A few weeks later and Romir was back to normal. And by that I mean the bandage on his wrist was taken off and he could use both hands to do the things he normally did.
Which included showering, thank the Lord. I shuddered. Having had to help him the past few weeks was literal torture.
Even with his injured self he had gone to work, not wanting to stay at home with me, I suppose, but now that he was gone like before, my days were much more free.
Except for today. Today was a weekend and we were all trapped with each other.
Ugh.
It was so stifling having him around. I didn't bother making him food after that comment he made that other week, settling to eat frozen or junk food instead. My confidence had gone down the drain. What else was I to expect?
My phone rang as I surfed through channels on the telly. It wasn't a regular call, it was FaceTime.
"You finally picked up," dad said with a grin.
"What? You never even called me." I checked any recent missed calls I had but there were none.
"I called you twice."
"Twice? Why?"
"To tell you that we're going back to England in a few days."
"Already?!" I spluttered. It felt like no time had passed. "I want to see you guys before you leave!" I knew that would be impossible considering they were in Kochi and I was here, in Bangalore.
"Well that is why we came to Bangalore for two days."
I gaped. "You came here and didn't even tell me?!"
"We know you're busy adjusting," mum said, snatching the phone from him. "Besides Romir would be working, right?"
"I don't know," I mumbled before raising my voice, "I could still come a few days before right?"
"By yourself?"
"I'm not a kid, anymore, mum. Did you forget? I live alone back home."
"You're still my baby. You'll understand when you have kids of your own."
I rolled my eyes but I couldn't but laugh. "Oh my god, okay, okay, forget I said anything."
"I'm joking, you silly buffoon. Of course I want you to visit us. It's why we called."
"What do you say you and Romir meet us at a restaurant in a few hours?" said dad over mum's shoulder. She swatted him away and I chuckled, the sound fading away in my throat when I realised they expected Romir to come with. "Google says AKSS restaurant in Little Italy is a good place?"
"Uh, Romir has work," I lied, even though I literally said I didn't know before.
Mum looked suspicious, lips pursing into a tight, white line. "On the weekend?"
"Car breakdowns don't really keep tabs on the day, mum. Mechanics are in high demand." I didn't care that Romir was right in the kitchen making a late lunch. I hoped my parents couldn't hear the sizzling of eggs on the pan. "I'll come, mum," I offered.
"I called Romir earlier, you know," said dad slowly, "and he said he would be fine coming over."
Did they trick me?! Of course I looked like the bad guy for lying. Romir would be the perfect, great husband.
A strangled sort of choking noise left me and I whipped my head around to look at Romir. He paid no attention to me, like I didn't even exist.
"Is everything okay?" she asked.
YOU ARE READING
Vows of Misfortune
RomanceArshia is a bratty NRI with unhealed scars, left with no choice but to marry a good Indian man to change her ways. Romir is a guarded and spiteful half-Indian man, reeling from the aftermath of his gritty past. These two are pitted together by misf...