Pestonji's preoccupations as activist-journalist spill into her stories with refreshing candour, undisguised, at times, almost documentary. In the Mixed Marriage of the title story, Savita and Cyrus, two young lawyers, meet during the campaign to save Cuffe Parade's Gitanagar slum from municipal demolition. Later, Savita enters Cyrus' Cusrow Baug home as his wife, prepared for major cultural adjustments she knows she'll have to make. But not enough. Segregated at her own daughter's navjote ceremony, her husband feebly acquiescent, she finds the strength to resist her dominating in-laws in the example of a battered wife and aids victim who is her client. In Riot, a story set in Dharavi during the communal carnage in Mumbai, Rashna is able to withstand the emotional blackmail of family and colleagues, to reach out to her Muslim friend, Tahira, and find "a ray of light" that makes her spirits soar. In The Verdict, a successful manager, Gustad, is unable to feel anything but revulsion for his mentally retarded infant son. When he makes his first move towards starting an affair with a Punjabi airhostess, he too crosses a line of no return.