Short Story: The Forgotten Vows

Part I – The Pune Beginning

The monsoon had washed Pune clean that July, leaving behind a city strung with dripping bougainvillaea and the faint smell of wet earth. Mira stood at the entrance of an NGO’s learning centre, clutching a folder of sketches for their new brochures. She was a freelance designer, hopping from project to project, but this assignment felt different. Here, the work was about teaching women to sell their products online, not about logos that popped.

“Are you here for the entrepreneurship class?” a man asked, stepping out of a rickshaw and shaking rain off his shoulders.

He wore a plain cotton shirt, sleeves rolled neatly, and dark trousers. There was nothing about him that shouted wealth or privilege,  except perhaps the effortless confidence in his bearing.

“I’m here to design posters,” Mira replied, smiling.

“Then we’re colleagues,” he said, offering a hand. “Ari. I help with training.”

Later, she would remember that handshake: firm, warm, unhurried. As if he had all the time in the world.

Ari was unlike anyone she’d worked alongside. He wasn’t loud or self-important. He listened. He explained marketing terms to women who had never heard of a “customer base” with the same patience Mira used when teaching her nephew to read.

Sometimes, after class, they would grab cutting chai from the corner stall. Mira would complain about clients who wanted “more vibrancy” without knowing what they meant, and Ari would laugh, eyes creasing at the corners. He told her he was freelancing too; consulting for small ventures while taking time away from “family business pressures.”

She never asked further. She liked the man who turned up for chai in dusty loafers, not the ghost of whatever family weighed behind him.

By winter, friendship had melted into love. They rented a small flat near Deccan Gymkhana, its terrace peeling paint like sunburned skin. They bought second-hand chairs, quarreled over curtains, and celebrated victories as small as the landlord agreeing to fix the leaking tap.

On a Tuesday afternoon, in a registrar’s office that smelled faintly of ink and impatience, they married. Two friends signed as witnesses. Ari slid a simple silver band with two tiny leaves etched inside onto Mira’s finger. “Two lives, one stem,” he whispered, embarrassed by his own sentimentality.

Mira laughed and hugged him. It was not the wedding her mother would have wanted, nor the spectacle his background would have demanded, but it was enough.

For six months, they built a life out of late-night tea, morning rushes for the bus, and whispered promises on their small terrace. Mira never met his parents. Ari only said, “It’s complicated.” She didn’t press. Love, she thought, was proof enough.

Part II: The Accident

It happened on an ordinary evening in January. Ari had gone to meet a contact for a potential training programme. He texted her a quick *Back soon, want samosas?*

He never returned.

A lorry, swerving to avoid a motorbike, hit him at a junction. He was rushed to Sassoon General Hospital. His helmet saved his life, but a head injury left him unconscious.

When he woke the next day, the nurse asked gently, “Name?”

“Aarav Shah,” he murmured, surprising himself with the clarity.

Biometrics confirmed the match. Within hours, calls were made. By the next morning, the Shahs of Mumbai, industrialists with roots in textiles and wings in finance, had arrived. His father’s voice was steel; his mother’s eyes were damp with relief.

Aarav recognised them instantly. He remembered boarding school, Harvard lectures, and boardrooms in Nariman Point. But when the doctor asked, “Do you recall the last six months?” his brow furrowed. Blankness stretched before him like fog.

“No,” he whispered. “Only… fragments. Nothing clear.”

The Shahs didn’t correct him. They never mentioned Pune, never asked if he had a wife. To them, this was a second chance: their son had come back.

That night, while Mira waited with two cups of chai on their terrace, Aarav was driven down the expressway to Mumbai, to the world he had once tried to escape.

Part III: Mira Alone

The first days were madness. Mira called hospitals, police stations, and friends. She filed a missing person report: *Ari, no surname, about thirty, last seen near Camp.* The officer gave her a sympathetic smile. “People leave, madam. Maybe he went back to his family.”

Back to his family? What family? Ari had never said.

Weeks bled into months. Rent kept rising. Work was scarce. With a heavy heart, Mira packed their flat into boxes, slipped Ari’s ring onto a chain around her neck, and moved back with her parents in Nashik.

Eventually, she found steadier work, a job in a Mumbai agency that serviced big corporate clients. She told herself it was time to start over. Yet every night, when she unclasped her chain, she whispered into the dark: *Come back to me, Ari.*

Part IV: The Corporate Reunion

A year later, Mira sat in a glass-walled conference room in Lower Parel, nerves taut. Her agency was pitching for a massive account: Shah Group Industries. If they won, it would change everything for her career.

The door opened. Executives filed in. And then…

Her heart stopped.

Aarav Shah walked in, tall in a tailored suit, with a faint scar by his temple. He carried himself with polished authority, every inch the heir to billions.

Her Ari.

But his eyes slid past her with polite disinterest. He didn’t recognise her.

“Good morning,” he said, voice clipped. “Let’s begin.”

Mira forced herself to focus, though her hands trembled over the slides.

