In a south Indian town, there was a young Brahmin too lazy to work, who spent his days maintaining falsehood. He felt the need of a marriage and was successful in getting a virtuous woman. She never allowed him to relax at home. Always forced him to go out, work and fetch the money. Unable to bear her torture, he went to a railway station to check if he can work as a porter, sitting on the floor and waiting for the train some passers-by threw coins in front of him mistaking him for a beggar. Many coins came by and the Brahmin was happy that it was an effortless way of making money.
As days passed, a group of thieves pulled him for robberies. One early dawn they targeted a rich Brahmin’s house for loot and gained entry as per the plan. They approached the Pooja room to take all the expensive jewels, idols and silverware and there were some Saligrama’s in the silver plate. The Brahmin felt the Saligrama’s were sacred and he would touch it after a quick bath. He gets into the bathroom and suddenly his mates ran away from the back door as the rich man and the wife were opening the gate. The Brahmin finishing his bath sits in the Pooja room to pack the bounty. Immediately the rich man and the wife sees this brahmin with utmost respect applauds him and tell him that he was God sent. The couple overwhelmingly expressed that they would give away half of the family wealth to him as that was the wish of Rayaru. They further tell him that Rayaru appeared in their dream last night and informed them to share their wealth with the Brahmin they would see in the Pooja room the following day.
The fortunes of the lazy Brahmin changed with this event. The intentions of the Brahmin were wrong but who knows, his marriage to the woman brought him all the luck. Rayaru masterminds the sequence of events.