STORYMIRROR

Average Guy

Drama Romance Fantasy

4.5  

Average Guy

Drama Romance Fantasy

Amma Lakshmi 2

Amma Lakshmi 2

16 mins
938

Dear Readers, please read part 1 of this story series, for better comprehension of the story so far..


Sumit had never thought that even at the age of 40, his quiet bachelor life would involve being hoisted, cuddled, and carried around like a schoolboy by a woman nearly 15 years older than him. But that’s exactly what had become of his daily routine — ever since Amma Lakshmi had entered his life.

At 5’3” and 64 kg, Sumit barely reached her shoulders. Amma Lakshmi, a towering 5’10” and 85 kg and 55 years old, often joked that she should carry an ID card labeling her as “housekeeper plus transport service.” Yet behind the jokes, there was something warm and quietly powerful in their strange, affectionate bond.

One morning Sumit decided to rearrange the living room furniture.

“Amma, I think the sofa would look better on the other side.”

Amma Lakshmi gave him one long look before saying, “Aap ko to khud hi shift kar dena chahiye.” Before he could ask what she meant, she leaned down, wrapped one strong arm around his thighs and the other around his back, and heaved him up over her shoulder.

“Yeh pehle hatega,” she said, patting his bottom lightly. “Tabhi toh sofa hilega.” 
“You should be moved first, then the sofa can be shifted.”

Sumit hung there, legs kicking slightly in mid-air, while she marched across the room — his face now level with her back — before depositing him carefully on the empty chair.

Then on another occasion, at the local market, Sumit once again tried to juggle two heavy grocery bags while navigating puddles.

Amma noticed his struggle, clicked her tongue, and put the bags down.

“Aap toh samaan se zyada halke ho. Main toh aapko hi le jaaun.” 
“You are lighter than your bags. I would rather carry you”.

Before he could protest, she crouched, slid her arms under his thighs and back, and hoisted him in a snug front baby carry — his face pressed awkwardly into her shoulder, his arms clumsily wrapped around her neck.

“Dekhiye na, log kya dekh rahe hain!” he whispered, mortified. “See, people are looking at us”.

“Unko bhi lag raha hoga ki main apne bacche ko vaccine lagwaane le jaa rahi hoon,” she chuckled, rocking him gently as she walked past giggling shopkeepers and stunned pedestrians. “They might be thinking that I am carrying my child to get him vaccinated.”

One rainy day, they stood side by side, waiting for a delivery. Sumit leaned against the wall, arms folded. Lakshmi came and stood next to him, measuring their heights.

She marked her hand above his head and laughed. “Poorey saat inch ka farak hai. Aap to meri armpit tak hi aate ho, saab.” 
“There's a full seven inches difference. You are coming just under my armpits only Sir.”

Sumit blushed. She grinned mischievously, turned him around, and then lifted him by the waist as if checking how tall he’d be if he tried harder. Now, with his legs dangling, their eyes met levelly.

“Bas, ab thoda height aur chahiye toh din mein do baar uthaa liya karungi toh stretch ho jaayenge!” 
“Now, this much height is required to catch up with me. So I'll pick you up like this twice a day, so you will get the stretching done.”

One Sunday, Lakshmi had been trying to clean the upper shelves of a cabinet, but the duster kept slipping. “Aap chhote hain, par haath chhota nahi. Aaiye.” 
“Come, you are short, but your hands are not.”

She turned around, bent slightly, and gestured. “Chadh jaaiye.” “Climb up.”

Sumit stared. “Kya?!” “What?!”

But before he could resist, she turned him around and crouched down behind him and put her head from under his thighs. She grabbed both his thighs and stood up effortlessly lifting him sitting on her shoulders. His legs hung in front of her breasts on either side. She walked to the cabinet with him perched on her shoulders like a small boy on his dad's shoulders at a fair.

“Ab safa karo, ooncha shelf bhi,” she ordered. “Now reach out and clean the dust from the top shelf also.”