To her horror and secret relief, her agency won the account. She was assigned as an account manager. Which meant she would be working directly with Aarav Shah. The man who had once been her husband, now treating her like a stranger.

Part V: Working With a Stranger

The weeks that followed were agony.

In meetings, Aarav was courteous but detached. He praised her ideas when they were good, challenged them when they weren’t. To the rest of the team, it was professional respect. To Mira, it was a knife twisted daily.

Late nights in his office were the hardest. He would lean over her laptop, frown at a campaign line, and for a second, just a second, she would glimpse the man who teased her about fonts over chai. Then he would pull back, professional mask intact.

One evening, reviewing designs, she used a phrase she hadn’t spoken aloud in months: “Less glitter, more water.”

Aarav froze. His eyes flickered, unsettled. “Where did you pick that from?”

“It’s just something I say,” Mira lied quickly.

“Strange,” he murmured, shaking his head. “Feels… familiar.”

Over the next weeks, other moments surfaced. Her absent-minded humming of an old tune. The leaf motif she used in a draft campaign logo. The way she clasped her hands when thinking. Each time Aarav reacted, a flicker of recognition, quickly suppressed.

Mira, torn between hope and despair, kept silent. She couldn’t risk his scorn.

Part VI: Cracks in the Wall

The dam finally burst during a creative workshop. Mira presented a mock-up featuring a silver band with two etched leaves, repurposed as a campaign symbol for sustainability.

Aarav stared at it, blood draining from his face. He pressed his temple as if in pain. “This… I’ve seen this before.”

He left the room abruptly. Mira followed, heart pounding.

In the empty corridor, she said softly, “You have. You made it.”

He turned, eyes sharp. “What do you mean?”

She reached into her blouse, pulled out the chain, and held up the ring. “This is yours. You gave it to me when we married. In Pune. You called yourself Ari.”

The silence between them was deafening. Aarav’s gaze fixed on the ring, then on her face. Memories flooded: blurred but insistent. Rain. Chai. A small terrace. Laughter. A registrar’s stamp. Her voice whispering, *Two lives, one stem.*

His hand trembled. “Mira…”

Part VII: Truth and Confrontation

That night, Aarav confronted his parents. They sat in the sprawling Malabar Hill living room, city lights twinkling below.

“Why didn’t you tell me?” he demanded. “I was married. To Mira. I asked if there was anyone in Pune. You said no.”

His mother’s eyes glistened. “Beta, you nearly died. You remembered nothing. We thought it was a mistake, a phase…”

“A mistake?” His voice cracked. “The happiest months of my life, and you erased them?”

His father’s jaw hardened. “You are a Shah. You cannot throw away your future for—”

“For love?” Aarav shot back. “For choosing who I want to be?”

Silence fell. His mother wept quietly. His father’s face was unreadable. Aarav stood taller, voice steady. “I will not lose Mira again. She is my wife. And if the company wants me, it takes me on my terms.”

Part VIII: A Life Reclaimed

The weeks that followed were not easy. There were cold dinners, tense board meetings, and relatives whispering. But Aarav refused to back down. He carved out a new division in Shah Group, one focused on social ventures and sustainability, where his values and Mira’s creativity found a home.

Mira continued at her agency, though now she worked with him openly, no longer pretending to be a stranger. At first, colleagues gossiped, then grew used to the idea.

Slowly, even his parents softened. His mother began attending Mira’s NGO workshops, quietly proud. His father, grudgingly impressed by the profits of the new division, began to respect the marriage he had once dismissed.

Part IX: Happily Ever After

One evening, a year later, Aarav and Mira sat on the balcony of their Mumbai apartment, city lights flickering like restless fireflies. A kettle whistled in the kitchen. On the table between them lay the same ring, now firmly on her finger again.

“Do you remember everything now?” Mira asked softly.

“Not everything,” Aarav admitted. “Some days it’s foggy. But the feeling…” He reached for her hand. “The feeling never left. Even when I didn’t know your name.”

She smiled, tears glinting. “That’s enough.”

They sipped tea, the noise of Mumbai humming around them, and for a moment it felt like their Pune terrace, except higher, brighter, steadier.

Love had survived memory, class, and the weight of a dynasty. It had come back, not as glitter, but as water: steady, essential, unstoppable.

In My Hands Today…

Abundance – Ezra Klein, Derek Thompson

To trace the global history of the twenty-first century so far is to trace a history of growing unaffordability and shortage. After years of refusing to build sufficient housing, the entire country has a national housing crisis. After years of slashing immigration, we don’t have enough workers. After decades of off-shoring manufacturing, we have a shortage of chips for cars and computers. Despite decades of being warned about the consequences of climate change, we haven’t built anything close to the clean energy infrastructure we need. The crisis that’s clicking into focus now has been building for decades—because we haven’t been building enough.

