Something About Us- MG || (Part 70|Page 67) - Page 62

Romance FF

Created

Last reply

Replies

673

Views

38k

Users

23

Likes

2.4k

Frequent Posters

NilzStorywriter thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 1 months ago

Part 62

The morning light didn’t break into the room; it seeped in—slow, silver, almost shy. A tide of pale brightness softened the edges of everything it touched. Outside, the skyline looked like a watercolor left in the rain—blurred, gentle, unfinished.

Geet surfaced first.

Not abruptly. Not like she’d been pulled back by a sound or a thought. Just… gradually, as if her body had learned how to return without panic.

For a few seconds, she didn’t move.

She let the quiet of the penthouse settle around her like a second blanket. The familiar ache in her ribs was still there—a dull hum instead of a sharp insistence now. Manageable. Present. A reminder of where she’d been.

But it wasn’t the pain that anchored her.

It was the warmth beside her.

Not heat. Not pressure.

Presence.

She turned her head carefully.

Maan was still under.

This was the man the world saw as a monolith—clinical, sharp-edged, someone who could dismantle a competitor before coffee and still arrive at a meeting looking like the idea of control. But here, in the grey-gold wash of early morning, he looked… untethered.

He lay on his stomach, face half-pressed into the pillow, one arm hooked instinctively toward her side of the bed—as if sleep had made a decision his waking mind would never openly admit. His hair was a quiet riot, dark strands falling over his closed eyes, the kind of mess no stylist would be allowed near.

Geet felt a small, traitorous flutter in her chest.

He looked younger like this.

Not boyish. Not fragile.

Just… human. Like the version of himself that didn’t have to fix anything. The one who didn’t carry an empire in his jaw.

And then she saw it.

A tiny, almost imperceptible glisten at the corner of his mouth.

Geet bit her lip, a silent giggle warming her chest.

Maan Singh Khurana was drooling.

“My God,” she whispered to the empty room, eyes dancing. “Wait until the board of directors hears about this.”

She couldn’t help herself.

Her hand crossed the space between them with practiced ease now—like her body already knew the distance. She brushed his hair back from his forehead, her touch light as breath. His skin was warm beneath her fingers, steady heat. Her thumb traced his temple once, gentle and deliberate.

Maan stirred.

Not a startle. Not a snap to alertness.

Just a low hum in his throat—half-asleep, almost pleased—and then he leaned further into her palm with pure instinct, cat-like in its quiet trust.

His lashes flickered.

Then slowly lifted.

His eyes were dark, heavy with sleep, and completely focused on her.

For a long moment, neither of them moved.

The sarcasm wasn’t there yet. The brilliance hadn’t fully switched on. There was just that raw, quiet recognition—like he’d woken and found something he didn’t want to lose.

“You’re staring,” he rasped, his voice rough enough to vibrate through the mattress.

“I’m observing,” she corrected softly, fingers still tangled in his hair. “It’s part of my research into apex predators.”

The corner of his mouth quirked into a sleepy, lopsided smile—the kind that never made it to newspapers. The kind that belonged only to rooms like this.

He reached out, his hand closing gently around her wrist—not stopping her, just claiming the contact. He tugged her hand down and pressed a lingering, drowsy kiss into the center of her palm.

“Find anything useful?” he murmured against her skin.

“You drool,” she whispered, delighted.

He froze for exactly half a second.

Then buried his face back into the pillow with a groan that was pure offended dignity. “Forget you saw that. Corporate secret.”

“Too late,” she murmured. “Already factored into my ROI.”

A sound escaped him—low and real. A laugh he didn’t polish.

He shifted carefully, rolling just enough to tug her closer without jostling her ribs, his arm settling around her with a restraint that was almost reverent. Her head found the crook of his shoulder like it had always belonged there.

“Go back to sleep, Geet,” he said, voice softer now. “We have a long day.”

She should’ve said something.

A joke. A tease. A deflection.

Instead, she just breathed him in.

And let the quiet hold them.

+++

By the time she woke again, the light had thickened into morning.

No alarms. No urgency. Just the soft thud of footsteps and the muted click of a door.

Geet lay cocooned beneath the throw blanket, eyes fixed on the city veiled in mist. The kind of grey morning where the skyline blurred like a half-finished sketch. A car honked far below. Somewhere, a dog barked. The world was awake—just not urgently.

