18-04-2026, 09:57 PM
Let latha see the hairless body of the old man and fall in love for it.
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Adultery Radiance of Vanitha, Daughter-in-Law and Instagram Influencer
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18-04-2026, 09:57 PM
Let latha see the hairless body of the old man and fall in love for it.
18-04-2026, 10:21 PM
Awesome dude
19-04-2026, 04:29 AM
Chapter 55: The Big Reveal
Scene 1 Selvam woke before the alarm. The room was still dark around the edges, a soft blue light bleeding in under the blinds. For a second he did not move. He lay on his back, arms at his sides, and tried to figure out what felt wrong. Then he remembered. His skin. His whole body was buzzing, a low tight hum under the surface, the way a leg felt after sitting on it too long. He shifted under the sheet and the cotton dragged against his chest and he sucked in a breath. Everywhere the sheet touched him, he could feel it. He sat up slow. The clock on the nightstand read five forty-two. Outside, a single bird had started up in the lemon tree. The house was quiet. He swung his legs over the side of the bed and looked down at himself. His chest was bare in the gray light, the muscle lines sharp, the skin a little pink where the hair used to be. He ran a palm over his left pec, careful, expecting a sting. There was one, small, the kind of ache that came after a hard workout. He pressed harder and the pec flexed under his hand. He could feel every ridge. He had forgotten what his own chest felt like without the hair in the way. He padded to the bathroom and shut the door behind him. The tile was cold on his feet. He stripped off his shorts and stood for a second in front of the mirror, not quite looking at himself yet, just feeling the cool air move across places it had not moved across in forty-eight years. He turned on the shower. He kept the water lukewarm, because the girl had told him no hot showers for a day. Jenny. Her name came to him along with the smell of lavender and he pushed it away. He stepped under the spray. The water hit his shoulders and ran down. He watched it move. Usually the water caught in the hair on his chest, slowed down, pooled at the center before sliding to his belly. Now it ran off him like he was a stone in a river. Straight lines, fast, down the front of him, down his stomach, over the flat skin where the trail used to be, down past his hip. He watched it run off the head of his cock and onto the tile and he looked away fast. He soaped up. The lather was thin. He rubbed it over his chest in slow circles and his hand slid in a way it had never slid before. There was no catch, no friction. His palm moved across his own stomach and he could feel every single square of muscle under it. He had worked for those muscles for twenty years. He had never really seen them. Now they were right there, under a skin of soap, like someone had scrubbed a dirty window. He lifted his cock out of the way with the back of his hand to wash underneath, and the skin there was smooth too, bare and a little sore. He was careful. He did not linger. He rinsed. When he stepped out, the air in the bathroom felt colder than usual. He wrapped the towel around his waist and used a corner of it to wipe the fog off the mirror. Then he stopped. The man in the mirror was not the man he saw every morning. That man had a thick black shadow of hair across his chest and a softer, less defined middle, and the shape of his body was hidden under all of it. This man was lean and cut. His shoulders were wider than he remembered. His arms were heavy and veined. His stomach showed the six squares Ashok was always complaining he could not get, and the two lines that ran down from his hips and under the towel made a clean V, like an arrow pointing down. He lifted his chin. His jaw looked sharper, somehow, without the bulk of the hair below it pulling his eye. His salt-and-pepper stubble caught the light. He turned a little to the side, the way he had seen Vanitha do, to check the angle. His lat flared out when he raised his arm. He lowered the arm. He raised it again. He felt a small, stupid laugh rise in his chest and he pressed his mouth shut. He looked ten years younger. Maybe more. The blonde girl had been right. The thought of her came back in the same second. Jenny. The way she had said book me and then written his name in neat letters. Ten o’clock. Full body massage. He closed his eyes and he could feel her hand again, the warmth of her palm through the thin glove, the way it had stayed too long at the base of him, the way she had held his cock against his belly and her fingers had not quite closed around him. His stomach tightened. His cock, under the towel, began to move. He opened his eyes and made himself stare at the fog at the edge of the mirror. He thought about his breathing. He thought about the bird in the lemon tree. He thought about anything but her small hand. A full body massage. No gloves for that, probably. She would have oil on her hands. She would start at his shoulders and work down, the way she had worked the aloe down his chest yesterday, and she would find every sore place the wax had left, and she would press into it with her thumbs. He did not know where she would stop. He did not know if she would stop. He pressed both hands flat on the counter and breathed out. He was a grown man, he told himself. He was a grandfather-in-waiting, almost. He had no business standing in a bathroom in his son’s house in California with his cock stirring under a towel because a twenty-three-year-old had written his name down in an appointment book. He finished toweling off. He was careful around the sore spots. He put the towel on the hook. He took one last look at the mirror. The man in it looked back at him, smooth and hard and a little flushed, and did not look away. In the bedroom he pulled on a pair of soft gray pants, the loose kind Ashok had given him for lounging, and a plain black t-shirt. He tugged the shirt down and smoothed it and then caught himself smoothing it and stopped. The cotton hung differently on him now. It sat closer to his body. He could see the shape of his chest through it. He picked up his phone. Nothing on it. He set it down. He looked at the door. Downstairs the family would be waking up. Vanitha would ask. Ashok would tease. Latha would stare. He would have to walk through it and pretend it was nothing. He took a deep breath in, held it, let it out. Then he opened the door and went down. Scene 2 The kitchen smelled like coffee and toasted bread. Vanitha stood at the stove in a pale blue robe tied loose at the waist, cracking eggs into a pan with one hand, her phone in the other. Ashok sat on a stool at the island in a t-shirt and gym shorts, hair still wet from his own shower, slicing a mango with the focused slowness of a man who had not had enough caffeine yet. “Appa’s up,” Ashok said, without looking, the second Selvam’s footsteps hit the landing. “I can hear,” Vanitha said. She turned the flame down. She put the phone face-down on the counter. “Mama, come, come. I made eggs.” Selvam came around the corner and stopped in the doorway. They were both already looking at him. For a long second, nobody said anything. The pan hissed. The refrigerator hummed. Ashok set the knife down on the cutting board and leaned back on his stool, a slow grin spreading across his face. “Okay,” Ashok said. “Okay, Appa.” “What,” Selvam said. “Nothing,” Ashok said. “You just look different, that’s all.” “It’s a shirt,” Selvam said. Vanitha laughed. It was a short bright laugh, the kind she used for the camera. She came around the island, wiping her hand on the side of her robe, and stopped two feet from him. Her eyes moved down his chest and back up again. “The shirt fits better,” she said. “Admit it.” “The shirt is the same shirt.” “The shirt is the same shirt, mama. The man in it is not the same man.” Ashok snorted into his coffee. Vanitha crossed her arms. “Let’s see the results.” Selvam shook his head. He felt his ears go warm. “Let me eat first, ma.” “No, no, no.” She flapped a hand at him. “We did not pay good American dollars to watch you cover it up. Come on. Pull it up. We all want to see.” “Vanitha.” “Shirt up, mama.” Ashok was already laughing. “She’s not going to let it go, Appa. Just get it over with.” Selvam looked from one of them to the other. Both of them were grinning at him like he was five years old and hiding a college report. He sighed. He reached down and caught the hem of the t-shirt with both hands. He hesitated, then pulled it up to just below his collarbones, and held it there. Vanitha whistled. Low and long, through her teeth, like a man on a construction site. “Oh my god,” she said. “Mama.” Ashok stood up off the stool. He came around the island and stopped next to Vanitha and they both stood there and looked. In the hard morning light the change was even sharper than it had been in the bathroom mirror. The pink had gone out of the skin overnight. What was left was smooth and even and the color of strong tea, and under it every line of the muscle showed clean. The chest was a wall. The stomach was a stack. The two lines at his hips pointed down into the waistband of the gray pants. “This is not fair,” Ashok said. He lifted his own t-shirt an inch and looked down at his own stomach. “This is not fair. I go to the gym four times a week. I eat no rice. I drink that disgusting green thing every morning. And my father, at forty-eight, looks like this.” “Forty-eight,” Vanitha said, shaking her head. “Forty-eight,” Ashok repeated. He dropped his shirt. “I give up. I am giving up.” Selvam started to lower his own shirt. “No, keep it up a second longer,” Vanitha said. She leaned in, not touching, just looking. She tipped her head. “The shoulders especially, mama. I didn’t realize how broad you are. The hair was hiding it.” “Enough now,” Selvam said, and pulled the shirt down. “Just saying.” From the hallway came a small quick sound of bare feet on the wood floor. Latha had come down. She stopped at the edge of the kitchen in a long blue kurta and loose pajama pants, her hair in the same loose braid she always slept in, a cloth in her hand. She had clearly been passing through, on her way to the laundry, and she had heard them laughing and stopped to look. Her eyes went right to Selvam. Her mouth opened. Her mouth closed. “Uncle,” she said. Selvam nodded at her, a little stiff. “Morning, ma.” “You look…” She tilted her head, searching for the word. Then she laughed, a small surprised laugh, hand going to her mouth. “You look so young, Uncle. So strong. Like the boys in the fitness videos.” “See,” Vanitha said, pointing at Latha without looking at her. “The young one has eyes.” “Anna, what happened to your father?” Latha said, turning to Ashok with wide mock-serious eyes. “Yesterday he was my Uncle. Today he is a movie hero.” “Don’t encourage him,” Ashok said, groaning. “He’s going to walk around the house like this all week. Flexing every time he passes a window.” “I do not flex,” Selvam said. “He is already flexing,” Ashok said to Latha. “Look. He is flexing right now.” “I am standing,” Selvam said. Latha laughed and ducked back into the hallway. “I will stay out of this,” she called over her shoulder. “I am just a simple girl. I cannot handle so much handsomeness in one kitchen.” Ashok threw a piece of mango peel after her. She squealed. Her footsteps went away down the hall. Vanitha shook her head, smiling, and went back to the eggs. “She’s not wrong, mama. Get used to the attention. That’s the trouble with American standards. Once you’re in, you’re in.” “American standards,” Selvam said. He sat down on the stool Ashok had left. “Tomorrow I will look like a politician. The day after I will look like a movie star. Where does it end?” “It ends when your wife tells you to stop,” Ashok said. “I do not have a wife.” “Then it doesn’t end,” Vanitha said, over her shoulder, and she said it lightly, but she said it. Breakfast went on like that. Eggs, toast, fruit, coffee. Ashok complained for fifteen minutes about his own body and vowed to start waxing next month. Vanitha ignored him and ate half a slice of papaya and drank black coffee. Selvam ate quietly, keeping his eyes on his plate, answering when he had to. When Ashok finally stood up and stretched and announced he had a call in ten minutes, he clapped Selvam on the shoulder on his way out. The clap was loud against the bare skin under the cotton. Ashok laughed again, shaking his head, and trotted up the stairs. The kitchen went quiet. Vanitha rinsed her mug at the sink. Selvam brought his plate over and set it on the counter next to her. She did not look up. She ran water over the plate. Then, under the sound of it, with her eyes still on her own hands, she said it. “Did she take care of you down there, mama?” Selvam froze. He glanced at the stairs. Nothing. He glanced at the hallway. Empty. Latha was somewhere on the other side of the house, humming to herself. He looked at Vanitha. She still had not looked up. A small smile was tugging at the corner of her mouth. “She did her job, ma,” he said, quiet. “Mm.” She turned the water off. She set the plate in the rack. She dried her hands on the robe and finally looked up at him, and her eyes were bright and full of trouble. “Tell me later, mama. All the details. Every single one.” She patted his bare forearm, once, and walked past him out of the kitchen. Selvam stood at the sink with the water still dripping off the plate and listened to her go. Scene 3 Ashok jingled his keys against his palm as he stood by the kitchen island, scrolling through the directions on his phone. “Latha, you ready? We’ll be late.” Latha came down the stairs in a clean pink kurta, a small handbag tucked under her arm. She had pinned her hair back and her cheeks were already a little flushed with nerves. “I am ready, Anna.” Vanitha leaned against the counter with her coffee. “How long will it take?” “Ultrasound, blood draw, then the doctor wants to talk about the next cycle,” Ashok said. “Maybe three hours. Maybe four if there’s traffic coming back.” “Take your time,” Vanitha said. She turned to Latha and gave her a gentle smile. “Drink lots of water before they take blood, okay?” “Yes, Akka.” Latha glanced over toward the living room, where Selvam sat on the couch pretending to read the newspaper Ashok had brought from the corner store. She put a hand on her hip and smirked. “Uncle, don’t show off your new body too much in the mirror today. Anna will get jealous.” Selvam looked up, startled. Ashok laughed. “Hey, hey,” Ashok said. “I am the husband here. I can be jealous if I want.” “Then start lifting weights, Anna,” Latha shot back, walking past him to the door. “Otherwise Akka will run away with Uncle.” “Latha!” Vanitha said, but she was laughing too. Selvam turned a deep red and went back to his newspaper. The door closed behind them. The car backed out of the driveway. The house went quiet, the kind of quiet that only an empty American house in the middle of an afternoon could be. The fridge hummed. A sprinkler ticked on somewhere two yards over. Vanitha set her coffee down. She walked to the front window and watched until the car had disappeared around the bend. Then she came back and stood in the doorway of the living room, one hand on the frame. “Mama,” she said. “Come upstairs for a minute. I want to ask you something.” Selvam folded the newspaper. He did not look at her. He stood up and followed her up the carpeted steps. In his bedroom the afternoon light came through the blinds in long pale stripes across the bed. Selvam sat on the edge of the mattress, hands on his knees. Vanitha closed the door behind her. She turned the small lock with a soft click. “So,” she said. She crossed the room slowly and stood in front of him. “Tell me. Did Jenny take care of you down there?” Selvam looked up at her. He saw the crooked little smile on her lips and he knew exactly what she was asking and he knew exactly what she was not asking. “She did the wax, ma,” he said. “That’s all.” “That’s all?” Vanitha put a hand on her hip. “She didn’t slip a little? Her hand didn’t wander a little?” “Vanitha.” “Mama, I’m just asking. She’s a young girl. You‘re a handsome man. Your cock is...” She paused and her eyes went bright. “Well. It is what it is. She must have noticed.” He looked at the floor. “I don’t know what she noticed.” “Did you get hard?” He didn’t answer. “You did,” she said. She was grinning now. “You did, mama. I knew it. Poor Jenny. She probably had to take a break after.” “Stop it, ma.” “I’m not stopping.” She took a step closer. The toes of her bare feet were almost touching his. “I want to see.” He looked up sharply. “Vanitha, Ma...” “I want to see, mama. I waited all morning. I dropped you off and I drove around for two hours thinking about it. I want to see what she did to you.” “They will be back.” “Three hours, Ashok said. Maybe four.” She put one knee up on the edge of the bed beside his thigh and leaned down so her face was close to his. “Don’t be shy, mama. I‘m your daughter-in-law. I can look.” He swallowed. His mouth was dry. She straightened up and stepped back and then she lowered herself down, slow, until she was kneeling on the carpet between his knees. She put both her hands flat on his thighs. She looked up at him and waited. He breathed in. He stood up. He did not mean to stand up. His body did it before his head could stop it. His knees had just unbent on their own, and now he was on his feet, looking down at her kneeling on the carpet with her hands still open on her thighs, waiting. Vanitha tilted her head back. Her hair fell off one shoulder. The pale blue robe had loosened at some point during the walk up the stairs and he could see the edge of the thali chain resting against her collarbone, the gold catching a stripe of afternoon light. His son’s thali. The one Ashok had tied around her neck four years ago in front of eight hundred people and two priests and a fire. He looked at it. She saw him looking at it. Neither of them said anything about it. “Mama,” she said, quiet now. “Come on.” “Shhh.” She rose up a little on her knees and her hands moved to his waistband. She hooked her thumbs into the soft gray cotton and tugged it down in one slow pull, taking his underwear with it, and the whole bottom half of him came free. His cock lay across his thigh, soft, hairless, the bare skin around the base pink and tender from the morning. The whole shape of him was different now. The shaft looked longer without the hair at the root, the head fuller, the heavy balls hanging low and smooth. Vanitha let out a small breath. “Oh my God, mama,” she said. “Look at you.” She put her hand on his thigh, then slid it up, slow, across his hip, and then her fingertips traced the bare skin at the base of his cock. The skin was so smooth her nails caught nothing. She circled the root with one finger, then ran the same finger up the underside of his shaft, all the way to the tip. “It’s like a different cock,” she whispered. He twitched under her hand. “You can see everything,” she said. “Every vein. Every line. Look how big the head is when there’s no hair around it.” He was getting hard now. She watched it happen. She did not stroke him. She just kept tracing him with one finger, the way a person traced a leaf to see the shape of it. The shaft thickened and lifted off his thigh. The head turned a darker pink. A clear bead came to the slit and sat there. “So pretty,” she said. She bent her head down and pressed her lips, just her closed lips, to the very base of him, where the smooth skin met the soft skin of his sack. She kissed him there once. Then she dragged her lips up the underside of his shaft, slowly, all the way to the head. Selvam’s hand gripped the bedspread. She opened her mouth and took just the head in. Just the tip. She held him there and let her tongue move around the crown, slow circles, tasting the bead of fluid she had seen. She closed her eyes. She pulled off and looked at him. “I have to taste every inch, mama. It’s a whole new cock.” She went back down. This time she took more of him, a little at a time, her lips sliding down the shaft, then back up to the tip, then a little farther, then back up. She was not hurrying. She was learning him. Her tongue ran along the vein on the underside. Her lips closed on the ridge of the head and she sucked, just once, soft. Selvam’s breath came out as a long, low sound. “Vanitha…” “Shh, mama. Let me.” She took him deep then, all the way down, and he felt the back of her throat close around the tip, and she stayed there for a moment, swallowing once around him, before she came back up. She did it again. And again. Each pass slower than the last, her hand cupping his bare balls, rolling them gently, her thumb tracing the smooth underside of his sack where the hair used to be. She pulled off with a small wet sound and looked up at him, her lips shiny, her eyes full of something he did not have a word for. A strand of saliva stretched from her bottom lip to the head of his cock and she caught it with her thumb and pressed it back onto him and rubbed it in like lotion. “She did a good job,” Vanitha said, quiet, her breath warm on the wet skin. “Jenny. She took her time down here, didn’t she? I can tell. Every inch is smooth.” “Vanitha Ma, please” Selvam said. “Tell me, mama.” She ran her tongue along the underside, flat and slow, from the base up to the head, then looked up at him again with her chin resting against his hip. “Did she hold you like I’m holding you? When she was waxing. Did she have to hold your cock?” “She wore gloves, ma.” “I know she wore gloves, mama. I’m not asking that.” Vanitha wrapped her small hand around the base of him and squeezed, and he jumped. “I’m asking if she held you. If she took your cock in her hand and held it out of the way.” He looked down at her. Her face was so close to him. The thali chain had slipped further down her collarbone and was hanging loose against the slope of one breast where the robe had fallen open. He could see the small gold pendant at the end of it, swinging a little every time she moved. “Yes,” he said. “She held me.” “Mm.” She closed her eyes and kissed the head again, a slow closed-mouth kiss... “Was she gentle?” “Yes.” “Did she go hard?” “No.” “Did you?” He did not answer. She opened her eyes. The crooked smile was back. “Don’t be shy, mama. I want to picture it. I want to picture that little blonde girl trying to hold this in one hand