Chapter 1
Stefan steps out of the airplane into the air-conditioned jetway
of Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok and immediately feels the
transition: the cool cabin air gives way to a humid, warm breeze that
drifts through the open areas of the terminal. The smell of tropical
rain, jet fuel, and a hint of sweet jasmine rice from the nearby food
courts hangs in the air.
He follows the crowd through the long corridors. Thai signs with
English subtitles everywhere, flashing billboards advertising
duty-free and island tours. The humidity feels like 90%, his clothes
already clinging lightly to his skin. It’s late afternoon, the sun
hangs low and bathes the terminal in golden light through the huge
glass fronts.
After a few minutes Stefan reaches the immigration queues. Long
lines of tourists—backpackers, families, businesspeople. The
officers in their uniforms scan passports with tired but efficient
glances. His backpack—with the shrinking machine and the small,
steel hollow sphere (safely stowed in a padded compartment)—hangs
heavily on his shoulders.
His passport is ready. The line moves slowly forward.
Stefan nods to himself—no sightseeing, no shopping, no dawdling.
He wants nothing more than to get out of this overcrowded terminal as
quickly as possible and into his hotel.
The immigration queue crawls forward agonizingly slowly, but he
gets lucky: one of the lines for “Visa on Arrival” and “ASEAN +
Tourists” has just opened an extra counter. He slips over deftly,
presents his passport and the completed arrival card (which he filled
out obediently already on the plane). The officer scans it, gives him
a brief once-over, stamps with a loud clack and mutters “Welcome to
Thailand.” Thirty seconds later he’s through.
Baggage claim: his backpack arrives surprisingly fast—the
shrinking machine and the steel hollow sphere are still securely
packed, nothing looks suspicious. He grabs the backpack, ignores the
indoor taxi counters (they usually charge more), and heads straight
for the official Airport Rail Link.
Down in the basement he buys a ticket to Phaya Thai at the machine
(45 Baht, about 1.20 €). The train arrives in 4 minutes. He
boards—air-conditioned, clean, almost empty at this hour. Through
the windows he watches Bangkok’s lights slide past: high-rises,
neon signs, motorcycle taxis darting through the streets like glowing
fireflies. Even here the humid heat creeps in whenever the doors
open.
After 25 minutes he gets off at Phaya Thai and changes to the MRT
(Blue Line) towards Sukhumvit. His hotel is near Asok
station—central, but not right in the middle of the Silom chaos.
Another 10 minutes on the train, then he’s there.
He emerges onto the street around 18:45. The heat hits him like a
soaked washcloth: 32 °C, 85% humidity, the smell of grilled meat,
exhaust fumes, jasmine and open sewer canals blending into that
unmistakable Bangkok cocktail. In front of him the sign of his hotel
flickers: “Sukhumvit Bliss Hotel.”
The reception is brightly lit; a young woman with a perfect smile
greets him in English and Thai. Check-in takes less than three
minutes. She hands him the key card, explains the elevator and asks
if he needs anything else (“Welcome drink? Massage booking? SIM
card?”). He politely waves it off.
He rides up to the 12th floor. His room: clean, modern, large
window overlooking the lights of Sukhumvit Road and, in the distance,
the Chao Phraya. The air conditioning is already humming at 24 °C.
The bed looks inviting.
He drops the backpack. The shrinking machine and the sphere now
rest safely on the desk.
Finally alone.
Stefan exhales slowly and walks to the window. Below him the city
pulses: endless rivers of red taillights, the occasional blare of a
tuk-tuk horn, the faint thump of bass from some rooftop bar several
streets away. He feels the jet lag tugging at the edges of his mind,
but the adrenaline from the journey—and from what he’s
carrying—keeps him sharp.
He turns back to the desk, unzips a side pocket of the backpack
and carefully lifts out the small steel hollow sphere. It’s heavier
than it looks, cool against his palm, perfectly smooth except for the
almost invisible seam where the two hemispheres were welded. He sets
it down beside the shrinking machine.
The device itself is unassuming: matte black, roughly the size of
a large coffee maker, with a single circular opening on top and a
simple control panel that currently shows nothing but a faint standby
glow. No brand name, no serial number, no visible manufacturer
markings. Just as it was supposed to be.
Stefan sits on the edge of the bed for a moment, staring at the
two objects. Tomorrow he would begin the real work. Tonight, though,
he allows himself exactly one small ritual: he opens the minibar,
takes out a chilled Singha beer, cracks it open and raises the bottle
toward the glittering skyline outside.
“To Bangkok,” he murmurs. “And to whatever comes next.”
He takes a long sip, lets the cold bitterness cut through the
travel fatigue, then stands up again. Shower first. Food second.
Sleep third.
Everything else can wait until morning.
Stefan takes a deep breath—the cool air conditioning of the room
suddenly feels almost too sterile. Before he dives into the adventure
with the shrinking machine and potentially gigantic hands, he wants
to feel Bangkok at “normal” size first. The real chaos, the
smells, the energy. Test the waters, as he puts it to himself.