Maan walked in with a folded linen co-ord set in one hand, left out by the nurse the night before. His shirt was open at the collar, sleeves rolled up, hair still damp from his shower.

Precise. Sharp.

Like he’d already been awake for hours.

Like the morning belonged to him.

He didn’t speak at first. Just set the clothes down at the foot of the bed and checked her meds on the tray.

Then he turned—and paused.

“You’re up,” he said.

His voice was low. Rougher than usual. Like he hadn’t spoken since dawn.

“Just now,” she replied.

He walked over and crouched to her level.

“Today’s check-up,” he said evenly. “Spinal and rib specialist. We leave in an hour.”

She swallowed. Not fear—just the weight of it. The first hospital visit since… everything.

“Okay.”

He didn’t crowd her. Just held her gaze a beat longer, then stood with that quiet self-restraint she was beginning to recognize as care.

As he walked out, she half-expected him to say something—take your time, be careful, let the nurse help.

Of course he didn’t.

That wasn’t how he operated.

The nurse arrived ten minutes later, warm and efficient. She helped Geet dress slowly, wrapping the shawl gently around her brace—not too tight, not too loose. Geet followed each cue quietly, her fingers still clumsy with sleep.

Maan returned with the wheelchair.

He didn’t announce himself. Didn’t ask.

He simply bent and lifted her from the bed—muscle memory now—lowering her into the chair with the same focus he brought to boardrooms and lawsuits.

Once she was settled, he adjusted the footrest, flicked the shawl to cover her collarbone, tucked a small cushion behind her back.

Only then did he look at her properly.

“Ready?”

She nodded. “Yes.”

As he turned the wheelchair toward the door, she said lightly,
“You didn’t even ask if I’m prepared.”

He glanced down once. “You’re upright. That’s prepared.”

She scoffed softly. “Emotionally.”

“That’s negotiable,” he said. “Structurally is non-negotiable.”

She laughed under her breath. “You’re impossible.”

“And yet,” he replied, already moving again, “remarkably effective.”

Her smile lingered as they moved down the hall.

+++

During the drive

She angled slightly toward him. “You booked the same hospital?”

“No,” he replied. “Too many bad memories. I picked a better one.”

“Better?”

“Quieter. More privacy. And the lobby doesn’t smell like antiseptic and trauma.”

“Oh,” she murmured. “So you went hospital-shopping.”

“I have taste.”

“You also have control issues.”

He didn’t deny it. “Do you want to steer the car with your fractured wrist?”

“…Carry on.”

+++

The specialist didn’t look like he flew in from Singapore. He looked like someone’s reassuring professor—calm, kind-eyed, polite.

But Geet knew better.

Maan didn’t do sentiment. He brought in results.

The spinal brace came off first.

Soft presses. Small rotations. The nurse guided her hand. The doctor asked her to breathe.

When the velcro finally parted—when that wide, suffocating collar peeled away—Geet stilled.

She hadn’t realized how much she’d forgotten the feeling of air on her neck.

Of holding her own head without help.

“Excellent healing,” the doctor said, pleased. “But go slow. The spine remembers everything.”

Maan stood against the far wall, arms folded. His gaze never left her.

When the brace landed on the table, she looked at him.

He didn’t smile.

Not exactly.

But the tightness in his jaw eased.

And that was enough.

The Rib brace was worse.

Not the pain—the sensation.

The nurse helped her sit on an inclined bench, easing the straps at her side.

Geet winced.

Maan took one step forward. Then stopped himself. Folded his arms tighter.

When the brace came off, her breath hitched. Her back curved without permission. The sudden lightness felt wrong. Exposed.

“Sit back,” Maan said quietly, close now.

He stepped behind her. His palm hovered—then gently guided her shoulder blades.

“Not like you’re being interrogated,” he murmured. “You have a spine. Use it.”

A small, shaky laugh escaped her. “I feel… wobbly.”

“You’ll adjust.”

“I feel like jelly.”

“Jelly regenerates. So that’s an upgrade.”

The nurse blinked.

Geet just smiled.

+++

Later, in the Car

She shifted carefully. “This feels strange. No brace.”

“Better?”

She nodded. “Lighter. More like… me.”

His eyes flicked to her once. “You’ll be more you every day.”

She turned toward him. “That sounded suspiciously like encouragement.”

“Don’t get used to it.”

“I already have.”

He said nothing.

But the corner of his mouth curved—just slightly.

+++

The drive back was quiet. Not heavy—just the kind of quiet that let things settle.