while she did her job. I bet her fingers didn’t even go all the way around.” “They didn’t,” he said, before he could stop himself. Her eyes went bright. She laughed, a small breathless laugh, and buried her face against his thigh for a second, her forehead pressed to his bare hip. When she came back up her cheeks were pink. “Oh, mama.” She shook her head. “Poor Jenny. Poor little Jenny.” She took him back in her mouth before he could answer, all the way down this time, her nose pressing into the smooth pink skin at the base of him where the hair had been. She stayed there. He felt the back of her throat flutter. He felt the small hot huff of her breath against his belly. His knees almost gave out. She came back up slow and let him fall out of her mouth and rested the weight of his cock along her cheek, her eyes closed, as if she were listening to it. “Tomorrow,” she said. Her voice was low, almost to herself. “Tomorrow she’s going to put her hands on you again. For the massage. Did you know that? Did she tell you what a full body massage means?” Selvam stared down at her. His heart was going so loud he could hear it in his own ears. “She didn’t say, ma.” “No,” Vanitha said. “They never do.” She turned her face and pressed a kiss to the side of his shaft, long and slow, and then rubbed her cheek against it once, like a cat. “It’s okay, mama.” She looked up at him. The afternoon light caught the gold at her throat. “I don’t mind. I want her to. I want her to put her little white hands all over you and I want you to think about me the whole time.” He closed his eyes. “Say you will.” “I will.” “Good mama.” She opened her mouth again and took him back in, and this time she did not stop. Downstairs, the fridge hummed. The sprinkler two yards over ticked off and went silent. Somewhere on the freeway a car carrying Ashok and Latha was crawling through afternoon traffic toward the clinic, Ashok’s hand resting easy on the wheel, Latha’s hand resting on the small warm curve of her belly where she was keeping her own secret. Neither of them was thinking about the bedroom at the end of the upstairs hall. Neither of them had any reason to. In that bedroom, Selvam sank his hand into his daughter-in-law’s hair, and did not pull her off. She worked him with long, patient pulls of her mouth, the kind that had no hurry in them, and then after a while she let him slip out and sat back on her heels, breathing through her parted lips. His cock stood up away from his body, wet and shining, the smooth skin at the base catching the afternoon light. She did not look at the shaft. She looked lower. “Mama,” she said, soft. “Look at these.” She cupped his balls in her palm. Both of them. They filled her small hand and then some, the weight of them heavy against her fingers, and she lifted them a little, as if she were weighing fruit at the market. “I didn’t even see them properly,” she whispered. “I was looking at your cock, I didn’t look at these.” She leaned in. Her breath was warm on the smooth skin. Selvam’s hand tightened in her hair without meaning to and she made a small pleased sound and did not pull away. “Jenny did this,” she said. She was talking to the balls now, almost, her lips an inch from them. “Little Jenny. With her tweezers. Every stray hair. She must have been down here a long time, mama.” “She was,” he said, because the words came out before he could decide whether to say them. “How long?” “I don’t know, ma. It felt long.” “Mmm.” She turned her head and pressed a kiss to the side of his sack, soft, her lips barely parting. “It felt long because she was holding your cock up out of the way. Wasn’t she.” “Yes.” “And you were hard.” “Yes.” “And she kept going.” “Yes.” Vanitha made a small laugh into the skin. “Good girl, Jenny.” She kissed the other side, the same soft close-lipped kiss, then tilted her head and ran the flat of her tongue up the underside of his sack in one long slow stripe. Selvam’s whole body shuddered. “So smooth, mama.” Her voice had gone quieter, wondering, almost respectful. “Like a boy’s. But heavy like a man’s. Look at them. Look how low they hang.” She cradled them in her palm and rolled them gently, the way she might have rolled two warm stones. Her thumb traced the seam that ran up the middle of his sack, the soft line of it, and she followed it with her eyes, her lips still parted. “She had to stretch the skin,” Vanitha said, half to herself. “I’ve seen them wax me down there. They pull the skin tight like this.” She did it, her fingers spreading a small patch of his sack taut between them. The skin stretched smooth and pale and she bent her head and pressed her mouth to that exact spot and sucked, once, soft and slow. “Vanitha,” he whispered. “Shh.” She let the skin go and moved to the other side and did the same thing, stretching a new small patch tight, kissing it, sucking it soft. “I’m just thanking her. She did such careful work, mama. I want to feel every inch of it.” She opened her mouth wider and took one of his balls in. Selvam made a sound he did not recognize. She held it on her tongue. Just held it. Her cheeks hollowed a little as she sucked, light, barely any pressure, and her eyes lifted to look up at him. His hand in her hair had gone loose. His mouth was open. He was staring down at her like he did not know where he was. She let the ball slip out, wet. A thin thread of saliva hung between her lip and the skin and she did not wipe it away. “She would die,” Vanitha murmured, almost to herself. “If she could see this. Little Jenny. Kneeling in her salon with her gloves on, being so professional. And here I am on my carpet, no gloves, mama, look.” She held up her small bare hand, wiggling her fingers, and then put it back on him. “No gloves. No rules. Just my mouth.” She took the other ball in and gave it the same slow attention. Her other hand slid up his cock, lazy, more to keep him occupied than to stroke. He was leaking clear fluid freely now, a small slow drip, and she caught some of it on her thumb and brought it to her mouth without letting go of the ball she was sucking, and licked her thumb clean. “Tell me something, mama,” she said when she came off him again. She rested her chin on his thigh, both hands cradling his sack now, her eyes on his face. “When she was holding you. Did she look at these?” He tried to answer. His throat was dry. “Hm?” She squeezed, gentle. “Did she?” “She looked, ma.” “For how long?” “I don’t know.” “Yes you do.” He closed his eyes. “A long time.” “There it is.” Vanitha smiled against his thigh. “A long time. Poor girl. And you couldn’t do anything about it, could you. Lying there with your legs open and your cock in her hand and her little blue eyes just looking at your balls.” “Ma, please.” “Please what, mama.” She kissed the top of his sack. “Please stop? Or please keep going?” He did not answer. She already knew. She went back down. Mouth open wider now, she took both balls in together, carefully, her tongue moving underneath them, her cheeks hollowing in a slow pull. Her nose pressed against the base of his cock. The smell of him was different now, without the hair, cleaner and sharper, and she breathed it in through her nose with her eyes closed and hummed, low in her throat. The hum vibrated through him. His knees buckled. He caught himself with one hand on the bedpost. Vanitha pulled off and laughed, breathless. “Mama, sit down.” She guided him back onto the edge of the mattress with a hand on each of his thighs, and she shuffled forward on her knees and settled between them again, and now her face was exactly at the right height. She looked up at him from there, her cheeks flushed, her lips swollen, her hair a little wild on one side. The robe had come fully open. The thali hung in the shadow between her breasts. She did not move to close any of it. “I have to tell you something, mama,” she said. Her voice had gone serious for a second. “I was a little jealous this morning. When I asked you about her and you wouldn’t look at me.” “Vanitha...” “Let me finish.” She lifted his sack in her palm again and held it like an offering, her eyes not leaving his. “I was jealous. And then I thought about it in the car. I thought, no. No, I’m not jealous. I want her to touch him. I want her to get him hard on her table and not be able to do anything about it. I want her to go home tonight and think about his cock in her hand.” She bent her head and kissed his balls, soft, then looked up again. “Because she touched you,” Vanitha said. “But she doesn’t get to do this. She doesn’t get to put her mouth on you. She doesn’t get to taste you. That’s mine, mama. She prepared you for me. That’s what she did. She cleaned you up and made you pretty for me and tomorrow she’ll do it again, with her oil and her little hands, and she still won’t get to do this.” She opened her mouth and took one ball back in, slow, and her eyes closed. Selvam stared down at the top of her head. The part in her dark hair. The gold chain that was his son’s hanging loose at her throat. Her small hand cradling his sack with a tenderness he could not name. A sound came up out of his chest that was not a word. His hand found her hair again, not pulling, just resting there, and he held on. Vanitha, with her eyes still closed and her mouth still full, smiled. She stayed there a long time with his balls in her mouth, just holding them on her tongue, until his thighs were shaking under her hands. Then she let them slip out, wet and shining, and she turned her face up and ran her tongue all the way from the base of his sack to the very tip of his cock in one long unbroken stripe. “Back up here now,” she murmured, more to his cock than to him. “I’m not done with you.” She took the head in first. Just the head, her lips closed around the ridge, and she sucked once, slow, hollow-cheeked. She held him there. Her tongue moved in a small circle around the crown, around and around, and every time it crossed the slit she tasted the clear fluid that kept coming and she swallowed it and kept going. Selvam’s hand tightened in her hair. She took him deeper. An inch. Two. Three. She was not hurrying. She was moving at the pace of someone who had already decided how this was going to end and had all afternoon to get there. Her mouth slid down the shaft slow, her lips dragging against the smooth bare skin at the base, and then slid back up slow, and then down again, a little deeper, a little wetter. The only sounds in the room were the small wet ones she made and the uneven rasp of his breath above her. She pulled off, just for a second, and looked up at him with her lips parted and shiny. “Slow, mama,” she said. “I want it slow. I want you to feel every second.” “Vanitha,” he said. His voice was not his voice. “Shhh.” She went back down. This time she used her hand too, her small fist wrapping the base of him, following her mouth up and down, up and down, in a lazy rhythm. Her other hand stayed on his balls, rolling them in her palm, feeling them draw up a little tighter each time she came down on him. She felt everything. She felt the ridge of his head catch on the roof of her mouth. She felt the thick vein on the underside pulse against the flat of her tongue. She felt the way his thighs went rigid on either side of her, then went loose, then went rigid again. She felt his hand in her hair go tight and then tremble. She knew. She had known for a minute now. She just did not want it yet. She slowed down further. She took him almost out of her mouth, just kept the very tip between her lips, and she sucked there, tiny flicks of her tongue at the slit, holding him on the edge. His hips jerked up toward her and she pinned them back down with the flat of her hand on his lower belly, gentle but firm, and looked up at him through her lashes with a smile at the corner of her mouth. “Not yet, mama.” He groaned. It came out of him low and broken. She did that to him three times. Took him to the edge, backed off, held him there, licked the tip clean, went down on him again, came back up, held him there again. By the third time his whole body was shaking. Sweat had come out at his hairline. His hand in her hair had gone desperate, pulling without meaning to, and she liked that, she liked the small sting at her scalp. On the fourth time she did not stop. She took him all the way down. Her nose pressed into the smooth skin at the base of him. She stayed there, swallowing once around him, her throat working, and then she came back up slow and went down again, and the rhythm tightened, her fist and her mouth moving together now, and she felt him swell against her tongue, the head growing impossibly thicker, the vein on the underside hard as a rope. “Vanitha,” he said, warning. She hummed around him. Yes. “Vanitha, ma, I’m going to...” She hummed again. Low. Encouraging. Her eyes locked on his face from below. He broke. The first pulse hit the back of her throat hard and hot and she swallowed it clean, her throat closing around the head of him in a tight squeeze that pulled another jet out of him a second later. She swallowed that too. The third came and she could not keep up, she pulled back a little, let the head rest on her tongue, and the fourth pulse shot across the flat of it, salty and thick, and she held it in her mouth and did not swallow yet. He kept cumming. She had not expected this much. She had forgotten this about him. Her hand kept working the base of him in slow pulls, milking every thick pulse out, and each one filled her mouth a little more. Her cheeks rounded out with it. A small warm trickle escaped the corner of her lips and ran down her chin. She pulled her mouth off him then, deliberately, at the exact moment he was still pulsing, and held his cock in her fist an inch from her face and looked up at him with her mouth full and her lips closed. The last two ropes hit her. The first one caught her across the bridge of her nose and striped down one cheek in a hot line. The second landed higher, on her forehead and in her eyebrow, and a fat drop rolled down the side of her temple into her hair. She did not flinch. She did not close her eyes. She held her mouth full of him and she looked up at Selvam and she let him paint her. He made a broken sound. A last slow dribble came out of him and she caught it on her tongue with her mouth still closed, tipping her head forward to let it fall onto the flat of her tongue through her parted teeth, and then she closed her lips again. She knelt there for a long moment in the striped afternoon light. Her cheek was streaked white. There was a line across her nose. A drop was beading on the edge of her upper lip where it had run down from her cheek. Her forehead had a smear of it cooling on the skin, glossy in the light. Her hair, where the drop had rolled into it, was damp and dark. The gold thali chain between her breasts was untouched, catching the sun, clean. She kept her mouth closed. Her eyes stayed on his face. Selvam looked down at her and something in him came apart and put itself back together in a different shape. He was going to remember this, he knew, for the rest of his life. The pale blue robe fallen off her shoulders. His son’s gold chain resting between her breasts. His cum on her face. Her dark eyes watching him through it, calm and proud and patient, waiting for him to see. Then, slowly, she swallowed. She did it with her mouth closed, her throat working once, a small visible bob under the skin. Her lips stayed sealed. Her eyes stayed on him. She swallowed again, just to be sure. A third time, small. Then she opened her mouth. She opened it wide. She tipped her head back a little, so he could see all the way in. She lifted her tongue and moved it from side to side. She showed him the insides of her cheeks, the backs of her teeth, the pink of her tongue. Empty. Clean. Every drop of him gone down her throat. She held the pose. “See, mama?” she said, when she finally closed her mouth again, and her voice was hoarse and wrecked and pleased. “All of it. Every drop. It’s mine now.” She looked up at him from the carpet with her face striped in white, and she smiled. Selvam’s legs gave out under him. He sat down hard on the bed. His hand slid out of her hair and fell to his side. He was breathing like he had run up a hill. Vanitha rose up on her knees between his thighs. She did not reach for a tissue. She did not wipe her face. She let it sit there on her skin, cooling, a small badge only he could see. She laid her forearms on his thighs and rested her chin on them and looked up at him with those same bright patient eyes. “Tell me you’re mine, mama.” “I’m yours,” he said. It came out before he could think about it. “Again.” “I’m yours.” “Good.” She turned her head and pressed a kiss to the inside of his thigh, and a small smear of white transferred from her cheek onto his skin, and she saw it, and she smiled. “Now. Tomorrow. When Jenny puts her hands on you.” He closed his eyes. “You’re going to lie there,” Vanitha said, soft, “and you’re going to let her do her job. And you’re going to get hard for her, mama, because you can’t help it, and she’s going to see. Scene 4 The evening light came in low and orange through the tall back windows, spilling across the wood floor and the edge of the sectional. The TV was on, some house renovation show with the sound turned low, and nobody was really watching it. Ashok had a beer open on the coffee table, his feet up. Latha sat on the floor cushion with her knees tucked under her, picking at a bowl of gbangs. Vanitha was stretched out along the long side of the couch in soft cotton lounge pants, her phone in one hand. Selvam sat in the armchair by the window. His thoughts mixed with guilt and post nut clarity. He still felt a little raw under his clothes, the new skin tender against the cotton. He had washed his face twice after dinner. He had not been able to look directly at Vanitha during the meal. “Oh, Ashok,” Vanitha said, without looking up from her phone. “I forgot to tell you. Jenny offered mama a massage tomorrow morning.” Ashok glanced over. “A massage?” “Part of the aftercare package,” Vanitha said. She was scrolling, casual, like she was reading something else. “She said the skin gets tender after the first wax. A massage helps.” She lifted her eyes to Selvam over the top of the phone. Her eyebrows went up just a little. “Ten o’clock. She seemed quite impressed with your fitness level, mama.” Selvam shifted in the chair. His knee jumped. “She did?” Latha looked up from the gbangs. “Very impressed,” Vanitha said. She was enjoying herself. Selvam could see it in the corner of her mouth. “She told me she has never seen anyone in such good shape at his age.” “Vanitha,” Selvam said. “What? I am just telling you what she said.” Ashok laughed and reached for his beer. “Maybe I should book one too. If a massage will get me a six-pack like Appa‘s, sign me up.” “It is not the massage that gets the six-pack, da,” Vanitha said. “It is the forty years of squats.” “Then I am doomed,” Ashok said. “You are doomed, Anna,” Latha said. She popped a gbang in her mouth. “You sit in that office chair all day. Your stomach is getting soft. I noticed yesterday when you bent down to pick up the suitcase.” Ashok put a hand on his stomach, mock offended. “There is nothing soft here.” “There is something soft there.” “Latha!” Vanitha laughed. Selvam smiled in spite of himself. “And you, Uncle,” Latha turned on him, the same wicked little look on her face, “you are not allowed to come back from this massage with even more muscles. Otherwise Anna will start crying.” “I won’t cry,” Ashok said. “You will cry, Anna. I will take a video.” “No more videos,” Ashok said. “The last one you took, Amma is still showing to the neighbors.” Latha grinned. Selvam shook his head and looked at the floor. “So you will go, mama?” Vanitha said. The teasing was still there, but quieter now, just for him. “To the appointment? Ten o’clock, she said.” Selvam did not look up. “I will go.” “Good.” Ashok finished his beer and stood. “Alright. I have a few emails to send before I crash. Latha, leave me some gbangs for tomorrow.” “No promises, Anna.” He went up the stairs. Latha gathered her bowl and stood, stretching. She stopped at the bottom of the stairs and looked back at Selvam, eyes mischievous. “Uncle. Tomorrow when you come back, walk slow into the kitchen. Don’t show off the new body too fast. Anna’s heart can’t take it.” “Go to bed, ma,” Selvam said. She giggled and went up. The living room was quiet then. The TV showed a couple choosing between two beach houses. Vanitha sat up on the couch and gathered her phone and a glass into one hand. She paused beside his chair on the way to the kitchen. “Ten o’clock, mama,” she said softly. “Don’t be late.” She did not wait for a reply. She walked through to the kitchen and he heard the faucet run, then the dishwasher open, then close. He sat for another minute. He listened to the house. He could hear Ashok’s voice upstairs, on a call now. He could hear Latha’s door click shut down the hall. He could hear the soft tap of Vanitha rinsing her glass. He stood up and went to his room. He closed the door behind him. He did not turn the overhead light on. He turned on the small lamp by the bed instead, the soft yellow one, and the room filled with that same warm light from the salon that morning. The full-length mirror was on the back of the closet door. He walked over to it and stood in front of it for a long time without doing anything. He just looked at himself in his t-shirt and shorts. Then he pulled the t-shirt off. Then, because he could not help it, he thought about Jenny. He thought about her standing in front of him in the lobby that morning, her blonde hair, her blue eyes. He thought about her hand on his chest, the way her palm had pressed warm through the latex glove. He thought about her cupping him in her hand and saying nothing about it. He thought about her bending close, her breath on his skin, the small strand of her hair stuck to her lip. He thought about her saying, you look amazing. He thought about her writing his name in neat letters in the appointment book, ten o’clock. A heat moved through him. Not sharp like in the salon. Slower. A kind of dread mixed in with it, and a kind of pride, and something else under both of those that he did not have a name for. He looked at himself in the mirror one more time. The smooth chest. The hard stomach. The face above it that was his own and not his own. He took a deep breath in. He held it. He let it out. He turned the lamp off.
