Ekta
looked around the mall; Galaxy Mall, one of Mumbai’s top famous shopping
destinations, filled with luxury brands, designer outlets, and high-end
showrooms. The mall wasn’t crowded, maybe due to the riots that happened or
because it was still early evening.
Each shop that came into her view seemed
expensive and over the top; she was sure no one would buy such overpriced items
so casually. Everything fascinated her as she was seeing it all in real life
for the first time, but it also made her feel out of place and small in a world
she didn’t belong to.
She still felt awkward walking with
Eshita and Vanya. Both the girls were chatterboxes; the whole ride they had
been talking and talking like there was no pause button in their system. While
she sat there trying to grasp their conversation, one minute they were going on
about college work, then some reality show, then suddenly jumping to what to
eat... Ekta struggled to keep up with their pace, feeling lost in between their
effortless bond.
Quietly, she stepped into the elevator,
following Eshita. Since the moment they had stepped into the mall, Eshita had
been holding her hand, even when her focus was on Vanya, continuing their
conversation. Ekta felt relieved at the constant reassurance of that touch. The
strangers scared her; their unknown presence made her feel uneasy and
overwhelmed, but for the first time, there was a hand holding onto hers to
ground her, that she wasn’t alone, that nothing would go wrong, and Ekta held
onto that hope like a child on Christmas.
The moment they stepped out of the
elevator, Ekta promised herself she would enjoy every moment. The fears would
linger in the corners of her mind, the shadows she left behind might reach her
sooner or later, but today she would give herself a chance to feel, to live,
even if it meant it was her last moment of peace.
“Aur do teen ghante late aate aap dono.”
Rishan, Ritvik’s younger brother, hissed annoyed.
Eshita raised an eyebrow, amused, “No
greetings, no hello hi, direct complaints shuru. Bad manners, Rishu.”
Rishan rolled his eyes. He glared at
Vanya, “I am trying to call you for tickets, phone use nahi karna aata toh phek
kyun nahi... Ouch!” He yelped in pain, turning to glare at his brother who had
just whacked him.
Ritvik glared back, “Badi hai tujhse vo.
Zara bhi tameez nahi hai na baat karne ki.”
“Ask her to behave like one then.” Rishan
retorted, only to earn yet another whack for his efforts.
“It’s okay, Ritvik.” Vanya intervened
softly. She looked at Rishan with a charming smile, “Your highness, aapna net
on karenge toh aapko send kiya hua msg bhi deliver ho jayega. Basic cheezein
bhi check kar liya kar dusro ko bolne se pehle, no?”
Rishan bit his tongue, embarrassed, “Vo..
vo haa. Yaha network issue hai isliye warna mujhe kya Bhagwan aa kar bolenge ki
bete aapna phone check karo.”
Vanya shook her head in disbelief; the
boy had an answer for everything, no matter how ridiculous it sounded.
Eshita chuckled softly. She looked at
Ritvik, “Where is Siyara...” She trailed off as a pair of hands covered her
eyes from behind.
She smiled softly, “Siya.”
“Oho, aapko itni jaldi nahi batana tha
di.” Siya whined, a small pout adoring her face.
Eshita ruffled her hair affectionately.
Siyara, the sister of Ritvik, his cousin, just like her name, the girl was
gentle and radiant, with a playful innocence. She glanced at Ekta, who stood
there stiff and hesitant. Without meaning to, she subconsciously wished for
Ekta to be so carefree and open, without any fear holding her back.
“Kya ho gaya, kaha kho gayi aap...” Siya
paused as she noticed Ekta, “Yeh kaun hai?” She asked warmly.
Eshita pulled Ekta towards her, draping
her arm around Ekta’s shoulder casually, “Ekta... my sister.”
Rishan frowned, “Your sister? But aapki
toh koi bhen nahi...” He paused as Ritvik held his hand in caution. He looked
at his bhaiyu who shot him a glare. Realizing his slip of tongue, he looked
back at Eshita, “Sorry di... I didn’t mean...”
“It’s okay, Rishi.” Eshita cut him off, “You
didn’t know. But now you do.” There was a tint of warning and protectiveness
that lingered in her tone, everyone heard clearly.
It’s rare to see Eshita Seghal get into
her protective stance, and if she stood up like this for Ekta, that meant only
one thing, the girl already held a special place in Eshita’s heart, whether she
accepted it or not.
“Movie ka time ho raha hai. Let’s go.”
Ritvik said gently, trying to cool off the sudden tension.
