Asha looked up, her eyes glistening. For years, she had offered, and Riya had been too busy. The laptop, the city, the instant noodles—they had been the enemy. But now, the girl was asking.

That evening, Riya did something she had never done before. She went online and ordered a stainless steel masala dabba for her own apartment in Bangalore. It wasn't an antique. It had no dents. But as she unpacked it, she knew it was an invitation.

Each spice had a memory. The dhania (coriander powder) was from the year her son, Riya's father, got his first job. The lal mirch was a warning and a celebration—the year she finally learned to balance heat with love after a disastrous first Diwali as a bride. The tiny bowl of amchur (dried mango powder) was her own secret, a tangy rebellion against the bland food her mother-in-law had once preferred.

Inside, seven small bowls held the universe. From the fiery red of Kashmiri lal mirch to the earthy yellow of haldi , the fragrant green of dhania-jeera powder to the black, mustard seeds that popped like firecrackers in hot oil. Each had its place, worn smooth by decades of use.

She texted her Nani: The new dabba is empty. I'm coming home next weekend to fill it. With your stories.