Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Funny Sex


 


 

The heel of my left shoe caught the bear's ear sending me to embarrassment heaven. As I lay spread eagle face down on the bear skin rug, I took measure of the situation. Having missed landing on his lordship as he reclined in the nude by the fire I quickly rose to my feet begging him for forgiveness. I felt awkward in my maid's uniform but played the role to the max. The bowl of strawberries I had carried bounced off the head of the bear, strewing the ripe fruit across the room as the can of whipped cream now well shaken remained unharmed. The night may be salvageable yet I hoped as my mate bestowed a frown of mock displeasure. Our game may change to one of crime and punishment instead of master and maid. We would still please each other as only those married for many years can do. I put on my best saucy French accent and asked his lordship if I could clean up my unforgivable error, lest he think me incompetent to remain in his employ.

He rose on one elbow, picking a strawberry from his navel, popping it into his mouth with a deliberate slowness. My breasts throbbed, heart fluttered and I knew tonight would be filled with wonders. My breath deceived me as I gasped at my lovers rising intentions. Oh, foul the boundaries of lordship and maid. I kicked my shoes off and once again lay on top of the bear skin rug, this time on my back as I put the ghost of my recent trip aside and got laid.

With a lust never too hearty, my one and only drew me close. His breath was hot and laced with the scent of strawberries. He whispered sweet nothings in my ear causing my wanton desires to run amok. I worked the lacy cuffs off my wrists and tossed one onto his lordships throbbing member. Score!! This seemed to bring his passion to a height I could only be thankful for.

He stripped my uniform off, loathsome as it was to stand in our way, and tossed it to the side. My pulsing desire moist with anticipation waited to be entered. I pulled him toward me urging him to consummate this union as I was horny as all get out. He teased and tickled me with my feather duster, then grasped me to his heaving chest and thrust his package deep into my chamber (after all I was a chamber maid).

Our coupling was thwarted as an odor of something other than wood was burning. We looked toward the fireplace and noticed my maid's uniform smoldering, half in and half out of the fire (kind of funny since that was the position we were in too). I kicked the rest of the fabric into the flames and tossed my frilly headband in for good measure.

We rolled around on the bear skin rug for hours, taking turns at being the lord, or lady. However a lady I was not. Dost thou require anything else my lord I asked with a throaty voice sated by the night's debauchery? His lordships answer was a snore.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Why Millie Gardenia Broke Our Windows

    We met one early Tennessee morning after my cousins had taken us coon hunting. In the dark, cold and tired with no coons to show for our trek, I came face to face with love. She caught my heart right then, standing there in dark blue overalls pockets laden with shells and her shot gun leaning against her leg, her long brown hair tied with a worn out shoelace with frayed ends. That was Millie Gardenia, sexy even before I knew what sexy was, before she knew what sexy meant. I loved her then and thought forever.

    She sent a blackberry pie home to me a few days later; crust slightly burned and not enough sugar, yet it was the best pie ever. I figured I'd better give something to Millie so I dug through my cigar box full of treasures and found a brand new leather bootlace. I walked the

half-mile to Millie's with that gift hot in my pocket. With no trucks in the driveway and no answer to my knock, I scooted around the house looking in each window hoping to find Millie's

room. I found her window in back over-looking the garden. There was a young pine tree right by the house almost too close. I tied the bootlace on the top branch so she'd see it flutter. I peered into her room thinking how lucky that cat was, to be curled up in a pool of sunlight on Millie's desk. I ran home whistling, breezed through all my chores thinking of Millie the entire time.

    Junior high came and went with Millie and I swapping treasures, coon hunting and stealing an occasional kiss behind the barn. After all, we loved each other but what do thirteen-year-olds know about love.

    Passions flared as we entered high school with coon hunting a handy excuse for spending nights in each other's company. Cousins and brothers went along, but I only cared about Millie. We'd begrudge time, little as it was to kill a coon, even though everyone knew that's not why we went hunting any more.

    She was my best friend. We always had fun together, dreaming about our futures, listening to our favorite songs. Her hair smelled of Prell Shampoo. I'd undo that bootlace, run my fingers through her hair; rhapsodize my affections, spouting love poems learned in English Lit. My love for her or my hormones went wild; for Millie had a body that any girl would sell her teeth for; long wavy brown hair, dark chocolate brown eyes that always twinkled. Large breasts that overflowed my clumsy hands, a waist small but not twig thin and hips made fit to straddle my teenage lust.    