Eshita nodded. She looked at Ekta, who
looked too shocked for her liking. Did she utter something wrong? The girl was
her brother’s sister, which eventually made her hers too. They didn’t share
anything specific to be called that, and Eshita didn’t know if they ever would,
but she had just said what she thought was right.
“Tumhe kuch khana hai?” She asked,
shaking Ekta lightly out of her daze.
Ekta blinked, startled. Quietly, she
shook her head. What Eshita said... she tried to tell herself that it was
nothing, that it was just said casually, shrugging away the warmth spreading in
her heart, but a simple statement was doing wonders on her.
But she pushed those unfamiliar emotions
rising within her away. Eshita said that because she couldn’t say that her
brother had taken a roadside girl under his wings, now calling her his sister.
Ekansh Seghal was the kindest soul for her, her saviour, and she or Eshita
wouldn’t want people calling him a fool for helping someone like her without
any reason.
Ekta had witnessed that help came only
when it was convenient, people could tag big stories, write articles, even
protest, whatnot, to show the world their goodness, but when the real time came
to step up and help someone, the greed for recognition and benefit came first.
She was grateful that Ekansh was nothing
like that. He was selfless and genuine, and she would always be grateful to the
almighty for sending her a family... her bhaiya. Someone she could call her
own, without any conditions attached.
✨✨✨
One hour later, Eshita was ready to
sprint out of the theatre. Watching a horror movie with a 3D experience was
plain suicidal. She tried to close her eyes, cover her ears, but nothing
worked. Every other minute she was jumping in her seat.
Who the hell on earth invented such
terrifying horror movies? And if inventing them was not enough, people had a
kick to watch such heart-thumping, nightmare inducing things.
The option of walking out was open, but
everyone was enjoying the movie. She knew if she said she wanted to go out,
others would follow her for her sake, not wanting to leave her alone. She didn’t
wish to spoil their fun.
However, what got on her nerves was Ekta.
The girl sat beside her as calm as a still lake, relaxed, leaning on the seat,
watching the movie. She didn’t once flinch, except for in the beginning, and
that was something Eshita didn’t like. Bloody hell, back in Shimla the girl had
told her she couldn’t handle horror movies, and now she watched it as if it
didn’t affect her at all.
Finally, the interval came as a relief.
Eshita removed the 3D glasses. She reached out to shake Ekta when a startled
scream blasted through the speakers.
“Ahhh!” Eshita yelped, the popcorn tub in
her hands flipping over, spilling everything right onto Ritvik who was sitting
beside her.
Eshita gasped, horrified. She immediately
leaned forward to clean him up, “Sorry... I am so so sorry.” She stammered, “Vo
awaaz achanak se aayi and I just lost it for a second...”
“Wow bhaiyu, you look handsome.” Rishan
teased, already clicking pictures on his phone despite the glare his brother
shot him.
Siya chuckled, helping Ritvik brush off
the popcorn from his shirt.
Ritvik sighed, “You just can’t see me at
peace, right?” He muttered, dusting off his clothes in resignation.
Eshita bit her tongue, giving him a
pleading look, “Sorry... Arey maine jaan ke thodi kiya. Inn gadho ki galti hai
sab. Ads mein kaun itne loud terrifying sounds rakhta hai? Curse them, not me.”
Ritvik shook his head, rising to his
feet. Eshita and her chaos, no matter what he did, he somehow always ended up
being the victim of her unpredictable disasters.
Eshita turned toward Ekta who sat there
as if nothing happened. She shook the girl not so gently, “Tum toh mujhe keh
rahi thi tumhe horror movies kuch zyada pasand nahi. Now what happened
suddenly?”
No response. Eshita frowned. The girl didn’t
even move a bit, sitting there like a stone.
Eshita shook her again.
“What happened to her?” Vanya asked,
gathering around with Ritvik and his siblings.
Eshita rose to her feet, worried. She
shook Ekta, removing her goggles. Her eyes were closed, and that increased her
panick.
“Darr ke maare behosh toh nahi ho gayi?”
Rishan muttered casually.
“Chup kar.” Ritvik and Siya snapped at
him.
Eshita tapped Ekta’s face, “Ekta... Ekta
get up.”
Her heart sank as the girl didn’t respond
at all. She had brought Ekta out under her responsibility, and now this had
happened. A strange, unfamiliar panic clawed at her chest, tightening with
every passing second. It wasn’t just fear, it was something deeper, heavier,
something she couldn’t quite name. Her thoughts spiraled uncontrollably... What
if something actually happened? What if she missed something? What if she wasn’t
careful enough?
