Adultery Radiance of Vanitha, Daughter-in-Law and Instagram Influencer
(16-07-2026, 07:11 AM)Nesamanikumar Wrote: Please continue the honeymoon and accept selvam child

sure bro
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Chapter 129: Hartmann's Obsession

Scene 1

The Alpina suite was quiet except for the muffled hum of radiant heating, the air slick and mineral from a night of half-open balcony doors. The king bed was wrecked ... a tumble of white linen, pillows scattered, the imprint of Selvam’s head a hollow in the center. Vanitha rolled over and let her arm fall into the crater, still warm, then swept the duvet aside and sat up. She liked the look of herself in the suite’s glass-walled bathroom mirror: hair tangled, shoulders bare, yesterday’s bite-marks ghosting her collarbone in a constellation of blue and yellow. She stretched, vertebrae popping, and padded naked to the balcony for a hit of the mountain air.

It didn’t matter that it was July; the cold landed on her nipples, shock-tightening them instantly. The view was impossible: the valley floor already awake with cowbells, the slopes pinstriped with wildflower meadows, the nearest ridgeline catching sun while the lower village still sat in blue shadow. She braced both hands on the wooden rail and stood there until her feet numbed to the cold. When she ducked back inside, the stone tiles seared her soles and made her laugh.

There was a note on the pillow, Selvam’s handwriting tiny and dense: Gym. Downstairs. Back before you’re dressed.

She pictured him in the hotel’s gym: alone, efficient, gray at the temples, face unreadable in the wall of mirrors. She knew the routine by heart. She didn’t rush her own.

Vanitha hit the shower and let the temperature climb as high as she could stand, scouring her skin pink. She used the hotel’s body wash, the scent sharp ... pine, bergamot, a whisper of something medicinal that reminded her of home, oddly enough. She scrubbed the ghost of sex from her thighs but left the bruises alone.

She towelled off and stood at the open wardrobe, surveying the options. It was too cold for cotton, too formal for denim. She pulled a sage-green saree from the hanger, its silk so thin it felt almost liquid, and set out the matching choli and petticoat. She worked fast, pleats crisp and even, the dbang hitting higher than usual at the waist to fight the morning chill. Her gold waist chain went on last, clasped tight above the curve of her hip. When she caught her reflection, she liked the way the color made her skin pop, the chain a bright line over her abs. She left her hair unbraided, swept it behind her ears, and skipped makeup altogether.

Downstairs, the lobby was empty except for a woman in a black wool dress arranging fresh orchids behind the front desk. The floral arrangement was overkill ... a species she didn’t recognize, stalks longer than her arm, petals shot through with purple veins. Vanitha didn’t slow; she walked through the airlock doors and onto the Gstaad promenade with her head up, the sun barely over the mountains, the chill so clean it scbangd the inside of her nose.

The village was frozen in the way of all real money: every detail perfect but underplayed, like nothing here had ever been allowed to chip or peel. Shutters and flower boxes, old stone facades, bakery windows steamed from the inside. She passed three locals in as many minutes. The first ... a man in a fleece and an old-fashioned cap ... looked straight at her, clocked the saree, and gave a polite up-nod, nothing more. The second was a couple, older, walking a pair of off-leash terriers; the woman glanced, then smiled, like she’d seen Vanitha every morning of her life. The third was a delivery boy, late teens, who nearly biked into a planter box trying to stare and steer at once. She pretended not to notice.

The bakery was exactly what she wanted: glass case jammed with pastries, bread still hot from the oven, the scent a hammer-blow of yeast and sugar. Vanitha pointed at a baguette in the basket and asked for “a coffee, please,” in the careful accent she knew worked everywhere but France. The woman behind the counter was round and cheerful, eyes going wide at the saree but not saying a word. When she slid the baguette into a paper sleeve, the steam fogged the bag instantly.

Vanitha paid in cash, thanked her, and stepped outside. The sun was on the stone now, painting the far side of the street in pure gold. She sipped the coffee, black and acid-bright, and started up the promenade, drifting without real aim.