19-04-2026, 08:24 AM
Selvam is just enjoying things but not participating. I thought he will fuck Vanitha brains out thinking about jenny. But she drank his protein and nothing more happened. First time both are alone in her home for long time Disappointed.
19-04-2026, 08:31 AM
(19-04-2026, 08:24 AM)veeravaibhav Wrote: Selvam is just enjoying things but not participating. I thought he will fuck Vanitha brains out thinking about jenny. But she drank his protein and nothing more happened. First time both are alone in her home for long time Disappointed. There is a reason for his restraint.
19-04-2026, 08:31 AM
Great great.... Writing... Keep it up
19-04-2026, 08:48 AM
(This post was last modified: 19-04-2026, 08:50 AM by adams_masala. Edited 2 times in total. Edited 2 times in total.)
Chapter 56: Jenny's Hands
Scene 1 He woke at five-thirty again, this time before the bird in the lemon tree. The skin on his chest felt thinner than it had yesterday. Less raw, more awake. He ran the flat of his palm over his stomach under the sheet and the muscle jumped at his own touch, and he pulled the hand away like he had been caught. Ten o’clock. He lay there and looked at the ceiling and said it in his head. Ten o’clock. He got up. He stood in front of the open closet in his underwear and went through the shirts on the hangers one by one. He passed over the polos, the button-downs with the stiff collars, the linen kurta Vanitha had packed for him. He stopped at a soft gray henley Ashok had left in the guest closet from some earlier visit. Three buttons at the top, loose at the shoulders, easy to pull over his head. He took it off the hanger. He found a pair of dark cotton pants with a drawstring, the kind that would come off without a fight. He laid both on the bed. He caught himself doing it. Choosing clothes for a woman to take off. He sat down on the edge of the mattress and pressed his hands to his face. It was not Vanitha he was choosing the clothes for. That was the part that would not sit still in him. Vanitha was his son’s wife. Vanitha was a fact, a weight, a taste that lingered again yesterday afternoon on the carpet in this very room, and he did not know yet what to do with that. But Vanitha was his. In some bent, wrong, undeniable way, Vanitha was his. The girl at ten o’clock was not his. The girl at ten o’clock was a stranger. The girl at ten o’clock had gold hair and blue eyes and a small fair hand that had not closed all the way around him. He had never stood so close to a white woman in his life before yesterday, and tomorrow, which was now today, he was going to take his clothes off for her in a small room. He dressed. He went downstairs. The kitchen had Ashok in it already, at the island, typing on a laptop with a coffee in one hand. Latha stood at the sink rinsing a mug. Vanitha came in from the back patio in workout clothes, her hair in a high ponytail, her phone in her hand. “Ready for the spa day, Appa?” Ashok said, without looking up. “It’s a massage,” Selvam said. “A spa day,” Ashok said. “Leave him alone, da,” Vanitha said. She set her phone on the counter. “Mama, eat something small. Not too heavy. You’ll be lying down for an hour.” Selvam took a piece of toast he did not want. He drank half a glass of juice. He could feel Vanitha’s eyes moving over him from the other side of the island. She was not smiling. She was doing something better than smiling. She was pretending not to look and looking anyway, the way she looked when she was about to put her phone down and ask for something. “I’ll drop him,” she said to Ashok. “You have your nine-thirty call.” “You sure?” “I’m sure.” Ashok waved a hand and went back to his screen. In the car she did not say anything for the first two blocks. She drove with one hand on the wheel and the other flat on her own thigh. The morning light was coming in at the side of her face and catching the small gold at her ear. She had changed into a fresh top before they left, a soft white cotton one, sleeveless. Her arms were bare. The thali chain sat where it always sat. “You slept, mama?“ she said, eventually. “A little.” “Mm.” She turned onto the main road. A light turned yellow ahead of her and she coasted through it on yellow, not quite red. “She’s going to put oil on you, mama,” Vanitha said. She said it the way she might have said it’s going to rain later. “Her hands are going to be all over your back. Your legs. Your chest, when you turn over.” He looked out the window. His palms were wet on his thighs. He pressed them flat against the cotton and the cotton went damp under them. “Vanitha.” “I am not jealous, mama. I told you. I said it yesterday and I meant it.” She glanced at him, then back at the road. The small crooked smile was there at the corner of her mouth. “I want her to. I want her little white hands on you.” His heart kicked once, hard. He shifted in the seat. The pants he had chosen for how easily they came off were now, he noticed, also very loose in the front, which was a mercy, because he was starting to fill them. He thought, he could not stop himself thinking, about Jenny’s hand at the base of him yesterday. The way her fingers had not closed. The way the glove had been warm through and warm anyway. The gold of her hair falling forward over her shoulder while she bent her head to check a strip. He had never, in his life. The phrase kept coming back. He had never, in his life. He had grown up in a town where a white face in the market was a thing children ran to look at. He had married a Tamil girl from three streets over. He had raised a son alone. He had lived his forty-eight years with brown hands on his skin and only brown hands, and now a fair girl with blue eyes was going to pour oil into her palms and rub it into him and call it a job. Vanitha reached over without taking her eyes off the road and put her hand on his thigh. Not high. Not low. Just there, on the meat of it, warm through the cotton. “Mama.” “Hm.” “You’re sweating.” “I am fine.” She squeezed once and let go. “You’re fine. Just breathe.” The salon came up on the right faster than he wanted. The same strip mall, the same window with the round gold letters. Her car was already in the spot marked with her name. Vanitha pulled up at the curb and put the car in park but did not turn it off. “Go,” she said. He did not move for a second. “Mama. Go. I’ll be back at eleven-thirty.” He got out. He shut the door. He stood on the sidewalk with his hands at his sides and watched her pull away, and then there was nothing between him and the glass door but a few steps of concrete. He took them. Scene 2 The bell over the door gave the same small chime it had given yesterday, and for one strange second he half expected everything else to be the same too. The front desk with the computer open. The receptionist on the phone. The soft couches and the magazine rack and the wall of expensive bottles. It was not the same. The lobby was empty. The lights were lower. No music out front, or maybe the music was further back in the building and the hush here was on purpose. The couches were still there, the rack was still there, but nobody was at the desk. A small paper sign at the edge of the counter read BY APPOINTMENT ONLY TODAY in a careful, looped hand. He stood in the middle of the tile floor with his hands at his sides. A door opened at the back of the room, the one she had led him through yesterday, and she came out. Selvam forgot, for a second, how to hold his face. She was not dressed for work. Or she was dressed for a different kind of work, one he did not understand. Yesterday she had been in black slacks and a silk blouse buttoned to the collar. Today she wore a loose cream blouse with a V at the neck and sleeves that fell to her wrists and the fabric was thin enough that the morning light behind her moved right through it. The slacks were gone. She had on a soft skirt that stopped above her knee. Her legs were bare. Her feet were in small flat sandals. Her gold hair was down and loose around her shoulders, not tucked back behind her ear the way it had been yesterday when she was holding a wooden stick and a strip of cloth. He saw, because there was no way not to see, that she was not wearing a bra. The silk hung soft against her small breasts and two small points pressed out clear against the fabric, one on each side, the way his own eyes kept landing on them against his will. He dragged his gaze up to her face. Her face was worse. Her mouth was a little pink. She had put something on her lips. Her blue eyes had a line of something dark at the lashes that made them look even bluer than he remembered. He had never in his life stood alone in a room with a white woman. The thought came up so plain and so loud it almost sounded like someone else had said it. He was forty-eight years old. He had flown across an ocean. He had done many things. He had not done this. He had not been four feet from a fair-skinned, gold-haired young woman in an empty room with the door locked behind her and the overhead lights turned low. “Hi,” she said. Her voice was softer than yesterday too. A morning voice. A private voice. “Right on time.” “Good morning,” he said. “Come on back.” She tilted her head toward the hallway. “It’s just us today. I blocked the morning off for you.” He made himself walk toward her. His feet felt heavy. “Blocked off,” he said. “Mm-hm.” She smiled, and the smile was a little more crooked at one side than yesterday. “I wanted to take my time. First wax is a lot. I like to give the body a real chance to recover.” The body, she said. Not your body. The body. Like it was a thing she had on loan. She turned and walked ahead of him and he followed her. The skirt moved when she moved. The back of her neck was bare where her gold hair parted and fell forward over her shoulders, and he could see two small freckles at the top of her spine that he had not been in any position to notice yesterday. Her sandals tapped small and light on the tile. He watched the floor because looking anywhere else felt dangerous. They passed the room from yesterday. She kept going. At the end of the hall was another door he had not noticed before, and she pushed it open and held it for him with her hand on the frame. “In here,” she said. He stepped in past her. She was close. Her shoulder almost brushed his arm. He caught the smell of her, vanilla and something cleaner underneath, and a new thing today, a warm sweetness like lavender heated in oil. The room was bigger than yesterday’s and dimmer. The walls were a warm cream color. The overhead light was off; two small lamps glowed in the corners, the same soft yellow as the one he had turned on in his bedroom last night. A wide padded table sat in the middle, longer than yesterday’s, lower, dressed in a clean white sheet folded back at the corner. A stack of rolled towels waited on a shelf. A small warmer with a bottle of oil in it ticked quietly on the counter. The speaker was playing something slow, a single stringed instrument and nothing else, no piano today, no melody he could follow. The whole room smelled of lavender. He breathed it in without meaning to, and his shoulders dropped half an inch. Jenny closed the door behind them. She did not lock it, but the soft click sounded louder in the quiet than it should have. “So,” she said. She walked past him, close, closer than she needed to, and he felt the soft cotton of her blouse skim the back of his arm. She turned at the table and leaned a hip against it and folded her arms under her chest in a way that lifted those two small points a little higher against the silk. “How’s the skin today? Any bad reactions?” “No, ma’am.” “Jenny.” “Jenny.” “Good.” Her eyes moved down his chest and came back up. She was not hiding it today. “You slept okay?” “A little.” “Nervous?” He looked at her. Her blue eyes were steady on his. There was something in them that was not nothing. He could not read it. He did not know women like her well enough to read them. “A little,” he said. The corner of her mouth lifted. “Don’t be. I’ll take care of you.” She said it the way Vanitha had said it in the car. I’ll take care of you. It was not the same. Nothing about it was the same. “Okay,” Jenny said, pushing off the table. She reached out, and for a moment he thought she was going to put her hand on him, and his whole body braced, but she only picked up a folded sheet from the stack and held it out to him. Her fingertips brushed his when he took it. Fair small hand, short clean nails, the lightest freckles on the back of it. His throat went dry. “So this one’s different than yesterday,” she said. “It’s a full-body massage, which means I need you fully undressed. Everything off. Face down on the table, under the sheet. I’ll dbang you so that only the part I’m working on is uncovered at a time. Okay?” “Okay.” “I’ll give you a minute. Knock on the door when you’re set and I’ll come back in.” She paused at the door, her hand on the handle. She looked back over her shoulder at him. The gold of her hair slid forward. “Take your time, Selvam.” She said his name with a softer S than Vanitha used. He felt it down the back of his neck. She stepped out. The door clicked shut. He stood in the middle of the warm dim room with the folded sheet in his hand and listened. Somewhere out in the hall her sandals tapped, once, twice, and then stopped. The stringed instrument kept its slow line. The oil warmer ticked. A car went by outside, far off. He set the sheet on the corner of the table. He pulled the gray henley over his head. He folded it. He set it on the chair. He untied the drawstring of the soft cotton pants and let them fall, stepped out of them, folded them, set them on top of the shirt. He hooked his thumbs into the waistband of his underwear and hesitated for only a second before he slid those down too. He stood there in the yellow light, smooth and bare and a little cold at the shoulders, and he felt every inch of his own skin as if it were new. He climbed onto the table. The padding was warm, just like yesterday. He unfolded the sheet and drew it up over the backs of his legs, over the curve of his buttocks, up to the middle of his back. He lay face down. He turned his face into the padded hole at the head of the table and looked at the floor through it. He could see a small square of wood grain and the edge of one of her sandals, which she had apparently left by the door. He closed his eyes. He knocked, twice, on the edge of the table.
