Married to the Palace Tigress / Chapter 5: The Reluctant Groom
Married to the Palace Tigress

Married to the Palace Tigress

Author: Saanvi Patel


Chapter 5: The Reluctant Groom

I passed my coming-of-age year without incident; my two brothers both engaged, and only I am left.

The palace, usually buzzing with wedding plans, barely noticed my adulthood—except for the old ayah, who fussed as if I were still a child.

The old ayah in Maa Sa’s palace hinted several times, wanting her to ask the Maharaja to arrange a marriage for me.

She’d mutter while oiling my hair, “Arjun Baba, you’re of age now. Ask your mother to speak with the Maharaja, or the right girls will all be gone!”

But Maa Sa still eats and drinks as usual, shakes her head and doesn’t care, living by the principle that blessings are determined by God—no need to worry, fate will come on its own.

She’d spoon extra ghee onto her parathas, smile at the ayah, and say, “Let the mango fall when it’s ripe, not before.”

With no worries, she’s getting rounder by the day.

Her sarees no longer fit as they used to, and even the palace tailor has started adding extra fabric to her blouses.

I quite agree with Maa Sa’s view.

Why rush? I’m happy enough watching the sun set over the palace walls and listening to the temple bells in the distance.

The old ayah is too anxious. The Maharaja’s son—could he really stay single?

She’s convinced if I don’t marry soon, the palace will blame her. I suspect she’s more worried about losing her job than my happiness.

Sure enough, one day in the palace gardens, I ran into the Maharani, who saw I’d grown up and offered to find me a suitable bride.

She was feeding grain to the peacocks when she spotted me. “Arjun, you’re all grown up! Leave the matter of your marriage to me.” I could see the gleam in her eye—a new project to control.

With the Maharani getting involved, Rani Meera was alarmed too, and the two families started bickering, neither willing to back down.

Soon, the entire harem was abuzz—servants scurrying back and forth, Ranis arguing so loudly, even the peacocks stopped their dance and stared from the terrace. It was as if I were a gold bar to be auctioned off.

They both pestered Father Maharaja, each wanting to marry their own cousin to me.

Father Maharaja looked more tired than usual, rubbing his forehead as both queens presented long lists of eligible girls, each with their own strengths and dowries.

Kunal Sharma spoke up for me:

He couldn’t resist adding his own logic, much to everyone’s amusement and some discomfort among the queens.

“The eldest prince marries the only daughter of Raja Devendra, with a dowry of a hundred thousand acres. The second prince marries the legitimate daughter of Diwan Singh, a pillar of the upright officials.”

He listed their family trees and dowries as if auctioning cows at the village fair.

“You may not be as prominent as the eldest, nor as noble as the legitimate son, but you’re still the third prince. Whether marrying a Raja’s daughter or a noble lady, it’s more than enough.”

I could sense Kunal’s attempt to hype me up, but even he knew the odds.

“How could you settle for distant relatives from small families?”

His tone was half-serious, half-teasing, but the Ranis didn’t like his interference.

I couldn’t help but laugh.

The whole scene was so comical—everyone fighting over me as if I were a golden mango in the palace orchard.

With all this matchmaking, why do I feel like a prized breeding bull?

Kunal rolled his eyes at my comment but couldn’t disagree.

Kunal Sharma is different from me.

He’s always chased after perfection, as if his destiny depended on it. I think he secretly wants his life to be a story in the next Amar Chitra Katha.

He doesn’t know—having a wife is better than none.

I would be happy with someone who knows how to make good pakoras and doesn’t mind my laziness. Kunal, however, wants a partner who can debate philosophy and run the marathon too.

Not everyone is like him: young, proud, the most dazzling lord in the capital, the dream of every maiden.

Even the palace maids giggle behind his back, and every wedding invitation that arrives for his family carries a hopeful air.

When his family chose a wife, they screened the whole kingdom inside and out.

The Sharma family set up lists, called astrologers, and even had secret interviews with the eligible girls. The process was more intense than the IAS exams.

The requirements included: good family, spotless reputation, upright ancestors, kind parents, helpful brothers, outstanding talent…

And of course, a perfect horoscope match and a singing voice fit for temple bhajans!

After three or four years, they finally settled on the young princess from Raja Anil’s household.

It was a grand affair—elephants, horses, and dhol beats echoing down the main road. The whole city came to watch.

I may be a prince, but I’m nowhere near his league when it comes to marriage.

My own engagement would probably merit a small notice in the back of the palace gazette.

So I turned to comfort him:

I patted his back in mock sympathy, “Don’t worry, yaar, not everyone is born to be the star of the show.”

“Even you know I’m not prominent or noble enough, so how could others not know?”

It’s the plain truth—nobody bets on a horse that doesn’t run in the race.

“Noble families always want to hitch their wagons to the rising star; who would bet their treasures on a prince like me, already out of the running?”

I shrugged, hoping he’d see reason, but Kunal only looked more frustrated.

“Besides, I have the ‘good name’ of being slow-witted, not at all the white knight in shining armour. I doubt the girls in their rooms are eager either.”

If they’ve heard even half the palace gossip, they probably pray their mothers don’t mention my name at all.

Kunal Sharma glared at me, his eyes full of three parts sympathy, three parts pity, three parts anger, and one part helplessness.

His expressions change faster than the weather in Delhi. I almost wanted to laugh, but thought better of it.

In the end, he concluded:

“Don’t worry! The Maharaja will never agree.”

He flung his hands in the air, as if blessing me with the gift of bachelorhood.