The spring of our senior year we spent idling in fields. Millie was a sight to behold as butterflies flitted and tickled her, wafting on the scent of our love. The scent of flowers, Millie

and sex would linger long after we parted, leaving me full of young passion and pride. She knew I loved her, that I'd do anything. I'd cross tracks in front of an oncoming train just to see her, to touch her. She was my life.

    Graduation arrived, caps tossed into the air never to find the right head again. Summer jobs kept us busy but we managed to find a moment to say hey, I love you or an always too short moment to kiss.

    Fall fell and Millie along with her friends took a girls night out. Millie donned her sweater and tied her hair up with the leather lace I'd given her years ago. A beauty no doubt. The girls had fun, giggled about their outing, but never told the boyfriends what they did.

    The boys and I decided that if the girls could have a night out we could too. We piled into my old Jeep Wagoneer and headed out to the nearest bar. Other friends eventually joined our group and soon we'd taken over the entire place. One particularly drunken fellow bragged about a recent conquest getting louder and cruder as he went. He told stories to any that would listen. After one story too many he pulled an old leather bootlace from his shirt pocket spouting what a sweet piece of ass she'd been.

    This news tore my heart out; I saw red and decked the son-of-a-bitch, grabbing for that leather string. Followed by my buddies I headed to the Jeep before a real fight ensued. I was hit so hard with anger I felt my soul leave.

    All night I wondered what Millie had done; acting single and all that. Morning came and with the lace once again hot in my pocket I trudged to Millies and tied it on the pine tree that had grown as tall as the house. I marveled at her shame, my loss. I couldn't stand it, couldn't see where to go or what to do. I was smacked with the harsh realities of adult love.

    I didn't see Miss Millie Gardenia for months. Pies showed up on the porch but I left them for the dogs. When we did see each other in town, we didn't speak and her looks of puzzlement met a coldness I never knew I had in me.

    I couldn't stay, left for college where I learned a lot about life and love and eventually found another girl. We married and took over the home place when my Pop passed away. I went home to Mama's love but also to the hurt that never quite healed. The hurt of loving Millie.

    She must have heard I'd come home and left a blackberry pie on our front porch. My wife a loving person had no idea that the pie she served me that night was a slice of torture. All she talked about was what wonderful neighbors we had, how she'd have to get to know them.

    All those feelings were difficult to cope with so I called the boys and off we went, back to the bar where my love had been wrenched away. Pals I hadn't seen for ages were there, along with the same old son-of-a-bitch I'd laid out years ago. He spotted me and nodded, put his hand to his chin in mock disbelief, sauntered over and we shook hands warily. Pleasantries aside he got right to the point. He wanted to know why I'd clocked him for a piece of old bootlace that his girl Susan had worn in her hair.

    Stunned, I asked him what Susan had looked like. He described a beautiful blonde haired blue eyed girl just the opposite of my ravishing brunet Millie. I apologized, told him he owed me a fist in the jaw for being a jackass and left it at that.

    I felt my soul leave once again as I drove home in a shame so deep I thought I'd meet the devil himself.

    Sharing my feelings never did come easy to me, writing them down even more difficult. I never went to bed that night; I wrote and erased, wrote and erased until I came up with a pretty lame explanation and a pathetic apology. None of it really an excuse but what else could I do after all this time had passed.

    I heard my wife stirring so I made coffee, tried to tuck my shame away and face the woman I now loved. She questioned my nights absence with a loving look, I pulled her into my arms offering nothing but the truth in its own way; I couldn't sleep.

    Leaving late I headed to work with a plan to swing by Millie's hopefully after she was gone. Memories assailed me as I pulled up to her house. I hadn't been back to Millie's since leaving that old piece of lace on the pine tree by her window that second time. Climbing the porch stairs with stiff legs I left my feeble note tucked under the welcome mat I'd crossed so many times before.

    After an overly long and uneventful day I pulled into my driveway and stopped in horror. Every window in the house was broken. I called to my wife, no answer; I hoped she had gone into town, escaped the madness that I saw. I walked slowly toward the front door, dreading what I'd find inside, but nothing could have prepared me for what lay waiting on the top step.