19-04-2026, 11:29 AM
Scene 3
She came back in on a quiet knock of her own. He heard the door open and close. He did not turn his head. “You comfortable?” she said. “Yes.” “I’m going to wash up and warm the oil. One sec.” He heard water run at the small sink in the corner. He heard her dry her hands on a cloth. He heard the tick of the oil warmer open and the soft pour of something thick into her palm, and then the sound of her rubbing her hands together, slow, warming the oil between them. He kept his eyes closed. He tried to slow his breathing. He could not slow his breathing. Her footsteps came around to the head of the table. He felt the air shift as she stood over him. Then the sheet moved. She folded it down to the small of his back, exposing him from the nape of his neck to the top of the waxed skin above his buttocks, and then her hands came down. Two small fair hands, warm with oil, on his shoulders. It was the first thing he really felt that day and the only thing he would remember clearly later. The fair of her hands against the brown of his back. The warmth of the oil. The smallness of her palms, how they did not cover even half the width of one of his shoulder blades. He had been braced for something and this was not it. This was quiet. This was slow. This was a woman who had all the time in the world. She pressed down in a long slow stroke from his shoulders all the way to his lower back, both hands moving together on either side of his spine, and he heard himself breathe out, long, into the padded hole. “There you go,” she said. Her voice was low, meant for the room. “Let it out.” She worked his shoulders first. She found the knot in the left one that he had not known was there, pressed into it with both thumbs, and held the pressure until it gave under her. He made a small sound into the cushion. He was embarrassed by the sound. She did not comment. She moved on. Down his back in long, heavy strokes. Up again. Out to the sides. Into his ribs with the heels of her palms. She was strong. Her hands were small, yes, but they were trained. Every press went exactly where it needed to go. Every release came at exactly the moment the muscle was ready to let go. And yet. And yet, every few minutes, her hands slowed down in a way that had nothing to do with massage. Her fingertips trailed instead of pressed. Her palms skimmed instead of kneaded. Once, down the line of his spine, her fingers drew a slow curl that was not a technique he recognized. It felt like something she was doing because she wanted to feel his skin under them, and not for any other reason. She was thinking about him. She had been thinking about him all night, actually. She had driven home yesterday afternoon on the 880 with the radio off. She had taken a longer shower than usual. She had stood in front of the mirror again before bed, same way she had in the morning, and this time her hand had slipped lower and she had not pretended it was lotion. She had finished quick and sharp with her teeth in her lip and the picture of him on the table behind her closed eyes, the thick weight of him in her glove, the way he had twitched once under her thumb. She had never given a client anything more than a massage. Three years in the business. Hundreds of men. A rule. Her rule. She was thinking, now, with her hands on the long brown slope of his back, that she was about to break it. “Is this okay?” she said, when she moved to his lower back, where the skin was still a little tender from yesterday’s work. “Yes.” “Tell me if it’s sore.” “It is fine.” Her thumbs worked small slow circles just above the sheet, right at the line where the waxed skin began. His breath caught once. She felt it under her hands. She smiled, a little, where he could not see her smile. She folded the sheet down another few inches. Only another few. Enough to uncover the top of his glutes, the high round curve of them, and she put oil there and pressed in with the flats of her hands and he made a small sound again, lower this time. “Your body is incredible,” she said, quiet. Not quite to him. More to herself, out loud. “I want you to know that. I don’t usually say things like that to clients. But it is.” He did not have a word for what to say back to that. He stayed quiet. His fingers curled against the padding. She worked his glutes through the sheet, then with the sheet folded back, kneading the thick muscle with both hands at once. She folded the sheet down her long way then, dbanging it across the middle of him so that only one leg at a time was exposed, and she started on his right thigh from the back of the knee up. Here she slowed down further. Her hands moved up the back of his thigh in long oily strokes, from the hollow behind his knee to the crease where thigh met buttock, and each time she reached that crease she lingered a second longer than the time before. Her thumbs pressed there. Her fingers traced along the line. Then, slow, she would drag both hands back down and start over. On the fifth pass up she did not stop at the crease. Her hand kept going. The outside edge of her little finger brushed something soft and warm and heavy that was not his thigh. His whole body jumped. She did not pull her hand away. She slowed it. She let it rest for a second right where it was, not moving, her smallest finger laid along the smooth skin of his ball sack from the outside. Then she drew the hand back down his thigh in a long slow stroke, as if nothing had happened. “Sorry,” she said, and her voice had dropped half a note. “My hand slipped.” “It’s fine,” he said. He could barely get the words out. She did the left leg. On the left leg she did not even pretend. The fourth pass up her hand cupped the inside of his thigh and her palm went flat against the back of his balls for one clear second, warm and still, and then slid up over his hip and away. He pressed his forehead into the padding and breathed through his mouth. “Okay,” Jenny said, a few minutes later. Her voice was a little rougher now than it had been at the start. She cleared it. “Can you flip for me? Onto your back.” He did not move. “Selvam?” “One moment,” he said, into the padding. “Take your time.” He took it. He took a full slow breath, then another. It did not help. He was hard as stone and there was no way to lie on his back and hide it. He knew this. She knew this. The sheet was thin. The room was small. There was nowhere for his body to go. He rolled. He did it fast. He kept his eyes shut while he did it. He pulled the sheet up to the middle of his chest and settled flat on his back and lay there with his arms at his sides and waited. There was a small silence. He opened his eyes and looked at her. She was standing at the side of the table with both of her fair hands shining with oil, and her blue eyes were on the tent the sheet was making between his hips, and her lips were parted just a little, and there was pink high on both her cheeks. The silk of her blouse lifted and fell with her breath. The two small points pressed out harder against the fabric than they had before. She met his eyes. Neither of them said anything about it. She reached down and, with great care, smoothed the sheet. She folded one edge across his hips so that it dbangd down on either side of the ridge his cock made in the fabric, cradling it with cotton, leaving the tent but tidying it. The movement of her fingers was tender, almost sorry, as if she were tucking in a child. “There,” she said softly. “That’s better.” She put more oil in her palm. She started at his collarbones. Her hands spread warm across his chest, fair on brown, small on wide, and she pressed slow circles into his pectorals, watching his face. Her thumbs moved inward toward his sternum and then outward toward his shoulders, and on the third pass her thumbs swept up and over the small dark points of his nipples and held there, just for a breath, just enough pressure to make him know she had done it on purpose. His cock jumped under the sheet. She saw it. Her mouth curved. “Sensitive,” she said, as if she had discovered something. He did not answer. She stroked down his stomach then, long flat strokes with both hands, down the hard squares of his newly bared abdomen, down to the soft cotton that hid nothing. Her fingertips reached the edge of the dbangd sheet and paused, and then swept back up. Down. Up. Down. Up. Each time a little closer. Each time slower. Her blue eyes stayed on his face. Scene 4 Her fingertips found the crease where his thigh met his hip and traced along it, slow, one side and then the other. The oil made her fingers slip easy on his skin. She drew a line with her fingertip from the top of his hip bone inward, along the soft edge of the dbangd sheet, right to where the cotton gave way to the smooth waxed skin of his groin, and then back out. Then again. Then again. She looked up at his face. He was watching her. His lips were parted. His breath was coming fast and shallow. His hands lay flat on the table on either side of him, and the fingers of both were curled a little into the padding. She held his eyes. Neither of them said anything. The stringed instrument played its slow line from the small speaker on the shelf. The oil warmer ticked. Somewhere out past the front door a car door closed in the parking lot and nobody flinched. She reached, without looking, for the bottle. He heard her pour more oil into her palm. He heard the small rub of her hands together. He kept his eyes on her face. Her fair hand came back. She held it above his hips for a second, hovering, her small fingers glossy in the lamplight. Her blue eyes darted down to the tent the sheet made and back to his. She was asking. He did not say no. He could not say no. His cock throbbed with each heartbeat, aching against the thin sheet. When she held his gaze, her blue eyes darkening with intent, his mouth went dry. She lifted the edge of the sheet and folded it back with deliberate slowness, exposing him inch by inch until his erection sprang free… eight-nine inches of dark, veined flesh curving upward from the newly waxed root, the swollen purple head already glistening with pre-cum. Her breath caught. It was a small sound. He heard it. Her small fair hand closed around his shaft, fingers unable to meet her thumb around his girth. For one long moment neither of them moved. Her fingers did not meet at the thumb the way they had not met yesterday. Her palm was warm with oil. Her grip was light, almost careful, as if she had picked up something she was not sure she was allowed to hold. Selvam stopped breathing. He had seen her hand a hundred times in the last twenty-four hours, in the salon and in his head and now here. He had pictured it. He had dreamed it. None of it was the picture. The picture was this. A fair girl with gold hair bent a little over him in the low yellow light, her blouse loose at the neck, a line of collarbone showing, her small white hand wrapped around his brown cock and her blue eyes on his face. She stroked, slow. Once up, once down. Experimental. Watching him. A low sound escaped him. “Okay,” she whispered, more to herself than to him. “Okay.” She stroked him again, a little firmer this time, her thumb sliding up along the thick vein on the underside and over the wet slit at the crown. A fresh bead of clear fluid welled up and she smeared it down the head with the pad of her thumb, spreading it along the shaft like it was more oil. Selvam lifted his head off the table. He had to see it. He had spent the whole morning in the car and the whole night in his bed and the whole afternoon on the carpet in his bedroom thinking about this exact picture and now it was real, and he could feel it, but he had to see it too, or he would not believe it was happening to him. He propped himself up on his elbows, neck straining, and looked down the length of his own body. The sight hit him harder than the touch had. Her small white hand was wrapped around him. Her pink fingers, short clean nails, the faint freckles on the back of her knuckles, all of it closed around the thick brown shaft of his cock in the warm yellow lamplight. Her other hand rested flat and fair on his bare waxed thigh, the thumb of it stroking a slow back-and-forth on his hip bone. His neck was already starting to ache from the angle. She saw it. She smiled. Not the professional one. Not the crooked one from yesterday. A quieter one. A soft pleased one, the kind a woman smiled when she understood a thing about a man before he had even finished asking. “Wait,” she whispered. She did not let go of him. She kept her small hand wrapped loose around the base of his shaft, her thumb still stroking, and with her free hand she reached behind her to the shelf and pulled down one of the rolled white towels, a small firm pillow. “Here, baby,” she said, and the word slipped out before she could catch it, and she did not take it back. “Lift your head for a second.” He lifted it. She slid the folded towel under the back of his neck and eased his head back down onto it. His chin tipped forward. His eyes settled at the perfect angle to look straight down the length of his own body. Her small hand was still there. Her pink fingers were still wrapped around him. In the soft yellow light her skin against his looked even fairer than it had a second ago, almost white next to the dark brown of his shaft, and the contrast went straight into the base of his spine and stayed there. “Better?” she whispered. He nodded. He could not speak. She watched his face for another second, the small pleased smile still at the corner of her mouth, and then she looked back down at her own hand on him, as if she were seeing it the way he was seeing it. Her cheeks got a little pinker. Her tongue came out and touched her top lip once and went back in. “You wanted to see,” she said. Quiet. Almost to herself. “Okay.” She lifted her hand off him. He made a small sound of protest before he could stop it, and she laughed, soft, and shook her head. “I’m not stopping, baby. Shhh.” “You hands look so beautiful around my cock,” he said. The words came out rough, half-whispered, as if he had been saving them up behind his teeth for a full day and they had finally pushed past. “Your fingers. They look so pretty around it.” He did not know where he had found the voice to say it. He was not a man who said things like that. He had never said anything like that in forty-eight years. He had said polite words to strangers, nothing like this to someone he barely knew. Now he was lying on a padded table in a locked room, in California, with a fair girl’s small white hand loose on him, and he had opened his mouth and told her her fingers were pretty. Jenny’s head came up. She looked at him. Her face did the thing he had wanted it to do. The calm slipped. The small pleased smile. Her blue eyes went wide and her lips parted and a flush came up her neck and climbed into her cheeks, pink and bright and unmistakable. She leaned in closer. Her gold hair fell forward over her shoulder. He could smell the vanilla of her skin under the lavender. “I have been thinking about this,” she said, very quiet, right by his ear. “Since yesterday. Since I held you on the table.” As Jenny leaned forward, her blouse slipped lower, the thin silk gaping to reveal a pale, perfect curve and the soft, flushed tip of her nipple. Selvam’s eyes flicked down, caught, then up to her face…caught again. She didn’t move to fix her blouse. Instead, she let her hand slide up his cock, her breath trembling, her own arousal shimmering in her eyes. He couldn’t help it… his eyes dropped again to the pale swell visible in her gaping blouse. The soft pink tip of her nipple pressed against the silk, so close he could almost feel its heat on his skin. A hungry thought flickered through him… he had never touched a white woman’s breast. Not in all his forty-eight years. The ache of wanting…. curious, reverent, nearly overwhelming…. tightened in his chest. If he just reached out, he could brush his fingers across that perfect skin, let his palm cup the delicate weight of her, feel the contrast of her creamy flesh against his darker hand. He clenched his fist against the table instead, breath rough in his throat, and let the wanting burn through him. He closed his eyes. “I don’t do this,” she said. “I want you to know. I have never done this with a client. Not once, in three years. Not one.” Her hand kept moving. Up. Down. Slow. “I went home last night,” she said. Her voice had gone soft and a little rough. “And I could not stop thinking about you. About your body. About how you lay there on my table and let me do my job and did not say one thing, not one complaint, even when I was hurting you. About this.” Her grip tightened a fraction around him. “About how you felt in my hand.” She stroked him long and slow. Her other hand came up and her fingertips skimmed, featherlight, down the underside of his shaft from the base to where her fist was working, teasing. “I kept telling myself I was being stupid,” she whispered. “All night. Told myself to stop. Told myself I would be professional this morning. Just a massage. Aftercare. Like all my new clients.” Her thumb circled the head of him. Slow. Round. The oil made it glide. “And then you walked in,” she said. She laughed, a small breathless laugh against his cheek. “And I forgot every single thing I said to myself.” She did something new then. She brought her second hand up and wrapped it around him too, stacked above the first, and she stroked with both, a slow twisting motion, one fist rising as the other fell, the oil making her fair hands slide easy on his dark smooth skin. The sight of it almost undid him. Two small fair hands. Gold hair falling in the corner of his eye. Blue eyes flicking up to his face to check him, then down again to the work of her hands, then up. “Tell me if it’s too much,” she whispered. He could not speak. She watched his face and she learned him. She felt it when his breath caught on a particular stroke and did it again. She felt it when his thigh tightened under her hip and did it again. She slowed when his hand gripped the padding. She sped up when his jaw loosened. She was a woman who worked with her hands for a living, and she brought that same patient attention to him that she brought to every part of her work, except that none of the rest of her work had ever included the way she was looking at him now. She had never done this. Not once. Not for any of them. Not for the ones who had hinted, the ones who had joked, the ones who had left extra cash on the counter. Not for any of them. Her rule. Her business. Her whole careful thing, built room by room over three years in this strip mall. She was breaking it now for a brown-skinned man twice her age on a Wednesday morning with the blinds drawn, and she was not sorry. Selvam’s gaze strayed again, drawn helplessly to where Jenny’s blouse had slipped open, the soft swell of her breast and the pale pink of her nipple clearly visible beneath the thin silk. This time, when he looked up, Jenny’s eyes were already on him. For a suspended heartbeat, neither moved. She saw exactly where his attention was, saw the hunger on his face. But she didn’t pull the fabric closed. Didn’t adjust, didn’t look away. Instead, her lips parted just a little, and she let her blouse hang open, her nipple exposed for him… an unspoken invitation, not a reprimand. Her hand tightened around him, slow and sure. The air between them felt charged, a secret current flowing from her boldness to his silent awe. She held his eyes a beat longer, and then, very slowly, she lowered them. Not to his cock. To her own chest. She looked down at the gaping V of her blouse, at the pale soft curve that had worked its way free of the silk, at the small pink tip that was pointing at him now as if it had been pointing at him the whole time. Then her blue eyes came back up to his. She did not say anything. She did not have to. The look was a small clear thing. Her chin tipped down a fraction. Her lips parted. Her lashes lowered and lifted once. Her eyes flicked from his mouth to her own bare breast and back to his mouth again, and the corner of her lip caught on the edge of her teeth, and she waited. Come, the look said. Come here. Selvam’s heart kicked so hard against his ribs that he felt it in his throat. He had never, in his life, been invited to a thing like this. Not