aasthawrites_05
Mandavi was born a princess of Sankashya and raised in the court of Janak, where daughters were not taught silence. They were taught to question, to observe, and to demand answers.
Then came the exile.
When Ram, prince of Ayodhya, left for the forest with Sita and Lakshmana, the exile did not belong only to those who went with him. It also belonged to those who remained behind.
For fourteen years, they waited.
Mandavi began those years as a sister and a wife - a young woman whose sister had been sent away for no fault of her own, and whose husband had chosen a harder path to atone for the sins of his house.
But kingdoms do not pause for grief.
While princes fulfilled their dharma in the forest, palaces still had to stand, households had to endure, and a kingdom had to be held together.
By the time Ram returned, Ayodhya had changed.
So had Mandavi.
No longer only a sister, nor only a wife, she had become a daughter-in-law, a keeper of a fractured household, and a queen forged by waiting.
This is the story of the exile as seen from the palace - of the woman history remembered only in passing, and of the fourteen years that changed her forever.