    Two old leather bootlaces.


 

The End

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Freaks

Beard droppings. A bone of contention between the newlyweds. Are all women this messy he wondered as he leaned up around their one sink.


 

After living as family and traveling with the carnival for thirty plus years along with the other freaks they had grown to know each other well. However after reaching old age at 45 (for 45 is old for a carney), Reginald the Strong and Barb the Bearded Lady decided to marry and leave the fast paced life behind.


 

Reginald the Strong wasn't considered to be quite as freakish as the others; most of the stunts performed were really staged. Now Barb the Bearded Lady was the carnivals biggest freak; she had been born with extra male hormones, her voice a deep alto and a fine beard were her fate in life. She hated the affliction, rarely spoke and now that she was rid of the carnival, shaved everyday.


 

Their carnival friends threw them a party and bid them luck and happiness. What they hadn't told them however, was what to expect now that they were married and how to adjust to life outside the carnival.


 

In many ways they were like a normal couple; Reginald worked at the local gym as a trainer and Barb stayed home to cook and keep their little one bedroom apartment tidy. She tried to get a job, but employers wanted "qualified people"; being a Bearded Lady didn't bring many qualifications to a job. After all, knowing how to pitch a tent and stand up to the jeers of an audience didn't count for much in the real world.


 

They found they missed their carney family, but not the frenetic daily life. They had quiet dinners talking over the day's events and spent evenings-sitting hand in hand on their postage stamp sized porch. Life outside the carnival was hard to get accustomed to; being freaks and never living long in one place they didn't know how to be neighbors.


 

They thought is would be easy, leaving the carnival, but taunts of freak echoed as neighborhood children played. This hurt Barb the most, as she had been a freak in the carnival, and thought that this ugly name would be left behind; she know she was different, but not a freak.


 

Reginald and Barb shopped together and went to movies every so often, but they avoided really public places like the park or the mall. Fewer chances to be ridiculed. Freak was the most common taunt with weirdo and alien coming in close behind.


 

They became twitch living in one place; with neither space to spread out nor any place to get away from each other. Barb missed the constant hum of carnival life and grew lonely. Reginald, enjoyed his job, but started to detest coming home to the neediness of Barb; bear droppings littered the counter, he wondered why she couldn't get them all picked up. Reginald took on extra work as a personal trainer and spent several hours each weekend at homes other than his own.


 

Barb discovered soap operas and lived to watch fictitious families survive, started loving them like her own family. These people made up for all she lacked in life. They never called her a freak and accepted her quiet intrusion into their lives. She soon took on characteristics similar to those she watched and for a time, their married life settled back into one of normalcy.


 

He began to have hope for their future although Barb still left those damn beard droppings around the sink. But as weeks went by her shaving became obsessive and she began spending all her time watching her boxed family, completely ignoring the house keeping.


 

Reginald had had enough and told Barb they needed to talk. She reluctantly turned off her other life and heard him say he wanted to leave. She know he wouldn't really go and she told him so. Said he'd never be happy without her. They went round and round, as Reginald explained that it just wasn't working, trying to be as nice as he could while he tossed what had been dreams out the window.


 

Barb just didn't get it. He went to their bedroom, packed a bag and walked to the door. She laughed her deep throaty laugh, knowing he wouldn't turn the knob.


 

As he walked through the door out into yet another life, he turned to face Barb. "you know" he said, "you really are a freak."

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The Thong

There once was a girl from Hong Kong,

Who wore a tiny French thong.

Her Dad did despise it,

Her Beau idolized it,

And her Mother just thought it was wrong.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Aroma Therapy


 

We lost our dog of fifteen years,

we wept, then dried our mournful tears.

She's buried in a nice deep hole,

with her favorite ball and water bowl.

We miss her every single day,

but not the vet bill we had to pay.

We'll wait a while to find another,

the mess and fuss, we don't want to bother.

We'll take a break from a faithful friend,

to waiting dog pleas we will not bend.

We visit friends with lovely dogs,

who slobber and require lots of daily jogs.

They let us pet them and toss a toy,

we get our fix and are filled with joy.

Then the smell proceeded by a little pfft,

emanates from the hind end resting at my foot.

Aroma therapy is now at its best,

it puts our nostrils to the highest test.

It fixes our need for a kindly dog,

we look around, we don't want to step on a log.