Episode 13
|Disguised Darling|✔
It has been two weeks, two weeks and three days to be precise since Mishti has entered Samratâ house as his personal chef and got to know him as much as she could externally because there is still a long way to get to know his heart.
Apart from the usual demand from extremely complex dishes that Mishti has to watch the recipes for on YouTube for hours straight, there is nothing that he does that is remotely close to unpleasant. As opposed to whatever her friends had said about the divorced man or the articles had written about him, Mishti doesnât find any resemblance between the real-life Samrat and Samrat of the tabloids. Heâs snarky, yes, but not cruel. He takes his time to get impressed but gets to it eventually. Heâs polite with his staff, especially with Vivek but Mishti doesnât mind because she too is somewhere in the queue. Recently Samrat and her have found a new way to converse â through banters. Healthy banters that erupt after the lunch when he subtly has to say the food was good but doesnât quite want to put it out like that, and so heâd say, âYouâre learning day by day, arenât you? Canât say the food was too salty this timeâ to which Mishti would reply, âHad it been some Michelin star chef, they would expect a fully worded compliment, itâs good that I donât!â sheâd sass.
âDonât you?â
âNo.â
âNot at all?â Samratâs lips would quirk up at that while Mishti squints her eyes.
âNo!â
âWell, it was fine, I guess. The food.â
And heâd end that with a teasing glint in his eyes, both the gaze and the words making Mishti preen under them though sheâll still maintain her nonchalant façade.
So, the fact that it is already time to get on with the second task and complete it, hurts her like nothing else.
Mishti doesnât want to do it. She doesnât think sheâll once again be able to see suspicion or doubt in those eyes ever again when sheâs already seen that teasing glint or better, the serenity in them.
The work is pretty simple for someone like her who has carried out riskier tasks; she has to transfer all the funds, a total of four crore rupees that Samrat had kept aside to buy Singhaniaâs shares, to her account that she has further will send to the agency by hacking his mobile and back account.
Itâs worse than last time, so much worse, not only because the amount is massive but because she doesnât know how to help him this time. Last time, her brother to protect her had unknowingly saved Samrat from any potential sorrow that he couldâve faced because of his stolen watch, it was a different thing that he wasnât so much bothered about the watch as much as he was with the thought of Mishti stealing it and lying to him about it.
This is another thing that gnawing inside her chest.
She doesnât want to lie to him. He hates it. He hates liars and Mishti doesnât want to be someone he hates.
A thought occurs in her mind, but as soon as it comes, it has to go, because no, there wonât be any good in talking to her brother about it. Sure, he would understand if she told him that she doesnât want to do this task, she canât do it, because heâs one amazing brother but that wonât stop the task from happening. Itâll probably be Ruhi whoâll come in her place and carry out the task. If not her then someone else.
She has no choice. Sheâll have to do it.
And so Mishti finds herself entering Samratâs room at two in the morning, the sound of him snoring audible to her ears as she tiptoes, closing the door behind her. She chose this time not because Samrat sleeps so late, no, like a systematic man he is, he sleeps at 11 every night, and before 12 if he has some work to do. Itâs his valet, that Vivek who doesnât sleep and plays temple run on his phone till late, all the while practising some singing for the concert he presents in his dreams. Mishti knows all this because her room is right beside the valetâs, the walls not being as soundproof as they should be for such a luxurious villa.
Though itâs the least of her concern right now. The point is that Vivek is asleep now, and so is Samrat and now she just has to do what sheâs here for.
However, before she can take a step towards Samratâs side table to get to his phone, her gaze lands on his sleeping finger, unable to stop the train of thought that takes her back to all those years ago when the man had been laying just like this whining and complaining about how everyone leaves him. She wonders if itâs true for him even now if he still doesnât have anyone to stay, to trust.
Mishti wants to stay, wants him to trust her.
It seems laughable though considering how sheâs going to hurt him only a few seconds later, will transfer his hard-earned money to the agency, something that theyâll probably use to convert parentless children into criminals.
It makes her want to hate the life that has been destined for her.
Why did her parents have to go away like that? Had they not gone, Mishti wouldâve been living a different life right now, an ethical one where she wouldnât have to rob others to survive, where she wouldnât have to follow anyoneâs orders, where sheâd not have to hurt the person, her heart had decided to protect if she ever found him again.
Mishti picks up Samratâs phone, unlocks it by using his fingerprint that she had safely transferred on a glass sheet this morning, her own hands gloved. Hacking the accounts comes as a challenging task to her with the agency wanting them to use technology to steal only recently leaving her and her friends to learn and execute it all on their own.
Dumb bastards.
Within quick five minutes, she completes the task, though her hands tremble as she puts back the phone in its original spot, turning to go out of the room.
âWhat are you doing here?â
Mishti stiffens in her steps as she hears those practically growled words, blood draining from her face.
She gulps before finding back her voice, too terrified to turn and face the man.
âN-Nothing, sir. I was just checking â I wanted to ââ
âYouâre lying. I â I donât like liars.â The next words come a bit slurred, but Mishti shakes in her boots because she knows this. Knows that he doesnât like liars, that he doesnât like her.
âYou â you always intended to betray me, d-didnât you? F-From day one that was your motive, you wanted to see me cry!â
Mishtiâs rendered speechless at those words, not having it in herself to deny the obvious truth by another lie. Yes, she has been lying to him all this time, has betrayed him for her groupâs sake but she never wants to see him cry.
She didn't then, she doesn't now. However, before she can clarify her part, the man speaks up again, cries, making Mishti freeze all over again on the spot.
âIâm saying the t-truthâ¦... Sakshi, you liar! Why did you ever m-marry me?â
Itâs then when she understands it.
Itâs then that she realises that he isnât in the present dimension, at least not his mind and that he has travelled back to the spot that his mind still lingers on, the place and time that his heart canât seem to let go off. That he is talking but not to her.
Heâs sleeping. Heâs dreaming.
Heâs talking to his wife.
The realisation somehow hurts her more than the accusation.
Mishti turns towards him with her own aching heart, and sees him writing on his bed, eyes closed, a deep-seated frown on his temple, and beads of sweat rolling down the sides of it.
Samrat looks agonised and the thought that in the morning the reason for his agony would be her doesnât sit well with her.
With a hesitant breath, Mishti reaches out to smooth her now ungloved hand over his temple and his hair, stroking them gently as she had done all those years ago. The frown leaves his face immediately, and so does the furrow between his brows and his raging, quivering lips.
With expert stealth, she gets up from the bed, leaving her sinful heart to mourn some other time. She tiptoes around the room and picks up a pillow in her hand and with just as much silence, she brings it to his bed, keeping it beside the sleeping man, and then hesitantly stroking her hand at his back once which makes him shift on his bed, his weight now balanced on one side, with both his arms cuddling the pillow.
His body goes lax, pearls of sweat drying on his forehead, a drop of tear still clinging to his lashes.
Mishti leaves the room with a guilty conscience and helpless heart.