Sumit, still in mild shock, reached out and began dusting while she stood firm like a rock, holding him on her shoulders.

Only a few days back, after a long day working on his laptop, Sumit slumped on his chair, drained and dizzy. His head throbbed slightly.

Amma sat on the armchair and saw that. She patted her lap.

“Yahaan aaiye. Sar daba deti hoon.” “Come and sit here, I'll massage your head.”

When he didn’t move, she simply walked across, lifted him like a bundle — his arms tucked in — and placed him sideways across her lap, like a child about to be fed porridge.

She stroked his hair with one hand, massaging his forehead with the other. “Aise thak jaate ho, aur keh rahe ho shaadi karni hai?”
“You get so tired,and you say you want to get married.”

Sumit didn’t reply. His eyes closed, warmth and softness surrounding him.

During Navratri celebrations, Amma insisted they go to the temple. The crowd was impossible. He couldn’t even see past the heads in front of him.

With one confident motion, Lakshmi crouched down, placed his feet on her thighs, and said, “Chadh jaaiye.”

He barely had time to react before she lifted him onto her shoulders, holding his legs with her large, strong hands as he swayed gently above the crowd.

“Waah,” he muttered. “Main toh giraffe ban gaya.”
“I am now a giraffe!”

“Giraffe nahi, baccha ban gaya aap, ma ke kandhon par,” she laughed. “Aur main toh hamesha se haathi thi.”
“Not a giraffe, you have become a small boy on his mother's shoulders. And I have always been an elephant.”

After lunch, Sumit had nodded off on the sofa in a crooked, uncomfortable position. Lakshmi looked at him with a sigh.

“Aise sulte hain kya koi? Gardan tootti jaayegi.” 
“Who sleeps in this crooked manner? You will get a sprain in your neck.”

She bent low, slid one arm behind his knees and the other under his back, and gently picked him up in a full cradle carry, walking slowly to the bedroom.

Despite the sudden movement, Sumit stayed half-asleep. She laid him on the bed, tucked a light blanket over him, and whispered,

“Chhota sa hai... jaise mera khoya hua beta mil gaya ho.”
“So small and cute..as if I've found my long lost boy.”

She sat beside him, watching his chest rise and fall. A strange softness lingered in the silence.

The days continued like this — Sumit finding himself in Amma Lakshmi’s arms for one reason or another. Each lift — whether funny, practical, or tender — brought them closer. What had begun as a household arrangement had grown into something far more intimate and profound.

Though the world might never understand why a tall, aging woman carried around her grown male employer like a baby, within the walls of that little apartment, there was no awkwardness anymore. Just trust, affection, and an odd, unshakable bond between a small man and the strong, towering woman who had become his everything.

Sumit had gradually accepted the strange comfort of being carried around by Amma Lakshmi — his towering 55-year-old maid whose strength defied both her age and society’s ideas of womanhood. But one morning, a seemingly harmless moment changed everything.

It was a breezy Sunday morning. Sumit was struggling to tie up a fluttering clothesline on the balcony. He stood on his toes, stretching, the knot slipping every time.

Lakshmi emerged from the kitchen and smirked. “Aap toh jump bhi kar lo, phir bhi woh dori milne wali nahi.”

She stepped behind him, gripped his waist, and lifted him straight up like a pole, holding him aloft as he flailed, trying to grab the line.

“Arre amma, neeche toh utaariye—kahi gir gaya toh!”
“Ohh Amma, put me down, I might fall off!”

“Main hoon na, apko giraaungi nahi. Aap toh meri bahon mey ek bachha jaisey ho,” she said proudly, her biceps flexing beneath her cotton blouse as she held him high. “Don't worry I'm here, I'll not drop you. You are like a baby in my arms.”

At that very moment, the neighbor from the opposite building — Mrs. Deshpande, a talkative, sharp-eyed woman in her sixties — stepped onto her own balcony, just in time to witness the sight of Lakshmi holding her fully grown male employer high in the air like a toddler.

