The Sharma family is at the mall. Grandfather sees a pair of sneakers. "These cost 5000 rupees?" he yells. "I used to buy a cycle for 500 rupees!" The granddaughter rolls her eyes. "Dadu, that was 1970. Inflation." He doesn't buy the sneakers. But later, secretly, he slips 5000 rupees into her hand when they get home. "Buy them online. But don't tell your father. He says I spoil you." He does. That is the privilege of the grandparent in the Indian structure—to break the rules set by the parents.
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The mother is rolling chapatis with one hand while stirring the dal with the other. The phone is wedged between her ear and shoulder as she argues with the electricity board. The grandmother is pickling mangoes on the balcony, coating them in salt and red chili powder, her hands stained yellow. The Sharma family is at the mall
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