Adultery Priya Didi
Hi writer..
I think I missed what happened between these two before. Can you point me to the page number where Ravi hurt Priya?
Thank you.
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Do not mention / post any under age /rape content. If found Please use REPORT button.
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Ravi poured the coffee carefully, placing the cups on the tray. “Here,” he said softly, motioning to her. She took hers without a word, her fingers brushing his briefly, a fleeting connection he would remember, though she did not acknowledge it.
 
Breakfast proceeded in near silence. Ravi ate quietly, stealing glances at her now and then, trying not to intrude on the storm beneath her calm exterior. Every gesture she made, every motion in the kitchen, seemed to hold a story, a story of disappointment, resilience, and quiet endurance.
 
Bhayya,” she said after a long pause, the word almost a test, almost a tether.I hope… you’re taking care of yourself. That… whatever happened with… all that… doesn’t weigh too heavily on you.” Her words were measured, precise, careful, as if she was dipping her toe into conversation without opening the floodgates.
 
Ravi’s chest tightened. He nodded, keeping his voice low.I am… trying. It’s just… hard sometimes. But I’ll manage. Don’t worry.
 
Her eyes flicked to him, just briefly, then returned to the cup she held. Her grip tightened around it, knuckles pale, as though the motion of holding something mundane helped anchor her emotions. She didn’t smile. She didn’t forgive. She didn’t soften. But she was speaking to him, and that was progress, a small, fragile bridge over a chasm that had seemed insurmountable yesterday.
 
Ravi realized then that this would be a slow path, perhaps weeks or months, and that the charm and ease that had once existed between them might never return. But this, her acknowledging him, her measured words, the glimpses of care beneath the anger, was a beginning.
 
It wasn’t comfort, it wasn’t absolution, but it was recognition.
 
As breakfast ended, she began clearing the dishes, her movements precise and deliberate, the gold border of her saree catching the morning light in a way that made her seem almost statuesque. Even in anger, even in disappointment, even in grief and care for the world around her, she looked impossibly beautiful, a combination of strength and elegance, vulnerability and command.
 
Ravi felt that ache in his chest again, a mix of guilt and admiration, knowing he had no right to feel drawn to her yet, and yet utterly unable to look away.
 
He finished his own coffee quietly, letting her work in her rhythm. He didn’t speak, didn’t ask for forgiveness, didn’t try to push. He simply observed, and in that observation, he found both torment and solace.
 
There was no reconciliation today, no softening of the heart beyond what had already begun. But there was presence, and for Ravi, presence was everything, a sign that maybe, over time, this distance could be bridged, slowly, carefully, with respect for the walls she had placed.
 
As she finally carried the last plate to the sink, Ravi exhaled softly, steadying himself. He didn’t dare speak unless spoken to. He let the moment linger, letting her anger, her restrained care, and her quiet, undeniable beauty settle around him like a heavy, intricate tapestry, complex, commanding, and breathtaking all at once.
 


-- oOo --


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Cheppochu kadha andi Shailu garu
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(29-10-2025, 11:15 PM)Strangerstf Wrote: Cheppochu kadha andi Shailu garu

Please give me sometime, came out for lunch. I will tell you once I get back home. Sorry for the delay in response
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(25-08-2025, 07:21 PM)shailu4ever Wrote: Exposed Beauty of the Virgin 

...

She was exquisite, too perfect, too fragile, too damned beautiful to resist.
...

He wanted her, all of her, and he wanted her now.
.

This is an amazing erotic scene. Excellent Shailu. I am excited reading this. I feel it personally.

Wonderful narrative.
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(25-08-2025, 11:39 PM)shailu4ever Wrote: 291



Thank you Shailu
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(29-10-2025, 01:59 PM)Strangerstf Wrote: Hi writer..
I think I missed what happened between these two before. Can you point me to the page number where Ravi hurt Priya?
Thank you.