For a moment, everything else blurred,
the movie, the people, the noise... nothing mattered except the girl sitting
unresponsive in front of her. A sharp guilt pierced through her, sudden and
suffocating. She had insisted Ekta come along, pulled her out of her comfort
zone... and now this.
Vanya passed Eshita a water bottle, “Paani
maar uske muh par.”
Eshita complied immediately. She
sprinkled water on Ekta’s face in panic.
Ekta flinched, her face scrunching. “Ekta...
Ekta...” Eshita tapped her face again.
Ekta shrugged away her hand, “Sone do na.
Kya hai!” She turned her face away lazily, relaxing in the seat more
comfortably.
Eshita froze, shocked, so did everyone.
Silence stretched for a long moment before Rishan burst out laughing.
“Shh! Chup kar!” Siya hissed annoyed.
Eshita fumed. She pulled Ekta up with a
sharp jerk, startling her. “Dimag kharab hai tumhara? Yahan mujhe tension ho
gayi thi, tum aankhein nahi khol rahi thi. Aur tum ho ki... How can you be so
stupid, Ekta. Apne aas paas kya ho raha hai dhyaan bhi nahi de...” She stopped,
noticing the tears swimming in Ekta’s eyes.
Eshita stepped back. If she stayed there
a minute more, she would burst out even more. Turning on her heels, she walked
away.
Ekta blinked away the tears that
threatened to fall. She was too scared to watch the movie, and denying it meant
disturbing others, so the best option was to sleep, and she just did that.
However, she wasn’t prepared for a reaction like that.
She didn’t wish to embarrass herself in
front of strangers. She followed behind Eshita immediately. Even though Vanya
was Eshita’s friend, she couldn’t bring herself to stay around her, they didn’t
know each other. Ritvik and his siblings were also strangers to her. All she
had here now was Eshita, even if the girl had to yell at her, she could take
it, but being left alone in between unfamiliar faces was not something she
could handle.
“Ekta...” Vanya tried to call out, but
she didn’t stop.
Eshita stood at the railing, looking down
on the bustling crowd below. If anything had happened to Ekta, what would she
have explained to her bhaiya? And here the girl was sleeping like nothing
mattered. Idiot!
She turned around as she heard Vanya and
Ritvik, only to find Ekta rushing towards her. The girl was scared of
strangers, but the way she was pushing aside everyone felt like she was on fire.
“Vo log tumhe bula rahe hai.” Eshita
snapped even before Ekta could say anything, “Kaan kharab hai? Suniye nahi
deta? Or you just don’t care?”
Ekta flinched slightly. Eshita wasn’t
even realizing the range of her own tone, the added anger in it cutting deeper
than intended. She stood quietly, staring at the floor, unable to say anything.
No matter what, she had to stick by Eshita’s side. She was suddenly feeling
scared of everything. It was a bad, an even worse idea to step out of the
house, of her room. She deserved to be caged in one place.
He was right... she wasn’t meant for the
outer world. She was meant to live within the four walls, obediently, silently
enduring everything.
She spoiled everyone’s mood, everyone’s
day. It was better if she stayed quiet the rest of the day before returning to
her bhaiya, even though she wanted to go to him right now. Then it clicked...
He told her she could call him. She reached out for her phone instantly,
ignoring whatever Eshita was saying. Her fear got the better of her,
overpowering every rational thought.
Just as she tried to call, her phone was
snatched away from her grasp abruptly. A startled gasp escaped her lips. She
looked at Eshita with hurtful, teary eyes.
“I am talking to you.” Eshita hissed, “What
is your problem, girl?” She looked down at the phone before glaring back at
Ekta, “Ghr jaana hai? Fine, I will call bhaiya myself. Go and complain to him
all you...”
“Eshita, enough!” Ritvik’s sharp voice
cut through the anger like a blade.
Ritvik turned towards Ekta, his tone
softened, “Aap Vanya ke saath rukogi please... mujhe aapki bhen se do minute
baat karni hai.”
Ekta contemplated. She couldn’t say no,
it could annoy Eshita more. She nodded her head reluctantly.
Ritvik glanced at Vanya, “Food court jao.
Order something for everyone. We will come till then.” He didn’t wait for a
reply. Holding Eshita’s wrist, he guided her away from there.
Eshita could do the worst in the name of
doing good, in worry and concern, but she herself didn’t realize what means she
chose that could hurt the other person deeply, and he wanted to make her
understand that. That was a side of her everyone was aware of, even understood,
but maybe Ekta was still too fragile to handle it.