Maan wheeled her into the penthouse with the same calm efficiency as before. But this time, something felt different. The silence wasn’t sterile. It was… expectant.

And then the door opened fully.

“Ohhh! Look at you!” the nurse practically squealed from the hallway, already abandoning the folded laundry she’d been carrying. She beamed like a proud aunt, her voice entirely too loud for the hour.

Geet blinked—then laughed.

Before she could process it, the nurse was halfway across the room, arms out—but careful not to touch.

“Brace-free neck! Back upright! My god, madam, you’re glowing!”

From the kitchen, the cook leaned around the doorframe, grinning. “Didn’t I say? This one’s got fighter bones.”

Geet shook her head, amused. “Fighter bones? That sounds like a dinosaur.”

“Exactly,” the cook said, hands on her hips. “You survived extinction, girl. Tea?”

“Only if you’re having some too,” Geet replied easily.

Maan watched—still holding the wheelchair handles. Still silent.

But he was reading everything.

The nurse bustled forward with her checklist, already scanning vitals. “I’ll update your dressing chart and change the bed angle by evening. But no heavy lifting, okay? Just because you’re out of the cage doesn’t mean you start picking up pumpkins.”

Geet gasped in mock offense. “Are you comparing me to a fruit vendor?”

“No,” the nurse said cheerfully. “I’m comparing you to my cousin who busted his shoulder because he tried lifting a watermelon while on painkillers. Men are hopeless.”

“I heard that,” Maan said flatly.

The nurse didn’t even blink. “Good. Some things are meant to be heard.”

Geet was laughing now—an open, full laugh that still made her wince a little at the edges. “Ow—don’t make me laugh. It pulls.”

The cook emerged with tea on a tray—two cups, already sweetened. “I made those ginger biscuits you said reminded you of school.”

Geet’s face lit up. “You remembered?”

“Of course,” the cook said. “You’re the first person who eats without asking for oat milk and air-fried broccoli.”

“Or calorie counts,” the nurse added. “Or telling us how many macros are in halwa.”

The three of them laughed again. Geet reached for the tea slowly, careful of her sling, murmuring a thank you so soft it wouldn’t have registered if Maan weren’t still listening to every word.

It was a small scene.

Laughter. Tea. Ginger biscuits.

But to Maan—it might as well have been an earthquake.

This wasn’t the world he came from.

Not just the ease. Not the warmth. The equality.

Geet wasn’t gracious with them the way people were when they wanted to appear kind. She wasn’t charming. She wasn’t condescending.

She was familiar.

No hierarchy. No pretense. No invisible rules of “us” and “them.”

The nurse teased her like an older sister. The cook rolled her eyes and scolded her for being underweight. And Geet took it all—laughing, elbowing, offering biscuits from the tray like she was just another girl in another kitchen.

Not a guest. Not a patient. Not the wife of the man who owned the building.

Just… her.

Maan stood behind the chair. Quiet. Watching.

He didn’t smile.

But his grip on the handle softened.

Because this—this was what no one around him had ever done. Not his relatives. Not the women he’d dated. Not even the friends who stayed too long after fundraisers and forgot the staff existed the moment the wine ran out.

Geet remembered birthdays. She asked about the cook’s son's exam results. She reminded the nurse to take her lunch break before five. She told the guard downstairs to drink water in the heat.

Not to earn approval.

Not to score points.

Just because that’s who she was.

And for the first time that morning, Maan felt something deeper than calm.

Something closer to... certainty.

She didn’t just belong in this space.

She changed it.

++++

Next Day

The morning light spilled slow across the penthouse, turning the floors into brushed gold. It was the kind of light that made silence feel full — not empty.

Geet woke without effort. Not from pain. Not anymore. Her body had begun to recover its rhythm. The heaviness in her chest was gone. The stiffness in her neck, a fading memory. What remained now was her arm in a sling, her leg still braced — the reminders that healing takes time.

She moved slowly, adjusting her weight as she sat up, and reached for the wheelchair with practiced ease. Her movements were still uneven, but no longer clumsy. There was steadiness in her fingers now, even if it came one inch at a time.

She wheeled out into the hallway, turning instinctively toward the walk-in closet.

He was already there.

White shirt, sleeves rolled, still untucked. The trousers ironed to precision. He stood with his back to her, fingers moving along his cuff — the second roll, not the first. That was how she knew he was tense.

She didn’t announce herself.

She just rolled in, quiet as breath.

