One harvest day, I decided that I would stay home. I told my parents I wasn't feeling well.
'You look well enough,' said my mother.
My father looked at me suspiciously. 'Lad, you're eighteen now. You're a man. Hale or sick, the harvest must come in.'
I replied, in my best croaking voice, that I was so ill I couldn't rise from my bed. They didn't believe me, I could tell. Shaking their head with disappointment, they both went off, to the join the rest of the village bringing in the harvest.
It was a golden day. Perhaps the last fine day of the year. Why waste it toiling in the fields? Coming home scratched bloody by the stubble. Itching, exhausted, back aching? No thanks. I had a reputation in the village as a dreamer and a wastrel. A potential runaway, even. So what? Though my plans were vague, I knew my future wouldn't be here, following the same life my parents had led, and their parents before them.
I waited a decent amount of time until the harvesters had left and then I headed down to the village pond. There was no-one around. The adults all working the fields, the children safely out of the way in the school house. No need for caution, or stealth. The sun beat hot on my skin. A delicious warmth. I took my boots off and let my feet dangle in the cool waters of the pond and watched the lazy clouds meander. I daydreamed about Elsa, the girl in the village that I liked the most. At least, at the moment. She had milky skin, supple limbs. I started to wonder about what lay beneath her smock. I hoped that one day she might let me see. Perhaps even touch. A pleasant heat grew around my crotch. Reaching down, I slowly rubbed myself there through my breeches, my imagination wandering in directions that would shock my parents, and probably Elsa, until I reached the point of no return. A sticky dampness spread around my crotch, not unpleasant in the noon heat. I felt perfectly relaxed. Lying back, on the sunny bank, my eyelids became heavy, and I fell asleep.
Sometime laOn harvest day, I decided that I would stay home. I told my parents I wasn't feeling well.
'You look well enough,' said my mother.
My father looked at me suspiciously. 'Lad, you're eighteen now. When it's your fields you'll have to do it yourself, hale or sick.'
I replied, in my best croaking voice, that I was so ill I couldn't rise from my bed. Shaking their head with disappointment, they both went off, to the join the rest of the village bringing in the harvest.