Eshita pulled back from Ritvik’s grasp, “What
are you doing? She can’t stay alone...”
“And yet you left her behind inside?”
Ritvik shot back squarely.
Eshita looked away, running her fingers
through her hair. She had nothing to say. She didn’t want a younger sister, she
didn’t want the responsibility of being the elder one. All her life she was the
youngest of the family, she was the pampered one, she was taken care of, she
was the one protected and shielded from everything. So suddenly, after five
years, this new change... these unfamiliar feelings rising in her once carefree
and guarded heart, unsettled her.
If she had slept like that in the
theatre, worrying her bhaiya, he would have been worried like she was, but
after finding out she was just sleeping, he would have laughed it off rather
than making a big deal out of it, pulling her into his arms and scolding her
lightly instead of letting his fear turn into anger. She wasn’t used to
handling fear like this, she only knew how to react, not how to respond.
“What is happening, Esha?” Ritvik asked
calmly, noticing her distressed face. “Kuch bataogi? We all are aware of your
nature. But Ekta... maybe she doesn’t know. Why did you...”
“I don’t want to talk about it.” Eshita
cut him off, “Can we please go to the food court.”
Ritvik stared at her for a moment before
he gave in. Any other time, he would have pressed her into talking, but now the
look on her face clearly said she wasn’t ready to open up, so he stepped back,
giving her the space she needed.
✨✨✨
Eshita paused as she noticed Ekta sitting
stiff and quiet, compared to Rishan who was blabbering continuously, so was
Siya. Both were Ekta’s age, it would be easy and natural if they could befriend
Ekta, but the way Ekta kept herself withdrawn and guarded, it was next to
impossible.
Shaking off her thoughts, she moved
towards their table. She was no one to force her comfort or choices, Ekta could
decide for herself. She made a mistake bringing the girl out; next time she
wouldn’t. It was better to keep her distance than doing something that could
create rifts and misunderstandings.
Apologies weren’t that hard for her. If
she was wrong, she could say sorry and clear things, drawing a firm line,
closing the matter, that was the last time she would let herself get
emotionally involved in something that wasn’t hers to carry... or so she told
herself.
Eshita took her seat beside Ekta, which
was the only empty one left. She noticed how Ekta stiffened slightly and
straightened up immediately. Eshita closed her eyes, ignore,
she told herself, and focused on her food.
Just as Eshita reached for the sandwich,
Ekta reached for the pasta. Their hands brushed against each other, and Ekta
pulled back immediately as if struck by thunder.
“S–Sorry.” She mumbled, staring at her
hands, fidgeting with them.
Ignore. Eshita
repeated... “You didn’t order white sauce pasta?” She asked Vanya, unable to
hold back.
Vanya frowned, “You don’t like it... none
of us do.”
Ignore... ”She likes it.”
Eshita blurted out before she could stop herself.
Silence filled the table. Vanya and
Ritvik shared knowing glances, they knew exactly what was going on between the
two girls.
“I will go and order,” Rishan said,
rising to his feet.
He didn’t know much about Ekta, but
whatever he was witnessing was hilarious for him rather than complicated like
Vanya, Ritvik, or even Eshita were making it out to be. When you love someone
or even care for them, what was the issue in saying it directly? Why do elders
love to play pretend games, that was out of his knowledge.
“It’s okay,” Ekta stopped him instantly, “Aapko
preshan...” She paused as Rishan laughed out loud like a maniac. Was the boy
suddenly possessed by the ghost from the movie, she wondered.
Rishan wiped off the tears of laughter,
realizing he was the only one laughing. People would call him crazy, just like
his siblings, and even Vanya and Eshita; their faces said it all.
He looked at Ekta, “Aap? I am your age
yaar. Kyu mujhe budha banana chahti ho. Call me Rishi, Rishu, Ahan, or even
Rish! But not that ‘aap’ or ‘tum’... I am a cool dude, girl.” He lifted his
collar for effect, and extended his hand toward her.
Eshita rose to her feet, ignoring the
creature, just like Ekta ignored the extended hand. Good. The boy behaved like
a celebrity who had done nothing worth the attention he was demanding.
“Main abhi aayi,” She mumbled before
walking away. She had noticed Ekta didn’t prefer spicy food. Whatever Ekansh
made for her had its own spice level, or if it was extra spicy, he added
cheese, something Ekta loved. She was doing it for herself, not for Ekta; she
had already decided to keep her distance after this. Better to say sorry after
this and end it.