And let herself look.

He always looked good, but this — this was different.

Maan Singh Khurana, preparing for battle. Hair still damp from the shower. Jaw set in focus. Movements efficient, contained. He looked like someone the world would obey. But she could still see the weight in the set of his shoulders. The war beneath the armor.

“Should I be worried,” she asked, voice soft but clear, “or just impressed?”

He turned.

And the mask slipped — just a little.

Not enough for the board to notice. But enough for her.

“Impressed is safer,” he murmured.

She smiled, wheeling in closer, her good hand resting lightly on the wheel rim. “You’re going in today?”

He nodded once. Reached for the navy blazer on the hanger but didn’t put it on yet.

“Board meeting,” he said simply. “They want answers.”

She watched him carefully.

His face gave little away. But she knew the tension. She’d seen it before — in his hand when he adjusted nonexistent creases. In the way he tightened his watch strap when he was overthinking. Today, the watch was absent. But the hands were restless.

“Will you be back by lunch?”

He glanced at her. Briefly. But it was enough.

“I’ll try,” he said. “No promises. I’ll text.”

She nodded. “Okay.”

He stepped closer, crouching slightly — mindful of her leg, of the wheelchair. One of his hands came up to brush her hair back, the other paused just above her arm in the sling. His thumb grazed the edge of her shoulder lightly, the only place that didn’t hurt.

“Take care,” he said. “Rest. Let the nurse help with your physio, but don’t let her lie and double the reps.”

Geet raised an eyebrow. “That happened one time.”

“She’s ambitious.”

“She’s keeping me functional.”

“She’s stealing my job.”

She laughed — not loud, but real.

And then — quieter — she said, “You take care too, okay?”

He nodded. But didn’t move.

There was something in his eyes.

Not panic. Not fear.

Just… pressure. Carried too long. Contained too well.

“I’ll wait for you,” she said.

He looked up.

“For the gossip,” she added, eyes twinkling. “You better bring the full report. Don’t skip the dramatic bits.”

His mouth curved — just slightly. “You want shareholder drama as bedtime stories?”

“I want you to come home like you’re not carrying the world.”

He didn’t answer that.

Just leaned forward slightly, letting his forehead rest against hers for a moment. Careful of her sling. Careful of her breath.

“I’ll come back to you,” he said quietly. “Always.”

Her lips tilted. “I know.”

taahir004 thumbnail
Posted: 1 months ago

Part 62

Fantastic Update

Wow Maan actually had drool and Geet had seen it

great that now Geet's spine and neck braces are removed

at least now she can move around with a little ease

Maan also notices how well Geet gets along with the home staff

and he knows that the person she is

not for some showoff stunt but her personality is such she can converse

and be friends with everybody

aparna3011 thumbnail
12th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 1 months ago

fantastic update

geet is free from brace

every on in house who help geet express their happiness seeing free geet

maan first time see such interaction between peoples around

geet can see tension n restlessness in maan without him sharing it

both maan n geet are true complimentary to each other

coderlady thumbnail
Posted: 1 months ago

A drooling CEO who the world sees as a strong, unmovable object. She has insights that will shock his board room.

coderlady thumbnail
Posted: 1 months ago

Having the brace off is huge. That means her recovery is coming along well.

khwaishfan thumbnail
Visit Streak 1000 Thumbnail 18th Anniversary Thumbnail + 9
Posted: 1 months ago

thanks for the update


Part 62

indeed a beautiful morning

of cos Geet admires Maan

ha ha she caught Maan drooling whilst asleep

liked Geet's actions

that moment when their gazes met said everything

at least she revealed that he drooled

his reply was justified

enjoyed their banter

as expected Maan did not forget her appointment

Geet's thoughts were reasonable

Maan had a point

well Maan booked another hospita;

its considerate of him

glad that Geet is healing and recovering

now her brace is gone

Geet shares a close bond with the nurse and others

agree with Maan that she changed the space

not surprised with Maan and Geet's care for each other

Maan will clearly manage the board meeting

pleased that Maan assured Geet


update soon

coderlady thumbnail
Posted: 1 months ago

Its time to go back and answer the hounds. The board needs to be reckoned with.