A boutique caught her eye ... the window crowded with wool shawls, every one embroidered with a riot of thread: gold, crimson, peacock blue. She drifted closer, free hand running down the hot paper bag, and let herself admire the craftsmanship. Each shawl was different: one with a border of tiny horses, one with a geometric tessellation, one with a pattern of mountain flowers she couldn’t name. The prices were visible, and she didn’t bother pretending to care.

She let herself look ... not for Instagram, not for anyone, just to see. She pressed her palm to the glass, felt the sun-warmth against her skin, and watched her own reflection double against the display: saree perfect, chain at her waist a line of burnished light.

She felt the moment stretch, unhurried. She was alone, anonymous, entirely at home in her body. She switched the bread bag to her other hand and leaned in, chin tipped up, letting the winter-bright light find every facet of the jewelry at her throat. She thought of the women she used to watch in the pages of Vogue, the way their posture said fuck you, I’m supposed to be here. She didn’t have to perform it. She lived it.

Vanitha finished her coffee and set the cup on the ledge outside the boutique. The bread was still hot through the bag. She tucked it under her arm and continued up the street, nothing in front of her except the sound of her own footsteps, the scent of yeast and mountain air, the perfect indifference of a world that finally, finally matched her own.

Scene 2

She walked past the end of the promenade, following the scent of the bakery until it faded into the resinous bite of pine. The gravel path behind the hotel was slick with last night’s rain, a line of pale stone winding between the tree trunks. Vanitha carried the bread in one hand, her phone zipped into the hidden pocket of the saree’s petticoat, the coffee cup long since abandoned. She was alone ... really alone ... for the first time in months, and she savored it, letting her footsteps slow to a crawl. She stopped at the edge of a clearing and looked up: the peaks above were lit now, sharp as teeth against the blue, the tips still dusted with old snow.

She didn’t hear the footsteps until they were almost behind her. Not Selvam. The stride was wrong, the rhythm all wrong.

She turned, slow, and saw Klaus Hartmann standing ten paces down the path.

His look was not the slick, smirking CEO from Zurich. No tie. No suit jacket. Just a navy turtleneck, black jeans, and a face scrubbed of all boardroom charm. He didn’t stop at a polite distance. He didn’t smile.

Vanitha’s first reaction wasn’t fear, but annoyance. She braced the bread against her hip and met his eyes.

He had a cut above his eyebrow, red and scabbed, and his shoes were caked with mud. He scanned her in one pass, not hiding it ... the hair, the chain, the way her long brown stomach tightened when she saw him.

“Ms. Sivakumar,” he said. No accent now, just a flat American R in the middle.

She didn’t slow. “You’re supposed to be in Zurich.”

He smiled, or tried to. It barely bent his lip. “My meetings wrapped early. I thought I’d take in the air.” He stepped off the path, closer to her than she liked. “You look… radiant.”

Vanitha shifted the bread to her left hand, kept her right free. “Thank you, Mr. Hartmann. Is there something you need?”

He looked up at the peaks, then back at her. “I watched your video last night. The one in Zurich, with the blue saree and the chain.” His hand made a loose gesture at her waist, then dropped. “It was very… striking.”

She kept her face neutral. “Brand exposure matters. Even in Switzerland.”

“No, I mean it.” Hartmann’s gaze flicked to the gold chain, lingered just a tick too long. “You wore it on purpose, didn’t you? To see if we’d notice.”

She shrugged, not giving him the satisfaction.

Hartmann took another step. The bakery bag crinkled against her hip.

“I’ve been thinking about you,” he said. “Since the dinner. Since you arrived.” He let the words hang, as if they were a gift.

She rolled her eyes. “I’m married, Mr. Hartmann. And I’m meeting my—” Vanitha stalled, then let the sentence die. Selvam. It would only provoke him.

He smiled, this time a little real. “Haven’t seen Chandran all morning. Maybe he’s still in bed.” Hartmann’s eyes dropped to her navel, then back to her face. “I’m not here to start a fight.”

She doubted that, but let it sit.

