Originally posted by: Manonids
Same here ...he will walk away and MAdhu will feel that he feels that she is involved in this attack ...so she will go there to prove her innocence though RK will surprise her that u left against my permissionπ
Originally posted by: Manonids
Same here ...he will walk away and MAdhu will feel that he feels that she is involved in this attack ...so she will go there to prove her innocence though RK will surprise her that u left against my permissionπ
Originally posted by: ISADORAAgree Reni...
That character is sketched in such a way..may be may not be in real i have not come across any such characters who would stoop so low as to try put despo act...i would not call it a seduction..that defo spoils seduction's sensuality...
Originally posted by: Manonids
I hope Madhu someday sees Dips maroing line on RK ...and then we might see Madhu shooing away Dips in her style π
Nids, I felt Madhu's not telling RK was more her protecting him and his image.
She didn't want to believe - even with definitive circumstantial evidence - that her Maalik had tried to kill RK.
If there was an iota of possibility that it wasn't true, she *had* to try for that.
She didn't try to protect Shamsher or defend him, but she took on part of the blame willingly, remembering a childhood promise and understanding his fatherly protectiveness driven to excess.
But the decisive point was when she stopped trying to understand or rationalize his actions, and that was when she said "my husband".
May be ur right Leela ...but since Shamsher accepted his crime, so there was no point of Madhu not talking to him once!!!!! Kher we can give benefit of doubt to Madhu since the state of mind she had at that moment, thinking about RK besides her possessive father is asking way too much from her. But, I loved how she took the partial blame on herself for a moment so that she can understand her father's pain.
Originally posted by: leelaa9
Nids, I felt Madhu's not telling RK was more her protecting him and his image.
She would not create a situation where he would potentially retaliate if there was even a ghost of a chance that there was no cause for retaliation from the person she suspected.She didn't want to believe - even with definitive circumstantial evidence - that her Maalik had tried to kill RK.
If there was an iota of possibility that it wasn't true, she *had* to try for that.
She didn't try to protect Shamsher or defend him, but she took on part of the blame willingly, remembering a childhood promise and understanding his fatherly protectiveness driven to excess.
But the decisive point was when she stopped trying to understand or rationalize his actions, and that was when she said "my husband".
Her father stood deprioritized. It was not that he mattered less, but that - however unreasonably - RK mattered more.
Originally posted by: leverne
I have not seen any such ladies in real..but did see them on crime related reality shows on TV...which is also reality that such females do exist...
Originally posted by: ShahisthiI think RK was angry with Madhu for leaving in the middle of night when he asks her not to.
So he might not talk to her at all in Police Station. So Madhu will come to talk to RK as in promo.
Originally posted by: leelaa9Nids, I felt Madhu's not telling RK was more her protecting him and his image.
She would not create a situation where he would potentially retaliate if there was even a ghost of a chance that there was no cause for retaliation from the person she suspected.She didn't want to believe - even with definitive circumstantial evidence - that her Maalik had tried to kill RK.
If there was an iota of possibility that it wasn't true, she *had* to try for that.
She didn't try to protect Shamsher or defend him, but she took on part of the blame willingly, remembering a childhood promise and understanding his fatherly protectiveness driven to excess.
But the decisive point was when she stopped trying to understand or rationalize his actions, and that was when she said "my husband".
Her father stood deprioritized. It was not that he mattered less, but that - however unreasonably - RK mattered more.
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