Hi Strangerstf

Sorry for the late response, please read the posts 941, 942 in page 48 and posts 1155 and 1158 in page 58

Thank you for your interest.  

With warm regards

-- Shailu
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Excellent update in Priya didi's point of view what she is doing is acceptable and quite natural but to Ravi it seems different really emotions make man think and progress in life as humanbeings


waiting for the next update eagerly
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(30-10-2025, 03:50 AM)venkygeethu Wrote: Excellent update in Priya didi's point of view what she is doing is acceptable and quite natural but to Ravi it seems different really emotions make man think and progress in life as humanbeings


waiting for the next update eagerly


Hi Venkygeethu

Thank you so much for your wonderful feedback.  I’m really glad to hear that you connected with Priya didi’s perspective and found her actions both acceptable and natural. 

You’re absolutely right, emotions play a huge role in how we grow and navigate through life, and it’s interesting to see how different characters process and react to those emotions in their own unique ways. 

I’m thrilled that you’re eagerly awaiting the next update.  I’m working hard on it, and I hope it continues to captivate and engage you just as much as this one did.

Thanks again for your compliments and continued support. It really motivates me to keep going.

With warm regards

-- Shailu
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Wednesday Morning continued with Priya Didi
 

The clinking of dishes quieted, leaving only the soft hum of the ceiling fan and the occasional rustle of the morning breeze through the half-open window. Ravi remained seated at the table, hands folded loosely in his lap, eyes occasionally flicking toward Priya Didi as she stood by the sink, rinsing the plates.
 
Her posture was still rigid, shoulders squared, yet there was a grace in every motion, a rhythm he had come to notice over the years, an elegance that seemed to persist regardless of her mood.
 
Even as her brow furrowed faintly while scrubbing a stubborn pan, the sunlight caught the strands of her hair, highlighting rich dark undertones that shone like polished wood. Her saree, pale beige with that subtle golden trim, shifted as she moved, the pleats falling perfectly, hinting at her slender form without fanfare.
 
Ravi felt his chest tighten again. Even in silence, even in anger and disappointment, she carried a presence that could not be ignored.
 
(There was something transcendent about her that morning, the quiet dignity of movement, the light playing in her hair, the soft precision of her gestures. A beauty that demanded no attention yet held it completely.)
 
He stood slowly, almost involuntarily, and picked up a plate, offering it to her. “Here… let me help.
 
Priya Didi’s hands froze mid-motion, and for a fraction of a second, he thought she might refuse. But instead, she inclined her head slightly, a single nod, not warm, not inviting, but not a rejection either.If you can. Be careful.
 
He stepped closer, careful to match her rhythm. As they worked together, the quiet between them was not uncomfortable, not exactly. It was heavy, yes, a weight of past actions, of loss, of the emotional chasm between them, but it was also filled with a strange, fragile human connection.
 
He caught glimpses of her face as she leaned forward to rinse a plate, the faint curve of her lips betraying nothing, but the slight crease near her eyes hinting at her restrained frustration. The pink flush on her cheeks remained, a subtle sign of both anger and the effort she was putting into maintaining composure.
 
Ravi moved silently, stacking the clean plates, fetching the small towel she used to dry them.
 
His hands were steady, but his mind raced. He couldn’t stop noticing her, the way the morning light softened her features, the way her fingers worked efficiently yet delicately, the faint scent of jasmine shampoo lingering in the air around her.



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(30-10-2025, 01:29 AM)shailu4ever Wrote: Hi Strangerstf

Sorry for the late response, please read the posts 941, 942 in page 48 and posts 1155 and 1158 in page 58

Thank you for your interest.  

With warm regards

-- Shailu
Thank you andi.


Waiting for big updates!
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(30-10-2025, 12:26 AM)prasannas2001 Wrote: This is an amazing erotic scene. Excellent Shailu. I am excited reading this. I feel it personally.

Wonderful narrative.


Hi Prasanna

Thank you so much for your compliments. I'm so glad the scene resonated with you. It means a lot to hear that it felt personal and engaging. 

