Secret Between Us
Phone came in at 10:00 am.
Tasha's phone lit up on mahogany table, all twelve VP's stopped mid-sentence, the quarterly number froze on the project, Tokyo on the speaker went silent
Principal Mahatma-- Ria's school
Radha held up a finger, the whole room understand, if Radha Kapoor took a phone, wait, if says to "reschedule" 400 core merger reschedule itself
She swipes to Answer - M's. Kapoor, Principal began, the voice was the same one that called six months ago when Ria organized a playground protest about "unfair swing rotation." tight careful
We have an issue with Ria she is being very mischievous.
Radha leaned back which cost more than most people's car. Mischievous, Ria's vocabulary word last word, she'd used it on houseplants," you are begging very mischievous Mr. Fren".
"Define Mischievous", Radha said
the CEO stopped, he knows that tone, the tone that ended Partnership
That you are busy for a simple school meeting, that you send your assistants. Obviously she is lying, no parents says that to their child.
Got it. Here’s Episodes 1, 2, 3 merged into *Chapter 1* with novel pacing. I added interior thought, setting, and space to breathe.
---
*Chapter 1: Level 2 Truth*
The call came in at 3:17 PM.
Radha’s phone lit up on the mahogany table and twelve VPs stopped mid-sentence. The quarterly numbers froze on the projector. Tokyo, on speaker, went silent.
_Principal Mehta - Ria’s School._
Radha held up one finger. The room understood. If Radha Kapoor took a call, you waited. If she said “reschedule,” a 400 crore merger rescheduled itself.
She swiped to answer. “Ms. Kapoor,” Principal Mehta began. The voice was the same one that had called six months ago when Ria organized a playground protest about “unfair swing rotation.” Tight. Careful.
“We have an issue with Ria. She’s being mischievous.”
Radha leaned back in the leather chair that cost more than most people’s cars. _Mischievous._ Ria’s vocabulary word last week. She’d used it on the houseplants. “You’re being very mischievous, Mr. Fern.”
“Define mischievous,” Radha said.
The CFO stopped breathing. He knew that tone. That was the tone that ended partnerships.
“She told the class you’re too busy for a simple school meeting. That you send assistants instead. Obviously she’s lying. No parent says that to their child.”
But Ria didn’t lie. Not since the night she was four, new to Radha’s apartment, and whispered, “You won’t send me back, right?” Radha had promised. _No lies between us. Ever._ Level 1 truth, always safe.
Ria had heard _Vera’s_ new single at 2 AM last month, bleeding through the bathroom door. She’d pressed her ear to the wood and whispered, “Mama, that’s you.” Radha had opened the door, heart in her throat, and Ria had just saluted. “Top secret.”
If Ria said Radha was too busy, then Radha was too busy.
A laugh built in Radha’s chest. She buried it. “Tell me, Principal Mehta, does Ria usually lie?”
“Never. Which is why this is so concerning.”
Radha stood. Chairs scraped. Twelve VPs and Tokyo watched her.
“I’m coming,” she said. “Keep my daughter in your office. And Principal Mehta? Ria doesn’t lie.”
She hung up and looked at the room. Her phone buzzed instantly. Berlin. Delhi. _Reschedule?_
“Meeting’s over,” Radha said. “My daughter needs me.”
No one argued. When Radha Kapoor walked out, the world waited.
The school smelled like floor polish, crayons, and mild anxiety. Radha’s heels clicked past thumbprint art and cubbies labeled with cartoon animals. Parents in the hallway stopped talking. She was still in full CEO armor. Black suit, hair sharp, phone vibrating with three continents.
She typed one text as she walked: _All meetings on hold. Family emergency._
Three replies came back before she hit send: _Understood, Ms. Kapoor._
Principal Mehta opened her office door and froze. She’d expected an assistant. Maybe Arjun, Radha’s second in command. Not _the_ Radha Kapoor. Forbes. 30 Under 30. The “ghost CEO” who ran two companies and never did interviews.
“Ms. Kapoor, thank you for...” The words died.
Ria sat in the corner chair, too small for it. Legs swinging. Clutching her glittery notebook like a shield. The one labeled _Mama’s Other Life_ in pink crayon. When she saw Radha, her whole face lit up. No guilt. No fear. Just that six year old truth beam.
Radha ignored the principal. She crouched down until she was eye level with Ria. The suit would wrinkle. Let it.
“Hey, bug,” she whispered. “Did you tell your class I was too busy for school?”
Ria nodded, solemn. “You are. You missed Grandparents Day and the play. You sent Uncle Arjun instead.”
It was true. Radha had been closing the Singapore acquisition during Grandparents Day. She’d watched Ria’s play on a grainy livestream at 3 AM, crying into hotel pillows.
Principal Mehta cleared her throat. “Ms. Kapoor, we don’t tolerate students making up stories about their parents.”
Radha stood slowly. The laugh was gone now. In its place was something colder, older. The thing that built K-Tech from nothing at twenty.
“Principal Mehta, let me explain something. My daughter doesn’t make up stories.” She turned to Ria. “But we need to talk about how you deliver them.”
Ria clutched the notebook tighter. “Are you mad?”
Radha looked at the cover. _Mama’s Other Life_. Stick figure Radha with a microphone, face scribbled out. Level 3 truth, locked down.
“No,” Radha said. “I’m late.”
“Late for...?” the principal asked.
“For listening to her.”
Principal Mehta finally gestured to the chairs. “Please, sit.”
Radha didn’t. “Why did you say it, bug?”
Ria opened the notebook. Pages of drawings. Stick figure Radha on a phone. Stick figure Radha on a plane. Stick figure Radha singing, mouth open, notes flying.
“Miss Sunita asked why you never come,” Ria said. “Neha’s mom makes laddoos for everyone. Aarav’s dad built the volcano. I said you’re busy saving the world.” She picked at the glitter on the page. “Then she said you probably don’t love school stuff. So I said you’re too busy. Because it’s true.”
The silence that followed was heavy. Principal Mehta’s pen hovered over her notepad, then lowered.
Two companies. 400 crore deals. A secret music career with 18 million monthly listeners as _Vera_. None of that prepared Radha for six year old logic delivered without armor.
“I do love school stuff,” Radha said, voice quiet. “I’m just bad at showing it.”
Ria tilted her head. “Like how you love singing but hide it?”
Principal Mehta’s head snapped up. “Singing?”
Radha shot Ria a look. _Top secret, remember?_ Level 3. Ria zipped her lips, threw away the key, then tucked it behind her ear for safekeeping.
Radha stood and faced the principal. Her phone had buzzed seventeen times in the last five minutes. She didn’t check it.
“I’ll clear my calendar for the next parent meeting. And the one after that.” She looked at Ria. “But if my daughter tells the truth again, don’t call it mischief. Call me.”
She held out her hand. Ria took it without hesitation.
“Come on, bug. We’re getting ice cream. Then you’re teaching me how to make a volcano.”
As they walked out, past the cubbies and the stunned parents, Ria whispered, “Does this mean Vera gets a day off?”
Radha squeezed her hand. “Vera, Radha, and Mama are all off duty tonight.”
Outside, the Delhi sun hit them. Ria squinted up. “We’re still doing library first, right?”
“Library first,” Radha agreed. “Always.”
Because some truths needed glittery notebooks. And some needed silence between the biographies
End
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Updated 21 Episodes
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