Radha
groaned inwardly as she sat on the kitchen counter, staring at her brother, or
better yet, glaring at her brother; who was busy launching the knife into the
onion, cutting them into weird shapes. For a fact, she didn’t even understand
why suddenly Mahir wanted to play master chef. Earlier, he had shoved the
tablet in her hand and asked her to recite the recipe for Paneer Tikka step by
step. The appetizing dish was her favorite, but she pitied her taste buds for
the disaster they might be tasting once it was made.
“Doesn’t
this seem wrong to you?” Mahir asked, showing her the piece of
diced onion, the shape of which even Radha didn’t know, as she had never
studied them in mathematics.
Radha
shot him an incredulous look. ”Kuch? Ki sab kuch, Bhaiya? (Wrong? You
mean everything, right, Bhaiya?)”
She got
down from the counter, took the knife and onion he held, keeping them aside
before facing him. “You see, har koi har cheez nahi kar sakta. Ek baar aapne hi
mujhe yeh samjhaya tha. Toh phir kyun khud par aur mujh par yeh atyachar kar
rahe ho? Aapke haath mein guitar accha lagta hai na ki yeh chaku. (You see, not
everyone can do everything. You were the only one who explained this to me
once. So why are you torturing yourself, and me like this? A guitar looks far
better in your hands than this knife.)”
Mahir bit
back his smile; the sarcasm wasn’t lost on him, and he loved that, as it was a
reminder that his sister still had that brat in her, hiding deep beneath the
layers.
Nothing
was planned. Earlier, he simply thought on his feet to keep Radha distracted,
as she wasn’t going to school. Either way, she would bury herself in her
studies or in her gloomy thoughts, something he didn’t want. He wanted Radha to
feel everything she had been deprived of.
At that
moment, for Mahir, Radha was like a flower whose seeds were almost ripened;
yet, if one took care of them, giving them water, sunlight, and much-needed air
to breathe, in the end, they would blossom into a beautiful flower.
“You are
insulting me?” Mahir asked with a playful glare.
Radhika
shook her head. ”Why will I do that, Bhaiya? You want to cook? GREAT!
Cook then. But how about I help you? I can chop the veggies...”
“No!”
“But....”
“I said
no, Radha!”
Radhika
shrugged and hopped back on the counter. The finality in his tone gave away
that he wouldn’t budge. She knew how to cook thanks to her mother, but winning
in words with Mahir Dhanrajgir was the hardest thing to do, and for now, she
didn’t want to do any of that. Maybe later!
Mahir
nodded, satisfied, and focused back on the vegetables. No matter what, today he
was determined to create an eighth wonder.
“Wase aaj
subha subha yeh khana bane ka bhoot kha se chadha aapko? (By the way, where did
this sudden obsession with cooking come from so early
in the morning?)” Radha asked, scrolling through the tab. The recipe
was long forgotten.
“I want
to try new things,” Mahir said casually, whisking the curd in a bowl.
“But you
guys don’t even eat paneer tikka.”
“So? You
like it, don’t you? I’m making it for you, and like I said, I wanted to try
something new.”
Radha
went quiet. The simple words Mahir said spread a different kind of warmth in
her heart that she rarely felt. The whole family was non-vegetarian except for
Payal, and eventually, Radha took it from her mother. It wasn’t like she hated
non-veg; it was just that she preferred vegetables and more paneer.
Payal
obviously made food for her, but when she was busy, Radha would end up having
food made of stuff that had taste but not the love she craved. So, seeing Mahir
putting so much effort into what he was making for her felt like being cared
for, something that even her brother didn’t realize, or maybe he did.
“What’s
the next step?” Mahir asked, snapping her out of her thoughts.
“Add the
spices,” Radha replied before checking the screen.
“OMG!” a
loud shrill boomed in the kitchen.
Mahir and
Radha ignored the creature they called their brother, concentrating on the work
they were doing.
“Stop
ignoring me,” Abhi scowled. ”By the way, Bhaiyu, where did the sun
rise from today? Bhaiya is cooking. Wow...like the eighth wonder of the world.”
Arjun
gulped down the water, ignoring his overdramatic brother. Even though it was a
shockwave for him too, he looked around, searching for his parents. Not finding
any of them, he sighed in relief.
It was
the unsaid rule in the Dhanrajgir house that men were not allowed in the
kitchen to cook, something their grandfather started and their parents followed
till this day. Even the chef who cooked for them in the house was an elderly
lady.