Abundance explains that our problems today are not the results of yesteryear’s villains. Rather, one generation’s solutions have become the next generation’s problems. Rules and regulations designed to solve the environmental problems of the 1970s often prevent urban density and green energy projects that would help solve the environmental problems of the 2020s. Laws meant to ensure that government considers the consequences of its actions in matters of education and healthcare have made it too difficult for government to act consequentially. In the last few decades, our capacity to see problems has sharpened while our ability to solve them has diminished.

Progress requires the ability to see promise rather than just peril in the creation of new ideas and projects, and an instinct to design systems and institutions that make building possible. In a book exploring how can move from a liberalism that not only protects and preserves but also builds, Klein and Thompson trace the political, economic, and cultural barriers to progress and how we can adopt a mindset directed toward abundance, and not scarcity, to overcome them.

2026 Week 12 Update

As another difficult week unfolds in the Middle East, I find myself thinking of all those whose daily lives have been upended by conflict, fear, and loss. There are moments when words feel small, but silence feels incomplete, too. Perhaps all one can really say is this: may peace return, may suffering lessen, and may those living through uncertainty find strength, safety, and hope.

This week’s quote is by Sir Isaac Newton, the English mathematician, physicist, and astronomer, widely regarded as one of the most influential scientists in history. He formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation, laying the foundation for classical physics. His work in mathematics, optics, and natural philosophy transformed how humanity understood the universe. Despite the complexity of his discoveries, Newton deeply valued order, logic, and elegant simplicity in explaining how the world works.

Newton’s quote speaks to the power of clarity, suggesting that truth is often far more straightforward than we imagine. Human beings have a habit of overcomplicating matters, layering ideas with noise, confusion, and unnecessary detail. But beneath that clutter, truth usually has a cleaner, more elegant form. This idea is especially meaningful because it applies far beyond science. In relationships, work, decision-making, and even self-understanding, confusion often grows when we add too many assumptions, excuses, or distractions. Simplicity cuts through that. It helps us ask: What is really happening here? What is essential? Truth tends to reveal itself when we strip away what is excessive and return to first principles.

Newton’s quote also reflects a deeper intellectual discipline. Simplicity is not the same as shallowness. In fact, arriving at simplicity often requires great insight. It takes real understanding to reduce something complex to its essence without losing its meaning. That is why the clearest explanations are often the strongest ones. There is also a quiet warning in the quote. Multiplicity and confusion can be seductive. They can make something sound more impressive or feel more profound than it really is. But confusion is not depth. Complexity is not always wisdom. Sometimes the truest answer is the plainest one.

This verse from the Bhagavad Gita softens something important. We like to believe we are entirely responsible for everything that happens. Success becomes personal triumph; failure becomes personal shame. Krishna introduces nuance. Every action, he says, has five contributing factors. You. Your body. The tools available to you. The effort applied. And something beyond your control. This does not remove accountability. It removes excessive burden. You are responsible for effort and intention. But you are not the sole architect of outcomes. Context matters. Timing matters. Support matters. Circumstances matter. Understanding this changes how we move. We still act. We still strive. But we do not collapse under results. Discipline becomes steadier when it is not fuelled by ego. Courage becomes sustainable when it is not driven by fear of failure. You are part of the equation. Not the entire equation. A gentler way to measure effort.

Today’s motivation is about honouring your inner strength. It takes courage to keep your heart open despite everything it has been through. Your intentions are pure. The way you pour love into everything you do, the way you radiate kindness and demonstrate calm confidence, even in the most challenging moments, is a source of inspiration for many. You are brave enough to rebuild yourself with even more compassion and tenderness. Embrace all that you are and all that you are becoming. Do not allow anything to dim your spirit. Greater things are coming your way.

To those who are in the eye of the storm, we’re all rooting and praying for you. To everyone else, here’s wishing a beautiful second half of March!

In My Hands Today…

The Mesopotamian Riddle: An Archaeologist, a Soldier, a Clergyman, and the Race to Decipher the World’s Oldest Writing – Joshua Hammer

It was one of history’s great vanishing acts.

Around 3,400 BCE—as humans were gathering in complex urban settlements—a scribe in the mud-walled city-state of Uruk picked up a reed stylus to press tiny symbols into clay. For three millennia, wedge shape cuneiform script would record the military conquests, scientific discoveries, and epic literature of the great Mesopotamian kingdoms of Sumer, Assyria, and Babylon and of Persia’s mighty Achaemenid Empire, along with precious minutiae about everyday life in the cradle of civilization. And then…the meaning of the characters was lost.

London, 1857. In an era obsessed with human progress, mysterious palaces emerging from the desert sands had captured the Victorian public’s imagination. Yet Europe’s best philologists struggled to decipher the bizarre inscriptions excavators were digging up.

Enter a swashbuckling archaeologist, a suave British military officer turned diplomat, and a cloistered Irish rector, all vying for glory in a race to decipher this script that would enable them to peek farther back into human history than ever before.

From the ruins of Persepolis to lawless outposts of the crumbling Ottoman Empire, The Mesopotamian Riddle whisks you on a wild adventure through the golden age of archaeology in an epic quest to understand our past.