Alamelu thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Visit Streak 180 Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 1 months ago

aww what an amazing update...

loved teh bond and comraderie between them....the comfort the closeness the ease....

and she got to see the relaxed maan finally...love that they both are comfortable with each other being so close too...

so glad finally geet's restraints are almost all off...moire than her maan is happy for her...

coming home....what bonding between geet and the staff....as if they are all a family instead of employer and worker....love that...and the ease with which the nurse replied to maan even better..

confused about one thing...mentinoed wife of the owner....geet is not yet the wife right...


but loved it...so what does maan have to answer to the board....about his time off and not going physically to work????

loved the last line....will always come back to you...

Edited by Alamelu - 1 months ago
Gold.Abrol thumbnail
Posted: 1 months ago


THIS IS A "MEMBERS ONLY" POST
The Author of this post have chosen to restrict the content of this Post to members only.


NilzStorywriter thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 1 months ago

Part 63

The shift from the warmth of the penthouse to the clinical silence of Khurana Industries wasn’t just physical. It was spiritual.

There, the world moved slowly. Measured in careful steps and cups of tea. In quiet laughter between nurses and casted limbs finding new balance. Here, the air was colder. Recycled. Expensive. The kind of silence that cost more than sound.

The boardroom was still.

Not quiet — still. A tense, airless kind of stillness, thick with the residue of the quarterly projections that had just been dissected and filed into panic.

Three percent dip in the logistics vertical.

Just three.

But in Maan Singh Khurana’s world, a three percent dip might as well have been a body in the conference room. Not fatal — not yet — but bleeding enough for the vultures to start circling.

The directors had filed out in silence. No coffee, no post-meeting chatter, no afterthoughts. Just the hush of men too afraid to speak without alignment.

Maan stayed behind.

He hadn’t moved since the meeting began. He sat at the head of the obsidian table like it was a throne he’d outgrown, one leg crossed over the other, his tie still tight, his expression still… unreadable. A study in stillness.

The holographic display was still active, glowing faintly beside him — red markers, declining margins, recalibrated forecasts. They blinked quietly like tiny wounds.

He didn’t blink back.

Behind him, the door closed with a soft, ominous click.

His parents hadn’t left.

Of course they hadn’t.

Rajveer Khurana took the far side of the room, near the wall-length window, his arms folded over a suit that still reeked of ceremonial relevance. Savita moved more quietly — across the polished floor, her heels soundless beneath a silk saree so pristine it looked vacuum-sealed.

They didn’t sit.

They stood like judges in a courtroom they believed still belonged to them.

“The board is asking questions, Maan,” Rajveer said, his voice trained, rehearsed — the kind of voice meant for auctions and microphone galas. “The dip in logistics is being linked to a… lack of executive oversight. Your absence is being noticed.”

Maan didn’t look up.

“People are paid to talk, Dad,” he said, voice low. “I’m paid to make sure their talk doesn’t tank the share price. So far, I’m the only one in this room doing my job.”

The silence that followed wasn’t tense. It was insulting.

Savita stepped forward. Her tone was deceptively soft.

“Don’t deflect behind performance metrics. We know where you’ve been. Half your days at the hospital. The girl. You’ve moved her into your residence. It’s becoming… unmanageable.”

Maan’s jaw didn’t move. Not even a twitch.

“She’s not from our world,” his mother continued. “No background. No institutional standing. No utility. You’re a Khurana. Your private life has never been private. The optics are becoming—”

“Disastrous?” he finished for her, still without looking up.

Savita’s silence was confirmation enough.

That’s when Maan finally looked at them.

The lift of his eyes was slow. Surgical. Like a lens adjusting for exact precision before making the first cut.

“Optics,” he repeated. “You’ve built your entire identities around them. Optics, affiliations, face cards. All while the company bled under your so-called stewardship.”

He stood up.

No violence in the gesture. No aggression.

Just inevitability.

“When I took over at twenty-one, everything looked perfect. Your gala invites were intact. The PR was glowing. The logo was everywhere.”
He stepped around the table slowly. “You were being photographed with foreign ambassadors while the company’s core asset base had a burn rate of twenty-seven percent.”

Rajveer shifted. “We gave you that company—”

“You gave me a hollow shell,” Maan cut in, his voice now like tempered steel. “You gave me a legacy so corroded by self-worship that even the auditors pitied us.”

He reached the edge of the table, stopped in front of them.

His voice dropped lower.

“And I turned it into an empire.”

Savita straightened. “No one is denying your success. But you built it because you were clear-headed. Unattached. Focused. Now you’re... distracted. Emotionally compromised.”

A beat.

Then:

“You don’t even see what she’s doing to you.”

