The broken cup

Kneeling next to the shattered remains of his dadaโ€™s favourite tea cup, Radha looked up at Sheetal tai full of disdain. He had told her repeatedly not to bother him with her inane problems. But when she had come to his room, all teary eyed and wringing her hands like she would twist them off her body if that meant the cup would mend itself, he had had no option but to intervene.

In an ill-fated attempt to clean the tea stains from the centuries old cup (Radha had heard the story of the historic significance of that blue and white porcelain cup with only half an ear), the cup had slipped from Sheetal taiโ€™s hands and landed on the floor where it had promptly proceeded to shatter into a million pieces.

Normally, it wouldnโ€™t have mattered much. Sheetal tai could have told bhabhiji who would have simply shook her head and there the matter could have rested. But this was his dadaโ€™s favourite cup, one which had been used by Maharana Pratap himself. Not that Radha believed the story but it wasnโ€™t about what he believed.

So Sheetal tai was indeed in for a scolding of a lifetime unless Radha could use his substantial imagination and save her from it. And since he actually liked her, he was going to help her.

From where he was kneeling, he could just about see his room in the distance. He thought about the chart under his bed that he was using to map out the identity of the new thief at school and shook himself. The chart could wait. Sheetal taiโ€™s tears would not.

He told her in Marathi, โ€œDonโ€™t worry about it. Iโ€™ll handle this.โ€

Relieved and thankful, she brushed Radhaโ€™s hair affectionately, and promised sheโ€™d make his favourite puran poli once he had helped her escape dadajiโ€™s anger.

Now having an even better incentive to help her, he bent his considerable cerebral resources to come up with a plausible story.

In the end though, his dadaโ€™s gullibility won over all of Radhaโ€™s cleverness. Radha, who had found a replacement cup on eBay that would have made a sizeable dent in his savings had he had the time to actually purchase it, was saved in the nick of time by his mother.

His mother had simply kept a white cup in front of his dada and when he had questioned where the blue had vanished, she had simply said that the repeated washings had faded the pretty designs. Some of the markings could still be seen but owing to his eyesight, he would probably not be able to see them. Sheetal tai and Radha had judiciously nodded on cue.

Alarmed that such harm could come to this historic cup, his dada had proceeded to painstakingly wrap it in his best muslin cloth, put it in its ancient box and hidden it in his wardrobe.

Radha finally had an answer to where he got his cleverness!


This is the third post in the series. To know more about Radha, click here.

AtoZ

25 responses to “The broken cup”

  1. Radhika Acharya Avatar
    Radhika Acharya

    Though late on the scene I’m loving this……. Looks like I need to binge read to catch up!!! You are a talented story-teller!!

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    1. That’s the best compliment to give! Thanks much ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Unexpected twist at the end with his mom coming to the rescue instead of Radha. Very vivid descriptions. Could picture it all quite clearly.

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    1. You’re too kind. Thank you!

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  3. wow. You are brilliant. and funny. nothing needs to be said after this. may not look like a thoughtful comment.. but I mean it. 5*

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    1. Priya you’re making me blush. Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

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  4. Haha! Cleverness at it’s best. What brilliant idea Radha’s mother had thought off! Nobody is hurt although a lie won.

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    1. Cleverness runs in the family ๐Ÿ˜

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  5. Haha. The series is jogging along beautifully.

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  6. As per your own taught strategy, time to follow you. ๐Ÿ˜› (P.S. Loved this one too!)

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    1. Awe my head has grown ten times since I started reading your comments. Thanks!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. You totally deserve to soak in all the praise. Loving the series.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. pratikshya2 Avatar
    pratikshya2

    Radha has such tough matters to handle! ๐Ÿ˜ Hilarious dramatic narration!
    It was indeed the cup’s fault to have promptly shattered into pieces.

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    1. Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it

      Liked by 1 person

  8. So case of cup is solved without any harm to anyone except the amcient cup itself…. loving every bit of this series…

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    1. Haha your comments are brightening up my morning. Thank you.

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      1. And ur posts are doing same for me…loved it

        Liked by 1 person

  9. shwetadave Avatar
    shwetadave

    While this was fun to read, and I missed reading Radha, I just love the entire dramatization of the post. This has been done so well. The theme and the writing are right on the mark. I guess, this is one of the series, that can be read, and thoroughly enjoyed by everyone, regardless of their interest and age ๐Ÿ™‚

    D is Dumbfounded โ€“ Love is not my need

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    1. Thank you Shweta! I’m so happy to know that my excitement over telling Radha’s story is translating to the reader as well.

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  10. rashimital Avatar
    rashimital

    Reading the title the first thought was- why does each post talk about not-the-good stuff. I mean first, the apple gets eaten, then missing bottle, and now the broken cup. ๐Ÿ˜ฆ Please bring some positiveness in the next post. Poor Radha. How much he’s gonna bear.

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    1. With great power comes great responsibility ๐Ÿ˜œ

      Liked by 2 people

      1. rashimital Avatar
        rashimital

        Use the power then… Soon.. ๐Ÿ˜‰

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  11. Now that was a simple story delivered beautifully. I was hooked on till the very end. And what’s more… I’m excited to know what happens next.
    Great work!
    All the best for the Challenge. Do drop by mine.

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    1. Oh you’re so kind with your praise. Thank you.

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