Chapter 48
Growing Affections and Distances
March 16th, 1706.
The runes had disappeared by morning, just like Horatia said they would. Maithili sat up, staring into the mirror, and touched her cheeks. It didnât hurt anymore.
What were they?, she thought. And would they come back?
She felt a hard object just underneath her, sandwiched between the mattress. Carefully stepping out, she lifted it up and took out the spell book. It looked nothing like the books she had read in the library. It had mosaics of spiraling patterns and markings. The glyphs were impossible to interpret. As her hands fared over the cover, it glowed and shook, unaccustomed to its new wielder. She dropped it and backed away slowly, frightened.
Yamini came back just then, and closed the door behind her. Maithili burst into tears, and ran into her arms.
âMaa....whatâs happening to me?â She sobbed into the silken cloth.
âI will explain everything later tonight, my dear. Patience.â
She had her sit down, an assortment of fruits in hand. Maithili already felt better, unable to remember the last time they spent this much time together, even if it was a little.
Piya grimaced, and hated knowing this was all likely for show.
She picked up the spellbook, still lying face down on the floor, and pushed it back under the mattress.
âThat book.....it was glowing when I touched it.â
There was only a nod, and diversion of attention with more fruit. Maithili was left alone, once again and for a while longer, to wallow in her own confusions and new identity. She doubled checked her face after Yamini left, put on a wavering smile, and began to get dressed.
Everything else looked normal outside. She exhaled and looked around for Mandu. She tugged on the clothes of a passerby servant.
âWhereâs didi?â, she asked.
âShe is at the barracks, princess.â
She nodded, letting him go by. It was business as usual for the rest of the palace. Except for her. She felt out of place from it. A shard of glass that didnât fit with the rest. Wandering in the company of her own thoughts, she ran into Indranuj next, who smiled and caressed her hair. She found some semblance of a real smile then.
Piya too felt relieved.
âMaithili, are you feeling better?â
She assumed that sharing this topic was forbidden beyond her and her mother.
âYour mother told me you werenât feeling well.â
She shook her head.
âIâm okay now, baba....â
âIs that so? Alright.â He smiled and touched her shoulder. âDonât worry about your lessons for today. Rest is important.â
She nodded and waved as he and a few soldiers exited the palace.
Piya turned about, looking at every face in sight. There was someone missing, who she thought would be there by now.
âWhere is he?â
âAyushmaan?â
She nodded.
âA simple entry would be too boring for him.â
The king, along with an entourage of soldiers, looked to be in preparation for a leisurely hunting trip. Horatia guided Piya in his partyâs direction, while Maithili went off on her own to find Mandu.
âSheâll be okay, right?â
âFor now, yes. I wonder if your sympathy will hold later on?â
Piya sighed. If anything, this trip was giving her an idea of how the three mustâve felt after everything fell apart. It was like feeling a kinship with certain characters in a novel, only to have the story change them in irredeemable ways. Conflicting emotions.
Things I can never forgive her for, Abhay had told her.
âWhat did she do.....?â She murmured to herself. It was all she could ask.
Horatia pretended to not hear and kept moving. As they drew closer towards the forest, Piya could see Ayushmaan hiding between the trees, dragging a edged dagger across his arms and back. It wasnât some illusion; he was actively injuring himself. Blood spattered onto the rocks near his feet.
âAnd heâs so young....â
âFor your time, yes. In the 18th century, people were often married off at this age.â
As the party entered the area, he staggered and threw himself onto the dirt roads, exaggerating his pain and exhaustion. He had a story already cooking in his mind, his identity of an abused b*stard child, who finally mustered the courage to run away from home, outrunning pursuers his family had hired for coin. If they needed more convincing, he could also enslave their minds, though he hoped he wouldnât have to use his powers to begin with.
One of the guards pointed, bringing the caravan to a halt. Unaware of any intelligence hinting at an attack from foreign adversaries, they waited for long enough to make sure this wasnât a trap. Hands left the hilts of swords at that moment.
âYour highness, he doesnât look to be a threat....â
âOf course not.â
Indranuj jumped off his horse and approached Ayushmaan, leaving his sword behind to appear non threatening himself. He helped him up, finding splotches of blood stained on the cloth of the backside and arms. His eyes were wide with relief and fear, body shaking.
âPlease save me.....king....â
He fell to his knees, hugging Indranujâs ankles, and blubbering between heaving of breaths.