with a word, not with a look, not with anything. He was forty-eight years old and he was being asked, silently, by a fair-skinned girl with gold hair, to lift his head off a folded towel in a locked room in California and put his mouth on her breast. He lifted his head. He did not decide to. His body did it the way his body had stood up off the bed yesterday afternoon when Vanitha had knelt on the carpet. He did not know he was moving until he was already moving. He pushed up onto one elbow. The small pillow she had tucked under his neck slipped away. His other hand came up off the padding, shaking a little, and he did not know what to do with it. He let it hover. Jenny saw the hand hover. She saw the tremor in it. A small sound came out of her, a low sweet hum that was almost a laugh, and she caught his wrist with her oiled fingers and guided it the last few inches herself. She pressed his broad brown palm flat against the side of her breast through the silk and held it there until he understood it was allowed. His hand closed. He had pictured this, on and off, for a full day and a full night, and none of it had been right. His palm was too big. That was the first thing. She was small. Her breast fit into his hand with room left over, soft and warm and real, the nipple a firm little point against the center of his palm. The silk slid between his skin and hers. She made a small catching sound in her throat when his thumb moved, accidental, over the point, and her hand tightened around him at the same time, and they both felt the other one react and neither of them looked away. “Yes,” she whispered. “Like that. Come here.” She bent lower. She did not take her hands off him. She leaned down over the table with her hair falling forward and the open V of her blouse falling open further, and the pale soft curve came out into the lamplight and the pink tip of her nipple was right there, inches from his mouth. He had one more heartbeat of himself. One more second where he was a man who did not do this. A man who had never in his forty-eight years. Then the heartbeat passed, and he closed the last inches, and he put his mouth on her. The sound she made was soft and surprised and small. A little “oh,” barely a word. Her free hand came up and her fingers slid into the short gray hair at the back of his head and held him there, not pushing, just holding, the way a woman held a thing she had been wanting to hold. Her other hand, slick with oil, kept its slow careful stroke on his cock without pause. Her skin, against his lips, was warmer than he had thought it would be. It did not taste of anything. It tasted of clean skin and a faint trace of vanilla lotion at the edge where the silk had sat all morning. He closed his lips around the pink tip and, not knowing what he was doing, drew on it, soft, the way a child drew on a thumb. Jenny’s whole body shivered. “Oh my god,” she breathed. “Oh my god, Selvam….” He had never heard a white woman say his god before. He had certainly never heard one say it because of something he had done. The sound went through him like a hand at the base of his spine, and his hips lifted an inch off the table without his permission, pressing his cock up into her small fist. She gasped and stroked him faster for a beat, then slowed again, deliberate, making herself slow. She did not want this over. She did not want this over at all. She shifted her weight on the side of the table. She brought her hip up against his ribs and pressed in close, as close as the table would let her, so that he would not have to hold himself up on his elbow the whole time. She tucked her free hand under his shoulder and supported him there, which was a thing no one had ever done for him in any situation in his life, and he felt that quiet small kindness more than he felt the rest of her. “That’s it,” she whispered, above his head. “That’s it. Take your time. I’ve got you.” He drew on her again. A little firmer. His tongue, nervous, moved once against the sweet nipples of her, and she made that small sound again and her hand in his hair tightened. “Yes,” she said. “Yes. Like that. God.” He was not thinking. That was the thing that would strike him later, in the car, on the drive home. In this moment he was not thinking about Vanitha. He was not thinking about the thali. He was not thinking about Ashok two houses up the block or Latha humming in the laundry or the old men on the bench at the temple back home. He was not thinking at all. He was a mouth on a warm pink point and a hand on a small soft curve and a body pinned under a small fair girl who was stroking him slow and steady and whispering into the top of his head. The girl herself, for her part, was thinking plenty. Jenny was thinking, in a small bright panicked corner of her head, that she had just put a client’s mouth on her breast. Three years. Hundreds of men. Her rule. Her whole careful thing. She had not just broken it. She had burned it down and walked out through the ashes. There was no coming back from this. There was no version of next week where she pretended this had not happened. She was thinking, in another corner, that she did not care. She was thinking, in a third corner, that she had wanted to feel exactly this since the moment yesterday when her small fingers had not closed all the way around him. She had wanted his mouth on her. She had wanted her hand on him without a glove between them. She had wanted to be in a room with him where no one else could see, and she had wanted him to look at her the way he was looking at her now, which was the way a man looked at a thing he had not believed was real until he touched it. She was thinking, in a fourth corner, under all the rest, that she was going to make him come. She was going to do it with her hand. She was going to watch his face while it happened. She was going to let him keep his mouth right where it was, against her breast, through every second of it, because she wanted to feel his teeth clench and his breath stutter on her skin and she wanted to know, afterward, that she had been the one who did that to him. She shifted her second hand off his shoulder and brought it back down to stack above the first on his cock, and she started the twisting motion again, both fists working him slow and oiled and patient. “Keep going, baby,” she whispered into his hair. “Don’t stop. Don’t stop.” He didn’t stop. He moved from one side of her to the other when she shifted her weight and let the other small curve fall into the light, and he put his mouth on that one too, and she made the soft “oh” again, louder this time, and her hands faltered on him for a beat and then found their rhythm again. The stringed instrument kept its slow line on the speaker. The oil warmer ticked. Outside in the parking lot, a mother loaded a stroller into the back of an SUV. The world went on around the small warm dim room and did not know what was happening in it. Selvam did not know what was happening in it either. He only knew the warmth against his mouth, and the small fair hands on his cock, and the whispered broken words in his hair, and the slow rising tide at the base of his spine that told him, fair warning, that he was not going to last much longer. He tried to say so. He tried to pull his mouth off her. She felt it. She knew. His hips had started to move under her hands. Small. Barely. He was trying not to. She saw him trying not to. She smiled against his shoulder and moved with him. “That’s it,” she whispered. “It’s okay. I’ve got you.” Her grip tightened. Her rhythm tightened. She worked him with the confidence of a woman who had figured him out. One hand at the base, anchoring, squeezing. The other pumping up and over the head, slick, relentless, her thumb catching the ridge on every upstroke. Her breath came faster at his ear. His breath broke into a rasp. “Uh,” he said. Just that. The syllable of a man with no other language left. “Yeah,” she whispered. “Yeah. Let me. Let me.” He was going to last another ten seconds, maybe. His whole body had gone tight as a drawn bow. His stomach muscles stood out hard against the skin, every square of them flexed. His fists had made white-knuckle dents in the padding. His head had tipped back. A vein pulsed at his throat. She watched his face in the lamplight. Her blue eyes bright. “Look at you,” she whispered. He broke. The first thick white rope of him hit the middle of his own stomach, a stripe across the smooth hairless skin just below his navel. The second landed higher, on the lower square of his abs, pooling in the cut line. She did not stop stroking. She did not let up. She worked him through it, her small fair hand slick and tight, pulling each pulse out of him with a steady milking rhythm, her other hand pressed flat to his hip to hold him still. A third rope, thinner, streaked up his stomach toward his sternum. A fourth pulsed out over her knuckles and ran down the back of her small hand in a warm line. He groaned. It was a broken low sound, bitten down to almost nothing, as if he were trying even now to be quiet, even now to be good. She did not stop until he was empty. She stroked him slow through the last pulses, gentler, letting him ride it down, her thumb a soft caress now at the underside of his head. His body sank back against the padding as if a rope had been cut. She held him in her small fair hand and looked at what she had done. His smooth brown stomach was striped with him, white on brown, four hot lines cooling in the lamplight, a small pool gathered in the cut line of his abs. Her own hand was glossed in it from the knuckles back. Her cheeks were flushed. Her lips were parted. Her blue eyes were very bright. “Oh my god,” she whispered. It came out almost reverent. “Selvam.” He opened his eyes and looked at her. She smiled. Slow. A little shaken. A little proud. “That was my first,” she said. “Ever. In three years. I wanted you to know.” Scene 5 She turned, slow, and walked to the small sink in the corner. She washed her hands. He heard the water run, heard her rub the soap between her fingers longer than she needed to, heard her dry them on a cloth. She came back with a small stack of white towels warmed on the heater and a bottle of something that smelled like cucumber. She did not say anything for a little while. She unfolded the first towel and laid it flat across his stomach and pressed, gentle. She wiped him slow, one pass, then another, her small fair hand working the warm cloth across his smooth abdomen, gathering up every cooling line of him. She was careful. She was thorough. She was, he realized with his eyes closed, still touching him longer than she had to, her palm pressing flat against his stomach through the cloth even after the cloth had already done its work. She folded the used towel over and set it aside. She took a fresh one and cleaned his cock, slow, with a tenderness that made his throat close. She dabbed at the softening head. She wiped his thighs where the oil had run. She cleaned her own hands again, later, with a third towel, still not looking quite at his face. When she was done she lifted the edge of the sheet and drew it back up over him, to the middle of his chest, and smoothed it once with the flat of her hand. The silence sat there. He did not know what to say. He did not know what the right words were in English, or in Tamil, or in any language he had ever spoken. He lay on the padded table with the sheet over him and the lavender in the air and he listened to his own heart slow and wondered if he was a different man now than he had been an hour ago, and if so, which one he would have to be when he walked out through the glass door. Jenny cleared her throat. “Selvam.” He turned his head. She stood by the side of the table with her fair hands folded at her waist. Her gold hair was pushed behind one ear. The high color was still on her cheeks. Her blue eyes were steady on his. “This stays here,” she said. Quiet. Firm. “Between us. Nobody else. Not in my book. Not in my computer. Not even a word to Vanitha. I mean it.” He nodded. “I need you to say it,” she said. “Not because I don’t trust you. Just for me.” “It stays here,” he said. “Thank you.” She nodded, small, and looked down at her own hands for a second, and then back up at him. Something in her face shifted. The professional was back, almost. Not all the way. A version of it with a softer edge than the one that had stood in the lobby yesterday. “I’m going to step out,” she said. “You take your time getting dressed. No rush. When you’re ready, just come out front.” “Okay.” She hesitated. She put her small fair hand flat on his sheet-covered shoulder, just for a second, a pressure that was not a massage and not a goodbye but something in between, and then she lifted it away. “You did good,” she said. Soft. She walked out. The door clicked shut behind her. He sat up slow. He dressed fast. Faster than he had undressed. He pulled the soft cotton pants on without looking down, the drawstring clumsy in his fingers. He pulled the gray henley over his head and tugged it down straight. He stepped into his shoes. He ran a hand through his hair without looking in the mirror above the sink, because he did not want to see his own face just yet. He took one breath at the door. He put his hand on the handle. He opened it. Out in the lobby the light was brighter than he remembered. The bell over the front door was quiet. She was behind the counter now, the way she had been yesterday, in a fresh posture of business, her laptop open, a pen in her hand. The loose blouse was the same but the way she held her shoulders was different. She had put herself back together for him, so he could walk out into the day and not feel lost. “All set?” she said. Cheerful. Normal. “All set.” “Your skin’s going to love you today.” She smiled. It was her salon smile. The one she gave clients. But underneath it, at the corners, was the other smile, the private one, the one she had let him see at the side of the table. “Drink lots of water. Keep up with the aloe.” “I will.” She picked up the pen. She clicked it. “I’d like to see you back in two weeks,” she said. “For a touch-up. If that works for you.” He looked at her. Her blue eyes looked back, steady, bright, knowing. “Two weeks,” he said. She wrote it down. He walked to the door. He paused there with his hand on the frame. He looked over his shoulder. “Jenny.” “Yeah?” He did not know what to say. He said, “Thank you.” She smiled, the full one, the private one, all the way up to the corners of her blue eyes. “Anytime, Selvam.” The bell over the door chimed when he pushed it open. The California sun hit him flat in the face. The parking lot was bright. A woman was loading groceries into a minivan three spaces down. A boy on a bicycle coasted past the end of the strip mall. The world was the world, the ordinary Wednesday morning world, and he stood on the concrete and blinked at it as if he had forgotten where he kept it. He found a bench at the edge of the lot and sat down. His hands were shaking a little. He pressed them flat on his knees. He had, inside the last hour, been touched by a fair-skinned, blue-eyed, gold-haired young woman who had put her small white hand around him for the first time in her professional life and watched him come apart on her table. He had felt her breath at his ear. He had heard her say it was her first. He had seen her look at him, after, in a way no stranger had ever looked at him. He sat on the bench and he did not know, in any clear way, whether what had just happened was wonderful or terrible. It was both. It was the kind of both that would not settle into either side no matter how long he waited. Vanitha’s car turned into the lot at eleven-thirty on the dot. Vanitha pulled up at the curb. He stood, smoothed his shirt down, walked over. He opened the door and got in. The air conditioning was cold on his face. He did not look at her. He buckled his seat belt. She did not pull away. He could feel her looking at him. He kept his eyes on the dashboard. “Mama,” she said, soft. He did not answer. She reached over and put her small brown hand on his thigh, the same way she had on the drive out, and she squeezed once. He felt the gold of her wedding chain shift at her throat in the corner of his vision. He felt the heat of her palm through the cotton. “Look at me,” she said. He looked at her. Her dark eyes moved across his face, slow, reading. Whatever she was reading, she found. The corner of her mouth lifted. “Oh, mama,” she said. Almost tender. Almost sad. Not sad at all. “She did, didn’t she.” He did not answer. He did not need to. She put the car in drive and pulled away from the curb, her small brown hand still on his thigh, and she started the long quiet drive home.
19-04-2026, 12:39 PM
Chapter 57: The Missed Moment
Scene 1 Selvam was in the kitchen at 7am, alone. He had a bowl on the counter and a carton of eggs open beside it. He cracked one against the rim and half the shell went in with the yolk. He fished it out with a finger. His hands were not steady. He had noticed that already this morning, in the bathroom, when he had tried to button the cuff of his own shirt and could not make the button go through the hole on the first try. He cracked another egg. This one went in clean. The kitchen was not his kitchen. The drawers were in the wrong places. The whisk was in a cup on the counter instead of a drawer, which was a thing he did not understand but which seemed to be the way things were done here. He reached for it. He thought about Jenny. He did not mean to. The thought came the way a fly came into a room, without permission, and it sat down on the edge of the bowl and would not leave. Her small fair hand. The way she had said it was her first. The sheet folded back from his hips. He closed his eyes for a second and shook his head once, hard, and opened them again and looked at the eggs. Bare feet on the tile behind him. He knew it was her before she spoke. He knew the weight of her step now. That was a thing he had learned in the last week and did not know what to do with. “Mama.” “Good morning, Ma.” Vanitha came around the island in a short silk robe the color of wet stone, tied loose at the waist. Her hair was down. She had not brushed it yet. There was a soft mark on her cheek from the pillow. She did not look at him at first. She went to the coffee machine and opened the lid and measured beans into the grinder the way she did every morning. The grinder went. It was loud in the small space. He cracked another egg. He watched his own hand do it and not hers. She pressed the button for the water. She got two mugs down from the cabinet above the machine. To reach them she had to come up close to him, because the cabinet was on the wall behind the counter where he was standing, and there was no other angle for her arm to go. She rose up on her toes. The loose sleeve of the robe fell back from her elbow. Her hip brushed his hip, the silk on the cotton, and he went still all the way through. “Sorry, mama,” she said, soft. She did not sound sorry. “It is fine.” She came down with the mugs in her hand. She did not step away right away. She stood there at his shoulder for one more beat, close enough that he could smell the sleep on her skin, the small trace of night cream still at her jaw. Then she stepped to the side and set the mugs on the counter and went back to the machine. He cracked another egg. He missed the bowl. The yolk ran down the side onto the granite. “Careful, mama.” “Yes.” He wiped it with a paper towel. She watched him wipe it. He could feel her watching. He kept his eyes on the granite. “You slept?” she said. “A little.” “Mm.” She poured coffee. She did not ask him if he wanted any. She poured a second mug and set it by his elbow without looking at him, and she went back to her side of the island and leaned on it with both hands around her cup and blew across the top. “Thank you,” he said to the mug. “Mm.” Upstairs a door opened. Feet on the stairs. Ashok came down two at a time, the way he always came down, in gym shorts and a t-shirt, hair wet. He was already laughing at something on his phone. “Morning, morning.” He came into the kitchen and kissed the top of Vanitha’s head without breaking his stride and went to the fridge and opened it and stood there. “What are we making.” “Eggs,” Selvam said. “Appa is making eggs.” Ashok