I really appreciate your feedback and support, it motivates me to keep pushing the narrative forward.

With warm regards


-- Shailu
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There was no softness in her words, no warmth in her voice, but her presence itself was disarming. Even as he remembered the distance, the anger, the disappointment, he found himself in awe of her restraint, her strength, her beauty.
 
You don’t need to do everything,” she said finally, breaking the silence without looking at him. Her voice was calm but firm.I can manage. Just… help where you can.
 
Ravi nodded, keeping his voice low.I will. I want to.
 
A subtle sigh escaped her lips, almost imperceptible. She turned slightly, setting down the towel, her eyes flicking briefly toward him. For a heartbeat, he thought he saw a flicker of acknowledgment, a recognition of his effort, perhaps even of his remorse, before she turned back to the counter.
 
As they finished, Ravi gathered the last of the utensils, handing them to her to put away. She took them, fingers brushing his briefly, a fleeting touch, yet it struck him with quiet intensity. She didn’t pull away abruptly, but she didn’t linger either.
 
The contact was neutral, functional, yet laden with human reality, a subtle reminder that connection could exist even without forgiveness, even without warmth.
 
He stepped back, exhaling softly, trying to ground himself. “Breakfast… is ready. Shall we… sit?
 
Priya Didi moved toward the table with deliberate grace, carrying her coffee cup. She didn’t glance at him, didn’t offer a word of comfort, yet every motion was imbued with poise, a silent elegance that made his heart ache with admiration and guilt.
 
Ravi followed, sitting down opposite her, noticing the way the light caught the gold trim of her saree as she adjusted her position. Even when upset, even when restrained, she radiated an effortless beauty that drew the eye and the mind.
 
For a few minutes, they ate in near silence. Ravi stole glances at her now and then, each one filled with both wonder and regret. He observed the subtle tensions, the tightness of her jaw, the slight narrowing of her eyes, the careful way she avoided direct eye contact, all signals of her anger and hurt.
 
And yet, within those constraints, there was undeniable grace. The curve of her neck as she leaned forward to sip her coffee, the poised hands holding the cup, the faint furrow of her brow, all of it struck him, compelling and sorrowful all at once.
 
Ravi realized, with a pang of guilt, how he had taken such moments for granted before. How he had assumed familiarity would erase boundaries. And now, seeing her in this fragile equilibrium between care and anger, he felt the weight of every misstep, every betrayal, every careless choice.
 
Ravi,” she said after a long pause, her voice quiet but deliberate, measured.I know… it’s been hard. You… you lost people close to you.




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Ravi nodded slowly, voice low. “Yes… it’s… it’s been hard. And lonely.
 
Her eyes flicked to him for a brief second, a glance sharp yet fleeting, before she looked back at her cup. There was no judgment, no forgiveness, just recognition, acknowledgment of human suffering without concession of personal anger.
 
He exhaled, swallowing the lump in his throat.Thank you… for… noticing. I… I know I don’t deserve it.
 
Priya Didi’s lips pressed together in a tight line. She didn’t respond, didn’t soften, but she didn’t dismiss him either. Her silence was a careful balance, a boundary that he could neither cross nor challenge. And somehow, the restraint, the refusal to indulge him, the quiet strength, it all made her presence feel even more alive, commanding, and impossible to ignore.
 
Ravi finished the last sip of his coffee, placing the cup down softly. He moved to help with the remaining dishes, placing them near the sink. She glanced up, her eyes briefly meeting his, and in that fleeting moment, he saw a complexity, anger, sorrow, care, disappointment, all rolled into a single glance.
 
He didn’t speak, didn’t force words, and he didn’t need to. The silence carried its own gravity.
 
As Priya Didi began wiping the counter, Ravi stepped aside, watching her. The morning sun highlighted the delicate arch of her eyebrows, the subtle flush on her cheeks, the faint line of tension at the corners of her eyes. Her saree swayed gently as she moved, every fold falling perfectly, framing her form with understated elegance.
 