If there was one thing Piya was impressed by, it was his acting skills. Even she would have been fooled.
âDonât worry. You are safe with us.â
A snake was getting an open invitation to the palace. It was one of Indranujâs weaknesses, often placed blind trust towards those who ruled over. They cleared space on one of the carts and turned back, making haste. Many looked past as Ayushmaan was led carefully to the servant quarters, towards a clean bed and a visit from the royal physician. Soon was he bandaged up and left to rest.
âCanât he heal himself?â Piya asked.
âSure. But that would then make it more tedious to keep up an act. He needs time to gain everyoneâs trust.â
Piya was astounded by the lengths one could go to deceive. And if he was still around, lurking in her time, his objectives werenât yet complete.
Or he was selfish enough to want more.
The training grounds happened to be near to the servant quarters. She saw Mandu looking curiously in their direction, pulling off the worn breastplate and adjusting her hair.
He saw her face through the low window, and a obsessive pining ached his body. He had never seen a lady quite like her. It was an instant attraction.
So beautiful....
Piya felt chills, reminded of how Jeh used to stare at her. Just like that. But at least he was gone now. Ayushmaan was still alive.
Mandu could feel someone staring at her, and it raised the hairs on the back of her neck. It was easy to feel uncomfortable even when not fully able to see. She brushed it off, and found Maithili looking for her. She too knew that she wasnât feeling well last night, and let her rest without any disturbances on her part.
âAre you feeling better?â She touched her cheek.
She smiled and nodded. âAre Siddharth and Abhayendra coming today?â
âIn the afternoon.â
They shared a hug, as tight as comfort would allow. Piya smiled watching the two sisters.
Where did that love go?
Piya wandered inside the palace, finding Indranuj filling in both his queens on their temporary guest. They went to check on him together.
Ayushmaan was awake, and had his eyes dead locked in Yamini as she walked into the room last. And Yamini, she knew one of her own kind by just looking. Her eyes began darting about, making sure Maithili wasnât even remotely around.
If he stays for long, I wonât be able to hide her.
âDonât worry; youâre safe here. Our physician will take care of you.â Revati said.
To her and Indranuj, he looked like an innocent person. To Yamini, a personification of shrewdness. Thatâs how they all were. Thatâs how she was. And it all conflicted in the most destructive manners.
âThank you....thank you so much.â
Yamini faked a smile.
This isnât good.
She never thought theyâd send someone to watch her, after all the efforts they made of cutting ties. She wasnât prepared, and now that Maithili was in sights, her plans were now in danger of being compromised.
âIs Maithili that powerful?â Piya asked.
âYes. And imagine what would happen if her power was used to gain more than originally planned.â
They moved to a small pond next, where both girls were sitting on the edges of. They dipped their toes into the cool water.
âDoes he treat you well?â Mandu asked, knowing that she often felt better when talking about him.
âWho?â
âAbhayendra.â
Maithili turned several shades of red and lay on her back, splashing with her toes. She nodded quickly, pressing her hands to her cheeks.
âHeâs very kind. Even if I donât say much, he still likes my company.â
She had feelings for him.
âWhy donât you tell him?â
âTell him what?â
âThat you feel something for him?â
âDidi!â She buried her face in her palms, rapidly kicking the water to create background noise.
Mandu burst into laughter, holding her sides.
âDidi stop! Itâs embarrassing....â
She turned over and buried her face under her arms, kicking her heels up and down. A smile was already returning to her lips.
Piya had seen, how much they were together. The pairs became more and more obvious, one constantly bickering and teasing the other, and one that basked in the silent company of the other. Abhay did tell her that Maithili was reserved. They didnât need words, it seemed.
It was evident that the blossoms of love were beginning to sprout. Piya watched with interest, even whilst dealing with the jealousy of her own heart.
He had loved her so much. Was it possible for such a love to be completely erased from oneâs heart? Sure, he had given Piya that spot now, but watching him fall for someone else didnât go by without bothering her.
Once night fell, her skin began to burn and itch. She stared at her reflection in the glass of a hallway window. Before she could understand what to do, Yamini pulled her by the wrist, shielding her face with her veil.
âDonât lift it.â
Abhay was looking for Maithili, wanting to give her one of his favorite books from home to read. The last place to check was her room, having found her no place else. He knocked on the doors, but she didnât say anything.