He packs only the essentials: phone, wallet with a few freshly
exchanged baht notes, key card, and leaves the shrinking machine
along with the sphere safely locked in the room safe (he sets the
code to something memorable like 2519—his birth year backwards or
something close). The machine is far too valuable to carry through
the streets.
Down at reception he asks briefly about the best way to get
quickly into the city center. The woman smiles.
Stefan decides to see something of the city from above.
He steps in, buys a Rabbit Card (reloadable) for 100 baht plus
top-up, and rides towards Siam. The Skytrain is packed with
commuters, students, tourists. Air conditioning set to arctic levels,
outside the neon lights flash by: huge billboards for Shopee, Lazada,
True, 7-Eleven everywhere.
After ten minutes he gets off at Siam Station. And here Bangkok
really hits him in the face.
The heat outside after the chilled train feels like a punch: 31
°C, high humidity, the smell of grilled pork skewers (moo ping),
coconut milk, exhaust fumes, sweet mango sticky rice, and a faint
trace of canal water. The Siam intersection is a boiling chaos:
thousands of people crossing the streets at the same time, tuk-tuks
honking, motorcycle taxis balancing three passengers, street vendors
shouting “Hello! Mango! Cheap! Cheap!”
To his left towers Siam Paragon—the luxury mall with a
Rolls-Royce in the display window and a massive aquarium in the
basement. To the right Siam Center and Siam Discovery, full of trendy
Thai brands and international designer stores. Straight ahead lies
Siam Square—the old student quarter, now a labyrinth of narrow
alleys packed with street food stalls, second-hand clothes, manga
shops, and massage salons.
Everywhere young women in school uniforms (even though it’s
already evening—many universities have late classes), influencers
taking selfies, couples holding hands while eating ice cream, and
groups of backpackers loudly debating prices.
Stefan stands right in the middle of it all and feels the pulse of
the city.
He lets the crowd carry him a few steps forward, past a vendor
frying bananas in bubbling oil, the sweet caramel scent cutting
through the heavier street smells. A tuk-tuk driver leans out and
calls “Where to, boss? One hundred baht, very fast!” Stefan just
smiles and shakes his head, continuing on foot.
He turns into one of the smaller sois branching off Siam Square.
The noise level drops slightly, replaced by the clatter of plastic
stools on concrete, the sizzle of woks, laughter from open-fronted
bars. Neon signs in pink and blue advertise “Thai Massage” and
“Foot Reflexology – 150 Baht/30 min.” A group of university
students sits cross-legged on the sidewalk sharing a giant bowl of
som tam, the sharp lime-and-fish-sauce aroma drifting toward him.
For the first time since landing, Stefan feels something close to
normal. No machines, no secrets, no plans for impossible sizes—just
him, a sweaty T-shirt sticking to his back, and the living,
breathing, overwhelming organism that is Bangkok at night.
He stops at a small cart selling fresh coconut water. The vendor
chops the top off with a machete in one practiced swing, sticks in a
straw, and hands it over for 40 baht. Stefan takes a long sip—the
cold, slightly sweet liquid runs down his throat like relief.
He looks up at the sky, barely visible between the tangle of power
lines and glowing signs. Somewhere above all this, tomorrow he will
test what he came here to do.
But tonight?
Tonight he’s just another face in the crowd.
He finishes the coconut, tosses the shell into a nearby bin, and
keeps walking deeper into the sois, letting the city decide where the
evening takes him next.
The influencer-student girls in Siam Square are indeed a feast for
the eyes: long legs in short skirts or denim shorts, crop tops,
perfect selfie poses against the neon lights, laughing with their
friends while sipping bubble tea or filming TikToks. But he's right:
scenes like that exist in Berlin, Seoul, or LA too. This here is
supposed to be something different, something raw and unfiltered that
you only find in Bangkok like this.
He leaves the Siam intersection behind and strolls east along
Sukhumvit Road. The BTS line roars overhead, motorcycle taxis buzz
past, and the sidewalks narrow, crowded with stalls selling fried
insects, fresh coconut water, and cheap fake AirPods.
After about 15 minutes on foot, he reaches the area where the
famous spots begin: Nana Plaza is still a bit further (about 10
minutes' walk from Asok), but already he notices the shift in
atmosphere.
The crowd becomes more international: more Western men alone or in
small groups, fewer families, fewer trendy locals. The neon lights
grow harsher, the music louder—bass from the go-go bars spills out
onto the street. Signs flash everywhere: “Beer 99฿”,
“Lady Drink”, “No Cover Charge”.
He turns into Soi 4 (Nana). And there it is: Nana Plaza, the
three-story horseshoe of bars glowing like a red, pulsing heartbeat
at night. It's still relatively early (around 20:30), most bars have
just properly opened. Outside the entrances, the first girls are
already standing in skimpy outfits—hotpants, glittery crop tops,
high heels, most with long, straight hair (often extensions), heavily
made up, but with that signature Thai smile that's inviting and
professional at once.
A few call out to him in English:
“Hello handsome! Come in, first drink free!”
“Where you from? Germany? I like tall man!”
“You look lonely, I make you happy tonight!”
