Chapter 3 (A Feast for the Forgotten)
The Order That Shook the Kitchen
Padmaboti settled gracefully into her seat, the soft fabric of her dupatta falling over her shoulder like a brushstroke of light. The gentle clink of cutlery, the mellow hum of soft instrumental music, and the faint aroma of roasted spices created the perfect frame around her presence.
She adjusted her dupatta delicately, her fingers moving with a dancer’s poise. Then she lifted her gaze toward the waiter, gifting him a smile so warm it melted every trace of nervousness from his face.
“Could you serve me the dishes of the day?” she asked, her voice a blend of politeness and curiosity. “I’d love to try whatever your chef recommends.”
The waiter felt his heart somersault. Padmaboti Sen wants the dishes of the day… from their kitchen… from THEIR chef.
He nodded vigorously, almost bowing in excitement.
“Of course, ma’am! Certainly, ma’am! Right away, ma’am!”
If smiling were allowed in strict service protocol, he would’ve grinned from ear to ear. Instead, he pressed his lips together and hurried off, nearly colliding with a table on the way.
He rushed toward the kitchen like a soldier carrying intel from the battlefield to the command center.
Inside the Kitchen
He burst in like a man escaping a wildfire, out of breath, eyes wide.
“Chef Venky sir! Padmaboti madam wants the dishes of the day!”
The kitchen froze.
The sizzle of oil, the chop of knives, the clang of ladles — everything halted as every cook paused mid-motion.
But no one froze harder than Venkatesh Reddy.
His ladle slipped from his fingers and clattered onto the counter. His heart didn’t just skip a beat — it entered an Olympic sprint.
“Ayyo… nenu ready kaaledu!”
(Oh no… I’m not ready!)
Venky’s voice cracked like an adolescent’s. He paced in a tight circle, hands shaking, eyes darting around like a deer caught in headlights.
“Em cheddam, Rohit?!”
(What do I do, Rohit?!!)
His voice climbed an octave.
Rohit, leaning casually against a counter munching a biscuit, sighed dramatically as if he were dealing with a hyperactive child.
“Calm down, ra. You made everything perfectly. She’ll love it.”
But Venky wasn’t hearing anything.
His brain had entered full disaster mode, pulling out every unimaginable scenario in the history of cooking:
What if the biryani is too spicy? What if she hates gongura? What if the paneer texture isn’t right? What if she thinks it’s bland? What if the presentation is too rustic? Too modern? Too traditional? Too experimental? Too safe?
His heart hammered against his ribs like a festival dappu drum.
He wiped his sweaty palms on his apron — once, twice, thrice — but they kept getting clammy again, as if his body refused to cooperate.
“Ayyo ayyo ayyo…” he muttered like a broken record.
Then suddenly…
Something outside the glass wall caught his trembling gaze.
A shadow.
Movement.
Small figures gathering near the tiled entrance area.
He squinted.
His panic momentarily paused.
“Idi enti…?”
(What is this…?)
Whatever he saw pulled him out of his spiral, anchoring him in a different kind of shock.
And that single distraction…was about to change everything.
The Children at the Door
Venky leaned forward, brows knitting, as he tried to understand the shapes outside the frosted glass. The harsh sunlight hit the pavement outside Spice Symphony, making everything glow with a golden halo — but in that halo, he saw something that didn’t belong to the world of polished cutlery and gourmet plating.
Children.
Tiny silhouettes.
Slender arms.
Dusty hair.
Faces pressed to the glass.
Venky’s breath caught.
He stepped closer to the window, ignoring Rohit calling after him.
The closer he got, the clearer the picture became.
A group of beggar children—seven or eight of them—stood barefoot on the hot pavement, craning their necks, trying to peer inside.
One of them, a girl with a torn pink frock and large eyes that reflected equal parts innocence and hardship, pressed her palms against the glass.
“Padmaboti akka lo undanta…”
(They said Padmaboti sister is inside…)
The boy beside her, barely eight, tried to stand on tiptoe to see.
His shadowed cheeks were hollow, but his eyes sparkled with hope.
Another boy tugged the girl’s sleeve.
“Oka sari ayina choodali… please…”
(Just once, I want to see her… please…)
Venky swallowed hard.
A lump formed in his throat.
He wasn’t thinking about biryani temperatures or garnish precision anymore.
These kids… on this hot afternoon… were just trying to catch a glimpse of the star he worshipped from afar.
