All Sexual Activity In This Story Is Between Characters 18+ Years Old
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Arlene Hart glanced up at the big maple clock on the wall behind her daughter, Cynthia. Ted Trotter, seated at the kitchen table between the two women, followed her eyes. Arlene dropped her left hand lightly onto his right thigh and said, wistfully, "You'd better be getting going, Ted... It's five blocks to the trolley stop. If you miss the 3:50 car, you'll have to wait another hour, if you don't want to walk home." She squeezed his leg hoping he would stay, but knowing he would not.
Cynthia was more forthright. The eighteen-year-old rose from the table and stood behind Ted's chair, pulling his head back to rest against her firm medium bust. The towel knot in her cleavage untied itself when his pate made contact and she shimmied until her tits pillowed his ears. "Can't you stay, Mr. Trotter? Please?" Her high plaintive voice and her soft fingers, sliding from his temples across his cheeks, were very persuasive.
Trotter steeled his will, even as his willful dick turned to steel under his own towel. "NO, Cindy," he answered, proud of his self-discipline. "I have to leave." He smiled up at her precious young face. "But, I'll come again... I PROMISE."
Arlene fished her hand through his towel's separating fold and felt Ted's erection. Sliding its length, she grinned evilly and warned, "Sooner than you THINK, if you don't get dressed and get out of here, RIGHT NOW!" With a strong departing squeeze, she laughed, stood up and pointed to the breakfront sideboard. "The clothes you shucked this morning are all right there... except for your underwear which is still in my bedroom, in case you've forgotten. Cynthia, go fetch Mr. Trotter's shorts and undershirt."
While Ted hiked purposefully along Locust Avenue to Flint Street, five blocks north, he wondered, "Why am I reluctant to go home? Mary's a good woman and a fine fuck... and I NEVER feel this way when I'm leaving Izzy." He was so intently pondering his conundrum that he boarded the streetcar, and debarked at Central Avenue, like an automaton, virtually unaware of the world until he reached the corner of Garvey Street.
Meanwhile, in southeast Arbor Heights, Mary Trotter backed the family Ford out of the driveway at her parents' Oak Avenue bungalow. As she straightened the car in the street and pointed for home, Arthur complained he was hungry. Mary looked at her watch and said, "It's still an hour to supper time, Arthur. When we get home you may have either an apple or two oatmeal cookies to tide you over... OK?" Pointing through the windshield, she exclaimed, "Oh, LOOK! There's Grandma, Arthur... WAVE!"
Mary and her nine-year-old son waved from their stopped car while Isabel McGuinness pulled her thirteen-year-old maroon-and-red Flying Cloud sedan into her driveway. She smiled and waved back as she walked up to the house and watched her daughter drive off. Closing the front door, she called, "Yoo hoo! Jock! Cecie! I'm HOME!"
Jock stepped from the parlor into the hall and hugged his wife closely, sliding his hands over her back and bottom as he pulled her to his chest and groin. "Cecie's still upstairs, playing with her dolls or reading or something. I SHOWERED, like you asked... Do you..."
Isabel smelled the fresh Old Spice and felt his smooth jowls on her face as they embraced. Her lungs filled and her breasts swelled against Jock's hard pectorals. Her cunny, anticipating attention, built a low fire in her tummy as it lubed itself. Pushing him away, with a full, but brief, kiss, she hissed, "Not NOW, Jock... LATER! I've got a roast to tend to and Cecie isn't LOCKED UP, you know! What if she... saw or heard?" Clucking her tongue, Isabel patted her husband's freshly shaved cheek. "You're SWEET... but wait until bedtime... she'll be upstairs and we'll be ALONE."
Jock sighed as he watched his wife brush past him and enter the kitchen. He followed and spoke to her back while she tied her apron. "Well, you don't mind if I sit here, sip coffee, and undress you in my head, do you?" He chuckled low in his throat while he poured a mug of old burned coffee from the aluminum percolator on the stove.
"Not as long as that's ALL you do, you old goat," Isabel answered flippantly over her shoulder, with a wink. Silently she thought, "THANK you Father Logan... THIS week I'll be FAITHFUL. I really WILL!" Aloud, as she busied herself, she added, "Now HUSH! I've got to get these potatoes and carrots in or they'll be raw when the meat's done."
Unusual activity to his left snapped Ted out of his reverie. He looked a hundred feet up Garvey Street and saw a police cruiser, an ambulance and a strange black Plymouth coupe standing at the curb in front of Farragut's Victorian house. Deciding not to continue to the alley, as he typically would do, Trotter turned and headed for his landlord's front lawn.
As he arrived, he saw two white-suited medics removing a body from the house on a stretcher. On the porch, a dark-suited man was speaking with two police officers. Ted's curiosity morphed to concern and sunk, like a cinder block, into his gut as he wondered, "Is that Old Man Farragut?"
Mary, chatting as she drove, missed her turn on Holmes Street and continued the extra block to Garvey Street before turning off Oak Avenue. Five minutes later, approaching Central Avenue, she pulled over and parked as another arriving police sedan replaced the ambulance moving away from Number 46. Whereas, she did not see Eli's body being loaded, she assumed an accident had befallen her seventy-two-year-old part-time employer and secret lover.
When a tall detective, in a brown suit and fedora, got out of the second cruiser, Mary worried it was more than a mere stumble. She said to Arthur, with a no-nonsense tone, "You sit right here, Arthur, I'll be back in a moment." Arthur thought better about arguing as his mother exited the car, although he very much wanted to go look more closely at the black-and-white Chevrolets with their shiny sirens and big red spotlights.
Crossing the street, Mary saw her husband walking up the other side from Central Avenue. She diverted and hurried to meet him. "What do you think the rumpus is about, Ted?" She asked breathlessly, hooking her arm behind his back and leaning in for support.
Ted kissed Mary's anxious furrowed brow and answered, "I don't know, Sugar Beet. Maybe Farragut had a heart attack, or something."
"Oh, TED!" Mary blurted, "Don't even THINK that! He's so sweet and kind!" Tears formed and flowed freely while the two of them walked to the house.
When they climbed the porch stairs, Officer Steve Janssen demanded, "Who might YOU be? Do you LIVE here?"
The Trotters identified themselves and Janssen was on the verge of telling them to shove off and mind their own business, when Officer Sean O'Rourke appraised Mary's demeanor and dress. His practiced eye noted her flimsy frock hung revealingly. None of her loosely contained, and unrestrained, naturally contoured hourglass figure's details were in doubt. Recalling the soiled sateen panties he found in Farragut's robe pocket, he waved off his partners dismissal before it was delivered.