Some pose deliberately, leaning against the railing, throwing
glances, giggling with their colleagues. Others sit on bar stools
right on the street, smoking a cigarette and scanning passing men
with practiced eyes—appraising, but not aggressive.
The air smells more intense now: sweet perfume, cigarette smoke,
fried snacks from street carts, a hint of sweat and cheap beer.
Stefan strolls slowly through the lower level, inconspicuous,
without stopping. No one drags him in (not yet—that usually comes
later if you linger). He sees the typical types: the go-go dancers on
the small stages inside (some bars have glass fronts so you can look
in), pole-dance-like moves to loud EDM or Thai pop, waitresses in
skimpy uniforms balancing trays of drinks.
A few particularly striking girls catch his eye:
A petite one with pink streaks and
a tattoo on her lower back, flirting with an older Australian.
A taller, athletic one with hints
of abs under her top, laughing confidently and nudging her friend as
he passes.
One with very long legs and high heels, almost as tall as
him, who looks straight at him and winks.
He's right in the middle of it, feeling the energy—the mix of
temptation, business, and pure night atmosphere.
The plaza buzzes with life even at this hour: groups of men in
polo shirts and shorts cluster near entrances, negotiating prices in
low voices or laughing too loudly after their first beers. Up on the
second and third floors, more bars spill light and music down into
the central courtyard, where a few freelance girls sit on benches or
lean against pillars, chatting on phones or eyeing newcomers. The
famous sign at the top—“The World's Largest Adult
Playground”—glows in bright pink and white, a cheeky landmark
that hasn't changed in years.
Stefan keeps moving, circling the lower level once more. He passes
Billboard, one of the bigger spots with its spinning stage visible
through the open front—dancers moving in sync to thumping bass,
lights flashing across bare skin. Next door, a smaller bar blasts
Thai pop remixes, girls outside waving enthusiastically at anyone who
makes eye contact.
He feels the pull—the raw, unapologetic vibe that's equal parts
exhilarating and slightly overwhelming. No illusions here, no
pretense of romance; it's commerce wrapped in neon and smiles, and
somehow that honesty makes it feel more alive than the polished clubs
back home.
For now, though, he stays on the periphery. Observes. Absorbs. The
shrinking machine is safe back in the hotel room, but the thought
flickers: what if he came back here tomorrow... smaller? The idea
sends a strange thrill through him, mixing with the humid air and the
distant honk of a tuk-tuk.
He pauses near a street cart selling cold Chang beers, buys one
for 50 baht, cracks it open, and takes a sip. The bitter fizz cuts
through the sweetness of perfume in the air.
Not tonight, he decides. Tonight is still reconnaissance. Feeling
the city's underbelly at full size.
But the night is young, and Nana Plaza never really sleeps.
He finishes the beer, tosses the bottle into a bin, and heads
toward the stairs to check out the upper levels—curious to see how
the energy changes higher up, where the crowds thin a bit and the
views overlook the chaotic Sukhumvit below.
The adventure, in all its forms, is just beginning.
Stefan lets his gaze drift lower discreetly as he continues to
stroll slowly through the lower level of Nana Plaza. Most of the
girls stand or sit in ways that make them easy to see from the
front—but that's not his focus right now.
He notices:
One in black hotpants and platform sandals with thin
straps—her feet are narrow, nails painted in bright coral, toes
slightly spread as she shifts her weight. The heel is at least 12 cm
high, the sole gleaming under the neon lights. In his mind, these
feet suddenly become enormous: massive, warm platforms, each toe
bigger than his entire body, the lacquered nails rising like shiny,
curved billboards above him, the faint sheen of sweat between them
carrying the scent of perfume, skin, and the whole evening.
Right next to her, another leans
against the balustrade, half-turned to talk to a friend. Her shorts
ride so low that the lower curve of her ass is exposed—firm,
round, golden-tanned, with a small tattoo (some delicate floral
pattern) just above the left cheek. When she laughs, the skin
tightens slightly, tiny dimples forming. In his fantasy, he shrinks
down to sphere size: that ass turns into a gigantic, soft landscape
arching over him like two warm, living hills. Every movement makes
the muscles underneath ripple, a subtle quake he would feel with
even the slightest step. The scent—sweet perfume mixed with her
natural skin—would envelop him completely, and through the
sphere's countless holes he'd see everything: fine hairs catching
the backlight, the faint goosebumps when a breeze hits, the gentle
sway with each step.
A third one just coming in from the street wears simple black
rubber flip-flops. Her feet are a bit wider, soles lightly dusted
from the sidewalk, but the nails freshly painted dark red. She
wiggles her toes briefly, as if adjusting the sandals. In his head:
those flip-flops become huge, slapping platforms that make the
ground tremble. Each step a thunderous boom, the rush of displaced
air as the foot lifts and falls—and between those toes, that
tempting gap where he could theoretically peer through if he
positioned the sphere just right.
-
The images of Nana Plaza at night flood his mind—the pulsing red
and blue neon, the crowds of girls in skimpy outfits under glowing
signs—mirroring the raw energy around him now.
