She turned to Yash. “I’m not removing him. I’m making room for you.”
Aarohi saw her late father-in-law’s eyes soften. Then he looked at Yash and said, “She called you Papa.”
Yash leaned against the doorframe, watching her. He’d learned this about Aarohi—she went still when she was building a wall around herself.
Arjun replied, “Then your first papa was good. But my new mom is also good. Can we have two good papas and two good moms?” punar vivah 464
Yash’s eyes glistened. He stood up, took her hand, and placed it over his heart. “Feel that? It’s not beating for a second husband’s duty. It’s beating for you.”
Yash looked at Aarohi. She nodded, tears falling freely.
“No, it’s not!” Aarohi’s voice cracked. “You make my daughter breakfast. You taught her that losing someone doesn’t mean losing the capacity to love again. You never once asked me to remove Rohan’s photo. And still… still I froze when I read her message. I didn’t defend you.” She turned to Yash
Remarriage isn’t about forgetting the past. It’s about carrying it with dignity while building a new present. True love in Punar Vivah is not first love—it’s chosen love .
For the first time in three months, Aarohi initiated a hug. Not a polite one—a tight, trembling, desperate one.
She let out a shaky breath. “Why are you so patient?” Then he looked at Yash and said, “She called you Papa
Earlier that evening, Yash had overheard a conversation that cracked him open. Arjun, his son, was teaching Kavya how to ride a bicycle in the backyard. Kavya fell. Arjun helped her up, and Kavya said, “My first papa used to run behind my cycle. He never let me fall.”
End of Episode 464.
Yash nodded slowly. “That’s fair.”
Yash had to walk away, pretending to water plants.
She leaned her head on his shoulder. The camera pans to the bedroom drawer—slightly open—where Rohan’s photo now rests next to Yash’s spare keys.