At six years old, watching his mother cry over a budget notebook where the numbers never worked, Shyam made an impossible promise: "e;Ma, don't cry. When I grow up, I'll buy you a house."e;Forty-four years later, he's kept that promise—and so much more.The Builder's Burden follows Shyam from a struggling tier-two Indian city to professional success in Pune, through thirteen military entrance exam failures, years of grinding poverty, and the particular weight of promises made too young and carried too long.But success brings its own burdens. At twenty-nine, with the house finally bought, Shyam meets Aanya Kapoor—brilliant, privileged, and completely wrong for him on paper. What begins as a conference conversation becomes six years of daily calls, "e;I love you"e;s that change nothing, and the devastating realization that love without choosing is just pain in a pretty package.When Shyam finally walks away, choosing himself for the first time in his life, he discovers that building a legacy means more than accumulating wealth. It means finding someone who chooses you back. It means transforming childhood pain into purpose. It means building a hospital for strangers and raising a son who understands that privilege comes with responsibility.This is a story about:Promises kept across decades, even when they break youLoving someone who loves you back but never enoughThe grinding journey from poverty to purposeChoosing yourself when no one else willBuilding something that matters beyond mere survivalThe Builder's Burden is literary fiction for anyone who's ever made an impossible promise, loved someone who wouldn't commit, or wondered if decades of grinding toward success actually meant anything at all.Perfect for readers who loved: A Fine Balance, The Namesake, A Suitable Boy, Normal People.