At 2 PM, the men ate first. It was an old rule, one Meera had quietly ignored for the last three years. She served her father-in-law, then sat down with her plate beside her cousin-in-law, Priya, a divorcee who now ran a catering business from her parents’ garage. “They asked me when I’ll remarry,” Priya whispered, stirring her dal with a paratha . “I told them when the stock market crashes.”
At 7:30, the household stirred. Her mother-in-law, Asha, emerged wrapped in a white cotton saree, her silver hair braided tight. “The priest called. Shashti puja is at noon,” she announced, not a request but a decree. Meera nodded, mentally recalculating her day. The puja meant extra cooking: khichuri , labra , payesh . It also meant relatives would appear unannounced, expecting tea and warmth.
Instead, she said, “Let’s eat the mishti doi before the aunties come back for evening tea.”
At 2 PM, the men ate first. It was an old rule, one Meera had quietly ignored for the last three years. She served her father-in-law, then sat down with her plate beside her cousin-in-law, Priya, a divorcee who now ran a catering business from her parents’ garage. “They asked me when I’ll remarry,” Priya whispered, stirring her dal with a paratha . “I told them when the stock market crashes.”
At 7:30, the household stirred. Her mother-in-law, Asha, emerged wrapped in a white cotton saree, her silver hair braided tight. “The priest called. Shashti puja is at noon,” she announced, not a request but a decree. Meera nodded, mentally recalculating her day. The puja meant extra cooking: khichuri , labra , payesh . It also meant relatives would appear unannounced, expecting tea and warmth.
Instead, she said, “Let’s eat the mishti doi before the aunties come back for evening tea.”