The fantasy grows more intense. His pulse quickens. The sounds
around him—the laughter, the pounding music, the clink of
glasses—fade a little as his head is already inside that tiny steel
sphere: safe, protected, yet with perfect view through the countless
perforations. Everything outside enormous, overwhelming, close enough
to feel the draft of their movements, smell the warmth of their skin,
hear the soft rustle of fabric when they shift.
One of the girls—the one with the pink streaks from
earlier—notices his gaze suddenly. She flashes a cheeky grin, lifts
one leg slightly as if adjusting her shoe, and playfully wiggles her
toes in his direction. “Like what you see, baby?” she calls over,
laughing, her voice high and teasing.
Stefan keeps moving, still inconspicuous, but the fantasy is
burning hot now.
He feels the heat rising in his face, the familiar tightness in
his chest. Part of him wants to step closer, test the waters, see if
one of them might play along with a whispered scenario later. Another
part—the cautious, calculated part—reminds him why he's really
here: not just for the view, but for the experiment waiting back in
the hotel room.
He exhales slowly, forces a small, polite smile toward the
pink-streaked girl without stopping, and drifts toward the stairs
leading up to the second level. The higher vantage might give him a
better overview—of the plaza, of the crowds, of his own spiraling
thoughts.
Up there, the music is even louder, the lights brighter, the girls
more forward. A few lean over railings, calling down to potential
customers below. The air is thicker with smoke and perfume.
Stefan pauses at the railing, looking down into the courtyard.
From this angle, the scale feels even more exaggerated: tiny people
milling like ants beneath towering neon signs, while in his mind
everything is reversed—him tiny, them colossal, god-like in their
casual movements.
He checks his phone: just past 21:00. Plenty of night left.
The shrinking machine waits in the safe. The sphere waits.
And so does the city—raw, unfiltered, ready to swallow him whole
if he lets it.
He decides: one more loop through the plaza, then back to the
hotel. Reconnaissance complete. Tomorrow, the real test begins.
But tonight, the fantasies keep pace with every step he takes.
Stefan takes heart, draws a deep breath through the heavy mix of
perfume, smoke, and street food, and takes those few steps toward
her—the one with the pink streaks who just wiggled her leg and
called out to him.
She’s still leaning lightly against the bar’s railing, one leg
bent, the platform sandal dangling half off her foot. As he
approaches, she straightens up, turns fully toward him, plants one
hand on her hip, and flashes that wide, knowing grin. Her eyes
sparkle in the red neon, pink strands falling across her face; she
brushes them back with a casual flick of her finger.
He says it exactly the way it runs through his head:
“Yeah, I like what I see. A lot. How’d you guess?”
She bursts into laughter right away—a bright, bell-like sound
that cuts cleanly through the pounding music. Then she leans in a
little closer, her voice dropping to something lower, more playful,
laced with that signature Thai-English accent:
“Ohhh, baby… I can see it in your eyes. You don’t look like
the others who just stare at the face or the tits. You look…
deeper.” She lifts her foot playfully again, lets the sandal slap
back down with a soft clack, wiggles her toes once more in his
direction. “Feet? Or maybe…” —she twists slightly to the
side, pushes her hip out so the lower curve of her ass peeks free
again— “…this? I notice things like that. I’m good at it.”
She scans him from head to toe, bites her lower lip for a split
second, then grins wider.
“I’m Nook. And you? Where you from, Mr. Sneaky Eyes?”
Her friends nearby giggle softly; one nudges the other and
whispers something in Thai—probably about him. Nook ignores them,
keeps her gaze locked on him, waiting.
The scent of her perfume hits him now—something sweet with
vanilla and jasmine—mingled with the warm humidity radiating from
her skin in the muggy night.
He stands directly in front of her, close enough to see the fine
beads of sweat glistening on her collarbone, the gentle rise and fall
of her stomach with each breath.
Stefan meets her eyes, lets a small, crooked smile tug at his
mouth.
“Stefan,” he says. “From Germany. And yeah… you’re not
wrong. I do look deeper.”
Nook’s grin turns almost triumphant. She tilts her head,
studying him like she’s just won a little game.
“Germany? Tall and serious, huh? I like that.” She steps half
a pace closer—now the tips of her platform sandals almost brush his
shoes. The height difference shrinks; in those heels she’s nearly
eye-level with him. “You want to come inside? First drink on me.
Or…” —she lowers her voice so only he can hear it over the
bass— “…we can stay right here and talk about what those sneaky
eyes really want to see.”
One of her friends calls out something teasing in Thai; Nook
shoots back a quick reply without breaking eye contact, then laughs
again.
Stefan feels the pulse in his throat quicken. The fantasy from
minutes ago is no longer just in his head—it’s standing inches
away, warm, breathing, smelling of vanilla and skin and promise. Part
of him wants to follow her inside, let the night blur into drinks and
touches and whatever comes after. Another part—the sharper, more
disciplined part—reminds him of the steel sphere and the black
machine waiting in the hotel safe, of tomorrow’s real plan.
He glances past her shoulder for a second, up at the glowing signs
and the girls dancing on the stages above, then back to her face.
“Maybe both,” he says quietly. “A drink first. And then…
we see how deep we can go.”
