And every night, before sleeping, Uncle would send one last forward:
Their true bonding began at 9 PM. Uncle would take over the TV remote—loud Bhakti channel first, then a rerun of Ramayan , and finally, a 90s action movie where “heroes didn’t need six-pack abs, just one mustache and a revolver.”
Next morning, he hid Priya’s laptop charger and replaced it with a cucumber wrapped in black tape. When she panicked, he yelled, “PRANK! Bhatiji, where’s my YouTube money?”
She nearly disowned him.
They watched Indian Idol auditions together. Uncle critiqued like a Simon Cowell with a paan-stained tongue. “This boy is crying? Bhatiji, if crying won singing, your aunt would be Lata Mangeshkar.”
Priya laughed so hard she choked on her lassi.
Priya would roll her eyes but secretly love it. She introduced him to YouTube . indian uncle fuck bhatiji
Then she showed him a prank video . Uncle got dangerously inspired.
“Good night. Life is short. Eat parantha. Hug your Bhatiji. And always forward this message.”
Priya, barely awake, replied with a single “👍” emoji. By 7 AM, Uncle was already in the park doing yogic breathing while wearing a tracksuit two sizes too small. Bhatiji, meanwhile, was making an iced oat latte (which Uncle called “fancy doodh pani”). And every night, before sleeping, Uncle would send
Uncle stared. “She’s getting paid for eating ? Beta, I’ve been doing that for free for 58 years. Where’s my cheque?”
Uncle ran a small hardware store, but his real business was time-pass . He’d sit on a plastic stool outside the shop, solving Sudoku and occasionally selling a nut-bolt. Customers knew: first, listen to his theory on why Indian cricket lost. Then buy the screws.
It was a humid Monday evening in Delhi’s Lajpat Nagar, and 58-year-old Suresh “Uncle” Sharma was doing what he did best: holding court on his rickety balcony chair, a mobile phone in one hand and a half-empty glass of jaljeera in the other. Bhatiji, where’s my YouTube money