closed the fridge with his elbow. He had a carton of orange juice in one hand. He set it on the counter and looked at Selvam and he grinned. The grin took over his whole face. “So.” “So.” “How was it.” “It was fine.” “Fine.” Ashok leaned his hip against the island. He crossed his arms. He was enjoying himself. “That massage loosen you up, Appa? You’re moving like a new man in here.” Selvam cracked another egg into the bowl. He did not look up. “I am moving like I always move.” “No, no.” Ashok was shaking his head. “You came in last night, you walked different. I saw. Vanitha, didn’t he walk different.” “He walked different,” Vanitha said, over her coffee. “See.” “I did not walk different.” “He did not walk different,” Ashok said to the ceiling. He laughed. “Forty-eight years old. Walking around California getting massages. Coming home like a Bollywood hero. I am the one with the desk job, Appa. I am the one who needs the massage.” “You need the gym,” Vanitha said. “I need the gym,” Ashok agreed. Small feet came down the hall. Latha came in with her hair in a loose braid and her eyes still soft with sleep. She was in the long blue kurta again, barefoot. She yawned into the back of her hand and stopped at the edge of the kitchen and looked at the three of them. “What is happening,” she said. “Appa went to the salon again.” “Again?” “Massage. Aftercare. Two hours. The skin is a delicate thing, apparently.” “Oh.” Latha came forward. She leaned her elbows on the island across from Selvam and smiled at him, the sly small smile she used when she wanted to make him turn red. “Uncle. Did they firm up your six packs also?” The egg in Selvam’s hand slipped. He caught it against the side of the bowl. A small crack opened in the shell. He set it down carefully. “Latha.” “I am asking a serious question, Uncle.” She widened her eyes. “I read in a magazine that massage can firm the abs. If this is true, Anna needs to go also.” “Anna is going,” Ashok said. “Anna has an appointment next week. Anna is going to come out looking like his father.” “Anna will still be softer than Uncle.” “Latha.” She laughed. She reached across the island and pinched a piece of pepper off the cutting board and popped it in her mouth. Vanitha had not said anything through any of it. Selvam could feel her eyes on the side of his face. He cracked the last egg. He picked up the whisk. He began to beat the eggs, and he beat them longer than they needed, because it gave him a reason not to look up. When he finally did look up, across the island, past Ashok’s shoulder, past Latha’s grinning face, Vanitha was still watching him over the rim of her cup, and she was not smiling. She was just watching. Her eyes asked one clear question. He looked back down at the bowl. Scene 2 Breakfast ended the way breakfast always ended in this house. Ashok looked at his watch and swore and stood up and kissed the top of Vanitha’s head again. Latha gathered plates. Ashok gathered his laptop bag and his keys and said something about a call at nine and went out to the living room to find his shoes. “I will wash,” Selvam said. He stood up with his own plate. “I will help,” Latha said. “No, ma. You sit. You ate nothing.” “I ate, Uncle.” “Two bites is not eating.” Vanitha stood up. She had her coffee still in her hand. She set it down on the island. “Latha, go see if Ashok needs his travel mug. He always forgets it.” “Yes, Akka.” Latha slid off the stool and padded out after Ashok. Her voice reached them from the living room a second later, asking him about the mug. Ashok’s voice came back, muffled, telling her yes, please. Vanitha was at the sink before Selvam was. She turned the tap on. She turned it on hot. She ran the water and she did not pick up a plate. She stood with her hip against the counter and her body angled toward his, and the counter was on one side of him and she was on the other, and the stove was behind him. There was no way through. “Mama.” He kept his eyes on the plate in his hand. He put it under the water. The water was too hot. He did not move his hand. “Yes, Ma.” “Mama, look at me.” “The water is running.” “The water can run. Look at me.” He looked at her. Up close she was very awake now. Her dark eyes were steady on his. The mark on her cheek from the pillow had gone. “Why didn’t you fuck me, mama.” The plate slipped an inch in his hand. The water ran over his wrist and up his sleeve. A dark patch bloomed on the gray cotton at his cuff. “Vanitha.” “Yesterday.” Her voice was low. It did not carry. It did not need to. She was six inches from his face. “When they were gone. When I was on my knees in your room. Why didn’t you.” “.. this is not...” “Answer me, mama.” He set the plate down in the sink. He did not look at her. He turned the water down so it did not splash. “Ashok was coming back.” “Ashok was not coming back. Ashok was two hours away.” “He could have been back any time, ma. The appointment. They could finish early. Traffic...” “Traffic.” She made a small sound, not quite a laugh. “Mama. Traffic.” “It is a reason.” “It is not a reason. It is a thing you said because you could not say the other thing.” He turned his head away. He looked at the wall above the sink. There was a small framed print there of some flower he did not know the name of. He looked at it. She did not step back. She stepped closer. She put her hand on the edge of the counter beside his hip. Her fingers were almost touching him. Not quite. “I took you in my mouth, mama.” “Vanitha.” “I took every drop. On my face. In my throat. I showed you after. You saw.” “I saw.” “I did that for you.” “I know, ma.” “And then you did not even...” She stopped. She let out a small breath. She shook her head. “Mama. I am not angry. I am asking. I want to understand.” He did not know how to answer her. He did not have the answer himself. He had lain awake half the night with her question already in his head, before she had even asked it, because he had been asking it himself. He had had her in his hands yesterday. He had had her kneeling between his knees. He could have lifted her up onto the bed. He could have done anything. He had not. Something had stopped him. He did not have a name for the thing yet. “Vanitha,” he said. He kept his voice low. “Not here.” “Then when.” “I don’t know.” “Mama.” She did lean in now. Her forehead almost touched his shoulder. Almost. She did not quite put it there. “Look. I want you to hear me. I am on the pill. I have been on the pill since we, you know... you do not have to worry about that part.” His throat went dry. “That is not...” “That is not the reason. I know. I am telling you anyway. So you do not have it as one more thing to hide behind.” “Vanitha.” “I am taking it away, mama. That one. Next time you think of a reason, it cannot be that one.” He closed his eyes. The water ran. His sleeve was wet at the wrist, cold now. “Vanitha.” “Shh.” In the living room Ashok’s voice went up a notch, calling to someone, maybe to Latha, maybe to both of them. A door opened. The soft sound of his running shoes on the wood floor. He was coming back for something. A charger. His Apple Watch. Something he had forgotten. Vanitha stepped back, neat and fast, one clean half-step to the side. She picked up a dish towel from the hook. She began to dry a glass that was already dry. She did not look at Selvam. She did not need to. Ashok came around the corner into the kitchen. “Apple Watch. I keep leaving it.” “It is on the island, da,” Vanitha said, without looking up from the glass. “Where you left it last night.” “Where I left it last night. Yes.” Ashok crossed the kitchen. He picked up the charger. He stopped at the sink. He put his hand on Selvam’s shoulder and gave it a small squeeze. “Appa, you okay? You got quiet.” “I am fine.” “You sure? You were quiet at breakfast also.” “He is tired, da,” Vanitha said. “The massage. It knocks you out the first time.” “Okay, okay.” Ashok squeezed his shoulder again. “Take it easy today, Appa. Sit by the pool. I’ll be back after my run.” “Okay.” “Bye, baby,” Ashok said to Vanitha, and he caught her chin in his hand as he passed and kissed her on the mouth, quick, the way he kissed her every morning on his way out, and she kissed him back, quick, the way she kissed him back every morning, and he was gone. The door to the garage closed. The engine started out in the driveway. The sound of it faded down the street. Vanitha stood at the counter with the dry glass in her hand and the towel in the other. “I meant what I said, mama.” “I know, ma.” “Good.” She set the glass down. She hung the towel back on the hook. She walked out of the kitchen without looking at him. Selvam stood at the sink with the water still running and his sleeve still wet and the question she had not let him answer still sitting in the middle of his chest where she had put it. He turned the water off. Scene 3 The afternoon spread itself out across the backyard. The pool was flat and blue. The patio had the long shadows of the umbrella across one half of it and the other half was full sun. A bee worked the low edge of the lavender by the fence. Ashok had come back from his run at the kitchen table around two, stretched, and said, out, everyone, out. Sun. Vitamin D. Family time. He had herded them through the back door one by one. Now they were out. Ashok and Vanitha were on the long cushioned outdoor sofa under the umbrella, side by side. He had a beer. She had a glass of something with mint in it. Her legs were tucked up under her, her feet bare, and she was leaning against his side. His arm was along the back of the sofa behind her shoulders. His hand hung down and his fingers touched the bare skin of her upper arm, not moving, just resting there. Selvam was in the chair opposite them. He had a magazine on his knee. It was about cars. Ashok had brought it out and set it on his lap and said, here, Appa, read, relax. Selvam had opened it to the middle and he had not turned the page in ten minutes. Latha was on a yoga mat on the grass a little way from the patio. She was doing nothing serious, just stretching one leg out and then the other, lazy, the way a cat did on a sunny floor. She had a book open in the grass in front of her. She turned a page every so often. Mostly she lay on her stomach with her chin on her hands and looked at the pool. “Da,” Vanitha said, quiet. “Remember that place in Pondy. With the rooftop. With the blue walls.” “The blue walls.” Ashok thought for a second. “The one where you almost...” “Yes.” “Where you almost fell off the...” “Don’t tell it.” “I am telling it.” “Don’t.” “Appa, listen.” Ashok was already laughing. “Your daughter-in-law. On honeymoon. A glass of wine. Two glasses. She decides she wants to take a picture from the ledge...” “Ashok.” “There is a wall, okay, a low wall, and behind the wall there is a drop of about three stories...” “I am going to pour this on your head.” “She leans over. I am turning around just in time. I grab her by the...” “Ashok.” “By the end of the saree. I catch the whole saree.” Vanitha was laughing now too, despite herself. She pushed at his chest with the flat of her hand. “I was not going to fall.” “She was going to fall.” “I was not.” “She was going to fall, Appa. I am telling you. I saved her life. She owes me her life.” “I owe you nothing.” “You owe me everything.” He bent his head and kissed her forehead. Not a quick kiss. A slow one, with his hand coming up to the side of her face and his thumb brushing her cheekbone. He whispered something into her hair. Selvam could not hear it. Whatever it was made Vanitha smile. A real smile. The small one she had, not the camera one, the one at the corner of her mouth she kept for private things. She turned her face into his shoulder and laughed, soft, once. Selvam looked down at the magazine. He looked at a picture of a red car. He did not know what kind of car it was. He looked at the caption under the picture and the letters moved in and out of making sense. He read the same line three times. Across from him, on the sofa, his son was stroking the back of his wife’s arm with one finger, absent, not even thinking about it, the way a man did a thing he had done ten thousand times. She shifted against him. She took his other hand, the one hanging off his knee, and she laced her fingers through his, and she looked down at their two hands together, fair on brown, her smaller fingers between his longer ones, and she did not let go. Selvam’s chest did a thing. It was not a dramatic thing. It was a small quiet thing. It was the kind of thing a chest did when a man understood something he had been working around for a day and a half and had not let himself look at head on. He looked at his son. Ashok was thirty-one. He had been a small wet thing in Selvam’s hands once, in a hospital in Chennai, wrapped in a white cloth, his mother already gone from the world eight hours by then. Selvam had carried him home alone in a taxi. He had not known how to hold him at first. He had learned. He had learned everything. The boy on the sofa was that small wet thing grown up. The boy on the sofa had an arm around his wife and his fingers in her fingers and his mouth at her hair and he was whispering something to her that was between him and her and had nothing to do with anyone else in the world. He loved her. Selvam had known this. He had known this in the way you knew a fact. He had not known it the way he knew it now, in the chest, from four feet away, in the full sun. The boy on the sofa loved his wife. And Selvam had had the wife, yesterday, on the carpet of his own bedroom, on her knees. He fucked that wife so many times, back in his Chennai home. He turned the page of the magazine. He did not know what page he turned to. He kept his eyes down. He saw it again. He could not help seeing it again. He had been seeing it on and off for twenty-four hours. The pale blue robe off her shoulders. The gold thali between her breasts. Her face. What he had done on her face. The way she had swallowed it and opened her mouth afterward to show him it was gone. He had stopped there. She had asked him, later, last night in the hallway, with her eyes, to come to the guest room. He had not come. This morning she had asked him at the sink why he had not come yesterday afternoon, why he had not laid her back on the bed, why he had not done the one last thing. He had not had an answer then. He had one now. It was sitting four feet from him with its arm around her shoulders and its thumb at her cheekbone, laughing at its own old joke about a rooftop in Pondicherry. His throat got tight. He swallowed. “Uncle.” Latha had rolled over onto her back on the yoga mat. She had one arm over her eyes. “Uncle, you are very quiet.” “I am reading, ma.” “You have been on the same page for one hour.” “I read slow.” She laughed into her elbow. She did not push it. She rolled back onto her stomach and picked up her book. On the sofa Ashok was telling Vanitha something else now, quieter, their heads close, and she was nodding. Her free hand came up and touched the thali at her throat, absent, fingers closing around the pendant once and letting it go. Selvam had seen her do it a thousand times. She did it without thinking. It was a small habit, a thing a married woman did, the way a man touched his wedding ring. Selvam closed the magazine. He set it on the small table beside his chair. He put his hands on his knees. The California sun was all the way on his legs now, warm through the cotton, and he should have been warm. He was not warm. There was a cold place in the middle of his chest that the sun was not reaching. He had not been able to do it yesterday. He understood now. He had been telling himself it was about Ashok coming back, about traffic, about time. It had not been about any of that. It had been about the boy he had carried home in a taxi thirty-one years ago. He was not sure this understanding was going to help him. He looked at the pool. The surface moved a little in a breeze he could not feel on his skin. The bee had moved from the lavender to the jasmine by the fence. Somewhere over the hedges a dog barked twice and went quiet. Ashok laughed again at something Vanitha had said, low, into her hair, and his arm tightened around her shoulders. Selvam closed his eyes behind his sunglasses and he kept them closed for a long time.
19-04-2026, 02:01 PM
Damm that's a really big update... Really really appreciate the hard work of the writer.... Really really awasome... Keep it up... Awasome update
19-04-2026, 08:43 PM
20-04-2026, 03:15 AM
(This post was last modified: 20-04-2026, 03:17 AM by adams_masala. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
Chapter 58: Threads and Codes
Scene 1 The next morning everyone was at the table by eight. Ashok had his tablet propped against the sugar bowl. He had made toast. He had not eaten the toast. He was reading something on the screen and shaking his head and smiling at it. “Appa. Listen to this.” “I am listening.” Vanitha set a plate of idlis in the middle of the table and sat down across from her husband. She was in a plain cotton kurta. Her hair was pulled up. She reached for the chutney. Latha came in from the hall with her own small plate. She sat beside Selvam, the way she usually did at breakfast, because the chair on that side was closer to the door and she liked being near the door in case she needed to step out. Ashok tapped the screen with his fork, which was a thing he did when he was excited. “They just released a new model. AI is advancing so fast, so hard to keep up! And these things, they are called LLMs. Large language models. You can talk to them. You ask them a question, they answer. You ask them to write a poem, they write a poem. You ask them to code, they code.” “To code.” “To write programs. For the computer.” “A machine that writes programs for the machine.” “Yes.” “Who is doing the work then.” “The machine.” “Then what are you doing.” Ashok opened his mouth. He closed it. Vanitha laughed. Latha laughed harder. “I am supervising,” Ashok said, with dignity. “You are supervising.” “Yes.” Vanitha reached across for the pickle jar. “Mama, don’t let him off the hook.” “I am not letting him off the hook. I am just asking.” “Appa, the point is, the world is changing. Everything is changing. So hard to keep up.” “I am sitting at a table in California eating idli, da. I am keeping up.” Vanitha leaned forward on her elbows. The kurta pulled a little at her collarbone, revealing her cleavage. She had not worn a bra to sleep. Selvam tried hard to keep his eyes on his plate. Conversation transitioned to Vanitha’s ambitions.. “You know something I have been thinking about, da,” she said. Her voice was thoughtful now. She had put the teasing down. “For the boutique.” “The boutique.” “Yes. The Chennai one. The one I want to open in the second space by October.” “Right.” “The problem I am having. It is not the designs. I have the designs. I have sketches for forty pieces already. The problem is the measurements.” “The measurements,” Selvam said. Vanitha turned to him. She did it without thinking about it. She did it because he was listening and Ashok was already looking back at his tablet. “Mama, the choli is the hardest piece. You know this. Every woman is different. The breast, the shoulder, the back, the sleeve. Even the neckline. If I want to sell custom design, I have to take thirty measurements per customer. Thirty. And then the tailor cuts. And then the first fitting. And then the second fitting. And then by the time it is done the customer has lost interest and the margin is gone.” “Hm.” “In Chennai the aunties will come for three fittings. In America the girls will not. They want it in the box in a week.” “Yes.” Vanitha’s hands were moving. She was drawing shapes in the air, the curve of a bust line, the line of a sleeve. She was not looking at Ashok. She was looking at her father-in-law. “So I am stuck. I cannot scale. Every piece needs a human being with a measuring tape. And if I try to do standard sizes I lose what makes it mine.” Selvam set down his spoon. “Why can’t you use this AI for that.” Vanitha’s hands stopped in the air. “Mama.” “For the measurements,” Selvam said. He was not sure what he was saying. He was saying it anyway. “And the sizing. If the machine can look at a photo and make a lookbook in thirty seconds, can it not look at a photo of a person and take the