Mahir was
never allowed in the kitchen, nor were Arjun or Abhi, causing the fights to
escalate between Mahir and their parents. As Mahir didn’t believe in orthodox
thinking; for him, they were living in the 21st century. Equality mattered the
most to him. If a woman can cook, a man can help her; there is nothing wrong
with that.
Arjun had
often seen Ronit being too harsh with his words when Mahir said he wanted to
join cooking classes a few months back. His Bhaiya was always firm and to the
point but never disrespectful, and in the end, Ronit had to give in.
Though
Arjun knew the reason why his Bhaiya wanted to learn cooking, which was
obviously their sister. Payal ran her own catering service, so her being busy
was the cost Radha paid by having to eat food made by staff or even when she
home not working.
Sakshi
could cook too, but her rude behavior towards Radha was always on display,
making the girl keep her distance, and neither did he want his sister to beg
the woman he called mother. He held his own grudges with his mother only if...
Arjun shook off his gloomy thoughts and looked at his siblings, who were busy
in their own world.
Abhi
hopped on the counter beside his sister. ”What is cooking?” he
asked in a whisper.
“Paneer
Tikka,” Radhika whispered back.
“This
early in the morning?”
“It’s my
favorite dish. I don’t really care about the time when it comes to eating.”
“Is it
edible?” Abhis glanced over the pan where paneer was getting fried.
Radha
shrugged casually. To her, it didn’t matter; even if they were burnt or
tasteless, she would have them because her brother made it for her.
“Well, I
can ask the chef to cook something for us,” Arjun suggested.
“No need,” Mahir
said firmly, stopping Arjun. ”I made enough for all four of us.”
Arjun
scratched his eyebrow, ”Bhaiya, I know you must’ve made it well. But
you see, if something goes wrong then…” He trailed off as Mahir turned
and shot him a warning glare. ”Arrey, I—I was just saying we could have
a backup dish, you know?”
“He is
right, Bhaiya.” Abhi joined in, rushing towards Arjun’s side. ”We
can have paratha’ with paneer tikka. They both will go well in combination.”
Mahir
passed Radha an onion as she looked frustrated. ”Do the honors.”
Without a
second thought, Radha threw the onion at Abhi, which landed straight on his
stomach, making him wince.
“What was
that for?” Abhi asked, annoyed.
“First of
all, I got up early because of you. And now Bhaiya is working hard here, you
guys should be helping him, but instead you’re busy teasing him. Like
seriously!” Radhika burst out.
Abhi and
Arjun blinked once, twice, and thrice before bursting into a fit of laughter.
Even in anger, their sister looked too cute, like an angry cat, and for them,
witnessing the sight rarely eventually made them laugh.
Radha
smiled sarcastically before picking up the jug of water and splashing it at the
laughing jokers.
Mahir
whistled, stirring the vegetables. His brothers definitely needed some lessons
on precautions. Who even dares to tease an angry cat, especially in front of
her?
Arjun and
Abhi stood, shocked and drenched. Luckily, there wasn’t much water in the jug,
or they would have had to drag themselves to change yet again.
Arjun and
Abhi glared at the brat, ”You...”
“And the
food is done,” Mahir interjected, plating the paneer tikka he made. Serving
the first plate to his sister, he passed the other to his brothers.
Arjun and
Abhi instinctively gave Radha pleading looks, asking her to taste first.
Radha
chuckled softly; nonetheless, she tasted the dish. However, her taste buds
leapt in agony due to the excess amount of salt. She gulped down the bite and
looked at Mahir, who was waiting for her reaction. She felt in a fix, not
wanting to say anything that might upset him, as he made it for her with so
much love.
Mahir
took a bite of paneer himself as he saw the uncertain look on her face, and the
very next moment, he spit out the piece, unable to eat it.
“It’s too
salty.” Mahir said with a sigh. He was still in the process of learning to
cook, but the measurement of salt always made it hard for him. Sometimes it’s
too much, and sometimes there is nothing.
Arjun and
Abhi kept the plates back on the counter. Jokes apart, they knew Mahir was
putting too much effort into making things right, and somewhere they felt
guilty for not being able to help him. They sucked at even boiling eggs. So
cooking was like setting the house on fire for them.
“Yeh thik
nahi ho sakta? (Can’t this be fixed?)” Abhi asked quietly.
Radha
hopped down from the counter and rushed towards the fridge, taking out the
lemon. She picked up the knife, which was snatched from her hands.
