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Download-- -18 - Kavita Bhabhi -2022 -

Tomorrow at 5:15 AM, the chai whistle will blow again.

5 PM is the sacred hour of “chai and bhajiya ” (onion fritters). Neha returns, exhausted, but she kicks off her heels and sits on the kitchen counter—her mother swats her for it every day, but she never learns.

By Riya Khanna

The conversation drifts. The grandfather remembers his first job in a small town, walking two miles to a phone booth to call his father once a week. Aarav asks, “What’s a phone booth?” The room laughs. The grandmother says, “We are all just changing the furniture. The house is the same.” 11 PM. The lights are off. The tulsi plant is dark on the balcony. The rangoli has smeared into a memory.

But at 2 PM, the apartment is hers. She lies down for that nap. The one without guilt. The one the west doesn’t understand. In India, the afternoon is not for productivity. It is for surrender. 4:30 PM. The door opens. Closes. Opens. Closes. Download-- -18 - Kavita Bhabhi -2022

But listen. In the kitchen, Asha is setting the dough for tomorrow’s roti . Neha is scrolling her phone one last time, fighting the quiet anxiety of adulting. Kabir’s keyboard clicks in his room—he’s not working; he’s playing chess online. The grandfather is snoring in the armchair, the newspaper finally sliding off his chest.

The city’s relentless hum has not yet begun. But in the Khanna household—a third-floor walk-up in a leafy gall (lane) of suburban Mumbai—the day starts not with an alarm, but with the clink of a steel tumbler. Tomorrow at 5:15 AM, the chai whistle will blow again

The meal is vegetarian tonight— dal , rice, subzi , a sliver of achar (pickle). No one asks for ketchup. That would be treason.

Asha Khanna, 58, the family’s matriarch, is awake. This is her stolen hour. She waters the tulsi plant on the balcony, its leaves sacred and medicinal. She draws a rangoli —a fleeting, geometric art made of colored rice flour—at the doorstep. It’s not decoration; it’s a prayer: Let abundance enter. Let discord stay outside. By Riya Khanna The conversation drifts

Aarav is home, shedding his school bag, socks, and dignity in a trail across the floor. The grandmother is telling him the same story from the Ramayana he has heard forty times. He listens like it’s new.