Bomma: Butta

The exhibition was called Fragile, Therefore Real .

Malli closed the laptop. Her voice was soft, but it cut like a shard of terracotta. “You don’t love me. You love the idea of a doll. A doll doesn’t wake up with a headache. A doll doesn’t get angry. A doll doesn’t refuse to smile.” Butta Bomma

She stood up and walked to the potter’s wheel. With one finger, she smudged the rim of an unfired vase. “This is me,” she said, pointing to the crooked mark. “And this,” she touched a small crack in the handle, “is me too. You cannot have the jasmine without the thorn.” The exhibition was called Fragile, Therefore Real

Venkat’s daughter, Malli, was his masterpiece. Not because he shaped her from clay, but because she moved like one of his creations—light, fluid, with a secret smile that tilted just so, as if the world was a private joke she’d decided to enjoy. The village elders called her Butta Bomma : a box-doll, so fragile and perfect that you were afraid to hold her too tight, yet unable to look away. “You don’t love me

Arjun blinked. “I edited them out. For the exhibition. I wanted you to be… perfect.”

She was not afraid of breaking anymore. After all, even a doll that shatters leaves behind a thousand pieces of light.