The climax arrived at the town’s annual festival. Vicky had arranged to finally meet Riya near the Ferris wheel, and Sameer’s father had "coincidentally" planned a secret date at the exact same spot. Sameer, sweating in the summer heat, spent the night darting behind food stalls, switching between his real voice and Riya’s high-pitched tones into his phone to keep them from seeing each other.
The trouble started when Sameer’s own world began to collide with Riya’s.
Sameer was now essentially dating his best friend and his father, all while trying to maintain his own real-life engagement to Mahi. The climax arrived at the town’s annual festival
Sameer lived in a cramped apartment in Mathura, surrounded by unpaid electricity bills and his father’s relentless optimism for a lottery win that would never come. Sameer had one gift: he could mimic any voice. To his friends, it was a party trick; to Sameer, it was a survival kit.
Sameer’s heart sank. But it got worse. His father, usually grumpy and reclusive, started wearing cologne and humming love songs. Sameer caught him hiding his phone under his pillow, whispering, "Yes, Riya ji, the moon is beautiful tonight." The trouble started when Sameer’s own world began
In the end, a stray microphone at the festival’s main stage caught his frantic "Riya" voice while he was arguing with a vendor in his normal voice. The feedback looped through the entire fairground.
To , like the suspicious fiancé. A story involving a different movie or theme. Sameer had one gift: he could mimic any voice
When he landed a job at a local, shady "romance hotline," he didn't expect to become the star. Behind a flickering computer screen, he became . Riya was witty, empathetic, and had a voice like honey. Soon, "Riya" wasn't just a voice; she was the most sought-after confidante in the district.