바카라Oh, you are here. Nayantara is getting ready still. Please wait here in the office바카라. As we entered the Director바카라s chamber in the children바카라s centre in an industrial part of north Delhi on that crisp November morning a dozen years ago, the moments of waiting for Nayantara seemed to stretch out interminably. Then right in the middle of our half-hearted small talk with the official-looking people in the room, we stopped in mid-sentence as we heard a tiny roar of voices and a swift swoosh as the curtains parted. A bundled baby was carried proudly into the room by a beaming nurse. I could see a nice head of hair that had been abundantly and freshly oiled, the smallest of noses, and a light blue cotton onesie with little cars and trains printed on it, no doubt picked out for the special occasion. My cousin Vatsala바카라s sage voice rang in my ears. 바카라Didda, don바카라t get put off by the hair oil바카라. Before I knew it, Nayantara was in my arms, and I was almost blinded by her million-watt smile and the spray of dimples all over her face. 바카라She looks just like you바카라, said the adoption officer triumphantly. Did she know I used to dream of a girl with dimples?