What remains when memory fractures but emotion endures? Remalini Yervaan exists between past and present—where loss is constant, and reality is no longer fixed.
Role in the Story
Remalini Yervaan is the first wife of Sir Bojeshnomaan Yervaan.
Once admired for her beauty—
she now lives confined within the Yervaan palace.
Separated from the world.
Watched.
Contained.
Her presence is disruptive, unsettling, and impossible to ignore.
She is spoken about in fragments—
but experienced in moments.
Psychological Profile
Remalini is no longer anchored to reality.
She exists within memory.
Her mind returns, again and again, to one truth:
Her lost son.
In her fractured perception, time does not move forward.
It loops.
Repeats.
Distorts.
She sees what she needs to see.
And when she encounters Gulaan—
she sees her son.
Not resemblance.
Not similarity.
But certainty.
Her madness is not emptiness.
It is overwhelming attachment to what once was.
Internal State
Remalini does not struggle between choices.
She exists within a single emotional reality:
Loss.
Everything she does—
every word, every outburst, every moment of recognition—
is shaped by absence.
The world around her has moved on.
She has not.
And perhaps—
cannot.
Presence in the Story
Remalini’s role is not active.
It is atmospheric.
She introduces:
- unease
- mystery
- emotional disruption
Her interactions are brief—
but deeply impactful.
Especially to Gulaan.
Because in her delusion—
she offers something real:
Unfiltered emotion.
Unconditional attachment.
A connection that bypasses identity.
Symbolic Meaning
Remalini represents:
- the cost of unresolved tragedy
- memory that refuses to fade
- identity consumed by loss
She is the past—
not remembered,
but lived.
And through her—
the story reveals that not all wounds heal.
Some remain.
Uncontained.