Yuva grew up telling the story not of a battle, but of a bridge.

“Small things go where big things cannot,” Kavi said, landing on Yuva’s back. “I’ll guide him. But cub, if you get us killed, I will haunt your next life as a tapeworm.”

Panic swept through the ravine. The monkeys wanted to throw stones. The wild boars wanted to charge. But Priya knew the old law: teeth and claws cannot break steel.

The next morning, the blueprints changed. “Saffron Heights” became “Saffron Corridor”—a wildlife overpass planted with native trees. And on the statue’s broken scale, the woman placed a new seed: her own.

“You’re too small,” growled a sambar deer.

For a long moment, nothing happened. Then, a flashlight flickered from the highway below. A woman in a hard hat, holding blueprints, stopped. She was the project manager for Saffron Heights. She tilted her head, listening not with her ears but with something older. She turned and walked into the jungle, not away from it.

The journey was a gauntlet of human dangers: a six-lane highway, a drain choked with chemical foam, and a pack of feral dogs who served a “king” in a garbage dump. Yuva learned to read the rhythm of traffic lights (red means stop, green means death), to cross foam by floating on a discarded plastic lid, and to bribe the dogs with a story—he told them of a place beyond the dump where the soil wasn’t poison. The dogs, tired of eating batteries and regret, let them pass.

If you’d like to watch Delhi Safari legally, it’s available on several streaming platforms (like Amazon Prime Video in some regions) or through official DVD/Blu-ray. Supporting legal channels helps more stories like this—and the real-world forests they represent—survive.