Nook’s eyes light up. She reaches out, hooks one finger lightly
into the front of his T-shirt—just enough to tug him a fraction
closer—and nods toward the entrance of the bar behind her.
“Come on then, Stefan from Germany. Let’s start with something
cold. The rest…” —she winks, lets her finger trail down his
chest for half a second before pulling away— “…we figure out
step by step.”
She turns, hips swaying deliberately as she leads the way past the
curtained entrance. The neon bathes her in shifting pinks and reds;
her platform sandals clack against the tiled floor with every step.
Stefan follows.
The music swallows them as they step inside. The air is cooler
from fans overhead but thicker with smoke and bodies. Nook glances
back once, makes sure he’s still there, then weaves toward a small
booth near the side wall—private enough, but still with a clear
view of the stage where two dancers move under strobing lights.
She slides onto the cushioned seat, pats the spot right beside
her.
“Sit, baby. Tell Nook what you really came here for tonight.”
Stefan sits. The leather is warm from earlier occupants. He can
feel the bass vibrating up through the floor, through the seat, into
his bones.
And for the first time since landing in Bangkok, the line between
reconnaissance and reality starts to blur.
Stefan speaks the words quietly, but clearly enough for her to
hear over the thumping music. His gaze stays calm, almost
matter-of-fact as he says:
“Right, sex isn’t really my thing. I’ve never been with a
Thai woman. Would you or your friends mind if I smelled one of your
armpits? I’d pay, of course.”
Nook blinks once, twice. The cheeky grin freezes for a split
second, then she bursts into loud, genuine laughter—not mocking,
just surprised and amused. She slaps her thigh lightly with the flat
of her hand, half-turns to her two friends and calls something in
Thai that Stefan doesn’t understand, but the two immediately giggle
and shoot him curious looks.
Nook steps closer again, so close he can feel the warmth of her
body and see the faint sheen of sweat on her skin glinting in the
neon light. She lowers her voice, still grinning, but now with a
spark of curiosity in her eyes.
“Wow… you’re really different, huh? No sex, just…
smelling?” She playfully lifts one arm, resting her hand behind her
head so her armpit opens slightly—smoothly shaved, a trace of
deodorant and natural scent wafting toward him, blended with her
sweet perfume. “Lots of farang want all kinds of things, but this
is new. Funny new.”
She scans him head to toe again, as if trying to figure out
whether he’s serious or has some wild fetish (which he does, just
not quite the way she thinks).
“Okay, listen… normally no, we don’t do that just like that.
But you look harmless, and you mention money—how much are we
talking?”
Stefan sees one of her friends—the one with the long legs and
high heels from earlier—coming closer. Nook introduces her briefly:
“This is Ploy, she’s the brave one here.” Ploy laughs softly,
lifts her own arm too, extending it slightly toward him without
touching.
“Smell test? Like perfume check?” Ploy says in English with a
strong accent and winks. “Okay lah, but only quick. And you pay
both of us, yes? 500 baht each, okay? No touch, only smell. Deal?”
Nook nods in agreement, leans back against the railing and watches
him expectantly. The third friend stays a bit in the background,
discreetly filming with her phone (typical for the scene—some post
this kind of thing later as a funny story), but she doesn’t speak.
The air around them feels even thicker now: perfume, sweat,
cigarette smoke from the street, grilled meat from the stall across
the way. And underneath it all, that special, warm, human scent
coming from the two women—not overpoweringly strong, but intense
enough to fuel Stefan’s imagination. He thinks: If this is already
so close and present at normal size… what would it be like inside
the sphere? Giant armpits arching over him like warm, living caves,
the smell concentrated, all-encompassing, perhaps almost too
much—exactly what he was worried about just moments ago.
Nook raises an eyebrow. “So? Deal? Or just watch and dream?”
Stefan takes a slow breath, feeling his heart beat faster—not
from classic excitement, but from the clarity forming inside him.
This is the perfect test run. Not the big leap with the sphere yet.
Just a small, real step: How close can he get, how intense is it in
reality, before he tries everything tomorrow?
He nods slowly.
“Deal. 500 each, 1000 total. But I pay after I’ve done it—and
only quick, like you said. No touch, I promise.”
Nook and Ploy exchange a quick glance, then both shrug—agreed.
Ploy grins widely, Nook nods toward a slightly quieter corner of the
bar, half-hidden behind a pillar where the neon isn’t quite so
harsh and the music is a bit more muffled.
“Over here. Fewer eyes.”
They walk the few steps. The third friend (the one with the phone)
stays back but keeps filming from a distance—probably already
thinking of captions.
Stefan pulls out his wallet, counts two 500-baht notes and holds
them ready, but doesn’t hand them over yet. Nook notices and nods
approvingly.
“Good boy.”
Ploy goes first. She lifts her arm higher, leans lightly against
the pillar so her armpit is right at his eye level. The scent hits
him immediately: a mix of fresh deodorant (something citrusy), warm
skin, a hint of sweat from the long evening and that unmistakable,
slightly salty undertone that only comes from living flesh. It’s
stronger than he expected—not unpleasant, just… alive. Close.
