Mehta Tea Shop
On Canal Road in Dehradun, sits Mehta Tea Shop. A modest counter, a few worn benches, a warm kettle, and always that fragrance — tea leaves surrendering to ginger, cardamom, milk. All day the place shelters people in small waves. Cyclists pause mid-morning, one foot still on the pedal. Forest guards linger before the climb begins. Students stretch a single cup across an hour of nothing in particular. Walkers drift back from the canal and sit a while, letting the evening catch up with them. The tea itself is unremarkable. Made the same way, every time, poured into glasses too small to rush — glasses that warm the palms the way they ease the ache of the day. Nothing here hurries. Talk begins with weather, wanders towards the fields, towards cricket, towards an elephant seen near the treeline last week, towards the monsoon that is always either arriving or leaving. And often enough, no one speaks at all. Silence, too, is welcome at this table. Beyond the shop’s tin roof, the valley ...