He looked away, toward the clearing. “Did you ever notice how empty it gets here before ten? Like the whole village is waiting for something.” The wind picked up, cold and sharp. “Reminds me of home, in the winter. You can scream and not even an echo.”

She took a step to the side, angling for the path back to the hotel. “If you don’t mind, I’d like to enjoy the view.”

He blocked her, not touching but close. “I want you to hear me,” he said. “You walk into a room like you own it, and it makes men crazy. I haven’t stopped thinking about you since Zurich. What it would be like if you were… available.”

She stared him down. “You mean, if I were a whore.”

A flash of anger, quick and then gone. “Don’t be crude,” he said. “We’re both adults.”

“I’m not interested,” she said. “You should leave.”

He didn’t move. “I saw how you looked at me in Zurich. The way you smiled. The way you wore that saree for the room—”

She cut him off with a snort. “It wasn’t for you.”

He leaned in. Too close. “Maybe not. But I’m here now, and you’re here. No one else, just us.”

She tasted metal in her mouth. “You’re drunk.”

Hartmann shook his head, sharp. “Not yet.”

She tried to sidestep again, but he moved to block. His hand reached out ... not for her arm, not for her wrist, but for the pallu of her saree, right where it crossed her chest. He pinched the fabric between two fingers.

Vanitha’s stomach flipped. She wanted to slap him, but every muscle in her arm was tight and slow. “Don’t,” she said.

Hartmann’s grip tightened. “You know what’s crazy?” He kept his voice low, almost soft. “I came here to tell you I’d been thinking about you. To ask if you wanted to get coffee. But now I see it ... you want this. You want to be noticed.”

He yanked the pallu hard.

The silk slid off her shoulder in one unstoppable pull, a bright green arc across the air. It unspooled down her side, baring her right shoulder and the edge of her breast, the choli underneath suddenly too thin. The chain at her waist flashed in the sun.

She let go of the bread and hit him across the face with an open palm. The crack echoed in the trees.

He didn’t stagger. He didn’t even drop the saree. He just laughed, low and strange. “There we go. That’s the real you.”

She stepped back, fury boiling up hot, and tried to pull the saree from his hand. But he yanked again, and this time the whole pleated length tore loose from her waist, unraveling the perfect work she’d done that morning. It dropped to the muddy path, a pool of sage green at her ankles, leaving her in just the choli and the petticoat. Her abs flexed, the brown skin bare except for the gold chain and the thali pendant swinging at the hollow of her throat.

Hartmann’s eyes went wide. “Fuck, you’re beautiful.”

She grabbed for the fabric, but he caught her wrist. His grip was cold, dry, harder than she expected.

“Stop,” she said. “Let me go. I’ll scream.”

He leaned in, breath sour and close. “Go ahead. No one will hear. Not for another hour.”
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Please check the post. Same content posted multiple times
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Will selvam break the fingers of the bastard for touching his wife
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(16-07-2026, 07:11 AM)Nesamanikumar Wrote: Please continue the honeymoon and accept selvam child

If Vanitha says she is pregnant having selvam mother thaali in her neck, Ashok will start calling her mommy shamelessly or hang himself unable to bear the betrayal. Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin
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(18-07-2026, 12:07 PM)Rajani Rajendran Wrote: If Vanitha says she is pregnant having selvam mother thaali in her neck, Ashok will start calling her mommy shamelessly or hang himself unable to bear the betrayal. Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin

48 year old man satisfies her completely. She opens her legs anytime to him and allow him to fill her. Ashok is a pottai and he deserves nothing less than death. horseride
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Welcome back

Vanita is a courageous lady, she will not give up easily.
She never let even her husband finish inside her.
She must kick the balls of that asshole and make sure he doesn't have erection at all.
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Will Vanitha open her thighs for this old man
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Interesting twist in new place with a man hungry for her body. Keep going and keep rocking
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Awesome
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(18-07-2026, 06:14 AM)AjitKumar Wrote: Please check the post. Same content posted multiple times

What content bro, can you help point out?
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(Yesterday, 08:44 AM)adams_masala Wrote: What content bro, can you help point out?

