He turned on the axis of his spine. She traced the mallet up the back of his calf, into the hollow of his knee, and stopped at the hem of his briefs.
Monsieur Francois Gay did not flinch. He stood in the center of the polished oak floor, his posture a perfect plumb line from the crown of his graying head to the soles of his bare feet. He wore only a pair of charcoal wool trousers, impeccably pressed, and a simple white linen shirt, unbuttoned at the collar. His attire was that of a country gentleman at ease—yet his stillness suggested a man under judgment.
She knelt. Not in supplication, but in examination. She placed the cool metal of the mallet against his inner ankle. “Turn.” CMNM Monsieur Francois Gay
Francois Gay met her eyes. Here was the hinge of the piece. In the world of CMNM, the clothed man holds the power. But Francois had surrendered his role. He was the canvas. She was the frame.
And in that moment, Francois Gay—naked, except for his socks and shoes—smiled. It was not a smile of humiliation. It was the smile of a man who had just learned something new about the weight of fabric, and the heavier truth of its absence. He turned on the axis of his spine
She circled him slowly. Her heels made no sound on the antique rug. She opened the portfolio to reveal a charcoal sketch: a man’s torso, the muscles rendered not as anatomy, but as landscape—hills of pectoral, valleys of abdomen, the dark well of the navel.
“You may dress, Monsieur Gay,” she said at last. “The artist will be pleased. You have understood the assignment. You are not a man undressed. You are a man revealed .” He stood in the center of the polished
She walked around him one final time. The mallet did not touch him now. Her gaze did. It traveled the slope of his shoulders, the quiet surrender of his hands at his sides, the vulnerable intimacy of his genitals—unhidden, unashamed, simply present .