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

The Fake Princess’s Husband Defied the Crown
The Fake Princess’s Husband Defied the Crown
4.8
Raised as a royal decoy, Ishaan was cast out by the cold-hearted king she once called brother. Years later, hiding as the lowly wife of a loyal civil servant, she’s dragged back to the palace—where her secret marriage is exposed, and the princess herself demands her husband. When the palace orders her death, only Amit’s love stands between her and the fate the royals decreed. Will her true identity destroy them both, or can love defy a kingdom’s betrayal?
Stolen Bride: Reborn to Break the Palace Chains
Stolen Bride: Reborn to Break the Palace Chains
4.9
Ananya was the Maharani, betrayed by her own blood and forced to watch her love stolen by her half-sister. Now reborn, she refuses to let palace politics and Dadi’s schemes dictate her fate—choosing a forbidden prince and vowing never to be a pawn again. But as her wedding chunari is ripped away and flown like a kite by the man she once loved, she faces a cruel twist: her rival sister has also returned from the dead, determined to snatch everything she holds dear.
Illegitimate Bride to the Prince’s Father
Illegitimate Bride to the Prince’s Father
4.8
Born a shadow in the Malhotra mansion, Asha is bartered as a second wife to the Second Prince—only for her secret affair with the Maharaja to explode in the palace’s sacred halls. Betrayed by her own blood and denied a title, she’s forced to bow before the man who once called her by another woman’s name. When her forbidden marriage is revealed, will Asha destroy the royal bloodline—or finally seize the power denied to her since birth?
Married to the Colonel Who Can't Touch Me
Married to the Colonel Who Can't Touch Me
4.8
Sold by her own Madam to a wounded war hero, Pooja is forced into a loveless marriage with Colonel Arjun—rumored to be a man in name only. Yet every night, her forbidden beauty torments them both, and every touch threatens to break their fragile truce. But as secrets from her past and his hidden desires collide, will Pooja's suffering finally turn to love—or ruin her forever?
His Prisoner, The Palace’s Princess
His Prisoner, The Palace’s Princess
4.8
Kidnapped and humiliated by Major Arjun, the royal princess must survive among rough border soldiers who see her as a pampered burden. Forced to prove her worth through pain and humiliation, she vows revenge—even as a dangerous attraction flares between captor and captive. But when palace secrets and Arjun’s true motives come to light, will her pride survive, or will her heart betray her family’s honour?
Trapped as the Billionaire’s Bargain Wife
Trapped as the Billionaire’s Bargain Wife
4.9
Meera thought she married for love, but after the wedding, Arjun revealed his true Malhotra power—controlling her every move, doubting her loyalty, and locking her into a gilded cage. Branded a gold digger by Delhi’s elite and cut off from her dreams, Meera is secretly showered with lavish gifts from Arjun’s own friends, each with their own desires. When Arjun’s betrayal breaks her spirit, Meera must choose: stay the obedient wife, or become the most dangerous woman in Delhi’s high society.
Chained to the Villain Princess
Chained to the Villain Princess
4.9
Feared as the ruthless Eldest Princess, I claim the defeated desert prince as my chained servant, humiliating him before my trembling, saintly sister. But the blood on my whip cannot erase his burning gaze—or the prophecy that he will rise, reclaim his crown, and raze my kingdom to ashes. Tonight, only one of us will survive the desires and betrayals that bind us tighter than any chain.
Kept by the Billionaire, Married to a Nobody
Kept by the Billionaire, Married to a Nobody
4.8
For seven years, Priya was Arjun Malhotra’s pampered secret—until he offered her a mistress’s cage or a cold goodbye. Now married to simple, loving Rohan, she’s hunted by a Mumbai playboy and forced to beg Arjun for help, breaking every vow she made. As old chains tighten and new loyalties clash, Priya must choose: return to her powerful ex-lover or destroy her only shot at ordinary happiness.
Sold as the Second Wife
Sold as the Second Wife
4.7
Meera’s world shatters when her loving husband buys a deadly insect to make her barren—only for her to discover he’s a nobleman’s son, already married, and she’s nothing but a mistress in his gilded prison. Betrayed by the man she risked everything for, Meera must choose: submit to a life of shame as the barren second wife, or fight for her dignity in a house that will never accept her. In the shadows of Lucknow’s richest mansion, secrets, status, and shattered love collide—how far will she go to reclaim her fate?
The Attendant Who Betrayed My Heart
The Attendant Who Betrayed My Heart
4.8
Banished to the palace’s coldest shadows, I poured my secret longing into Arjun, the gentle attendant who soothed my loneliness—never guessing he was hiding a king’s ambition and another woman in his heart. When palace whispers revealed his true loyalty to the Maharani, my love turned to bitter dread, knowing my family’s fate now hung on the whim of a man I could never truly possess. In a world where even kindness is a weapon, I must decide: expose his secret, or risk my bloodline for a love that was never mine.
Divorced for His Mistress, Married by Command
Divorced for His Mistress, Married by Command
4.8
On her eighteenth birthday, Priya’s husband signs their divorce papers without a glance—too obsessed with chasing his runaway mistress to notice her heartbreak. Shunned by her own family and stripped of dignity, Priya is forced into a new marriage with a military heir, only to have her ex-husband return, demanding she serve his new bride. Torn between her wounded past and a cold, transactional future, Priya must decide: will she surrender again, or finally claim her own destiny?
Rejected by the Prince, Bound for Freedom
Rejected by the Prince, Bound for Freedom
4.6
Meera’s world shatters when her husband, Arjun, is revealed as a royal prince—and his true fiancée claims her place. Offered only the insult of becoming a second wife, Meera must choose between humiliation in a gilded palace or forging her own destiny beyond the border. With heartbreak in her chest and a border permit in her hand, will she trade her pain for freedom, or be caged by royal pride forever?