Her eyes widened. Her jaw dropped.

Sumit froze. Lakshmi lowered him carefully, but it was too late.

Deshpande shouted across, “Sumit beta! Who is this strong woman? Your masseuse or your mother?”

Sumit turned crimson.

“Nai nai... she’s my... my... maid... but also like... she helps... I mean—”

Lakshmi folded her arms, grinning. “Main toh bas inka help karti hoon!” 
“I only help him around in the house.”

The Rooftop Rumors Begin..
Within two days, the entire neighborhood had a new favorite story.

The bachelor on the second floor, that small man — apparently he lives with an Amazonian maid who lifts him around like a little boy.

Sumit could barely step out to buy milk without hearing whispers.

“Wahi na? Jisey uski bai godh mein uthake le jaati hai?” 
“Isn't he the one? The one who is carried around by her maid.”

One man even joked, “Mere pair mein moch hai. Us Lakshmi bai ka contact milega kya? Mujhe bhi godh mein uthaa le.”
“I have a sprain in my leg. Can you give the contact number of your Lakshmi maid. She can also pick me up in her arms.”

That evening, Lakshmi returned from the market with two full bags, one on each shoulder. Sumit opened the door and stood in awe.

He couldn't help but ask, “Amma... you’re 55... you carry gas cylinders, water buckets, and also me too. How?? I’m a 40-year-old full-grown adult man, not a featherweight child!”

Lakshmi laughed, stepping inside, brushing past him. “Aap full-grown adult ho sakte ho, par size toh pocket wala hai.”
“You may be a full grown adult, but pocket sized.”

She set the bags down and turned to him with a playful gleam.
“Kabhi kabhi sochti hoon... shaadi kar lete toh biwi ko aapko stroller mein le jaana padta.”
“I sometimes think..if you had married, your wife would have to carry you in a stroller.”

Sumit groaned and flopped onto the sofa.

“I just don't understand. I’m a man. I’m 40. And you, an old woman of 55 — you just keep lifting me like I'm a small child !”

She leaned down, scooped him effortlessly into a tight cradle carry, and sat down with him in her lap like a large baby doll.

“Yeh toh kuch bhi nahi. Kal se aapko market tak sar par le jaungi!”
“This is nothing, from tomorrow I'll carry you to the market on my head.”

A few days later, during a visit to the temple fair, Sumit twisted his ankle slightly while coming down the steep steps. Before he could even protest, Lakshmi swung him fireman-style over her shoulder in one smooth move.

“You can’t keep doing this in public, Amma!”

“Main toh sambhaal rahi hoon. Public toh sirf maze le rahi hai.” Amma was quick to reply. “I'm only protecting you. The people are only enjoying the fun”.

Indeed, they were — giggling kids, amused elders, and even a group of teenage girls who began whispering and pointing.

One girl said audibly, “Woh dekho, aunty ne uncle ko uthaa liya jaise school ka bag ho!”
“See see, that aunty has picked up uncle like he is a school bag.”

Sumit buried his face into Lakshmi’s back in embarrassment.

One afternoon, Mrs. Deshpande, the neighbour, dropped by under the pretense of borrowing sugar. The door was open. She stepped in and looked around suspiciously.

Just then, Lakshmi entered from the kitchen and noticed Sumit sitting on the floor rubbing his lower back after trying to shift and lifting a heavy box.

With no warning, Lakshmi stepped in, put one arm behind Sumit’s back, the other under his legs, and cradled him in her arms and straightened up standing.

Mrs. Deshpande whispered to herself. “Phir se godh mein utha liya!” 
“Again she has picked him up in her arms !”

She coughed loudly, “Beta, tum theek ho? Why is your maid always carrying you around like a baby?”
“Are you okay?”

Sumit stammered, “No no... it’s just... I pulled a muscle.”

Lakshmi, still holding him, replied cheerfully, “Arey madam, mai mera Sa’ab ko bacho jaise sambhalta hoon, toh aapko kya problem ?”
“Listen madam, if I take care of my boss like he is a child, so what is your problem?”