âPrincess.....are you there?â
Total silence. He hugged the book to his chest and knocked again. She muffled her tears with the pillow, staring at herself in the mirror in between.
Yamini returned with some concoction in her hands, finding him too close to her room. She walked over.
âI donât believe you have permission to be here, Abhayendra.â She said coldly. âRun along now.â
His eyes dropped.
âIâm sorry, your highness.â He muttered, running off. There was a bad feeling he couldnât shake off.
Once she had left, he slipped a note underneath the door frame, along with the book at the doorâs edge. All it said, was to let him know if she was okay, and that he brought her book he thought she would like.
She didnât have to talk if she didnât want to.
And as such began the passing of notes. It was the only way he could keep her company before he went home. Whatever his father gave him to do, he finished it quickly just so he could squeeze in some time. They even talked through the door, although she never disclosed why she was always brought inside like this, every night.
This continued for the next year, until her 11th birthday. That night, Abhay brought tools to pick the locks, working his way in when no one was around.
Enough was enough.
The lock snapped open. He shouldâve asked for permission to come in, but he was far too impatient, and worried.
âPrincessââ
She looked at him, horrified. The markings, she was supposed to keep them a secret. Now he knew. And now sheâd lose him too. She looked scary to her own sights. Then how on earth would he stay?
Their eyes didnât leave one another. Hers began to fill with tears.
Abhay was more confused than afraid. He didnât know what had happened to her, but she didnât look happy about it either. She broke down in front of him, as he quickly shut the doors.
âYouâreâââ
She turned away and continued her quiet sob, hiding her face into a pillow.
âPlease leave. I donât want you to see me like this.â
He touched her shoulder.
âLike what?â
Piya now understood what Horatia meant when sheâd find the situation familiar. It was just like hers and Abhayâs, except that Abhay took Maithiliâs place, and Piya his.
âItâs not safe for you.â
âWhy not?â
It was such an innocent question. But she couldnât answer. She was always warned that those of their world and humans werenât allowed to be this close. He could get hurt. She could hurt him.
âBut she seems to be getting a hang of her powers.....with her restraint, hurting him is near impossible.â
âItâs not her power that can hurt him necessarily, but something out of both their hands.â
âWhat?â
âNature. Thereâs a divide that it likes to keep between both worlds, human and supernatural. Those that cross it arenât safe from its wrath.â
âIs Nature like you? Something that can manifest in a form like yours?â
She nodded.
âThough weâve never met directly. I personally wouldnât want to.â
Piyaâs heart ached. She regretted asking.
âThen.....does that mean...we canât be together either?â
âNo. Not at all. Fate has tied you to him. And things dictated by Fate cannot be thwarted by Nature. Even Future and I are subject to its whims.â
Tied to him? In what way?
âTo put it simply, Nature is like a picky eater. Imagine a plate filled with many dishes. Everything in it must be kept separate. Should anything accidentally mix, the tantrum begins and the plate is thrown over.â
She took her hand.
âLetâs take a quick detour, to your time. I included some of it just for this moment.â
Piya wasnât sure of which part, but saw the scene and immediately remembered. Their walk by the stream, when she first tried to confess.
âAlthough Nature canât punish you both, it can certainly threaten. What do you mortals call it?â
Piya was fixed on him. Though she was looking at him then, there was a certain fear on his face that missed her eyes then.
âAh, pettiness.â
Her own dead body, his own bloodlust, and the threatening voice of Nature that sought at nothing more than to deter him. It was evident in how he held himself back, and how grief-stricken he was to see her dead because he dared to love her, a mere human.
If Piya was in her body, her cheeks would be soaked with tears.
âThatâs why he lied.......â
Horatia brought her back, to where he was comforting Maithili. She looked just as afraid. And Piya, she was beginning to have a grudge towards Nature.
âIf you werenât bound to each other, youâd have met a similar fate. Just like he did.â
âAnd Maithili?â
âOh, her? Sheâs part of the guilty party.â
ââââââââââââââââââââââ
Abhayâs nights at the palace were now spent most with Maithili, sneaking into her room out of her motherâs sight. It would be tough to explain regardless if anyone saw. She often showed him some of the spells she was learning, as he watched in wonder, not the least bit afraid.
A pile of flowers lay wilted next to her as she lifted herself off the ground. He looked at them.
âDo the flowers have to die?â
She stopped and nodded, not keen on the action either.
