Monsoon Wedding -2001- -

The priest chanted faster, as if trying to outrun the weather. The seven circles around the sacred fire felt less like a ritual and more like a slow, public undoing. With each phera , Anjali felt something settle—not peace, exactly, but a kind of heavy clarity. She was not running away from Arjun. She was running toward a version of herself that could survive without him.

The wedding had been arranged in six weeks. Six weeks of fabric swatches, guest lists, gold shopping, and silence. Her father had lost money in the stock market that spring; the groom’s family was wealthy, respectable, and conveniently unaware of the Kapoors’ thinning accounts. Anjali had said yes because saying no would have required a reason, and her only reason had a Canadian postal code.

Her name was Anjali. Twenty-two years old, with henna climbing her arms like a secret language she hadn’t yet learned to read. She stood by the window of her childhood room, the silk of her lehenga pooling around her ankles, and watched the first fat drops hit the dust of the courtyard below. The air smelled of wet earth and petrol and something else—something like the end of a story she’d been telling herself for far too long. monsoon wedding -2001-

By 4 p.m., the rain was no longer a drizzle. It was a curtain. The power flickered twice and died completely. Candles appeared like magic—or like years of practice. The generator coughed to life in the backyard, sounding like an old man clearing his throat.

And somewhere, a fountain pen leaked on an unsent letter. The priest chanted faster, as if trying to

The rain came not as a relief but as a character—late, dramatic, and with something to prove. It was September 2001, and the Kapoor family had been waiting for the monsoon to break for three weeks. The wedding had been scheduled around it, as all things in Delhi are scheduled around the stubborn sky. But the clouds had held their breath, much like the bride.

Later, after the vidai , as the car pulled away from her parents’ house, she rolled down the window despite the rain. Her mother was crying. Her father stood rigid, one hand raised in a wave he forgot to complete. The street was a river of mud and marigold petals. And somewhere behind her, the city of Delhi was drowning in the first real rain of the season—washing away the September heat, the summer dust, and the ghost of a love she had never named. She was not running away from Arjun

During the jaimala , as she lifted the garland of marigolds to place around his neck, the rain found a hole in the tent. A single cold drop landed on her wrist, just over her pulse. She looked up. For a second, she thought she saw someone at the gate—a man in a wet coat, standing still as the dripping trees. Then the generator surged, the lights blinked, and he was gone. Or had never been.

Outside, the pandit was arguing with her father about the muhurat . The caterer had called to say the tent might collapse if the wind picked up. Her mother was somewhere between the kitchen and a nervous breakdown, waving a silver thali and shouting at an electrician who hadn’t shown up. And in the middle of all of it, Anjali thought of Arjun.