Something flickered — behind Maan’s eyes.

Not rage.

Disappointment.

“She’s the only person in my life who isn’t performing,” he said, quietly. “She doesn’t want my company. She doesn’t want my name. She doesn’t even want my protection. She just wants to walk again.”

Savita looked away first.

Rajveer’s expression hardened. “You think that’s admirable? Playing nurse for a woman who doesn’t even belong at our table?”

Maan exhaled once, slowly.

“You still think this table is the summit of power. That nameplates and quarterly reviews and charity auctions are the point.”

He stepped closer now. His voice was so quiet it forced them to listen harder.

“She isn’t the distraction,” he said. “You are.”

“You’re threatening your own parents,” Savita said, her voice brittle. “For an actress.”

“No,” he said. “I’m protecting my life from people who confuse performance for loyalty. Again.”

He turned, walked back toward the table, picked up his tablet — but didn’t activate it.

“Let’s be clear. If either of you bring her up again in a boardroom context—if you even so much as use her name to question my discipline—”

He looked at them.

And for the first time in years, neither of them could hold his gaze.

“—I will gut the trust funds that keep your image polished. I will liquidate the face of this brand and rebuild it under a holding company that answers only to me. I will do it so cleanly you won’t even hear the blade.”

A long silence followed.

And then, with terrifying calm:

“I’ve taken down my own blood before. Don’t test the limits of my sentimentality. I don’t have much of it left.”

He turned toward the door.

His footsteps were soundless. Final.

At the threshold, he paused — fingers on the glass handle, head slightly tilted back over his shoulder.

“The board follows profit,” he said. “I follow vision. The day they understand the difference, they’ll know why I’m irreplaceable.”

And then he walked out, the door clicking shut behind him like punctuation.

+++

Elevator

The mirrored walls were cold against his back as he leaned slightly, finally letting his hands fall to his sides.

He loosened his tie.

Not like a man undone.

But like someone coming out of costume.

He thought of the penthouse.

Of her smile that morning.

Of the way she said:
"I'll wait for you. For the gossip."

And for the first time that morning, Maan Singh Khurana smiled.

It wasn’t victory.

It wasn’t peace.

It was something rarer.

It was clarity.

++++

It was past midnight.

The city had dulled into a hush, the kind only glass skyscrapers and impossible altitude could manufacture — no horns, no voices, just the faint hum of lights too far below to matter.

Inside the penthouse, the salt lamp glowed beside the bed, casting everything in amber hush.

Geet was still awake.

She didn’t stir much now. Her movements had become more measured — slow not from pain anymore, but from control. Her body was remembering itself. The sling cradled her fractured arm across her abdomen, and her leg was stretched out in front of her, casted but elevated, a soft support propped beneath her knee.

She didn’t look at Maan.

She didn’t have to.

He sat beside her at the edge of the bed — one leg folded beneath him, the other on the floor, spine curved slightly forward, his entire frame hunched over the tablet screen balanced on his thigh.

The glow painted harsh lines under his cheekbone, lit the tension in his brow. His shirt was rumpled, his cuffs unrolled, his tie had disappeared sometime between 9:00 and now. But the tension hadn’t.

His fingers hovered over the screen like they’d been frozen mid-tap. He wasn’t reading anymore. He was staring.

And she was watching him watch.

The silence between them had lasted an hour.

And still, it didn’t feel empty.

It felt suspended.

Like the quiet had agreed to wait for him to be ready.

She turned her head a fraction. Enough to glance at the tablet without being obvious.

The graphs were familiar.

Corporate performance dashboards. Segmented KPIs. Logistics trend lines. A dip across Q2. A red zone that curved downward in a way she recognized from her early days in the corporate strategy unit.

She didn’t say anything for another minute.

Then, softly — like thought, not speech —
“So the projections show a dipping trend.”

Maan blinked. Once.

He looked like he hadn’t realized she was still awake.

“Huh?” he said, his voice low, rough.

“Yeah.”

She nodded. “Hmm.”

“Board’s tense,” he muttered after a moment. “Logistics has underperformed three cycles in a row. Suppliers are renegotiating timelines. A couple of investors are making noise. Minor — but irritating.”

There was a pause.

Then she added, gently, “And?”

His eyes flicked sideways. “And?”

“It can’t be the only thing bothering you.”

His lips parted, like he wanted to disagree, then closed again.

She waited.

He looked back at the screen, but his posture had shifted.