âItâs the only way I can do anything. If I try to use my own energy, it hurts me.â
âBut that means you wonât tire, right?â
She nodded, flipping through the pages.
Piya was watching from the corner, leaning her head against the wall. Surprisingly, she didnât fall through.
âOnly he knew, huh?â
âYes.â
Piya expected the person to be Mandu, but Maithili made sure that no one else beyond Abhay would find out. Yamini was the most watchful of her anyways, knowing that she would obey her orders. On top of that, with the growing separation Ayushmaan was creating between the two sisters, it made sense as to why.
And Maithili kept allowing herself to get manipulated.
Ayushmaan, in the last year, had become a mainstay at the palace. One day while recovering, he entered the court on a whim, and offered his counsel on the prospect of a brewing territorial dispute. He proved to be quite knowledgeable in such affairs, and only added to Indranujâs trust in him. But he wasnât interested in all this. As long as Maithili was there, he needed to be there as well.
If she joins us, our kind will become unstoppable.
âRevenge is a dangerous emotion, isnât it?â Horatia touted.
Pandher was soon at war, and while she didnât show Piya the fighting, she did make a note to her that Mandu would be absent from the palace, also fighting in it. In fact, she took Piya to the same fort that still stood in Dehradun, the one that nearly plunged her to her death had Abhay not saved her.
I still have to thank you for it.
The walls were bare, and the structure was well-fortified and intact. Piya brushed her fingers past the empty wall that was now painted over.
âNo wonder the girl in that mural looked like her. It was her.â
âIt was painted after the battle that took place here, as an honor to her hand in the victory. Like a ruling queen would.â
âAnd Maithili?â
âMaithili wasnât the best at physical combat. Instead, she found interest in botany and medicine, along with strengthening her magical power. She raised some of the newer parts of the garden youâve been seeing.â
She did, and it was beautiful.
Indranuj loved both sisters equally, with much praise for either of their talents. But he was obligated to give his heir more attention in preparation for the inevitable, giving Ayushmaan more ammunition to convince Maithili she was being sidelined in favor of her sister.
He revealed himself to her one winter night, as she tended to the horses at the stable. She had been teaching herself to hide the runes, and could hold them back for a couple hours more. It hurt, but the hours away from the locked room was worth the pain.
She didnât think to talk to him much until the reveal. There was someone who she could share her frustrations with. While Abhay was doing the same already, there was only so much he could understand.
Ayushmaan was just who she needed.
âWhy have you come here?â
âTo help you, of course. Iâm sure keeping all this bottled up wasnât easy for you. Even your own mother.....she couldâve done more to help.â
She sighed and caressed the mane of her favorite horse, Rajan.
âI feel bad for you sometimes. She forces you to hide and appear weak, while your sister gets to do whatever she wants and take all the glory.â
Her hand stopped.
âWhat a terrible sister.â
She didnât think twice and slapped him square across the cheek.
âDonât ever talk about my didi like that again. Understood?â She hissed through her teeth.
Ayushmaan grumbled, palm to cheek, and watched her storm off, seething in his own humiliation.
Piya cursed him under her breathe and went after Maithili, as the seeds of doubt and division sowed in her mind.
This wasnât the end. He concocted many lies. At every opportunity, he sought to convince her that she wasnât important in the house.
He incited her as Mandu began to become more known as the crown princess.
âDonât you wish you were born first?â He sometimes whispered while passing by. âYou couldâve had it all.â
When she began to accompany their father in travels to other kingdoms.
âShe doesnât have time for you now.â
When she could meet Siddharth freely, whenever she wanted.
âLook at her with Siddharth. Donât you wish you and Abhayendra could meet the same way?â
When Revati always saw to her with love and affection.
âHer mother loves her much more than your own mother loves you. Donât you wish she was your real mother too?â
Even if Revati treated Maithili just like her own daughter, it wasnât the same.
âDonât you wish you had everything Mandakini has?â
She began to take them as he wanted, personally, all affecting her behaviors and mental state. She made more mistakes, lazed around, and began to garner the disappointment that he convinced her she was getting.
Maithili ran off one new moon night, somewhere deep in the forest where no one could find her. She fell to her knees and screamed at the sky, tears of anger and envy streaming down her cheeks.
Itâs unfair. Itâs all unfair.
Why did she not get to be as happy as her sister? Why wasnât she considered good enough for anything?