measurements.” Ashok laughed. He did not laugh unkindly. He laughed the way he laughed at everything his father said about technology, warm and a little loud. “Appa. AI cannot dbang a saree. AI cannot take grandma’s measurements.” “Why not.” “Because grandma is sitting in her blouse and her blouse is loose and the light in her kitchen is bad.” “Dei, I am not targeting grandmas, they are not my customers” she pointed at him with fake anger. “Okay, okay” Ashok turned to Selvam “And Appa, even if, even if, you need someone to build the thing. You cannot just wave your hand. Someone has to write the code. Someone has to train the model. Someone has to host it. These days they call it vibe coding, okay, it is a new thing, you type in plain English what you want and the LLM gives you the code, but even then you need to know what you are asking for, you need to know the stack, the API, the deployment, the...” “The what.” “The stack.” “What is a stack.” “Okay, Appa, it is like. The stack is like. Okay. Think of it as...” Ashok waved his fork. He searched for a word. He did not find the right one. He went back to the technical words anyway. Front-end, back-end, API, model, endpoint, database. Selvam listened. The crease between his eyebrows got deeper with each word. Vanitha was not listening to her husband. She had turned in her chair. She had put her hand on Selvam’s forearm, a flat warm small hand on the cotton of his sleeve, and she had left it there. “Mama,” she said. “That is actually not a bad idea.” Selvam looked at her hand on his arm. He looked at her face. Her dark eyes were steady on his, serious now, the teasing from yesterday gone. She was not playing this morning. She was listening. “I hadn’t thought of that approach,” she said. “Tell me more. How would it work.” “I don’t know how it would work, ma. I was only asking.” “You were not only asking. You were thinking. Keep thinking. What would it do.” He looked at her hand again. He looked at Ashok, who was still going, oblivious, explaining something about GitHub now. He looked back at Vanitha. “It would take a photo,” he said, slow. “And it would give you the numbers. The thirty numbers you said.” “Yes.” “And then the tailor cuts from the numbers.” “Yes.” “And the customer stays at home.” “Yes.” “Then one fitting. Not three.” “One.” “Or zero,” Latha said, from the other side of him. They both turned. She was leaning on her elbow with her chin in her hand, and she was grinning, the small sly grin. “Uncle. If I can just use an app to take measurements and send it to my tailor, I would buy a hundred blouses a year. Right now I buy maybe five. Because the three fittings. And the traffic in T. Nagar. And the tailor is always drunk after four.” “Latha.” “It is true, Akka. Mohan Uncle is drunk after four. Everyone knows.” Vanitha laughed, but her hand did not leave Selvam’s arm. Her thumb moved once, small, over the cotton. “A hundred a year,” she said, quiet. “Did you hear her, mama. That is one customer. Multiply that by ten thousand.” Selvam did not answer. He was looking at her hand on his arm, and he was thinking about the patio yesterday, and he was thinking about his son still explaining the word stack to the sugar bowl, and he was thinking that the thing he had decided on the patio yesterday, the quiet thing, the thing he had not given a name to, was not going to be as simple to keep as he had thought. He moved his arm, gentle, and reached for his cup. Her hand slid off without a fight. “Eat your breakfast, ma,” he said. “The idli is getting cold.” “Yes, mama.” She went back to her plate. But she was watching him now, out of the corner of her eye, the way she had watched him across the island the morning before, and she was smiling a small private smile that had nothing to do with breakfast. Scene 2 Mid-afternoon, Selvam was in the living room. Vanitha came down wearing a saree. She had not worn a saree since they had got back to California. She had been in t-shirts and lounge pants all week. Selvam knew this because he had noticed it, and he had noticed himself noticing it, and he had not said anything about the noticing to himself. The saree was a soft cream with a thin gold border. She had dbangd it low. Lower than low. The pallu was thrown loose over her shoulder and the blouse was one he had not seen before, a pale green one with small hooks up the front. The hooks did not meet the fabric in two places. Small gaps. Her hair was in a loose braid over one shoulder. No bra. She came into the living room with an armful of fabric samples and a measuring tape around her neck. “Mama. I am going to do some research.” “Research.” “For your app.” She dropped the fabric on the coffee table. “You asked me last night how it would work. I need to show you the problem. The real problem. With a real saree. On a real body.” Ashok looked up from the sofa. He had his laptop open on his knees. He was on a call with the headphones in and he had pulled one side of the headphones off his ear to listen to her. “You are doing what now.” “Research, da.” “Okay.” He put the headphone back. He went back to his call. Latha was on the floor with a puzzle she had found in a drawer. She looked up, interested for a second, and then looked back down at her pieces. Vanitha turned to Selvam. “Sit, mama. Over there. I need the light from the window on me.” “No ma, I don’t need to...” “Sit.” He sat in the armchair he had sat in yesterday. The one by the window. The sun was coming in at the same angle. She stood four feet from him on the rug and she shook out a length of silk and held it up against herself and turned to catch the light. “See this dbang,” she said. “This is the standard dbang. This is what goes on a mannequin. Now watch.” She lifted her arms above her head, slow, and stretched. The saree shifted. The low dbang slipped another inch off her hip, then another, exposing the full curve where her waist dipped inward. Her navel… a perfect dark hollow… emerged into the sunlight, the delicate gold chain circling her bare midriff glinting as it rode low across her hipbones. The chain swung hypnotically with each breath she took. She held the stretch, arching her back slightly, her stomach tightening. She held it longer than a stretch needed to be held. “The fabric moves, mama. See. Every time the customer moves. The blouse stays. The pallu moves. The hip dbang slips.” “Yes, ma.” “This is why the measurements cannot be static. The app would need to understand this.” “Yes, ma.” She bent down. There were pins on the coffee table, the small metal ones with colored heads, and she had apparently scattered some on purpose because they went everywhere when she reached for them. She got on one knee on the rug. She bent forward to gather them up. The pallu fell from her shoulder. The blouse opened at the top where the hooks did not meet. He saw. He could not, not see. The soft round swell of one breast and the edge of the fair skin at the tip of it, just for a second, before she straightened up and tucked the pallu back into place with the same small careless hand she used for everything. “Pins everywhere,” she said. She did not look at him. She was smiling to herself. “Always pins.” “Be careful, ma.” She set the pins on the table. She picked up another length of fabric. She went on. Selvam sat in the armchair and watched her work and did not watch her work. His mouth had gone dry. He reached for the glass of water on the side table and drank half of it. Latha, on the floor, put two puzzle pieces together and did not look up. He could see the small dark hollow of her navel from where he sat. He could see the gold waist chain. He looked at the floor. “Mama. Now see this.” She stretched to show the side view of her choli. “This is my new design and if the measurements aren’t perfect, this is what happens…” She showed a how the choli fabric moved up… He noticed, the wasn't wearing her bra under the thin green blouse. He had already known. He was trying not to know it again. “See how it rides up,” she said. She lifted her arms a second time, higher, and the choli crept up her ribs, and the pale green fabric pulled tight across her chest so that the shape of her was clear through it, every line of her, the small points of her nipples pressing out against the cotton because the room was cool from the air conditioning. “If the band measurement is off by half an inch, mama, this happens. The whole piece fails. The customer will not wear it twice.” “The hook at the back. The top one. It also digs into my skin.” He kept his eyes on the floor. “Vani...” “I am telling you, mama. You are the one who wants to solve the problem. Look at the problem.” He glanced up, just enough, and he saw the small red line at the top of her back where the fabric had been pressing for hours. A faint mark, real, not invented. She had not put that there. The blouse was doing it. “Undo it for me, mama. The top one. Just the top one. I’ll do the other hooks.” He looked at Ashok. Ashok was pacing in the kitchen, one hand in his hair, talking about a quarterly number. Latha had her earbuds in and her back half-turned. The dining room was open to both of them but neither of them was looking. “Vanitha.” “One hook, mama. It hurts.” She turned her back to him. She swept the braid over her shoulder to the front, out of the way. The back of the blouse was a so low, he can see the expanse of her bare back, smooth and warm-looking and already holding the sun from the window. The top hook at her lower back, just below the line of her hair. He could see the small red mark where the metal had pressed. He raised his hands. They were not steady. He put his left hand on her shoulder, light, to anchor. Her skin was warm. She made a small sound, not a word, a soft breath going out. He got his right hand on the hook. The hook was small. His fingers were not small. He had to work at it. The back of his knuckle brushed her bare back. She did not move. The knuckle brushed again. The small hairs there stood up under his touch. The hook came free. “Thank you, mama.” “Yes, ma.” He took his hand off her shoulder. He made himself take it off. His palm kept the memory of the heat of her skin for a long second after. She did not turn around right away. She sat there with her back to him, the blouse loose now at the back, the strip of green fabric slipping half an inch lower down her lower back. She reached her own hand back, slow, and rubbed at the small red mark, and her fingertips brushed the backs of his where he had not quite moved his hand all the way away. “See, mama,” she said. “Imagine if the app knew this. The blouse from last summer does not fit this summer. The machine should see. It should tell me. It should adjust.” “Yes, ma.” “You are a smart man, mama.” She turned then. She turned with her hand at her lower back still, her elbow lifted, which opened the front of the blouse at the top where the hooks still did not meet, and she looked at him through her lashes and she smiled the crooked small smile. “Thank you for the hook.” “Yes, ma.” Scene 3 He shut the door to the guest room. He locked it. He had not locked that door before. He locked it now because he did not want anyone walking in, not Ashok, not Latha, and not, especially not, her. He sat at the small desk by the window. He opened the laptop Ashok had given him for browsing. He stared at the screen. He typed, slow, with two fingers, into the search bar. He typed “What is vibe coding.” A list of links came up. Most of them were articles from websites he had never heard of. He clicked the first one. He read for ten minutes. The writer used the word democratize eleven times. Selvam did not know what was being democratized. He closed the tab. He tried again. Vibe coding for beginners. This was better. There was a video at the top. A young man in a t-shirt sitting in a chair with too many plants behind him. Selvam clicked. He turned the volume up. The young man talked fast. Selvam got a pad of paper out of the desk drawer and a pen and he started to write things down. Prompt. Model. Token. Deploy. Host. API. Front-end. Back-end. He wrote them in a list, each word on its own line, and next to each word he wrote a small Tamil translation for the ones he could figure out and a question mark for the ones he could not. The video ended. He clicked another one. The second one was about building an app in one hour without writing any code. The title said “Build a real app in 60 minutes, no coding needed.” Selvam looked at the clock. He had an hour. He had more than an hour. He had the rest of the afternoon. He pressed play. The young woman in this one was calmer. She opened a browser. She went to a website. She typed into a box, in plain English, what she wanted the app to do. The website gave her code. She copied the code into another website. She clicked a button. Ninety seconds later she had a real web page on her phone. Selvam watched it twice. He got up. He went to the dresser and got a glass of water from the jug there. He drank it. He sat back down. He opened the website the young woman had used. He made an account. He typed in plain English what he wanted. I want an app where a woman can take a photo of herself in a simple blouse. The app should give her thirty measurements for a tailor to stitch a new blouse. The measurements should include bust, shoulder, armhole, sleeve length, neck depth, back width, waist, and others. He stared at what he had written. He added a line. It should work in Tamil and English. He pressed the button. The machine thought for a long time. Then it gave him a page of code. He did not understand the code. He did not try to understand it. He copied the code into the other website the young woman had used. He clicked the button she had clicked. An error came up. A red bar across the top. The red bar said a word he did not know. He went back to the first website. He typed, I got this error, and he pasted the error. The machine apologized. The machine gave him new code. He copied it. He pasted it. Another error. He worked for an hour on the errors. He got up twice. He made coffee. He came back. Latha knocked once, softly, on the door, and asked if he wanted tea, and he said no, ma, I am busy, in a voice that came out harder than he meant, and she went away. He was sorry about the voice. He would apologize later. The fourth time he pasted code it worked. A small window opened in his browser. It had a white background and a button in the middle that said UPLOAD PHOTO in blue letters. Above the button, in smaller letters, the machine had written the title he had asked for. CHOLI MEASUREMENT. Below the button there was a mannequin figure drawn in thin black lines. Very basic. A stick figure, really, with a bust and a waist. He looked at it for a minute. He had made a thing. A real thing. On a real web page. He could click the button. He clicked it. It asked for a photo. He did not have a photo of a woman in a blouse on this laptop. He thought about it. He opened Vanitha’s Instagram, which he followed under a quiet account he had made under his own name and almost never used, and he scrolled until he found a photo of her from two months ago in a plain blouse, arms at her sides, a studio shot she had posted for one of her campaigns. He saved the photo to the desktop. He uploaded it. The machine thought. Thirty seconds later it showed him a number next to each part of the stick figure. The numbers were wrong. He could see that. He knows Vanitha’s body. They were way off. The breast number was the number for a much larger woman. The waist was off by four inches. But there were numbers. In the right places. Labeled in English. Bust, shoulder, armhole, sleeve length, neck depth, back width, waist, and more below that. He sat back. He looked at the screen for a long time. The numbers were wrong. But the shape was there. The bones. The thing a person could build. But he didn’t understand, why the numbers are wrong. He did not know how to take a screenshot. He searched for how to take a screenshot on a Mac. He learned. He took one. He opened his messages. He found Vanitha’s name in the list. He had not sent her a message in a long time. Most days they were in the same house. He wrote, slow, with his two fingers. For your boutique. If you can take accurate measurements without spending a lot of time you can focus on the design and sales faster. This is not finished. The numbers are wrong. But the shape is there. I used a photo of you from your Instagram. I hope that is okay. He sent the message. He closed the laptop. He sat back in the chair. His shoulders were stiff. The light outside the window was going orange. He had missed dinner. Scene 4 Selvam lies in his darkened guest bedroom, streetlight slicing across his feet as memories return in shards … the cream saree slipping over Vanitha’s skin, the gold chain at her hip, the red hook mark at her nape … igniting a quiet stir in his body. Under the sheet his cock twitches with unbidden arousal even as he invokes years of iron discipline, admits “You want her”.. wanting and having her are not the same. He turns toward the window, thinking of his son’s trusting smile, and lies still in the hush, unsure if and how long he can control his urges to fuck his daughter-in-law again. Meanwhile in Ashok’s bedroom two doors down, Vanitha was in the big bed with her phone in her hand. Ashok lay beside her on his stomach. He had taken his shirt off. He had a book open on his phone and he was reading it in the dark with the screen turned all the way down. He had his earbuds in. He was not listening to anything. He just liked them in. He read. She was under the sheet in a thin tank and shorts. Her hair was loose. She scrolled. She had opened her messages. She had opened his message. She had opened it four times now since dinner. She read it again. For your boutique. If you can take accurate measurements without spending a lot of time you can focus on the design and sales faster. This is not finished. The numbers are wrong. But the shape is there. I used a photo of you from your Instagram. I hope that is okay. She read the last line a second time. I hope that is okay. She smiled at the phone. She did not mean to. It just happened. She tapped the screenshot. It opened full screen. The stick figure. The thin black lines. The labels. Bust. Shoulder. Armhole. Sleeve length. Neck depth. Back width. Waist. A number next to each. She zoomed in on the bust number. It was for a bigger woman. She zoomed in on the waist number. It was off by four inches. Her smile softened. He had sat in the guest room all afternoon and done this. He had sat in there with that pad of paper she had seen on the desk when she walked past the open door earlier. He had written things down in his careful handwriting. He had typed with two fingers. He had missed dinner. For her boutique. She nudged Ashok with her knee. “hey Ashok.” “Mm.” “look here, da .” “I am reading, baby.” “Look for one second.” He pulled one earbud out. He did not lift his head. He turned it so he could see her phone sideways. “See,” she said. She held it in front of his face. “He already vibe coded the app. But the measurements are wrong.” Ashok looked. He squinted. He made a small amused sound. “It just needs training data,” he said. He put the earbud back in. He went back to his book. That was the whole of it. Vanitha lay there with her phone angled toward the ceiling and her husband’s words sitting in the room. Training data. She had heard the phrase at breakfast in passing. She had not caught on what it meant. Now she caught on. The machine did not know what a real woman’s real body looked like in a real blouse. The machine had looked at her studio photo and guessed wrong. The machine needed real photos. With real measurements. Of a real body. Enough of them that it could learn. She turned her head on the pillow. Ashok’s bare shoulder rose and fell slow, already half asleep over his book. A body. With real measurements. Someone to be the first one. Someone to stand, without blouse and hold still. Someone to hand him the tape. Someone to say, here, mama, measure me. The smile came back, slow, and it was not the smile she had smiled at the message. It was the other one. The small crooked one at the corner of her mouth. She locked her phone. She set it on the nightstand, screen down. She closed her eyes. She was not going to sleep for a while.