Ekta tried to stop her, but Eshita had
already left. She leaned back in the chair, not knowing what to do. Eshita was
confusing her in ways no one ever had. At times she was angry, plain rude, and
then suddenly soft, caring, keeping up with her needs and comfort.
Ekta didn’t understand what she was
supposed to feel. Was Eshita hating her, caring for her, or just doing all this
out of pity or for their bhaiya? Nothing made sense, and the more she tried to
understand, the more tangled everything felt within her heart.
“Can we go to the gaming zone after this?”
Siya asked Ritvik and Eshita once she returned.
Ritvik glanced at his watch and shook his
head, “Aaj nahi, baccha. It’s already late. We can try another time.”
“Next time mumma nahi maanegi.” Siya
whined, “I was grounded, still she agreed because you asked. Next time she won’t.”
“Arey wah, itna bharosa hai tujhe khud
par ki tu koi na koi khaand kiye bina nahi reh sakti?” Rishan teased.
Siya glared at him, “Nahi, itna bharosa
hai mujhe tujh par. Ki teri sangat mein reh reh kar main bhi teri tarah ban
jaungi.”
Rishan raised an eyebrow, “Tu mujhe roast
kar rahi hai ya khud ko? Waise bhi maine tujhe car start karna nahi sikhaya...
At sixteen you have quite the adventurous spirit. Not my fault!”
“You did what?” Vanya asked, shocked.
“Arey aapko nahi pata?” Rishan said
excitedly, “She wanted to try something new. So my dear sister thought driving
bua’s car would be fun. When bua was not at home this girl actually took the
keys and tried to drive it herself, luckily bhaiyu time par aa gaye. He scolded
her but bua found out from the guards and the rest is history. Bechari ko ek do
chaapde bhi pad gaye free free free.”
“Tujhe bhi chaiye?” Ritvik asked firmly, “Maine
kaha tha na, don’t tease her about this. It’s not like you are any better. Tu
koi kaam kaand nahi karta.”
Rishan whined, “Aap mujhse pyaar he nahi
karte bhaiyu. Main aapka chota bhai hoon. Kisi sadak ke kinare se nahi leke
aaye ho mujhe. You always defend her.”
Eshita chuckled softly, “Tu kyun pareshan
hota hai. Main hoon na tere side. Anyways every elder brother has a soft corner
for his sister, elder or little, it doesn’t matter.” She served him the pizza, “see
I am on your side. Come on, have it.”
Rishan leaned on Eshita, poking his
tongue out teasing his brother on purpose. He knew he was well loved but at
times like this he didn’t mind getting the attention he receives from Eshita.
She and Vanya were like elder sisters to him; he adored them both but loved it
more when they pampered him like that.
Ekta felt a sting, the casual ease and
closeness with which Eshita treated Rishan and even Siya.... She didn’t
understand what that kind of bond felt like, obviously they had known each
other for years whereas her bond with Eshita was new and uncertain.
However she couldn’t ignore the fact that
Eshita wasn’t even ready to look at her properly, always keeping a distance,
always snapping at her. She shook her head, focusing on her food when a slice
of pizza was served on her plate, startling her. She looked at Eshita who
served it but the girl wasn’t even looking at her, as if it didn’t matter at
all.
“Bhaiyu... I want to play shooting.” Siya
said softly, “Please... just one game and we will go back.”
“Fine!” Eshita intervened before Ritvik
could reject. She looked at him, “It’s okay. Main bhaiya se keh ke aayi hoon I
will be late. There is no need to worry. There is no curfew as long as bhaiya
is there.”
Ritvik understood what Eshita didn’t say.
As long as her brother was there, her father wouldn’t interfere like he used
to. It helped him relax but being Eshita’s friend who was worried for her, he
couldn’t bring himself to understand her brother ever. Ekansh Seghal... he had
heard the name, even seen Eshita’s photos with him but how the man was in real
was still a mystery to him.
If a brother loved his sister so much, he
wouldn’t leave her behind. A father’s promise matters but definitely not at the
cost of his sister’s happiness and emotional well-being.
Once done with their food, Siya happily
dragged them to the gaming zone chattering excitedly about all the games she
wanted to try. Ekta followed behind reluctantly; she wanted to go back home.
All she felt now was discomfort and uneasiness. The earlier eagerness to try something
new, to step out of her fears, took a back seat. What remained was the reality
that she was a stranger who didn’t belong anywhere in their high-class world.
