The smell hit me first—cardamom and sugar dissolving into fresh milk, steam curling from a dented aluminum pot. Dawn in Jaipur, and I'd stumbled into a chai wallah's corner stall while the pink city still slept in shades of rose and terracotta.
The old man didn't speak English. I didn't speak Hindi. But he smiled with his entire face when I held up two fingers, and poured the milky tea into small clay cups with the practiced rhythm of someone who'd done this ten thousand mornings before.
I sipped standing there, watching the street wake up. A woman in an emerald sari swept her doorstep with a worn broom. Three stray dogs stretched in synchronized yawns. Somewhere a temple bell rang, clear and solitary. The chai was sweet enough to make my teeth ache, spiced with ginger that burned pleasantly down my throat.