Rekha, the mother, is already ten steps ahead. Her hands move on autopilot: spreading turmeric on a wound her son got yesterday, packing a lunchbox with parathas shaped like a triangle (because “square ones are boring, Mumma”), and simultaneously yelling into her phone, “No, the bhindi vendor cheats me, I’m taking the auto to the sabzi mandi today.”
“That’s why I’m qualified to design games, Papa. Logic.” Rekha, the mother, is already ten steps ahead
Her husband, Ajay, is performing the sacred morning ritual of finding his glasses. They are, as always, on his head. He sips chai that is too hot, reads a newspaper that is already a day old, and negotiates with the Wi-Fi router by hitting it gently—the Indian engineering fix. They are, as always, on his head
The day in the Sharma household doesn’t begin with an alarm clock. It begins with the krrrrr of a steel mixer grinding coconut chutney and the low hiss of pressure cooker releasing steam—two sounds that could wake a hibernating bear. It begins with the krrrrr of a steel