“What are
you doing?” Mahir asked. ”You won’t be touching a knife from now
on. Not until you turn 18.”
Radha
gave him a confused look. ”And why so?”
“Because
Bhaiya said so,” Arjun chimed.
He wasn’t
against anything Radha did, but the brothers still remembered how last year
Payal forced her daughter to learn cooking, even though Radha never wanted to.
But it was a different story today; neither of them wanted their sister to do
anything forcefully.
Radha let
out a deep sigh. ”Fine, but cut this in half.” She passed the
lemon to Mahir.
Without a
question, Mahir complied. Radha squeezed the lemon on the dish, and taking out
the chaat masala, she sprinkled it on the panner tikka before passing each
plate to her brothers. Once, she saw the chef in their house doing the same,
and the lady explained her that lemon juice can balance out excess salt, making
the dish taste a bit tangy and flavorful, but one has to take care of the
amount they put in too, and she just applied that.
“Now
taste it,” Radha said, taking a bite of the paneer, her taste buds
leapt in joy.
“Wow,” Abhi
squealed. ”After eati the this, I think you can open your own
restaurant with Bhaiya. Even if he mess up the dish, you can help him.”
Radha
looked at Mahir, suddenly feeling guilty. If it had been her, she would have
eaten it all without a word of complaint, but her brothers were also
eating. ”Sorry, Bhaiya. The dish was good, it’s just that…”
“I
understand, Bacche,” Mahir intervened softly. “I am still learning, and you
helped me, Radha. Taking help or getting help kisi ko chota nahi banata. I am
happy I learned something new from my sister. ”I’m still learning, and
you helped me, Radha. Taking help doesn’t make anyone lesser. I’m glad I
learned something new from my sister.”
Radha
smiled.
“And what
about I suggested?” Abhi chimed in. He hated being ignored like a speck by his
siblings.
Radha
looked at Arjun; at times like this, the siblings’ eyes could speak hundreds of
sentences.
Arjun set
aside his plate and grabbed Abhi from behind, blocking his hands gently to keep
him still without harming him.
“What the
hell? What are you doing, Bhaiyu?” Abhi almost screamed,
shocked.
Radha
picked up a spoonful of salted paneer and brought it near Abhi’s mouth but Abhi
pressed his lips tightly.
“Ahhhh....” He
yelped as Arjun tickled him from behind, and Radha took her cue, feeding him
the salty paneer.
“Don’t
you dare spit it out, or I won’t talk to you,” Radha
warned as Abhishek was all ready to throw up.
Abhi shot
her a horrifying look, still chewing. Radha couldn’t help but laugh. The sound
of her laughter echoed in the kitchen, a laugh that was carefree, without any
hesitations or apprehensions, a laugh that was as pure as the first sunrays of
dawn and so unfiltered.
The
brothers stilled in the moment; their eyes held warmth as they watched their
sister, realizing what Radha meant to each of them. The smile on her face was
something they vowed to treasure for life!
Ronit,
who saw everything, walked away quietly. He had seen enough to understand
everything going on around him. He wished he could have confronted them, but he
chose to retreat, not wanting to get entangled in the brewing storm.
He had
seen his eldest son becoming protective towards Radha, and his other two sons,
who had once been obedient, too rebelled against him, following in Mahir’s
footsteps.
They were
becoming fiercely defensive of their sister, unwilling to let anything get in
the way that might cause the girl any distress. The strengthened bond among
them, just within a few weeks, wasn’t lost on Ronit, but he cribbed down his
frustration, wanting to take things slow and steady, especially when he wanted
Mahir to abide by and comply with his wishes.
Ronit
entered the study only to find his wife pacing the room. The infuriated
expression on her face told the story of its own. Closing the door behind him,
he approached her.
“What
happened?” Ronit asked calmly, gaining Sakshi’s attention.
“What
happened? Are you serious, Ronit, that you are asking me this?” Sakshi
hissed, exasperated. ”I just can’t understand what is wrong with our
sons. None of them wants to understand the curse that girl brings with her
wherever she goes. Because of her we lost Payal and Raghav, and the past... Did
you forget that too? God knows what kind of black magic that girl knows.”
Ronit
heard her words calmly. Obviously, after having a wife like Sakshi, who was
always short-tempered, he was prone to listening to her rants. And somewhere he
agreed and understood where she was coming from; the past and present felt so
alike that he couldn’t help but blame the girl for everything that was
happening in their life, like history repeating itself. Their old beliefs were
too strong to see through anything, and they always would be.