âOh no....â Piya whispered, witnessing her breakdown. It was far too late. Even Manduâs reassurances wouldnât quell her rage now.
The devil on her shoulder, which now shared Ayushmaanâs voice, whispered in her head.
But you have something she doesnât, Maithili. Magic. It is your power. Sheâll never have it.
Piya wished she could stop this.
âLet the fall begin.â Horatia said.
ââââââââââââââââââââââ
May 23rd, 1712.
Her sixteenth birthday marked the day her powers awakened completely. But with it, the distance to her family grew.
She kept to herself, holding onto her relationship with Mandu, believing that their family was at fault instead of Mandu, and only fully expressing herself with Abhay. Ayushmaan was just there as a mentor, who taught her uncommon spells when all were asleep. Things Yamini could never even attempt.
âYouâre so powerful, Princess.â
The validation was a poison. A poison that could spread quickly.
One day, while the four of them sparred against each other, her envy grew upon seeing Mandu jump for joy as she singlehandedly beat all three of them. When it was her turn to spar with Abhay, she went so hard that, despite beating him, the tip of the sword struck him and a small cut opened under his eyes.
âNoââ Piya shot her hand out as he touched his fingers to the cut. Thankfully, he was okay. She dropped the sword and frantically apologized.
âItâs alright, princess. Itâs only a small cut.â
He couldâve lost his eye. Why canât you control yourself? Didi would never make such a mistake.
Her gaze fell and she walked off, hiding from everyone else. Abhay followed after, holding a cloth to his cheek.
âIâm really sorry, Abhayendra......â She whispered, wiping tears.
The only thing she had that brought her a special joy was him. She didnât want to lose it.
He softly smiled and brushed her tears away.
âItâs alright. Iâm okay, see?â
He pulled away the cloth, the cut already scabbing over.
âYou donât have to lie. It must hurt.â
âIâm not lying. Promise. Now donât cry.â
She nodded and pressed her forehead to his chest, hair obscuring her face. He looked around, kissed her head, and hugged her back.
âAbhayendraâââ
âNo oneâs looking. Itâs okay.â He lifted her chin. âNow smile.â
She did, and he touched their foreheads together.
At least Iâm lucky enough, to have fallen in love with you.
Soon, even his love wouldnât be enough for her. Even if he gave her so much of it. Theirs was a relationship of little words and more feeling.
Both couples were weaving their love stories, away from public eye. While the younger two confessed earlier in the year, Siddharth too had confessed a few days later, but came back without an answer.
âI....need to think about this.â Mandu had told him, leaving the front gates in a hurry.
He put himself in a work slump, as a distraction.
It was past midnight, but Siddharth was awake, drafting a treaty in his fatherâs stead. As he finished penning the last few sentences, a white dove with a note attached to its neck perched itself on the windowsill.
Abhay was asleep, and Siddharth was weaving daydreams at night, in love with his best friend, the crown princess of Pandher.
Piya found Abhayâs sleeping position bordering Mishaâs, funny enough because of how they didnât get along. He lay on his stomach, one arm and leg hanging off the side. It looked cute, and Piya couldnât stop staring.
She wanted to ruffle his hair.
As soon as the dove fluttered its wings on landing, Siddharth was startled out of his dreamland and seat. Abhay stirred and mumbled something incoherent, before falling back asleep.
What is this?
He approached the dove, carefully undoing the note from its string. A single candle burned at the table. He unrolled it and read. Piya peered over his shoulder. Mandu had sent it.
I thought it over. Want to hear my answer?
- Mandakini
The excitement sapped all sleepiness from his eyes. And his smile, it was brighter than the wick of the candle. If this dove had flown by at this time, surely she must be awake. He tucked it in his pocket, starting towards the door. But there was no way heâd go alone, this late at night. He stopped, and looked to a sleeping Abhay.
He wonât mind. Whatâs helping your elder brother once in a while?
âHeâs going now?â Piya blurted out, surprised.
âHeâs going now.â Horatia affirmed.
Siddharth carefully walked to Abhay and kneeled, tapping his cheek a couple times. He stirred again and turned to the other side.
âAbhay?â He shook his shoulder.
âMmm....what....â
âGet up.â
Abhay was a deep sleeper. Siddharth grew impatient, and filled a small jug of water from the clay vessel in their room. Tipping it over his ear, the water drenched his face. He shot up, wide awake and upset, and glared at Siddharth.