And despite the anger, the hurt, the unspoken walls between them, she remained profoundly beautiful, poised, graceful, and impossible to look away from.
 
(In that light, she seemed less a figure of the ordinary morning and more like something timeless, a living embodiment of composure and sorrow intertwined.)
 
For a long moment, Ravi simply watched, letting himself be present without expectation, without desire, only admiration and silent remorse.
 
He realized that forgiveness, if it ever came, would be slow. Weeks, perhaps months. But today, today, she allowed him to be near, to share the mundane routine of breakfast, to observe her humanity and her beauty, and that, he understood, was already a gift.
 
Finally, as she set the last cloth to dry, she spoke, her voice low but firm:I have work to do today. You… take care of yourself. And… stay out of my way as much as possible.
 
Ravi nodded, voice soft. “I will. I promise.
 
She didn’t meet his eyes again, focusing instead on the small domestic tasks before her. And as he moved to the chair by the window, sunlight falling across his face, he felt a strange, quiet solace amidst the weight of guilt and longing.
 
Presence, he thought, was everything. Not forgiveness. Not comfort. Not absolution. Just presence.
 
And in that presence, he stayed, silently watching, silently learning, silently remembering, the curve of her lips, the arch of her eyebrows, the gentle sway of her saree, the quiet strength of her hands.
 
Even in anger, she was a vision of grace, of dignity, of resilience. And even in his remorse, he found a fragile hope, that perhaps, in time, the distance could shrink, however slowly, however carefully, under the watchful eyes of someone so impossibly beautiful.
 



-- oOo --



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(06-07-2025, 04:09 AM)shailu4ever Wrote: It wasn’t love.

It wasn’t lust.


This story is not about love.

It is about silence.
It is about the kind that binds people together…

It is about the kind that gets them killed.

This is about the crime that has no name.


Priya Didi  The Crime That Has No Name.



Start reading...

Wonderful Starting
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(30-10-2025, 12:29 AM)prasannas2001 Wrote: Thank you Shailu


Hi Prasanna

Thank you for your support

-- Shailu
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(30-10-2025, 05:39 PM)Strangerstf Wrote: Thank you andi.


Waiting for big updates!


Hi Strangerstf

Thank you so much, I really appreciate your patience and excitement. I’m also working on another story called The Nine Nights, so the big update for this one is taking a little longer.  But it’s coming very soon, please give me a couple of days.  In the meanwhile I will be keep giving updates as we go.

Thank you for your support

With warm regards

-- Shailu
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(30-10-2025, 11:36 PM)aaran88 Wrote: Wonderful Starting


Hi Aaran

Thank you. I’m glad the beginning caught your attention. I hope the rest of the story continues to keep you engaged and enjoyable to read.

Please keep posting your feedback as you progress in reading this story.  Your comments and feedback is very helpful for me to move forward.

With warm regards

-- Shailu
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Scene – Wednesday Afternoon (Distance, Guilt, and the Weight of the Unspoken)
 
The afternoon had settled heavy over the flat.

Sunlight filtered through the curtains in narrow beams, catching in the quiet swirl of dust above the dining table. The faint hum of the ceiling fan filled the air, unbroken except for the soft rustle of papers coming from Priya Didi’s room.
 
Ravi sat on the sofa, elbows on his knees, head bowed low. The air around him felt still, almost stagnant, like time itself refused to move forward. His coffee had gone cold, untouched for nearly an hour. The faint scent of ghee and soap from the morning lingered in the air — reminders of her presence, reminders of everything he had lost.
 
He had said sorry.
He had said it in every way he knew — in words, in gestures, in silence.
But there were things apologies could not touch.
 
The betrayal had burned something between them, something invisible but real — and though she did not speak of it, he could feel it in every pause, in every measured breath she took near him.
 
