Friday 12:08 PM
She was early. She was always earlier than the other two ladies that made up their local chapter of the Blue Hat Society. Sitting in the far back corner booth of Al's Diner she would usually savor this quiet moment to herself and take this time to go through a mental checklist of what she felt they needed to try to accomplish as a group, but today her mind was elsewhere.
Nothing seemed to make sense anymore. All in the span of less than three months, the order in her life was replaced with confusion that was interrupted only by moments of chaos. One choice made as a couple, one decision to strengthen their marital bond and it was now hard for her to discern what was really true or not. She stared into her glass of iced tea and stirred the slice of lemon around with her straw fascinated with how quickly everything just tumbled around.
"Oh, Peggy, we've gone and opened Pandora's Box," she sighed thinking on all the events that had taken place.
Reluctantly agreeing to meet men that her husband had selected to be her paramours, none of the encounters had gone as they either had expected or even imagined they would. Yet, she still had now had two of the most intense sexual experiences of her life and neither was with the man she had married. She wouldn't even classify her first two agreed meetings as anything sexual at all.
Charlie was the first man they had met and he flopped and rolled on and around her body in failed attempts at penetration until he unexpectedly orgasmed on her thigh. He then acted as if her and her husband weren't even in the room and offered no apology nor gave the standard excuse men give for ejaculating early. Contented only with his own sexual release, he never noticed them leaving his hotel room afterwards.
The second man they chose to meet resembled her husband and she was genuinely excited and aroused by him, but Brett hardly touched her before concocting an excuse to leave - both men humiliated and left injured her self esteem.
Her only expectation for the third man her husband chose was punctuality. She wasn't expecting him to be younger. She certainly wasn't anticipating to have the best sex of her life. She wasn't expecting the man to do all that to her to be black.
She looked out into the parking lot of the diner and thought about the black stranger and how he made her feel after that first night: equating her voluptuousness with sexuality, adding his dark color to her paleness and marveling in the contrast, and reigniting her long dormant hunger for sex.
"Where is the answer to all this?" she asked and continued stirring her drink wishing she was somehow psychic and the swirling lemon could take the shape of a tea leaf.
She closed her eyes and thought on how the stranger also caused her to suffer by leaving her with no subsequent contact. He left her mind to substitute fantasy into the gaps that his black dick should have been filling and caused her lust to fester and grow into something so uncontrolled and impulsive that it blindly led her down the path of a dead end street.
She removed the straw from her drink and watched as the tea, the ice, and the lemon all quickly slowed and settled in the glass to a complete stop.
"This is what I have to do with my life," she concluded. "I can't close Pandora's Box, but maybe I can walk away from it. I don't want my life circling like an out of control merry-go-round. I can stop the straw from stirring."
She looked up to see Miss Carol and Jeanne both finally arriving into the diner donning their distinctive blue hats. Jeanne had a smile from ear to ear as she and Ms. Carol made their way over to the table and sat across from Peggy right as the waitress came over to take their order.
"The usual, ladies?"
Jeanne nodded her head in approval after seeing no one else at the table object and said, "Yes, thank you, Elaine. A root beer float for me with a glass of water and a Diet Coke for Ms. Carol, please."
Jeanne, at 55, was the youngest and lone widow of the three having lost her husband to cancer a few years back. It was her responsibility to pick up and drive Ms. Carol to their weekly luncheon.
Ms. Carol was 72, never married, and took pride in donating most of the money needed for whatever community activity the group would decide on funding or to support.
"So, what are the plans for the birthday girl this weekend?" Jeanne excitedly asked Peggy.
"Oh, nothing much. Will is coming into town later today and it will be nice to see him. It's been a year since he's been back home to visit. I'm so looking forward to seeing him again."
"Oooh, I wonder if he'll have a big birthday present for his mom? Do you have any plans to go out on the town for a nice romantic dinner with your husband? What kind of birthday cake do you want this year? Buttercream frosting is the best! I like..."
"You do know that I've had birthdays before, right?" Peggy chuckled before Jeanne could continue peppering her with more questions.
"Yes, but every year is special," argued Jeanne. "Don't be a stick in the mud on this day. You're not wanting even one candle on your cake?"
"No," Peggy said, mildly annoyed at the suggestion that she was against celebrations and anything fun, "I'm not going out to dinner, having cake or a party, or doing anything romantic. It's not even my birthday until Monday. We're going to relax at home and enjoy Will's company. That's it."
"I love birthdays!" Jeanne exclaimed, "I pick out a different color every year as my birthday theme and I buy myself a gift three months in advance and have it wrapped and put it in my closet and on my birthday I wake up and I open it. I love surprises!"
A loud clanging at the front of the restaurant interrupted everyone's conversations and Jeanne rose and turned to see what was happening before Peggy could properly explain to her the meaning of the word 'surprise'.
At the entrance of the diner a man was hitting a spoon against an empty glass.
"Excuse me, good patrons, I'm so sorry to interrupt your fine dining experience, but I lost my grip on my car door and placed a small dent in the car parked next to me. Does anyone here own a blue CR-V?"
Jeanne turned to Peggy and whispered, "Isn't that your car?"
Peggy just sat silent with her eyes fixed on the man as Jeanne turned and waved her arms, "Yoo-hoo, Mister? Over here!"
An anger welled up in Peggy that she had tried to temper ever since the last time she saw her black lover. An anger at being tricked, ambushed, and fucked to exhaustion. The stranger always moved like some sort of haunting poltergeist since she had met him: surprising her in her bedroom, infiltrating her dreams, and popping out of dark spaces unexpectedly, but always leaving her body knowing that what she experienced was real.
He had fooled her husband and kept her off balanced by continuously changing from being generous to jealously vindictive. He was at times faceless and was still able, since their first meeting, to remain as one without a name. She was a grown woman who didn't need surprises in her life either in the form of a birthday party or a lover stepping out of the shadows in a dingy alley and she certainly did not appreciate an intrusion here and now among her and her friends.
The black gentleman walked to their table and looked at Jeanne and said, "I'm really sorry about putting a ding on your car. Please, allow me to offer some sort of compensation."
"Oh, it's not my car," Jeanne said giggling and then pointed across the table at Peggy, "it's hers."
"Thank you for coming in and telling me but I'm not really concerned. I have insurance. That's what less clumsy adults use to take care of inconveniences that pop up in their day to day life," said Peggy dryly without even looking up at the man. "My husband and I," she emphasized, "my husband and I write annoyingly trivial things like that off. Now, if you could please leave as we have business to attend to."
"Are you ladies a part of the Blue Hat Society?" the man asked.