Ritvik paid for the shooting game
tickets. Siya picked up the gun excitedly, the rule was simple, burst the
balloon and get the prize within the given time limit under the instructor’s
watch.
Rishan followed suit, he looked at his
sister, “So? Wanna compete, dear sister?”
Siya scoffed, “Just watch and learn,
loser. I’m going to win this easily.” She sassed, aiming carefully and
firing... it hit the balloon perfectly.
Siya squealed in excitement, Rishan
smirked in mock annoyance yet impressed at the same time.
Eshita noticed how Ekta flinched at the
noise of fire each time the trigger was pressed.
“I think we should try something else.”
She said, looking at Rishan and Siya. The duo turned toward her, confused.
Eshita looked around, her gaze landed on
the claw machine, she pointed at it, “That one... let’s go there. Take out the
toy from inside. The one who takes it out in the first try will be the winner.”
“And what will the winner get?” Vanya
asked, draping her hand around Eshita’s shoulder, “How about a treat... Beach
ke paas kulfi milti hai na. Vo. What say?”
Eshita glared at her, “They will fall sick.”
Vanya glanced at Ritvik. “Ek kulfi se
kuch nahi hoga, Esha.” Ritvik played his part perfectly, “Are you in or not?
Say that.”
Eshita groaned, they knew her too well,
it was her typical guilt-driven apology style to say sorry. Whenever she messed
up, she would take that person to her favorite kulfi stall, rant out everything
sitting on the beach and apologise, ending it all by throwing away her
frustrations into the waves.
Sunset points were her place of, comfort
and closure, whereas beach and kulfi were her place of, silence and reflection.
Both held special emotional significance. With a resigned sigh, she nodded, she
could apologise to Ekta, she should and she would. It’s not for herself. It’s
for... Vanya, Ritvik or even her bhaiya. But not herself, she repeated.
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
Was Eshita right in bringing Ekta out despite knowing her fears?
Did Eshita’s anger in the theatre come
from genuine concern for Ekta or was it more about her own fear of failing as
an elder sister?
Was Ritivk right in stepping in and
pulling Eshita away, or should he have let her handle things with Ekta on her
own?
Should Ekansh intervene between Eshita
and Ekta, or is stepping back the right choice to let their bond grow
naturally?
On the basis of today’s chapter, what’s
your take on Ritivk and his siblings?
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
I am not setting any targets just genuinely looking forward to your honest feedback, Please do let me know your views. It would really help me improve and understand your perspective shaping the story further.
Next Update: Wednesday!
Thanks for reading!!!
← Previous Next →
Esha is trying... but my heart goes to Ekta
ReplyDeleteAmazing
ReplyDeleteAmazing
ReplyDeleteLoved ritvik and rishan..want to read more...of them
ReplyDeleteloved the whole sibling dynamics
ReplyDeleteesha's anger for ekta was from both genuine concern and fear for failure but also the fear of disappointing her bhaiya
ReplyDeleteaccording to me esha and ekta are in a situation where neither an intervention fron ekansh nor being left on there own will work, esha isn't able to accept that she has somewhere started to see ekta as her sister, and the anger issues are not helping either, that is why i wanted esha to have a solo trip to figure out herself, sometimes we need time and space to think and understand what is actually going on in our lives and how to deal with it
ReplyDeleteMan eshita needs anger issues classes dude, i mean with this ekta will go more deeper into her shell and write now please reveal her past to everyone please and honestly i am not at liking eshita's behaviour towards ekta like how can she expects from ekta to behave friendly with her when she herself ranted she doesn't like ekta and don't wants her and ekta is also not a god who'll by magic get everything understood
ReplyDeleteEsha is trying her best...she has somewhere already accepted ekta as her sister ..it's just her concern and genuine fear for ekta takes an angry turn when she's expressing herself...also ritvik intervening between them was right..and why do I feel that ritvik and esha should have a romantic arc somewhere in the future coz they actually look grt together. I'm also eagerly awaiting for ekansh and ritvik to meet. Kuch drama toh hona chahiye jab woh dono mile.
ReplyDeleteEsha is trying her best but her fears and anger issues are making her act out. It is not fair for Ekta either. Ekansh might be able to help however, he might also screw things up , Idk. He has a talent of screwing things up Repeatedly with Esha so I am not sure how that will work out. And one more thing, I absolutely agree with what Ritvik thought about Ekansh , about that promise and stuff.
ReplyDeleteWonderful chapter, eagerly waiting for the next.