Real.
He leans in, just close enough that his nose is maybe 5–8 cm
away. Inhales slowly. The smell fills his lungs: sweet-warm, a little
musky, with that lingering vanilla-jasmine trace from her perfume.
His pulse is racing now.
Nook watches him with folded arms, an amused, almost tender smile
on her lips.
“And? How does Ploy smell?”
“Good,” Stefan murmurs, almost to himself. “Better than I
thought.”
Ploy giggles and lowers her arm. “Your turn, Nook.”
Nook steps in front of him and lifts her arm the same way. Her
scent is slightly different—sweeter, more vanillic, with a touch
more sweat because she’s been outside longer. The smell is denser,
warmer, almost tangible. Stefan breathes in again, longer this time.
It’s overwhelming in its closeness, but still controlled. Exactly
what he needs: a reference. A benchmark for tomorrow, when everything
will be millions of times bigger and more intense.
He straightens up, exhales. Hands them the two notes.
“Thanks. Really. That was… helpful.”
Nook takes the money, folds it without looking and slips it into
her bra. Ploy tucks hers into her pocket.
With a small smile he says:
“Thanks a lot. You really smell good. But I bet it changes the
later the night gets, right?”
Nook nods immediately, still grinning. “Oh yaa, baby! At the
beginning fresh like flowers—Deo, perfume, shampoo. But after
midnight? After dancing, sweating, running around… then it smells
real woman. Salty, strong, a bit like… real life.” She waves her
hand in front of her nose as if chasing away an imaginary scent and
laughs again. Ploy joins in: “Yeah lah, then you better not come so
close anymore or knock out!”
He waits a small beat, then follows up, still calm and polite:
“By the way… can I smell your feet too?”
The two exchange a glance—short, wordless, the kind only close
friends can share without speaking. Nook raises an eyebrow, Ploy
bites her lip to keep from bursting out laughing again. Then Nook
shrugs.
“Feet now? You’re really crazy, but… okay. Why not? We
already started the Weird-Shit-Program.” She laughs out loud, turns
around and hops onto one of the high bar stools right at the counter
(currently empty because most people are inside dancing). Ploy does
the same, swinging up beside her. Both extend one foot toward
him—Nook the right, Ploy the left—their platform sandals and high
heels now dangling half off.
Nook is still wearing her black platform sandals with the thin
straps; Ploy’s glossy high heels gleam under the neon. The soles
are lightly dusted from the sidewalk, nails coral and dark red
respectively, just as he’d noticed earlier. They both wiggle their
toes playfully, as if inviting him in.
“But same rules: no touch, only smell. And… 500 baht more per
foot? Or per person? We share fair.” Nook holds out her open palm,
still grinning. Ploy nods: “Yeah, 500 each again. Deal?”
Up close now, he sees the feet in detail: warm, slightly damp from
hours of standing, the scent already rising faintly—a blend of
leather/plastic from the shoes, lingering perfume traces, the salty
film of sweat, and that warm, earthy skin smell. Not overpowering,
but definitely more intense than the armpits earlier. Exactly what
he’d hoped for: a preview of what it might be like inside the
sphere—giant, warm soles shifting above him, the scent
concentrated, omnipresent, perhaps almost suffocating the longer the
night wears on.
The two wait, legs slightly parted, feet extended toward him,
watching with amused-curious eyes.
Stefan nods once.
“Deal. 500 each again.”
He pulls out his wallet, counts out another two 500-baht notes and
sets them on the bar counter beside them—visible but not handed
over yet. Nook glances at the money, gives a satisfied nod, then
gestures with her chin.
“You first or me?”
“Doesn’t matter,” he says quietly. “You go first, Nook.”
She grins wider, lifts her right foot a little higher so the
platform sandal dangles completely free now, hanging from her toes by
one thin strap. The sole faces him directly—smooth, slightly
arched, the ball of the foot shiny with a thin sheen of sweat under
the neon glow. She flexes her toes once, spreading them, then
relaxes.
Stefan leans in slowly, keeping a respectful distance—maybe 6–8
cm from the sole. He inhales.
The scent hits layered and immediate: warm leather mixed with the
faint chemical tang of the sandal material, undercut by the salty,
musky warmth of skin that’s been confined all evening. There’s a
hint of the coral nail polish, something faintly sweet and chemical,
and deeper still that unmistakable human footprint smell—earthy,
lived-in, alive. It’s richer than the armpits, more animal, more
intimate in its directness. His heart thuds hard; this is closer to
what he’s chasing.
He exhales, straightens a fraction.
“Good,” he murmurs. “Really good.”
Nook laughs softly. “Told you—later it gets stronger. You
like?”
“Yeah. A lot.”
Ploy doesn’t wait for prompting. She lifts her left foot next,
heel still half in the glossy pump, but she slips it off completely
so the bare sole hovers in front of him. Her foot is longer, more
athletic-looking, the dark-red polish catching the light. The scent
is similar but subtly different—less sweet, more straightforwardly
salty, with a faint trace of the shoe’s interior lining and the
same warm, damp skin underneath.
