Indian Wedding Season !free! ❲INSTANT❳
The season wasn’t over. But for once, she didn’t mind.
The second was a fusion wedding in a five-star hotel. Dry ice. A drone shot of the couple entering the mandap. A cake that cost more than her first car. Riya wore a silk saree that kept unraveling. She spent forty-five minutes pinned between a cousin who kept asking when she was getting married and an aunt who reeked of expensive whiskey. indian wedding season
Meera was sitting under a canopy of red and gold, her hands covered in intricate henna, her eyes lined with kohl and exhaustion and joy. She wasn’t looking at the priest. She was looking at the groom—a quiet, kind-eyed man who kept adjusting his sehra nervously. And he was looking back at her. The season wasn’t over
The first wedding was a classic Punjabi affair. 500 guests. A baraat that was two hours late. A dance floor where her 60-year-old uncle dislocated his shoulder doing the Ranjha step. Riya ate four gulab jamuns before the main course even arrived. She told herself it was fuel. Dry ice
Riya Kapoor had RSVP’d to seven weddings in six weeks. Her calendar looked less like a schedule and more like a military invasion. By the second week, she had memorized the traffic patterns around the banquet halls. By the third, she had a dedicated “wedding survival kit” in her car: safety pins,一双 juttis (embroidered flats), antacids, and a portable phone charger.
She smiled. Put her phone on silent. And walked forward to throw rice at her best friend.
She slept in her car for three hours. Woke up with a neck cramp and smudged kajal. She fixed her lipstick in the rearview mirror and walked into a field where a thousand lanterns had been lit. The groom was sitting on a horse that looked deeply unimpressed. The brass band was playing a tune from a 90s hit. Somewhere, a toddler was crying. Somewhere else, a chai vendor was shouting.