Chapter 12: The Kid With the Idea

Six months had passed.

Spring gave way to summer. The backyard that once echoed with chalk drawings and quiet grief now brimmed with laughter, rehearsed one-liners, and Zoey's booming director voice yelling, "Cut! Again, but this time with more eyebrows!"

Ayaan had grown taller—at least, that's what Rishi liked to say. His hair was longer now, a little wild, and his voice carried more certainty, especially when correcting Zoey's camera angles or insisting that the third act of Back to the Future was "basically perfect cinema."

Zoey had changed, too. Her sadness had softened at the edges, reshaped into motion—into colour, into storyboards. She smiled without bracing. She laughed without apology.

They had also built something else: a language of their own.

It started with a joke.

Ayaan had muttered something under his breath when Zoey spilt juice all over a storyboard draft.

"Arre yaar," he sighed dramatically.

Zoey blinked. "What was that?"

"Hindi," Ayaan said, grinning. "It means something like, 'Oh man,' or 'Seriously?' Depends on how much juice you've spilt."

"I want to learn that," she said, pointing at him. "All of it."

"You want to learn Hindi?" he asked.

"No," she replied. "Just the dramatic parts."

Every Friday afternoon in the backyard, after they were done with scene breakdowns or dialogue rewrites, Ayaan would pull out a tiny notebook titled "Filmy Hindi 101." Inside were phrases from Bollywood, script jargon, and movie lines he remembered from a lifetime ago.

He started small:

"Shabash" — "Well done."

"Chalo" — "Let's go."

"Sapna" — "Dream."

He even taught her how to write them in Devanagari. Her first attempt at "sapna" looked like a mangled centipede. Ayaan laughed so hard that he almost fell off the porch swing.

But week after week, she got better.

He'd quiz her like a proper teacher:

"What do you say when your actor finally nails the take?"

"Shabash!"

"And when someone forgets to hit record?"

"Arre yaar, with full drama."

She became so engrossed that she started inventing her phrases.

One afternoon, Ayaan found a folded slip of paper tucked into his script binder. In her handwriting—sloppy but confident—was a line written in Hindi:

"Sapne mein bhi himmat chahiye."

(Even dreams need courage.)

Ayaan stared at it for a long time.

"Where'd you get this?" he asked.

"I made it up," she said with a shrug. "Kind of a remix of everything you taught me."

He nodded slowly, something catching in his throat. "You're getting scarily good at this."

"I'm scary good at everything," Zoey replied, flicking her pencil like a wand.

Their birthdays came and went—on different days, just weeks apart, and yet both etched into the memory of that slow-beating season.

Zoey's Birthday: April 12th

Rishi let her pick dinner: grilled cheese, fries, and apple juice.

It was a postcard—a battered, bent little thing with smudged ink and a foreign postmark: "NWC—Off Grid Deployment Hub 4."

On the front, a drawing of an aurora borealis over tundra. On the back, in her mother's unmistakable print:

Zoey-bird,

I wish I could be there to see your wild, wonderful light. I think about you every single day. Never stop drawing. Never stop dreaming.

I'll come home when I can. Love you always.

—Mom

Zoey read it silently, then handed it to Rishi without a word. Later, she placed it next to the photo of her dad in her room. She didn't cry. But she asked Ayaan if they could make their party "a little weird and magical."

So they did.

They wore wizard robes. Played film trivia. And projected Sholay and Willy Wonka onto the garage door at night.

They weren't just celebrating a birthday. They were celebrating the life they were building.

No fancy guests. Just Ayaan, Rishi, and the cosy lights on the back patio. After the cake (chocolate, her dad's favourite), Ayaan handed her a small, clumsily wrapped box.

Inside: a set of artist's pencils and a leather-bound sketchbook, with a single page already marked.

It was a drawing. Done by Ayaan. Not very good, technically. But unmistakably them—Zoey holding a pencil like a sword, standing in front of a glowing screen. Behind her, a shadowy figure labelled "Writer Boy", his ideas floating like speech bubbles around them.

She stared at it for a long time, quiet.

"I wanted to give you something you could fill," Ayaan said. "Because your pictures make the world feel like it matters."

Zoey didn't say thank you. She just closed the book slowly and hugged him for the first time without hesitation.

Ayaan's Birthday: May 9th

Zoey spent three weeks planning. Rishi helped her make props out of cardboard and tinfoil. That morning, Ayaan was led into the garage-turned-studio, now transformed into "The Hall of Dreamers." Paper stars hung from the ceiling. Fairy lights traced the shelves.

At the centre: a single chair and an envelope that read, "Open Me, Writer Boy."

Inside was a hand-drawn movie poster: "The Phoenix Boy — Starring Ayaan Malhotra." His face was rendered in bright colour, a phoenix rising behind him, scrolls and magic books floating in the air. Below it, in her careful handwriting:

Some stories are born twice. But the second time, they soar.

Ayaan blinked hard. "You made this?"

She nodded, then grinned. "Told you I'm the better director."

That night, they watched Dil To Pagal Hai and The Goonies back-to-back, eating too much popcorn. Rishi joined them midway through and declared, "If Zoey's directing, I demand a better trailer voice next time."

It wasn't extravagant. But it was real. And warm. And for the first time, neither of them felt like they were pretending to belong.