The star who was now sitting gracefully inside, sipping water from a crystal glass.
But before even a sliver of hope could land in their tiny hands—
Security stepped in.
The Guards Interfere
Two uniformed guards marched toward the children with practiced sternness.
“Hey! Move! Don’t stand here!”
One of the guards pushed the little boy aside a bit too roughly.
The boy stumbled back, nearly falling, catching himself at the last second.
Padmaboti’s PR assistants joined in, clearly irritated.
“This is a five-star client area,” one of them snapped.
“You can’t stand here. Go!”
A girl, no older than six, flinched at the harshness.
“But we… just want to see her…” she whispered, voice trembling.
“No. Move aside.”
Venky watched this unfold, his insides twisting painfully.
A familiar heat rose inside him — the same heat he felt whenever he saw injustice or cruelty toward someone powerless.
“Idi correct kaadu…”
(This isn’t right…)
His fists clenched.
Rohit saw his expression and immediately sensed impending disaster.
“Oh no. Ohhh no. Venky—don’t. don’t. Don’t do what I think you’re about to do.”
But Venky wasn’t listening.
Something in him snapped clean through.
Venky Steps Forward
Venky pushed through the kitchen doors, wiping his hands on his apron, eyes burning with purpose.
“Venky! Venky! VENKY!”
Rohit chased after him.
But Venky was already outside.
The heat slapped his face; the children turned toward him instantly, startled but hopeful.
The guards straightened themselves.
“Sir, these kids are loitering—”
Venky raised a hand.
“Nenu handle chestha.”
(I’ll handle them.)
His voice was calm.
Firm.
Quietly authoritative — the voice of someone who didn’t need permission to care.
The guards stepped back, surprised.
The children stared up at him.
Their eyes glistened — not with the excitement of seeing Padmaboti, but with the pain of being chased away like stray animals.
Venky crouched down so he could look at them eye-to-eye.
“Why are you crying?” he asked softly.
A boy sniffled.
“They didn’t let us even look at Padmaboti akka…”
A girl wiped her nose with the back of her hand.
“We won’t touch her… we won’t shout… we won’t go inside… we’ll just stand far away… but they said no…”
Venky felt his chest tighten.
He placed his hands gently on the shoulders of two nearest children.
“Listen… you wanted to see a star, right?”
They nodded timidly.
Venky smiled — not wide, not cheerful — but warm.
A smile that carried reassurance.
“Then today… I’ll give you something even better.”
Behind him, Rohit slapped his forehead so hard it echoed.
“Oh my god. He’s doing it. He’s really doing it. I should have tied him to the stove.”
Venky’s Wild Decision
Venky stood up and walked back into the kitchen.
Not running.
Not rushing.
Walking with a stillness that came from absolute conviction.
He lifted the plates he had arranged so delicately for Padmaboti.
The gongura-paneer fusion.
The cashew-cream biryani topped with caramelized onions.
The roasted vegetables glistening in tamarind glaze.
The Nannari rose mocktail chilled to perfection.
The coconut-jaggery dessert shaped like a little lotus.
Every dish was perfect.
Every dish was the best of him.
Rohit’s eyes widened in horror.
“No. NO. Venky no. Venkatesh Reddy no. Put that down. PUT THAT DOWN.”
Venky didn’t even blink.
The waiter peeked in, confused.
“Chef…?”
Venky set the dishes into takeaway packs with gentle precision.
“For today,” he said quietly, “these belong to them.”
Rohit looked like he was about to faint.
“Bro… you just took Padmaboti Sen’s entire lunch… and gave it to a bunch of kids… ARE YOU TRYING TO GO TO JAIL?!”
But Venky walked back outside.
One step.
Another.
Then another.
He carried the parcels like gifts.
The children gasped.
“Is this… for us?”
“For all of you,” Venky said softly.
“Eat well.”
When the first child opened the packet and saw vibrant, aromatic biryani inside, her eyes widened like she had received something divine.
“Thank you, anna!”
“You’re the best!”
“Food! Real food!”
Their delighted screams echoed across the pavement.
And Venky — shy, quiet, nervous Venky — felt his heart loosen, warm, soften.
This was what food was for.
Not stars.
Not critics.
Not influencers.
But people.
Real people.
Rohit stood behind him, hands on his hips, looking up at the sky in despair.
“God… if you’re listening… please give me strength… because I’m best friends with a literal saint.”
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To be continued.