Stefan leans in again. Inhales deeper this time.
Here the earthiness is stronger, the sweat-salt more pronounced
after hours in heels. It’s heady, almost dizzying in its
closeness—exactly the kind of intensity he needs as reference. If
this is what a normal-sized foot smells like after a long night…
then tomorrow, magnified to impossible scale inside the sphere, it
will be a whole atmosphere: warm, enveloping, inescapable.
He pulls back, nods once.
“Perfect.”
He slides the two 500-baht notes across the counter. Nook scoops
them up with a flourish, Ploy pockets hers.
“You’re welcome, Mr. Foot-Sniffer,” Nook teases, but there’s
no malice in it—only playful warmth. “Come back anytime. Next
time maybe after 2 a.m., when it’s really… authentic.” She
winks.
Ploy adds: “And bring friends. Or more money. We like weird guys
who pay nice.”
Stefan smiles—small, genuine.
“Thanks again. You’ve been great. Really.”
Stefan hesitated for a moment, feeling his pulse jump one beat
higher, but the words still came out anyway – quietly, almost
reluctantly, yet clear enough:
“I have one more question… can I smell one of your butts?
Maybe one who…“ He faltered, searching for the right words,
“…also… well… has to fart?”
For a moment absolute silence reigned between the four of them –
only the thumping bassline from the bar and the distant honking of a
tuk-tuk. Then Nook exploded into the loudest, heartiest laugh of the
evening. She slapped both hands on her thighs, leaned back so far she
nearly toppled off the stool, and gasped for air.
“Oh my god! Oh mein Gott! Pupsen?!” She repeated it in Thai
for Ploy and the third friend (who now lowered her phone and stared
with an open mouth). Ploy first stared at Stefan with huge eyes, then
she too collapsed – clutching her stomach, tears streaming down her
face from laughing, gasping: “No way! No way! This guy is crazy!
Best farang ever!”
The third one (apparently named Mint, as Stefan now caught) fanned
air toward herself and murmured something in Thai that sounded like
“He’s crazy, but sweetly crazy.” All three laughed so loudly
that a few other girls and some guests glanced over curiously.
After a good twenty seconds Nook half regained control, wiped her
eyes and leaned forward – still grinning, but now with a trace of
real curiosity and respect for his audacity.
“Okay… okay… wow. You’re really next level. Farting?
That’s… that’s new. Very new.” She took a deep breath, looked
at Ploy, then at Mint. The three exchanged that wordless glance
again.
Ploy shrugged. “I already drank two Chang today… it could
happen.” She patted her flat stomach lightly and laughed again.
Nook nodded slowly. “Same with me – street food earlier, a bit
spicy. But… that costs extra, yeah? A lot extra.”
Mint, who had been rather quiet until now, suddenly spoke up:
“I’ll do it. I’ve got… well, pressure right now.” She said
it completely dryly, almost matter-of-factly, and the other two burst
out laughing again.
Nook summed it up, still giggling: “So listen, Mr. Crazy: Normal
butt smelling? Maybe 1000 Baht per person. But with… extra sound
effect? That’s special-service level. 3000 Baht for one of us. And
only in the little alley over there – not here in front of
everyone. No touch, no photo, no video. Only you come close, we do…
what’s necessary. Deal or too expensive?”
Ploy grinned crookedly: “Or you take all three of us – then we
make party. But that will be expensive-expensive.”
Mint was already half standing, patted her own butt and said in
English: “Come on, let’s go quick. Before I change my mind.”
The three looked at Stefan – a mixture of amusement, business
sense and genuine entertainment. The air now felt electric, Stefan’s
mind racing: This was the ultimate test. If the normal scent of feet
and armpits was already so intense… how much more must it be when a
huge, warm butt lowered itself over his tiny ball? And then that one,
inevitable, natural “sound effect” – in miniature size it would
rush through the holes of the ball like a warm, droning storm, the
smell concentrated, overwhelming, perhaps too much… or exactly what
he was looking for.
Stefan nodded slowly, feeling the heat in his face, but at the
same time this strange, tingling excitement – exactly this mixture
of embarrassment and the knowledge that they were currently
classifying him completely as the craziest, most harmless weirdo of
the evening. In their eyes he was not the great conqueror, but the
guy who pays for a fart. And that was exactly what made it so
intense.
“Okay… Deal. 3000 Baht for Mint. Just the alley over there.”
Mint grinned broadly, stood up immediately and patted her butt
once more demonstratively. “Let’s go quick-quick, before I change
my mind or it comes out without you paying.” Nook and Ploy burst
out laughing again, Nook gently pushed him with the flat of her hand
toward the narrow side alley behind the bar – dark, narrow, lit
only by the faint light of a streetlamp and the red glow of the neon
lights further ahead. It smelled of urine, stale beer and garbage,
but right now nobody cared.
The three walked ahead, Stefan followed. Once in the alley they
turned around. Nook and Ploy leaned against the wall, crossed their
arms and watched like it was a show. Mint positioned herself with her
back to him, lifted the hem of her short skirt a little – just
enough so that the lower part of her butt was exposed, the smooth,
golden-brown skin shimmering in the half-darkness. She wore a tiny
string underneath that barely covered anything.