Mrs. Deshpande thought it prudent to leave unceremoniously.

That night, a thunderstorm struck. The power went out and water began leaking near the fuse box. Sumit panicked and tried to inspect it with a torch.

Amma didn’t let him. She grabbed him, lifted him onto her hip, while she inspected the leak with her other hand.

“Aap itna chhota hai aapko yeh sab risky kaam karna nahi chahiye. Main hoon na.”
“You are so small. You shouldn't do all this risky work yourself. I am here for you.” 

Sumit clung to her neck, realizing — not for the first time — that in her arms, he always felt safer than anywhere else.

Later that night, as lightning flashed outside, Sumit lay resting on the bed, and Lakshmi was folding clothes beside him.

“Amma,” he said softly, “I used to feel embarrassed when you carried me.”

She smiled but didn’t look up.

“Ab toh aadat ho gayi hogi?”
“Now you must be used to it?”

“Not just aadat. I feel… safe, protected. I don’t know how to explain it.”

She sat beside him, cupped his cheek.

“Aap chhote hain, naazuk hain... You are small and weak; you need a tall and big woman to protect you.”

Sumit leaned his head on her shoulder.

“Promise you’ll keep carrying me?”

“Jab tak meri haddiyan chalengi, main aapko godh mey uthatey rahoongi,” she whispered. “As long as my health permits, I will keep on carrying and protecting you.”

And with that, she lifted him once more — gently into her lap — holding him close, the thunder outside only making the warmth within more real.

One muggy Saturday morning, Sumit’s elder cousin — Ragini didi — showed up unannounced from Pune.

Ragini had practically helped raise him. And though she hadn’t seen him in years, she remembered him as a shy but independent guy. So when she rang the bell and the door swung open... what she saw left her speechless.

Amma Lakshmi stood inside the flat’s hallway, wearing a plain cotton sari tucked high for work. Her hair was tied up, her big arms glistening slightly with morning sweat — and in her arms, like a baby in his mother's cradle, lay Sumit.

She had just picked him up to take him from the sofa to the dining chair. He had complained of a dull ache in his lower back. Lakshmi, standing behind him, had slid one arm smoothly under his knees and the other around his upper back.

Her big palms cupped him snugly as she gently leaned and hoisted him up and into her arms, as if lifting a child off the floor. His legs dangled slightly past her hip, his arms instinctively resting around her neck. Her sari pressed against his cheek as she began walking slowly toward the dining table — her hips swaying, her large frame making his own seem comically small.

That was exactly when Ragini walked in.

“SUMIT ?!”

Lakshmi paused mid-step, glancing sideways at the guest. “Aapke rishtedaar hain?”

Sumit was still frozen in her arms. “D-didi! You came early…”

Ragini gawked. “What on earth is this?! She’s carrying you like a baby!”

Lakshmi chuckled, looking down at Sumit in her arms. “Aur kya karti, didi ji? Baccha hai toh godh mein hi sambhaalna padta hai.”

Ragini blinked. “You’re forty!”

“Haan,” Lakshmi said calmly. “Par five-three hai. Aur bas 64 kilo. Dekhiye toh zara—ek baccha hi lag raha hai meri godh mein. Aur mey pachpan ki hoon”.
“Yes but he is five-three. And only 64 kilos. Just look at him, he is looking like a baby in my cradle. And I'm 55 years old.”

She gave Sumit a tiny bounce in her arms, as if to prove her point, and walked forward, setting him slowly into the dining chair, making sure his back was supported, his limbs folded gently into position.

Sumit turned crimson. “Didi, it’s not what it looks like—she’s just... very helpful.”

“Bahut helpful,” Lakshmi agreed. “Poore ghar mein sabse halka saman yeh hi hai.”
“He is the lightest luggage in the house.”

That afternoon, Ragini sat stunned as Lakshmi continued her chores.

