher-a Sadhguru-like figure named Aarvan-who becomes the central spiritual anchor. His voice, delivered in tranquil resonance across gardens that respond to human emotion, unveils a larger cosmology: the Four Ages. All faiths, he argues, were born in the current fallen age, Kali Yuga, but a new age is upon us-the Satya Yuga. The true Messiah is not coming, he declares-He has already come. Again.
Through swirling drone-delivered questions and audience-wide epiphanies, Aarvan explains that Vishnu, Yahweh, the Holy Father, and Allah are one-pointing to a divine pattern of avatars across civilizations. Prophets, angels, avatars-all represent facets of a deeper, singular truth.
Internal debates unfold within Islam (The Dajjal), Judaism (Armilus), and Christianity (false eschatologies), culminating in a joint confrontation with spiritual delusion. Ultimately, war is declared-not with bombs, but with falsehood, fear, and ego. Evil refuses logic, but redemption is still possible-for anyone willing to break free from the Devil's grip.
In the final chapter, Aarvan tells the story of King Parikshit and the beginning of this dark age-how the Devil was granted dominion over money, lust, violence, and deception. But now the cycle closes. The one who ends the age is already among us. And in the next age, religion as we know it will dissolve. Why? Because in the Satya Yuga, God will be felt directly-no priests or prophets needed.
This is not just a novel. It is an argument. It is a prophecy. It is an awakening.
And it has only just begun.