Singapore Sex Scandal - Sex In My Shower — Gary Ng -
Their first real date wasn't scheduled. At 11 PM, Gary texted: "I'm at Gardens by the Bay. The supertrees are less impressive without you telling me which one looks like it's waving."
For the first time in years, Gary Ng missed the last MRT train. And for the first time, he didn't care at all. If you'd like a different tone (e.g., bittersweet, comedy, or a dramatic relationship turning point), just let me know.
Intrigued despite himself, Gary agreed to a walk along the Singapore River. Elena talked about the secret history of shophouses, the way shadows fell differently on Tiong Bahru in the rain, and how she once spent three hours sketching a stray cat near Clarke Quay because "the cat had something important to say." Gary Ng - Singapore Sex Scandal - Sex In My Shower
Elena arrived 20 minutes later, paint smudged on her fingers. They sat on a bench until the lights dimmed. When Gary tried to apologize for being "too logical," she simply took his hand and traced a line from his wrist to his fingertips.
He left the meeting early—something he never did. Their first real date wasn't scheduled
Gary Ng had mastered the art of the convenient relationship. Dinner was always somewhere with a reservation. Dates ended by 9:30 PM to catch the last direct MRT train. His ex-girlfriends had described him as "a perfectly scheduled bus route—reliable, but never surprising."
Then, on a humid Thursday evening at a Maxwell Food Centre hawker stall, he bumped into Elena. Literally. Her iced bandung spilled down the front of his pale blue shirt. While Gary calculated dry-cleaning costs, Elena laughed—a bright, unguarded sound—and said, "Now your shirt matches the sunset. Keep it." And for the first time, he didn't care at all
The Last MRT Train
But two weeks later, when he was stuck in a late-night meeting reviewing traffic flow models, a photo appeared on his phone: Elena's sketch of him sitting at a kopitiam, hair slightly messy, but with a small smile he didn't know he had. The caption read: "The urban planner who forgot to plan his own happiness."
Gary found her utterly inefficient.
"You see numbers," she said softly. "I see colors. Together, we might just make a masterpiece."