They built their life in the quiet spaces between two Americas. She carried the discipline of immigrant parents, elite degrees, and long nights in chambers of the highest court. He carried the scars and stories of a forgotten Rust Belt childhood. Marriage, for them, meant not erasing those worlds but learning to let them sit at the same table.
In Kentucky, they promised each other a future that would honor both church and mandir, then went home to diapers, deadlines, and campaigns that would upend everything. As his face became a symbol in a bitter political era, hers remained composed, almost guarded, beside him. She walked onto rally stages, then slipped back into school pickups and bedtime routines, insisting on “being actually a normal person.” Their marriage now sits inside the machinery of power, yet still turns on something disarmingly simple: two people, stubbornly choosing each other across faith, class, and a watching nation.