Every morning before sunrise, Aai would quietly step into the kitchen. Two rotis, a small dabba of bhindi sabzi, and a piece of jaggery wrapped in foil — neatly packed in a steel tiffin box with her practiced hands. Ved, her son, would still be groggy, pulling on his formal shirt for his IT job in Hinjewadi.
She’d hand over the tiffin with the same three words every day: “Garam kha le.”
Ved rarely responded. A distracted nod, or a rushed “haan Aai,” while checking his phone.
One rainy Tuesday, he forgot the tiffin on the dining table. In the hurry to catch his cab, it slipped his mind.
Aai called him. “Tula tiffin rahila re.”
Ved sighed. “Aai, it’s fine. I’ll order something. Don’t worry, okay?”
That day, she didn’t say much. Just a soft “theek aahe.”
When he returned that night, the house smelled of ajwain and silence. The tiffin still sat on the table — unopened, cold. She was in the kitchen, folding a towel.
Ved mumbled, “Sorry, Aai. It slipped my mind.”
She didn’t look up. Just said, “Tiffin was the only part of your day that still had me in it.”
He didn’t know what to say. He didn’t even sit. He just walked over and hugged her — tighter than he had in years.
Sometimes, love is packed in steel boxes and silence. And we notice it only when it’s forgotten.
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