“Kneel down, Mr. Special,” she said over her shoulder, voice
half amused, half matter-of-fact. “Get close, but no touch. And
when it comes… breathe in deep, okay?”
Stefan went down on his knees – the ground was dirty, warm from
the day, but he didn’t care. His face was now perhaps 15–20 cm
from her butt. The scent rose immediately: warm, musky, a hint of
perfume that had mixed with the natural smell of her skin, and
underneath it this light, earthy film of sweat from the long evening.
It was already intense – the butt curved directly in front of him
like a soft, living wall, the pores visible in the faint light, tiny
hairs backlit, the slight goosebumps because a breeze blew through
the alley.
Mint took a deep breath, tensed her stomach slightly… and then
it happened.
A quiet but distinct Prrrrt – not loud, not dramatic, but warm
and close. The burst of air hit him straight in the face, warm,
moist, with that characteristic, sharp, sulfurous smell that
immediately settled in his nose: eggs, spicy street food, a hint of
garlic and pure, unadulterated human. It wasn’t disgusting – it
was overwhelmingly real, animalistic, intimate in a way that almost
knocked him over.
Nook and Ploy broke into laughter again – muffled, but no less
loud. “Oh shit, Mint! That was a good one!”, Nook gasped. Ploy
was still secretly filming with her phone, murmuring “I have to
show this to my sister, she’ll never believe me otherwise.”
Mint half-turned, looked down at him – he was still kneeling
there, the smell hanging heavy in the air – and grinned crookedly.
“Well? Was it worth it, Farang? Or do you need another one for the
road?”
The smell lingered, mixing with the humid night air. Stefan felt
his mind racing: If this was already so close, so dominant, so
all-consuming in normal size… how much more must it be inside the
ball? A giant butt descending, the pores like craters, the warm air
blast like a hurricane through the holes, the smell so concentrated
that it completely enveloped him, penetrated every pore, no escape.
Maybe too much. Maybe perfect.
The three waited for his reaction – still laughing, but now with
a trace of genuine curiosity whether he really wanted more or whether
that had been his limit.
Stefan cast one last, long glance at Mint’s butt – the skirt
was pulled back down, but the memory of that smooth, warm skin, the
gentle curve, the tiny, pinkish little asshole that had just opened a
small bit moments ago, burned itself into his mind. It had been so
small, so inconspicuous in normal size… and yet he knew exactly:
shrunken, that one little hole would become a gigantic, pulsating
crater. A dark, warm tunnel that would open and close over his ball,
completely enveloping him, stealing his breath, dominating him with
every twitch, every fart, every natural sound and scent. The fart
from just now had already been like a warm, sharp gust of wind – in
miniature size it would hit him through the holes of the ball like a
hurricane, the smell so dense and omnipresent that there would be no
escape.
A shiver ran down his spine – half arousal, half genuine, cold
fear. He would be at its mercy. Completely. No way out, only that
one, gigantic asshole as his horizon, his sky, his entire world for
the next hours or days.
Stefan slowly stood up, brushed the dust off his knees and cleared
his throat. The three were still looking at him – the laughter had
ebbed, but the amused, slightly condescending gazes remained. In
their eyes he was still the crazy farang who had just dropped 3000
baht for a fart. And that was exactly what made the situation so
electrifying.
“Thank you very much… that was… unforgettable,” he said
quietly. “I’m going now. But before I go… do you maybe have
numbers or any platforms where one can book you? I mean… for later
again?”
Nook grinned immediately again, pulled out her phone and quickly
typed something. “Sure, baby. We’re not just out here on the
street. Look: Line is the easiest.” She showed him her QR code –
a cute cat emoji as profile picture. “Scan that. My Line name is
NookNook69. Just say you’re the ‘Smell Guy’ from today – then
I’ll know right away.”
Ploy did the same, her QR code had a pink heart. “PloyPloy_4U.
And if you want something private – hotel, quiet place, more time –
just say. But it costs more than out here.”
Mint, who was just adjusting her skirt, shrugged and showed her
code. “MintMintHot. But I’m picky. Only if you’re as funny
again as today.” She winked and added: “And if you really come
back… bring condoms. Just by the way. In case you ever want
something else.”
The three laughed softly once more, but now rather friendly. Nook
nudged him lightly on the arm. “Take care, okay? And if tomorrow or
the day after you feel like Thailand again – Line us. We’re
usually here from 8 pm or in Cowboy.”
Stefan scanned the three codes (or at least saved them), nodded
once more in thanks and turned around. The alley spat him back out
onto the glaring lights of Soi 4. The sounds of the bars, the
honking, the calling of the other girls – everything suddenly felt
far away. His head was full of what had just happened. His body
vibrated with adrenaline and anticipation.
He took a Grab back to the hotel (about 120 baht, the driver
talked football the whole ride, Stefan only nodded absently). Once in
the room he locked the door, turned the air conditioning down to 22
degrees and stared at the safe.
The shrinking machine and the steel hollow ball were waiting.