Summer rolled on, and the garage became their new headquarters. They outlined scenes, invented characters, and rewatched classics with notebooks in hand.

Rishi, meanwhile, juggled early development calls on Harry Potter and kept the house afloat—laundry, food, and everything in between. But most days, he paused outside the door to listen to the kids argue over pacing or music choices, and he'd shake his head, half amused, half awed.

The attic smelled like time had stopped somewhere in the 1980s.

Dust curled through shafts of light, and old storyboards leaned like sleeping giants against the sloped ceiling beams. Boxes were stacked in precarious towers—faded Polaroids, half-burned candles from wrap parties, reels of film labelled in thick black Sharpie. It felt like stumbling into a forgotten archive of Hollywood's half-remembered dreams.

Ayaan coughed, brushing off a lid as he rummaged through one of the bins. Rishi was downstairs with Hal Greenberg, his old friend and former screenwriter, who was now more of an archivist than an artist. Ayaan had come up here out of boredom, but now... now he was still.

One folder sat at the very bottom of the bin—thicker than the rest, wrapped in a cracked rubber band. On the cover, in handwriting that looked hurried but bold, were four words:

"Christmas Heist" — John Hughes

He blinked. John Hughes? Like that John Hughes?

He opened the folder with reverence, flipping past a scribbled-out title page and into a world that felt oddly familiar. A child. Left alone. It's a holiday gone wrong. Booby traps. Slapstick. Heart.

It wasn't exactly Home Alone — it was something older, rawer—a prototype. But the bones were unmistakable. And it hadn't been made. Not here. Not yet.

Ayaan grinned.

"Dad......................!"

Rishi nearly dropped his tea.

Hal raised an eyebrow. "Tornado inbound."

Ayaan came barreling into the room, the folder held like a sacred text.

"Read this," he panted. "You have to read this."

Rishi flipped it open, frowning. "What is it?"

"An unproduced script. By John Hughes! It's Home Alone, but not the same. It's rough, but it's brilliant. We need to make this."

Hal leaned forward. "Christmas Heist? That old thing? Hughes shelved it after one too many rejections. Said it was too goofy."

"Well, he was wrong," Ayaan said. "This isn't goofy. It's magic."

He turned to his dad. "We can update it. Fix the tone. Add a layer of heart. And I want to play the lead."

Rishi looked sceptical. "You want to pitch a forgotten holiday script starring a kid, and you want to headline it?"

"Yes," Ayaan said. "But this isn't about me proving anything. I just believe in it. People are going to love it. It's got laughs but also heart. He's alone but not broken. He learns to be brave."

Hal chuckled. "Well, you've got passion. That's half the job."

A week later, in Chicago

The snow was piled in soft drifts along the side of the suburban road. Ayaan and Rishi approached a cabin framed in icicles and old Christmas lights that hadn't been taken down since last winter.

John Hughes opened the door in thick wool socks and a cardigan older than Ayaan.

"Mr. Hughes," Rishi began, "thank you for agreeing to meet us."

Hughes eyed the boy. "You dragged your kid here for a pitch?"

Ayaan held out the folder. "You wrote something amazing. You gave up on it too soon."

Hughes took the folder, flipping past the title page. "This old thing? They laughed me out of room for this script. They said it made kids look too clever. No studio would touch it."

"They were wrong," Ayaan said. "Kids are clever. And scared. And funny. That's why it works."

Hughes smiled faintly. "You're serious about this?"

Rishi nodded. "If we do it right, this could be special."

Hughes hesitated. "I'll tell you what. If you two can pull together the crew, the budget, the bones—I'll co-produce. But I'm not calling it Christmas Heist. That name stinks."

Ayaan grinned. "Left Behind. That's the new name."

Hughes laughed. "Better already."

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Back in L.A., the house became a war room of ideas.

The kitchen table disappeared beneath rolls of paper, half-drunk juice boxes, and coloured pencils. Zoey took up her post beside Ayaan, sketching every scene he described.

"Think wide-angle," Ayaan muttered. "We want to see Calvin alone in the living room — big shadows, tiny kid. Like E.T. but more Christmas."

"Got it," Zoey said, tongue between her teeth as she drew.

They argued about colour palettes. They debated lighting. They talked soundtracks. They fought like siblings and collaborated like old pros.

At one point, Zoey asked, "Why do you care about this so much?"

Ayaan paused. "Because it's the kind of story people remember. And because this time, I want to be part of something that lasts."

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Meanwhile, Rishi worked with Hughes.

They rented a modest production office. Hughes made calls to old collaborators, most of whom responded with a cautious maybe. Rishi pored over equipment catalogues, struggling with budgeting nightmares. Casting agents were contacted. Crew availability checked.

"You're really doing this," Hughes said one night, marvelling over a whiteboard covered in names.

Rishi nodded. "You believed in the words. My son believed in the story. That's enough."

One evening, Ayaan and Zoey finished hanging their final storyboard panel in the hallway.

The entire plot is now spread out in frames, from the kitchen to the living room wall. Calvin is sleeping with a flashlight. The intruders slip on the ice. The moment Calvin sits by the fire and hums a lullaby to himself in Hindi.

Rishi stood in the doorway, watching as they taped up the last panel.

"They're not kids," he whispered. "They're filmmakers."

In that moment, he saw it clearly—not just the film, but the path they were carving.

A family making a dream absolute.

Together.

End of Chapter 12