Sakshi
passed him a few papers, startling him. ”What is this?” Ronit
asked, confused.
“These
are boarding school forms. Sign them and throw that girl out of here.” Sakshi
stated. She was done with Radhika for life!
The girl
was trapping her sons, making them dance to her tunes. Sakshi was a lady who
loved controlling others, as it gave her satisfaction, a kind of power to let
everyone know who was the boss.
Eventually,
she tried to control Arjun, but as he was an adult now, the boy who once
complied with her slipped away from her hands once he became a young man. The
same went for Abhi. The boy was growing and seeing too much into the situation.
Though he still feared her, the teenage impulses were getting on her nerves.
Lastly,
it was Mahir. He was simply out of her reach. Mahir held strong ground; he had
the capability to call wrong wrong and right right without any filters. With
her husband always backing Mahir, Sakshi was forced to step back, but now she
regretted losing her hold on, Mahir, being done with everything and anything.
Ronit let
out a deep sigh. He was madly and blindly in love with his wife that even
though her words sounded wrong to him, even though what she had done and what
she was doing looked like a sin, yet he couldn’t say no to her. He loved her
too much to ignore her words and, like always, was ready to do anything for her
happiness.
“Fine, I
will talk to him,” Ronit said, giving in. He hoped Mahir agreed, despite he
knew the answer.
Sakshi
walked out fuming. She already saw the uncertainty in her husband’s eyes, and
it reflected in hers too, as she knew Mahir’s answer already.
It wasn’t
like she never loved the boy who was now a man. But Radha had become a bone of
contention between them for so many years, that the boy who never once raised
his voice at her spoke in a cold tone to her, as if she were some stranger, and
the cause of it all was Radhika bloody Dhanrajgir. Her insides were burning;
she wanted to lash out at someone or anyone.
As she made
her way towards her room, she collided with the girl who was the cause of the
fault in her life. ”Can’t you watch where you’re going!” Sakshi
finally burst out.
Radhika
flinched back at the sharp tone. ”So—sorry Badi Maa, I....”
“Firstly,
stop calling me that. I’m not your mother or anything.” Sakshi
hissed, her voice raised an octave. ”Aur sorry? Kitni baar kitni cheezo
ke liye sorry bologi tum? Sorry na hua kisi ko compensation de rahi ho aisa lag
raha hai. Galti karo... nahi, infact gunha karo and apologize thinking it will
straighten everything....(And sorry? How many times and for how many things are
you going to keep saying sorry? It doesn’t even sound like an apology anymore,
it’s like you’re handing out compensation. Make a mistake, no... commit a crime
even, and then just apologize thinking it will set everything right….)”
“It can,
Mom,” Arjun said from behind, walking towards his mother and
sister.
Sakshi’s
eyes flashed with warning. ”What did you say?”
Arjun
smiled widely, adding chili to the burning fire in his mother’s eyes. The venom
she was spitting lost in her own world that she didn’t even care to see the
look the servants were throwing their way.
“Sorry?
An apology! Well, it can at least lessen someone’s pain,” Arjun
said, pulling his sister behind him. ”But I guess Radha forgot this all
happens only with people who have a heart, not someone like the GREAT
DHANRAJGIR’.”
“Don’t
forget the surname you carry, son,” Sakshi shot back.
Arjun
nodded with a sad look. ”Unfortunately… but what can I even do about it
now, Mom?”
Sakshi
took a threatening step towards him, but the defensive expression riled her up
further, making her walk away.
“You
shouldn’t have spoken to Badi Maa like that, Bhaiyu.” Radhika
said quietly, tugging at Arjun’s hand.
Arjun
forced a smile for her sake, guiding her towards her room. He knew he was wrong
in the tone he took with his mother and the way he misbehaved with her, but
taking a stand for his sister was something he didn’t regret. He didn’t mind
doing the right thing for his sister.
You deal
with heartless people in a heartless way only, and he was doing just that. What
hurt him was, it was his own mother rather than a stranger!
Beautifully penned. The translation of emotions into words is really done flawlessly. Kudos 💝
ReplyDelete💜
DeleteLovely chapter! you have displayed the bond between siblings beautifully !
ReplyDeletelooking for further such lovely and adorable moments, and as for sakshi i only have a few words "you reap what you sow"
looking for forward to reading the next part , have a lovely day!
💜
DeleteYEAH I AGREE
Deleteits soo good to see their bond
ReplyDelete