Part 22
The wedding was over and it was time
for bidai.
As Khushi wept in her babuji’s arms
and Arnav stood by, his hand held by buaji, mami said, “Enough of rona dhona,
Sasiji. Your bitiya ijj going to her own homewaa.”
Sasi nodded and patted Khushi’s shoulder
to calm her down.
“I will take care of her, babuji,”
Arnav promised, his serious eyes meeting Sasi’s.
Sasi nodded. “I know, bitwaa,” he
said quietly.
As mami hugged Garima, she said,
“Garima, gibe me your bitiya too.”
Garima looked at her in amazement.
“Hamre Akash bitwaa ijj alone. You
gibe me your Payaliya,” mami demanded.
“Manoramaji?” Sasi stammered.
“My bitwaa ijj standing here, looking
at your Payaliya phrom here and there. Shaadi karwa diyo. He can look at her
from closewaa,” mami said, her ususal irreverent self.
Buaji and Garima gasped and burst out
laughing along with the others.
Payal and Akash blushed. It was a
close competition as to who resembled a tomato more.
“We will see,” Sasi promised her.
“Jaldi see kariyo,” mami urged. “Or
hamre Akass bitwaa bill become a sant. Then bhat bill I does?”
“Mate,” Akash murmured, embarrassed
but happy that she had noticed his fascination for Payalji.
“Sasiji, we would love to have
Payaliya as our bahuriya,” mama seconded mami. “Think over the proposal and let
us know.”
“Payaliya?” Sasi asked.
She blushed a fiery red and nodded
bashfully.
Amidst the sea of congratulations and
hugs, Khushi hugged Arnav and he dropped a kiss on her forehead.
***
The wedding party reached Delhi to a
rapturous welcome by HP.
Arnav and Khushi were happy but
tired. Their eyes widened in horror as mami said, “Ab aphter-bedding gamewaa
shuru ho jaaye!”
“No way,” Arnav thundered.
“Mate, we are tired,” Akash said,
trying to stifle a yawn.
Mami winked at him and insisted, her
eyes twinkling with mischief, “Arnav bitwaa, do you wants to look phor a ring
in milkwaa or untie a knotwaa phrom Khussi’s handwaa?”
“Neither,” Arnav stated.
Anjali hid a smile as she said, “Chotey,
the rasam are important.”
“Yes, Chotey,” nani said, smirking.
Without wasting time explaining to his
family that he had absolutely no intention of playing games in public that
night, he just lifted a surprised Khushi in his arms and strode away.
The whole family burst out laughing.
“Arnavji, yeh kya kar rahe ho, aap?”
Khushi asked, scandalised.
“Hold me tight,” was all he said. “I
am going up the stairs.”
Khushi tightened her arms around his
neck.
“Aap na, bahut badtameez ho,” Khushi
declared. “No manners. Khadoos. Arrogant. As fiery as a volcano.”
He smiled. “Jo kuch bhi hoon, I am
yours. Ab sambhalo mujhe.”
“Awww,” Khushi replied, her mouth
open in a perfect round.
He kicked open the door to their
bedroom, entered the room with her and kicked it shut again before marching to
the bed and depositing her on it.
There was a knock on the door.
Arnav sighed and went back to open
it.
Nani, mama, mami, Akash and nani
stood there.
“What now?” Arnav asked bluntly.
The ladies tried to hide their smiles
as they said, “We haven’t decorated the bed.”
“Tanik thehro, Chotey,” nani urged.
“No way,” Arnav replied. “We are
tired. Goodnight.”
He made to close the door.
“Chotey,” Anjali called.
“Yes?” he asked.
“Take your medicines,” she reminded
him.
He smiled. “I already have. Do you think Khushi will
let me forget?” he asked.
All smiled.
Arnav shut the door and returned to
find that Khushi had left him to freshen up for bed.
***
The Raizadas returned to the living
room to relax after the last few days of frenzied activity.
“The peda, the gulab jamun!” mami
reminisced. “Sasiji knows how to treat his samdan. Wah, wah!”
The other smiled at mami’s fondness
for sweets.
“Akass bitwaa, marry Payaliya soon. I
bill ask Sasiji to serve gujiya and jalebi too phor the bedding feastwaa.”
