Devendra works where truth is not discovered, but prepared.In the crowded court-bazaars of Jaunpur, documents are written, copied, corrected, and submitted with precision. Every word matters. Not because it is true, but because it is consistent.One case arrives. Routine. Ordinary. Just another land dispute among many.Until a single line feels… heavier than it should."e;I confirm that I have never had any claim."e;It is correct. Legally sound. Structurally perfect.So why does it resist?As Devendra copies the statement, something begins to shift. The words do not behave like words anymore. They repeat. They settle. They strengthen. And slowly, they begin to override memory itself.A man who once owned land starts to doubt it.A sentence written once begins to feel absolute.And a system built on repetition starts enforcing its own version of truth.What is written is accepted.What is repeated becomes real.And what is real no longer needs to be proven.As Devendra is pulled deeper into the quiet machinery of legal language, he begins to understand something dangerous:The system does not lie.It simply writes until the lie no longer needs to be questioned.JHOOTH is a psychological legal thriller about language, power, and the unsettling moment when truth stops resisting.