The narrator begins by telling us that he's very angry. He's upset that his wife has told him that he and the director of the theater had a sexual relationship, and that she ratted him out for it. He doesn't know if this means that she's actually trying to cheat on him, or if she just wants to make sure that his nephew is having an affair with her nephew. The narrator asks the audience to imagine what it would be like to have sex with your nephew, and imagines what it's like to be in love with someone who's not your husband. The audience imagines that the narrator and his wife are having sex in front of their friends and family, and they imagine that they're being watched. The two of them imagine that someone will see them having sex, and the narrator says he'll stop having sex with them if they don't want him to.
The narrator begins by telling us that he's very angry. He's upset that his wife has told him that he and the director of the theater had a sexual relationship, and that she ratted him out for it. He doesn't know if this means that she's actually trying to cheat on him, or if she just wants to make sure that his nephew is having an affair with her nephew. The narrator asks the audience to imagine what it would be like to have sex with your nephew, and imagines what it's like to be in love with someone who's not your husband. The audience imagines that the narrator and his wife are having sex in front of their friends and family, and they imagine that they're being watched. The two of them imagine that someone will see them having sex, and the narrator says he'll stop having sex with them if they don't want him to.