I found it. The same content posted after Vanitha saw the bouquet and again when she fighting with heart. Please read the last update again you will know.
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Hartmann leaned in, breath sour and close. “Go ahead. No one will hear. Not for another hour.”

There was a blur of motion behind him... then a sound, the kind that a human body shouldn’t make. A deep, hollow thud.

Hartmann’s grip slackened. His head snapped back and Vanitha saw Selvam, face like granite, standing two feet behind him. Selvam’s fist was still cocked, ready. Hartmann staggered forward, one hand flying to his mouth, the other still clutching Vanitha’s wrist.

She tried to jerk free, but Hartmann’s hand wouldn’t let go. He spun on Selvam, blood already running from his nose.

“You’re insane,” he hissed, but the words came out wet, smeared by the blood.

Selvam stepped closer, eyes flat and empty. He reached out and took Hartmann by the collar, dragging him upright with no visible effort. He hit him again... a straight punch to the face, the kind boxers use to finish a fight. This time there was a crunch, and Hartmann crumpled to his knees on the gravel, both hands at his mouth, spitting teeth and blood onto the pale stones.

Selvam stood over him. He didn’t say a word.

Hartmann looked up, rage and humiliation burning in his eyes. For a second, Vanitha thought he’d lunge, but Selvam moved first. He reached down, grabbed Hartmann by the scruff of the neck, and hauled him up so their faces were inches apart.

“If you ever come near her again,” Selvam said, his voice low enough that only the three of them could hear, “the next conversation will not be physical. It will be legal, financial, and public. I have the resources to make all three happen at once.”

He let go. Hartmann crumpled to the ground, one arm propped against a root. He wiped his face, blood smearing across his lips and chin, then scrambled to his feet and staggered down the path, a trail of red spatters behind him. He didn’t look back.

The silence after was surgical... cut clean, nothing left but the crunch of gravel as Selvam stepped to Vanitha.

She stood, frozen. The cold cut through her now, the exposed skin gone to gooseflesh. The ripped saree pooled at her ankles, the bread smashed and ruined.

Selvam bent to pick up the silk, careful not to let it touch the blood. He shook it out, brushing off the bits of gravel, then turned to her.

She expected him to wrap it around her, to fix what had been taken. He did, but it wasn’t a performance. His hands were gentle, threading the end around her waist, dbanging the pallu back over her shoulder. He didn’t look her in the eye until he was done.

She realized she was shaking. Not from fear. From adrenaline, from the naked fact of what had just happened.

Selvam put his hands on her shoulders, steady but not gripping. He waited.

Vanitha exhaled, once, slow. “I’m fine,” she said.

He nodded. “I know.”

She reached up, caught his wrist, and held it. The two of them stood like that, hands linked, until her heartbeat slowed.

She bent, retrieved the coffee cup, and found the bread... the paper sleeve ripped, but the inside still warm. She tucked it under her arm and started back up the path, Selvam beside her.

They didn’t speak, not at first. There was nothing to say.

When they hit the edge of the village, Vanitha stopped. She looked up at the mountain, at the ice-blind blue of the sky, and let the air fill her lungs. The moment was raw and uncut, no Instagram filter, no performance.

She turned to Selvam. His hand was still at her elbow, anchoring her.

“Thank you,” she said.

He shook his head. “He was always going to try.”

She nodded, understanding.

They walked together, out of the trees and into the open. The bread was still warm through the paper, the coffee now cold in her hand. The world was exactly the same as before. And nothing, nothing, was going to move her from it.
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Very good. She is saved luckily. Jesus saves and so is selvam.
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Hartman should return and take Vanitha making her his slut. Then she will become International SLUT
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Nice update bro
Ashok in that place would have left his wife and either ran away or watched behind the tree how Vanitha moans while being fucked by another man shaking his wimp dick.
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Superb update
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They are in a foreign country and Selvam hit a foreign country citizen like a hero in a tamil movie won't there be any consequences for his action? Please make it realistic as possible.
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