âGood morning!â He exclaimed in a hushed tone.
He lay back down and pulled the covers over his head.
âAbhay, please.â
âGo bother someone else.â
âI canât. Only you know the shortcuts to the palace.â
He sat up, threw the covers aside, and waited.
âWhat is it that canât wait till morning?â He angrily whispered, keeping watch at the door to make sure their parents didnât wake up from the noise.
âLook.â
Siddharth held up the letter. He took it and squinted while reading.
âHow can you be sure sheâs still awake?â
âLoverâs intuition. Letâs go.â
Abhay rolled his eyes.
âNo.â
âPlease, Abhay. Iâll make it up to you.â
âHow?â
âIâll do anything you ask.â
âAnything?â
He nodded quickly.
âOkay. For one week, any work Baba gives me, youâll do instead. Agreed?â
âAgreed.â
âYou didnât even think about it?â
âI donât need to. Letâs go.â
Abhay knew the paths of the forest well, thanks to his escapades with Maithili. It was much faster than taking the cobblestone path, and led right under the nose of the balcony. They snuck out with only a candle to light their path.
âWhat on earth are they doing?â Piya said.
Horatia laughed, at the way the two brothers tried to get to her balcony. Siddharth climbed upon Abhayâs shoulders, reaching for the railing.
âBaba is going to beat us if he finds out.â
âRelax. Weâll be back before he wakes up.â
Even Piya had a hard time believing it. Their father woke up really early, as early as the rising sun.
Atop the balcony, Mandu was awake, hugging a pillow in her bed, also daydreaming about the outcomes of the note she sent him. She blushed and hid her face in the fabric.
A pebble landed on the floor and rolled a few centimeters forward, accompanied with hushed bickering.
Who....?
She peeked outside the curtains to see a hand reaching over the balcony. Her eyes narrowed and candles were blown out. The dagger at her side was unsheathed, poised to stop anyone whoever dared barge into her chambers this late at night.
The bickering continued.
Why does that voice sound familiar?
Piya shielded her eyes, convinced that Siddharth would be mistaken for a thief and stabbed in self-defense.
His face popped into view just as she raised the sharp blade. She almost shouted, but his palm pressed itself against her lips. He frantically shook his head.
âYou can look now, Piya. Heâs fine.â
She peeked through her fingers and sighed in relief.
âSiddharth, youâre...here? At this hour?â
She knew her letter reached his home, but didnât expect him to drop everything and come now. She set aside the dagger and blushed.
âI couldnât stop myself. Iâve been waiting for this moment for so long.â
âOf course youâre both wide awake.â Abhay muttered from below. Mandu looked down in shock.
Abhay shook his head and tapped his foot. He was losing sleep over his brotherâs love affairs. He never dragged him to see Maithili at night. Not that he could anyway. They had a secret to hide.
Mandu cupped his cheeks and hugged him tight.
âYou didnât have to come now.â
âWell, I couldnât sleep, and Abhay was awake too.....â
âNo I wasnât.â He said, loud enough to hear. She giggled. Then they went back to ignoring him.
âThen....your answer?â Siddharth asked.
âNow that youâve come so far....what do you think it is?â She blushed and looked down at their feet, leaning her head into Siddharthâs chest.
âI want to hear it out loud.â
âYouâre so shameless.â
âWhatâs so shameless about this? Itâs not like anyone else is here.â
âAbhayendra is right there. Please....not right now.â
âNo.â
He trapped her in his arms.
âSiddharth...!â
âI wonât let you go until I hear it.â
She turned cherry red and sighed.
âFine.....I....I love you.â
His grin spread to the corners of his lips, and he hugged her back tight.
âI really hope this isnât a dream....â
She pinched his arm. He bit his tongue. Both hurt.
âThere. That should be convincing enough.â
Even Abhay couldnât hide a smile for long.
The guards were making their rounds, their torches catching Abhayâs eye. They had to leave, now.
âGo. Before you get in trouble, and my parents get me married off to someone else.â
âIâll die before I let that happen.â
He kissed her on the cheek, whispering an âI love youâ into her ear, then leaping down in front of Abhay. They hid in the bushes, as she waved goodbye.
âAre there more moments like these? Something happy?â Piya wondered. This was a heartwarming example.
âThere are, just a few more.â
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