20-04-2026, 05:29 AM
(This post was last modified: 20-04-2026, 10:56 AM by adams_masala. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
Chapter 59: Training Data
Scene 1 of 4 Morning comes pale through the curtains. The bird in the lemon tree is back. Vanitha stands under the shower for longer than she needs to. She has not slept much. She has been thinking about training data. She gets out. She dries her hair with a towel. She stands in front of her closet in a bra and a petticoat and she looks at her blouses. She picks the light yellow one. Sleeveless. Front hooks. Six of them, small and flat, down the middle. She skips the bra. She puts the blouse on over her skin. She hooks it up slow, one hook at a time, and she looks at herself in the mirror while she does it. She dbangs the saree. A soft white one with a thin yellow border. She dbangs it low. Lower than yesterday. She pins the pallu loose at the shoulder so it will fall with one pull. She picks up her phone. She opens his message again. She reads it again. She smiles at the floor. She walks down the hall. Ashok is in the shower. She can hear the water. Latha is downstairs, she can hear a spoon against a bowl. The door to the guest room is closed. She knocks once. “Mama.” “Come in, ma.” She comes in. Selvam is at the desk by the window. He is in a clean white t-shirt and the soft cotton pants. He has the laptop open. The pad of paper is beside it, covered in his careful handwriting, small Tamil letters and English words mixed on the lines. He looks up at her and his eyes move, once, down the yellow blouse and the low dbang and back up to her face. He catches himself doing it. He looks at the screen. “Good morning, ma.” “Good morning, mama.” She comes over. She stands at his shoulder. She puts one hand flat on the desk beside his. She does not sit. “Show me,” she said. “The app. Again. In the daylight.” “The numbers are wrong, ma.” “I know the numbers are wrong. Show me.” He clicks the bookmark he has made. The white page comes up. The stick figure. The blue upload button. He opens a folder on the desktop. There are four photos in it. He has been practicing. Two of them are from her Instagram. One is a photo of a mannequin from a website. “Mm.” He uploads the mannequin first. The machine thinks. A number shows up beside each label. Bust forty-two. Waist thirty-six. “The mannequin is a size four,” Vanitha says. “That is a size sixteen number.” “I know.” He uploads the Instagram photo. Another set of numbers. Different. Still wrong. “Mama,” she says. “See. The machine guesses. It does not know what it is looking at.” “It has no reference.” “Exactly.” She leans down closer to the screen. Her braid slips forward over her shoulder. The pallu shifts an inch. She does not fix it. “Ashok said something last night. He said it just needs training data.” “Training data.” “Real measurements. From real bodies. With real photos. Enough of them that the machine learns.” “Yes.” “Not from Instagram, mama. From a tape.” He is quiet. He looks at the screen. He does not look at her. “Okay,” he says. “So,” she says. She straightens up. She steps back, one step, into the middle of the small rug by the desk. She puts her hands on her hips. The yellow blouse lifts with her ribs. “You need a body.” “What are you saying, Ma?” “You need a body, mama. It is a research problem. You said so yourself at breakfast yesterday. You said the machine needs to see the real thing.” “I did not say that.” “You said something like that.” She smiles. “Close enough.” She reaches up and slides the pin out of the pallu at her shoulder. The silk comes loose. She catches it with one hand and, with the other, she unwraps it in a slow turn away from her body, two turns, three, until the whole length of it is in her hand and her front is bare of it. The yellow blouse sits on her by itself now, the six small hooks down the middle, the bare curve of her shoulders, the bare strip of her midriff above the low petticoat, the soft hollow of her navel. She dbangs the pallu over the back of the chair beside him. “There,” she said. “One body.” “Vanitha.” “The measuring tape, mama. You had one. I saw it on the desk yesterday.” “I was not going to.” “You were not going to, but now you are.” He does not answer. He reaches into the drawer. He pulls out the soft yellow tape. His hand is not steady. He can see it in front of him. He tries to make it steady. It will not. He stands. He walks the two steps to her. He is close enough to smell the lotion on her skin, a clean vanilla, and under it something warmer. “Breast first,” she says. “That is the hard one. Under the arms. Around the fullest part. Keep the tape flat. Two fingers under the tape.” “ok, ma.” “You know how. You’ve seen me before.” He lifts the tape. He brings it around her, under her arms. His forearms come around her back. For one second his face is very close to her hair. He keeps his breath held. He brings the two ends together in front of her, at the middle of her breast, where the hooks are, and he pulls it snug. The numbers blur. He cannot read them. His hands are shaking. “Mama.” “Yes.” “You cannot read the number.” “I can read it.” “You cannot.” He looks at the tape. He looks at the little red marks. They are moving. No. His hands are moving. Vanitha lifts her own hand. She puts it over his, at the front where the tape ends meet, and she holds his hand still against the center of her chest, through the thin yellow cotton, and he can feel the soft heat of her breast against the side of his thumb. He measures and he takes a picture of her and uploads to the app. The results, “still.. wrong” she says under her breath… “Mama,” she continues. “There is only one way.” She starts with the top hook. She unhooks it herself. She does not take her hand off his. She works the other hand up to the hook at her chest and she flicks it open with her thumb and it gives. The fabric opens half an inch. He can see the start of her cleavage. The second hook. “The app is not measuring the breast, mama,” she says. Her voice is very soft. She is looking at his face. “It is measuring the choli. If the choli is not on the body, the machine has nothing to measure.” “Vanitha.” “The choli has to come off.” Third hook. Fourth. The yellow blouse opens. She does not pull it apart. She lets it fall open on its own, loose now over her bare breasts, held together only by the last two hooks at her high waist. The tape falls out of his hand. He does not pick it up. He lifts his hand, both hands, slow, and he cradles her breast in his palm, fair warm weight against the brown of his hand, the nipple a small firm point against the center of his palm. His other hand comes up to her jaw. He bends his head. He kisses her. He kisses her full and slow and he says it into her mouth. “You win, ma.” She makes a small sound against his lips. Her hand comes up to the back of his neck. A door opens down the hall. Footsteps. Ashok’s stride, the heavy easy one, coming out of his bedroom, into the hallway. They break apart. Her hand is fast. She catches the blouse, hooks the top one, the next, the next. Three hooks in four seconds. She steps back. She reaches for the pallu on the chair. Selvam bends, picks up the tape, sets it on the desk, sits down in the chair with the laptop in front of him like he has been sitting there all morning. Vanitha wraps the pallu around herself in two quick turns. She pins it. Ashok’s voice, from the hall. “Baby. Have you seen my blue tie.” “In the closet, da,” she calls back. Her voice is perfectly even. “Second hook from the left.” “Thanks.” His footsteps go the other way. Vanitha looks at Selvam. She does not smile. Her chest is rising and falling fast under the yellow cotton. Her eyes are very bright. She walks out.
20-04-2026, 06:59 AM
Interesting. Selvam is already ladies expert and is going to turn AI expert soon
20-04-2026, 08:29 AM
20-04-2026, 10:55 AM
Scene 2 of 4
Ten minutes later they are all at the kitchen island. Vanitha has put the kettle on. Latha has set out four small plates. Ashok comes down in a shirt and a blue tie, which is a thing he does not often do in this house. "Oho," Latha says. She looks up from the plates. "Anna. The tie." "The tie." “Where are you going in the tie, Anna.” “Office.” Ashok says. He sits on the stool. He reaches for the coffee Vanitha is pouring. “In person. Today. The whole day.” “You do not go to office.” “Today I go to office.” “Why.” “All of my direct staff is coming together for a leadership workshop.” “Oho.” Vanitha slides a plate toward him. Toast. Two boiled eggs. A small bowl of fruit. She does not look at Selvam. Selvam is on the stool on the far side. He has not spoken since he sat down. He is cutting a piece of banana into four small pieces on his plate and eating them one at a time. “Is it far, Anna,” Latha says. “Forty minutes.” “And you come back when.” “Evening. Six, seven.” Latha picks up her own plate and sets it down again. She is already bouncing a little on the stool. She has the look she gets when she is about to ask for something and she knows she is going to get it. “Anna.” “No.” “I did not say anything.” “You did not have to. No.” “Anna.” “What.” “Take me.” “Latha.” “Anna, please. I have been here like 6 months. I have seen this house and the grocery store and the park with the dog. I have not seen your office. I want to see your office.” “It is an office, Latha. But I must agree, we have a pretty nice campus.” “See, I want to see the campus.” she did the air quote thing when she said the word campus. “It is boring.” “I will not be bored. I am easy to please, Anna. You know this. A small coffee. A view of the campus. I am set.” Ashok looks at Vanitha. Vanitha shrugs. She is smiling a small smile at her coffee. “Baby..” she said. “Take her. Otherwise she will sulk all day and I will have to hear about it.” “I do not sulk, Akka.” “You sulk.” “A small sulk. Not a big sulk.” Ashok laughs. He sets down his coffee. “Okay,” he says. “Okay. Go and change. Something neat. Not a kurta. You cannot walk into my office in a kurta, they will think I have brought my cousin from the village.” “I am your cousin from the village, Anna.” “Latha. Go.” She is off the stool before he finishes the word. She is down the hall, feet light on the wood. A door opens. A door closes. Drawers opening. Ashok shakes his head. He drinks his coffee. “That girl.” “That girl,” Vanitha says. “She has not sat still since she got here.” “She is a curious one.” Selvam eats his banana. He does not look up. They finish the coffee. Ashok goes upstairs for his laptop bag. Vanitha washes her hands at the sink. She does not turn around. Selvam sits at the island with his back to her. Latha comes out of the hall in a pale blue top and dark pants, her hair in a neat bun. She has put on small earrings. She has put on lipstick. She stops at the edge of the kitchen and she turns a slow half-circle for Vanitha to see. “Akka.” “Go, kannamma. You look nice.” “Do I look professional.” “You look professional.” “Not like cousin from the village.” “Not even a little.” Latha grins. She picks up her small bag. Ashok comes down with the laptop bag on his shoulder and the car keys in his hand. He stops by Vanitha at the sink. He kisses the top of her head, then the side of her neck, quick, the way he does. “Bye baby.” “Bye da. Drive carefully.” “I always drive carefully.” “You do not always drive carefully.” “I drive carefully ninety percent of the time.” “Drive carefully one hundred percent today. Latha is in the car.” “Okay.” He kisses her neck again. He turns. He squeezes Selvam’s shoulder as he passes. “Appa, I’ll see you tonight. There is that match on later if you want to watch.” “Okay, da.” “Bye, Uncle,” Latha says. She waves at him from the door. “I will bring you a coffee from the fancy machine.” “Okay, ma.” The door to the garage opens. It closes. The engine starts. The garage door rumbles up. The engine backs out. The garage door rumbles down. The engine fades down the street. Vanitha turns the water off. She stands at the sink with her hands wet. She listens. A bird outside. The hum of the fridge. Nothing else. She dries her hands on the towel. She folds the towel and puts it back on the hook. She turns and she leans her hip against the counter and she looks at Selvam’s back at the island. He is still at the stool. He has not moved. “Mama.” “Tell me, Ma.” “They are gone.” “I heard.”
20-04-2026, 10:57 AM
Scene 3 of 4
“Mama.” “Tell me, Ma.” “They are gone.” “I heard.” She pushes off the counter. She walks around the island. She does not touch him. She walks past him and down the hall and up the stairs. Her steps are unhurried. He hears them pass his door and go on to her room. A drawer opens. A drawer closes. He sits at the island for a minute. He puts his plate in the sink and rinses it. He sets it on the rack and turns around to look at her. She is standing in front of him with her arms folded, the yellow blouse is back in place, three hooks closed, the white saree low on her hips. “Mama,” she says. He stops at the edge of the rug. He keeps a little distance. He needs the distance to say what he is going to say. “Vanitha.” “Mm.” “Go upstairs.” She tilts her head. “Why.” “Get dressed. Properly.” “I am dressed, mama.” “No, ma. You are half dressed. You have been half dressed all morning. I have been looking at you half dressed since eight o’clock.” “And you almost ate them,” she says, and her eyes drop to her own breasts, slow, and come back up. “Where were we, mama.” “Vanitha.” “And, Is that a complaint.” “It is a request.” She smiles. The small crooked ones she uncrosses her arms walking toward him, slow, along the back of the sofa, trailing one finger on the cushion as she goes. “A request for what.” “For you to put everything on, ma. Everything. Your Panties. Your Bra. Your Petticoat. Your Blouse. Your Saree. Proper pins. Proper pleats. The whole thing.” “Mama.” She is smiling at him, but with question on her face… “Because I want to take it off, ma. Myself. Every piece. One by one. I do not want to find you already half open. I want to unwrap you.” Her smile goes still for a second. Then it comes back wider. “Go, ma.” “I am going.” “Everything.” “Everything.” “Pins, ma. Proper pins.” “Yes, mama.” “The petticoat also, don’t forget your bra.” “Yes, mama.” “And the...” “Mama. I know how to dress. I have been dressing myself since I was four.” “Go.” She goes. She goes slow on purpose. She walks past him close enough that the edge of her pallu brushes his hand. She does not look at him. She goes up the stairs with her hip swinging a little more than it needs to swing. At the top she turns and she looks down over the banister at him. “Mama.” “Yes.” “What is my reward, if I do it properly.” “I want to have you proper, ma.” The words come out of him before he knows he is going to say them. “Proper.” “Yes.” “What does proper mean, mama.” “It means on the.. slow.. and proper…” Her hand tightens on the banister. Her mouth opens and closes once. Then the crooked smile is back, a little shakier than before. “Yes, mama.” She goes.
20-04-2026, 11:01 AM
Scene 4 of 4
Upstairs, in her bedroom she shares with Ashok, Vanitha closes the door behind her. She leans against it. She puts her hand flat on her own stomach and feels it going up and down fast. The butterflies, she laughs, once, quiet, at the ceiling. Proper. He has said proper. Slow, unhurried. She has waited weeks for that word. Selvam stands in the living room. His heart is going as he walks to the kitchen and drinks a glass of water. He stands at the sink and he looks at his own hand on the glass and it’s steady now, as if it has a purpose, unhurried purpose. Upstairs he hears her moving. A drawer. Another drawer. The rustle of silk. The small metallic click of hooks. In Ashok’s bedroom, upstairs, Vanitha goes to the closet. She pulls out the drawer at the bottom and she looks at her panties. She picks a cream cotton, laced at the edge in a thin pale trim, the kind she has not worn since Chennai. She steps into them slow, one foot then the other, and she draws them up along her calves, up her thighs, and settles them high on her hips. The fabric sits low in the front, riding just under the soft hollow of her navel. In the mirror on the closet door she turns a quarter. The back cups her ass in two small halves, the thin cotton stretching across the round fullness of her, a faint line where her skin meets the elastic. She lifts onto her toes. The muscle underneath tightens. She lowers back down. Good. She opens the top drawer. She pulls out the black lace bra, the matching one. She does not always wear it. She is wearing it today. She slides the straps up her arms, she hooks it at the back with her hands behind her, a small practiced move, the way a woman does a thing she has done ten thousand times. She settles her breasts into the cups with the flats of her palms, lifting each one in, the way her mother taught her when she was fifteen, so that the full round weight of them sits high and close together. The lace is thin. The shape of her nipples shows through, two small raised points against the cream, dark under the fabric, already firm from the cool of the room and from the thought of Selvam waiting downstairs, hungry to eat them. She looks at herself in the mirror. The bra pushes her breasts up into a soft valley. A little cleavage rises above the line of the lace. She runs one finger along the top edge of the cup, slow, and feels her own breath catch. She thinks about him unhooking it. She thinks about his brown thumb sliding under the strap on her shoulder and pushing it off. She has to close her eyes for a second. The butterflies again. She opens her eyes. She goes to the other drawer. The petticoats. She chooses the soft red one that matches the saree, the drawstring kind, long to her ankles. She steps into it. She pulls it up. She ties the drawstring at her waist, and then, because she knows what he likes, she ties it low. Lower than low. She ties it below the curve of her hip bones, so that it sits at the top of her ass at the back and under the soft pouch of her belly at the front, and the line of the drawstring bow disappears under the dip of her navel. She smooths the front of the petticoat down over her hips. The cotton settles against her panties, against her thighs. In the mirror she can see the outline of the lace underneath, faint, just a hint of a waistband riding up above the petticoat tie. She adjusts it. She tucks the lace waistband down, out of sight. There. Clean line. Nothing for him to see until he unties the drawstring himself. She reaches into the jewelry box on the dresser. She takes out the gold waist chain, the thin one. She has not worn it since Chennai either. She opens the clasp and brings it around her waist, low, under the dip of her navel, over the drawstring of the petticoat, and she closes it at the side. The chain falls into place at the front, over the soft hollow of her belly button, just above the line of the petticoat. It crosses the navel perfectly in the middle. She picks up the light baby red blouse from the bed. Different from the one she had on this morning. But the front hooks, it’s the same, the hooks are easier for him, he loves the front hooks. She slides her arms into the sleeveless holes. She brings the two halves across her chest. She starts with the bottom hook, the one at her high waist, and she works her way up. One. Two. Three. Four. She looks at her hands in the mirror while she does it. Each hook closes with a small click. The blouse settles against her bra, against her breasts. It is cut low in the front, so low at the collarbone that the lace of the bra peeks out over the top in a small cream scallop. She tugs it up a half inch. It still peeks. She leaves it. He can push it aside himself when he gets there. The hooks run down the middle. Six of them now, instead of three. She checks each one. She pulls at the fabric on either side to test. The blouse holds. The front closes clean over her breasts, the cream lace flattened under the palered cotton, the two small points of her nipples still visible through the layers as soft raised ridges in the fabric. She turns sideways to the mirror. Her breasts push out against the blouse, full, high, the lace lifting them, the cotton cupping them. The bottom edge of the blouse sits at the bottom of her rib cage, leaving a long strip of bare midriff between the hem of the blouse and the low tie of the petticoat. The navel. The gold chain. The soft curve of her belly. The small mole just under her navel, the one Selvam kisses every time. She runs a finger along that strip of skin. She watches herself do it in the mirror. The chain is cool. The skin is warm. She can feel her own pulse in her belly. She turns to the back. Over her shoulder, she checks the line of her ass in the petticoat. The cotton falls straight from the low tie at the back, down the full round curve of her, and the way she has tied it low means the top of the cleft just barely shows as a soft shadow through the white. When she walks, the petticoat will move. When she runs, it will flare. She is going to run. She has decided this already, upstairs, alone, while she was tying the drawstring. He said unwrap. He said slow. She will give him slow. First she will make him chase. He made her wait so long, and now she wants him to chase her. She reaches for the saree. The soft red one with the thin gold border. She has already pressed it. She lays one end against her petticoat at the front, tucks it into the drawstring, and begins to turn. She turns slow. The first wrap goes around her waist once, the fabric snug against her hip, the gold chain pressing a thin line through the cotton down into her skin. She tucks. Five neat pleats, folded small between her fingers, each one the same width as the last. She holds the pleats in one hand and pats them flat with the other. She tucks the bundle into the drawstring at the front, a little left of center, the way her mother taught her. The pleats fall clean to the floor, a small white fan hiding the tops of her bare feet. She turns again. The remaining length goes around her back, up under her left arm, across her chest. She brings the pallu up and over her left shoulder. She does not throw it loose today. She pleats the pallu. Small neat folds, the same width as the pleats at her waist, each one folded between her fingers and smoothed flat against her palm. She looks in the mirror. The pleated pallu in the front sits high on her chest, the neat folds fanning out from her shoulder in a small crisp stack and coming down across her left breast in a clean diagonal line. The folds stop just at the top of her rib cage. Below them, the blouse. Below the blouse, the strip of bare skin. Below that, the gold chain riding over the soft curve of her belly, and under the chain, in the very middle, the small dark hollow of her navel, peeking out above the tucked pleats of the saree at her waist. She tilts her head. The pleated pallu makes a narrow frame at the top. The waistline of the petticoat makes another at the bottom. She places the jasmine on her hair. Selvam downstairs cannot wait any longer. He goes up the stairs. Her door is closed. He knocks. Three times. Not hard. “Yes?” Her voice is bright through the door. “Are you done.” “Almost.” “Vanitha.” “Mama, these things take time.” “Open the door.” “One minute.” He waits. He counts to thirty. He knocks again. The door opens. She looks at him from under her lashes. “Mama,” she says. Serious face. “Is this proper.” |
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