Anjali tried to hide her laughter. Nani
shook her head in amused exasperation.
“Manno, are you more interested in
your son’s wedding or the feast?” mama teased.
“The feastwaa,” mami confessed.
Amidst the laughter, HP served
everyone tea and mami, badam milk.
“HP, aaj khush to bahut honge tum!”
mami mimicked Amitabh Bacchan in Deewar. “Bahut khush honge ki aaj Arnav bhaiya
Khussi se haar gaya!”
All laughed.
HP replied with a smile, “Bahut,
mamiji.”.
Mami crossed her legs on the chair
and slurped her badam milk. HP left.
Nani watched her for a moment and then
called softly, “Manorama?”
“Yes, Sasumma?” mami asked, setting
aside her glass.
Nani looked away for a moment. Then
she gathered courage and said, “I am sorry.”
Mama and Akash were shocked. Anjali
looked at nani with surprise.
Mami frowned. “Kaahe ki?” Her eyes
widened.
Nani sighed. “Chotey was right. I
should have treated you with the respect a Raizada bahu deserves.”
Mami’s eyes filled with tears. She
blinked and tried to make light of the situation.
“Aap bhi na, Sasumma. You are the
enemy no: 1 of my kaajal.” She turned to her husband, “Suno ji, you said it was
water-proof.”
“Manno, it is,” Manohar tried to remonstrate
with her.
“Aap shutupiya hi kar lo, ji,” mami
shushed him. "My phool-jaisen cheekwaa are black. My muh is kaala."
“I mean it, Manorama. You have been a
good bahu, but I haven’t been a good Sasumma,” nani admitted.
“It is alright, Sasumma,” mami
replied. “I bill be a bery good Sasumma to my Payaliya. Because she is like me,
from a small house in Lucknow, she won’t think I am not..oo kaa kehte he? Haan,
cool.”
“You are the coolest mother, Mate,”
Akash hugged her.
Nani’s face fell again. “We have all
been guilty of ignoring Chotey’s well-being.”
All looked at her.
“He is difficult to get along with,
but we should have made an effort,” nani said slowly. “Seeing Khussi smother
him with concern and seeing him enjoy it...we let him be, thinking that he
enjoyed his own company. Galti hui hamse.”
“You are right, nani,” Anjali said. “We
forgot to show our love for him. We were so caught up in our own worlds that...”
Mami, mama and Akash nodded.
***
She emerged from the washroom in a
white night suit and he took his nightclothes and entered the washroom that held
her heady fragrance.
He smiled, his eyes lighting up. His
life had changed for ever. No more loneliness. No more sorrow. No more existing
instead of living. His past was where he should have left it a long time back—in
the past.
When he entered the bedroom, she was
sitting on his recliner, fast asleep.
He kneeled down by her, his loving
eyes on her glorious face. A minute later, he scooped her in his arms, careful not
to jolt her awake.
Had buaji been there, she would have
told him that only a bomb dropping on Khushi’s head and bursting inside her ear
would have succeeded in waking up Sanka Devi.
Unaware of his wife’s fondness
for sleep, he carried her like a piece of glass and placed her on his bed and
covered her against the cold.
***
Khushi woke up the next morning,
stretching lazily. She had slept well. Had jiji woken up?
She opened one eye to look for her
sister and saw Arnav looking down at her with amused eyes.
Her second eye too opened to full
capacity.
“Aap?” she asked, too surprised to see
him to remember that they had gotten married yesterday.
Arnav burst out laughing.
She sat up in bed to see that she was
in his room and that he was in bed with her.
Her mouth fell open as she
remembered their shaadi.
“I forgot, Arnavji,” she admitted,
shamefaced.
He replied, still chuckling, “I have
never woken up laughing.”
Khushi lifted the blanket and buried
her face in it.
Arnav tugged at the blanket and
uncovered her face. Looking at her bashful face, he said softly, “I love you,
Khushi.”
Khushi looked into his molten
chocolate eyes that were filled with love and adoration and breathed, “I love
you, Arnavji.”
He bend his head to kiss her.
***
THE END.
I will be starting the next ArHi story, An Unwilling Passion in
December. Till then, love and a load of good wishes to all of you.