Less guarded. More... human.

Then, quieter: “My parents were waiting for me after the meeting.”

She turned her head fully now.

His eyes were on the blanket, his fingers tugging at the edge of it like he didn’t realize he was doing it.

“Did they say something about me?” she asked softly.

He nodded.

Just once.

Almost like he hated giving the truth shape.

She didn’t wince. Didn’t look away.

“It’s okay,” she said calmly.

That startled him more than shouting ever could’ve.

Her eyes remained steady on him. “Don’t think about it too much.”

“You don’t understand,” he said, voice low.

She didn’t flinch.

“Maybe not your parents,” she said. “But I understand parents.”

Maan’s jaw tightened.

Geet shifted slightly — not toward him, but beside him, aligning her back against the headboard so her voice didn’t have to reach.

“Parents say things,” she said. “Things their children disagree with. Sometimes things that hurt. Sometimes things they don’t even fully mean.”

She paused. “That doesn’t make them villains.”

He didn’t respond.

She continued.

“It just makes them people. Flawed. Incomplete. Trying.”

She didn’t soften it to be poetic. She didn’t sugar it. It just was.

“I used to think betrayal meant you’d been pretending all along,” she said. “That if someone broke your trust — once, just once — it erased everything they ever gave you.”

Her eyes drifted toward the lamp. The glow curved over the bones of her face.

“But then I looked at my own parents. I saw all the cracks. The hypocrisies. The silence. And I realized... maybe they weren’t pretending.”

She turned back to him.

“Maybe they were just afraid. Or proud. Or too exhausted by their own failures to show up properly for mine.”

He stared at her.

Not with pity.

With something closer to awe.

“You still speak about them like you love them,” he said.

Geet’s eyes didn’t waver. “I do.”

“But they let you go.”

“I know.”

He stared.

“How?”

She smiled softly. “Because love isn’t perfect. And neither are people. But when you accept that… you stop needing perfection from them.”

She let that sit for a beat.

“Your parents,” she said, “aren’t trying to destroy you.”

His mouth opened to argue. She lifted a hand — careful not to jolt her sling — and held his gaze.

“They’re trying to stay relevant in a world you’ve outgrown.”

His breath caught.

She went on, quieter now.

“You scare them, Maan. Not because you’re wrong. But because you’ve surpassed every version of their dreams — and they don’t know how to love you without needing to control you.”

That landed.

He didn’t move.

She didn’t need him to.

She wasn’t fixing him.

She was offering him a new map.

“You don’t owe them your silence,” she said. “Or your obedience. But maybe... maybe you owe yourself the chance to stop bleeding from a wound they didn’t even know they gave you.”

He looked down. Then up.

And something in his eyes shifted.

Not all at once.

But like a single wall leaned back just enough to let air in.

“You make it sound easy,” he said.

She smiled — small, knowing. “I make it sound livable.”

Maan reached for her then.

Not desperately.

Just… gently.

He took her uninjured hand and brought it to his lap, folding his fingers over hers. Not laced. Just resting. Warm.

They sat like that for a long time.

Not touching in ways the world would notice.

But something between them had moved.

Something old had finally exhaled.

Related Topics

Geet - Hui Sabse Parayee thumbnail

Posted by: priya_21 · 3 years ago

Prologue sauda means deal... . kissi ke Armaano ka sauda... kissi ke khawabo ka sauda... . . . humne toh kiya tha sauda pyaar smjhkar... par nhi...

Expand ▼
Geet - Hui Sabse Parayee thumbnail

Posted by: priya_21 · 2 years ago

Hello everyone i know i already written many stories whi complete nhi ho paa rhi hai and i start one more actually, i written this for OS...

Expand ▼
Geet - Hui Sabse Parayee thumbnail

Posted by: Dragon-Heart · 2 years ago

INTRODUCTION A new season of this fiction. It's not an FF it's an ss

Expand ▼
Geet - Hui Sabse Parayee thumbnail

Posted by: Queen0fDarkness · 3 years ago

Bound by Honour| Note page 50

Prologue “Where are you, Sameera?” I yelled unable to hold myself back. “I’m not coming, Maan”. “It is our wedding day. You know what my...

Expand ▼
Geet - Hui Sabse Parayee thumbnail

Posted by: tammana.m · 4 years ago

She met him in an unfavorable time when she was running behind the time to save him. Save the only one member of his family whom she call his...

Expand ▼
Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".