When she emerged from her room, her face was calm, unreadable. She moved with that same unhurried grace, a quiet dignity that made the simplest action — setting a file on the table, adjusting the pleats of her saree — seem deliberate, almost ceremonial. The faint gleam of the gold border shimmered as she crossed the room.
 
Ravi stood when she entered, out of instinct more than courage.Do you need anything?” he asked, his voice low.
 
She didn’t look at him right away. “No,” she said softly. “I’m fine.
 
The words were light, but they carried finality — the kind of calm that came after too much emotion had already been spent.
 
He nodded, his throat tightening.If you ever want me to—
 
She cut him off gently, her tone firm but not sharp.Ravi, please. Don’t try to fill the silence. It doesn’t help.
 
He stopped. The words stung, not because they were cruel, but because they were true. He sank back into his seat, hands clasped, watching her gather her things.
 
Every small movement seemed to echo — the rustle of her papers, the faint sound of her bangles, the soft click of a drawer closing. Everything she did now was deliberate, cautious, distant.
 
Ravi’s eyes lingered on her profile. She looked serene, almost peaceful, but he could see the exhaustion beneath it — the fine tension around her eyes, the set of her jaw that betrayed the effort it took to stay composed. She was holding herself together with quiet strength, and that only deepened his guilt.


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He remembered the laughter that had once filled this spaceSirisha’s voice, Neetu’s teasing remarks — moments that had seemed harmless then, before they had turned into something unforgivable. Now those memories came to him like broken glass, cutting deeper each time he reached for them.
 
Priya Didi turned toward the window, drawing the curtain slightly to let in more light. The sunlight caught her hair, turning it a deep, warm brown where it fell over her shoulder. Her reflection shimmered faintly in the glasssteady, self-contained, distant.
 
Ravi spoke again, quietly.I don’t expect anything from you. I know what I did can’t be taken back. I just… can’t stand how far this feels.
 
Her hands stilled on the curtain. For a long moment, she said nothing. Then, without turning, she replied, her voice steady but low.
You made choices, Ravi. You crossed lines that can’t be uncrossed. You want the world to go back to what it was, but it won’t. It can’t.
 
He swallowed, the words pressing hard against his chest. “I know.
 
You say sorry,” she continued, “but that’s not for me. It’s for you. To make peace with yourself. But peace doesn’t undo what’s been done.
 
Her tone wasn’t angry — that made it worse. It was calm, distant, resolute.
 
He lowered his gaze, fingers tightening around the edge of his chair.I don’t want peace,” he said. “I just want to face it. Even if it means seeing you hate me.
 
Priya Didi finally turned to look at him. Her eyes were steady — not filled with rage or pain, but something quieter, heavier.
I don’t hate you,” she said. “If I did, this would be easier.
 
The silence that followed seemed to swallow the room.
 
She adjusted the edge of her saree and moved past him toward the study table. Her presence brushed the air near him — the faint scent of jasmine, the sound of her steps — and even that closeness felt unbearable.
 
He turned slightly, watching her as she bent over her papers, the sunlight glinting on her bangles. She looked composed, unreachable — a woman who had decided that distance was safer than emotion.
 
Ravi’s chest ached with the knowledge that he had caused that distance, that she carried this restraint because of him.
 
He stayed where he was, silent, still.
 
Outside, the sounds of the afternoon drifted in — a car horn, a child shouting somewhere, a crow calling from a distant rooftop. Life went on, uncaring, while inside that small flat, time seemed to move slower, heavier.
 
Ravi leaned back, staring at the ceiling. The light was fading now, the room dimming to a pale gold. Priya Didi’s silhouette against the window was calm and unmoving, like a painting that refused to change.
 
He realized, then, that forgiveness wasn’t something he could hope for.
Not now.
Maybe not ever.
 
But even so, he would stay — in this silence, in this distance, carrying the weight he had earned.
 
Because being near her, even as a reminder of everything he had broken, felt better than the emptiness that waited beyond her door.



-- oOo --




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