Sumit, meanwhile, was trying to change a bulb in the corridor, standing on a wobbly stool. He could barely reach.

Lakshmi returned from the kitchen, hands on her wide hips. “Ab utariye saab. Phir se zyada ooncha udh rahe ho.”
“Please get down, Sir. You are again trying to reach beyond your height.”

Sumit stretched anyway. “I can manage!”

Without warning, she walked up behind him, placed her big hands around his waist, and lifted him clean off the stool, holding him under his arms with his feet dangling.

She turned to Ragini as if giving a demonstration. “Dekhiye didi, aapka bhai toh poorey bacchon jaisa hai. Na height zyada, na weight.”
“Now see didi, your brother is just like a small baby. He is so short and light.”

Then she turned back to Sumit, holding him up to reach the bulb with her arms stretched up behind him.

“Dekha? Aap khud nahi pahunch paaye, Amma ki godh mein hi kaam hua.” “Did you see? You cannot reach on your own, but only in Amma's arms.”

Sumit whispered, blushing, “Amma, stop teasing, please...”

“Achha? Chalo neeche. Get down now.”

She brought him down slowly, face to face, letting him stand on his feet, their eyes barely level with her collarbone.

“Ab bolo, kisne zyada grow kiya — main ya aap?” 
“Now tell me, who has grown more - you or me ?”

The next day, Amma and Sumit were returning from the local tailor’s shop. The sun was strong, the lanes crowded. Sumit, already sweating, looked exhausted. 

Lakshmi didn’t waste time. With a sigh, she turned to him. “Aayiye, phir se chhoti sawari ban jaaiye.”
“Come, hop on for a small lift back home.”

Before he could object, she squatted slightly, wrapped both arms around his thighs, and lifted him in a secure hip-carry position — like a mother balancing a large toddler on one side. His arm instinctively went around her neck again.

Her large hand supported him from below, her other hand free to carry the bag she was holding, as she marched forward. Her sari swayed around his legs, her firm grip keeping him from sliding. She adjusted him once mid-walk — pulling him closer — and he could feel her strong body fully support his weight like he was made of pillows.

Then, they passed a group of teenage boys loitering outside a general store.

One pointed. “Arre dekh! Chhota uncle mummy ki godh mein!”
“Look guys ! That small uncle is being carried by his mummy.”

Another shouted, “Uncle ko school chhodne le ja rahi hai kya aunty?”
“Aunty are you carrying Uncle to school?”

Sumit buried his face into Lakshmi’s shoulder. “Amma... put me down... please…”

Lakshmi looked over at the boys and smiled — but her voice sharpened.

“Tum log bhi toh patle patle lag rahey ho. Aa jao tum logon ko bhi godh mey utha leti hoon.”

And with that, she patted Sumit’s bottom and said, “Aap chhinta mat kijiye, aapki Amma sambhaal rahi hai.”

That evening, Sumit said nothing. He sat on the edge of the bed, looking down.

Lakshmi stepped behind him, lifted him gently under the arms, and pulled him back into a deep lap-cradle, sitting on the edge of the bed and holding him sideways like always — his head resting on her shoulder, his legs folded over her thick thigh.

“Kya hua chhote saab?”
“What's the matter, my little boss?”

Sumit didn’t answer for a moment. Then he murmured, “It’s strange. I’m a 40-year-old man. And yet... when I’m in your arms, I feel like I belong there. Safe. Small and weak.”

Lakshmi rocked him a little.
“Chhota ho ya bada... har kisi ko kisi ki sahara chahiye hoti hai.”
“Smaller or bigger, everybody needs some support.”

He looked up at her — at the lines around her eyes, the proud strength in her thick arms, the affection in her wide chest where his head now rested.

“Tumhari godh i toh hai mera support system,” he whispered.

Lakshmi didn’t reply. She just kissed his forehead and tightened her arms around him, cradling him into sleep, as the city outside fell into darkness. A small guy of 40, sleeping peacefully on the lap of a 55 year old big tall woman. 

( To be Continued....)

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