17-05-2026, 11:53 AM
(This post was last modified: 17-05-2026, 11:54 AM by Hornytamilan23. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
(17-05-2026, 10:38 AM)heygiwriter Wrote: The answer is already in Chapter 129People often get so absorbed in the narration that they forget to step back and observe the situation objectively. From a distance, it becomes clear that Gowtham is not emotionally invested in this equation the way others assume. In many ways, he is the one being used, even if it appears otherwise on the surface.
//He was deeply conflicted. When he realize, just in the morning, Sneha announced about Gowtham asking her for sex and he allowed it.
He finally got the answer for it.. Deep down, he could somehow allow Sneha to sleep with Gowtham — for whatever reason, even if it hurt like hell. But he could never do the same with Aditya. Never.
He now realized Sneha had been right all along. Gowtham was someone they could still control — younger, manageable, someone they could eventually push out when the time came. He was a known devil.
But Aditya? He was something far more dangerous. He wouldn’t just sleep with Sneha — he would control her. He would control both of them.
Like Sneha had warned, Aditya wasn’t someone they could handle. The moment they let him in, he would own them completely.
That terrifying truth made Suresh want to detach from Aditya and the entire V-Activate Group right away, no matter the consequences.//
Basically he was okay with it as it is already happened and a lot time he had registered over conversation that its not sex , its siding with Gowtham hurt him and made him to extend of divorcing. Even in the start i have mentioned they couple was open enough for adventures.
Yes, he may possess compromising leverage over Sneha, but Gowtham is not the kind of person who thrives on confrontation or manipulation. Using those pictures would mean entering a conflict, taking responsibility, and risking consequences — things he naturally avoids. His involvement is driven less by attachment and more by convenience. For him, this phase is simply an arrangement offering pleasure, validation, and amusement without emotional cost.
The moment his priorities shift — whether toward career ambitions, personal growth, or even another woman like Varsha — Gowtham will likely detach without hesitation. He does not carry emotional baggage here. If staying means losing stability, reputation, or peace, he will walk away without looking back. His presence exists only as long as the situation remains effortless and beneficial to him.
Sneha understands this reality, perhaps more than anyone else. Beneath her actions lies an awareness that Gowtham is temporary — someone who belongs to the moment, not the future. Suresh, too, senses this truth, even if he struggles to articulate it. Both of them know that Gowtham is not a permanent force in their lives but a passing catalyst shaped by circumstance rather than commitment.
In the end, Gowtham is not bound by love, guilt, or obligation. He stays because it costs him nothing — and the day it does, he will simply disappear, leaving the emotional aftermath for Sneha and Suresh to confront alone.
-Pickup, drop, escape.


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