Anita was up early. She didn't have to be at work until late afternoon, but she wanted to get some shopping done downtown. By getting an early start she wouldn't have to rush, and could take her time browsing and just generally relaxing.
She was dressed very casually in jeans and a modest jersey. She could change later for work with the clothes she had packed into her shoulder bag. It wasn't much, and she had decided she didn't need to lug her large carry-all along today.
She went to the window and looked out. The day was bright and sunny, and she spread the curtains wide and opened the window to let in the fresh air. The fountain in the courtyard below sparkled in the early sun, and patrons were sipping coffee and reading their morning papers at the outdoor tables of the Café au Coin. Madame Fleury, the owner of the café, was chatting with her customers as she passed among them with carafes of coffee and hot milk. She was a pleasant woman of about forty, energetic and outgoing, and she bustled from table to table, efficient but never missing the opportunity to flirt with men who appreciated her buxom figure. She was also Anita's landlady, who owned with her husband the trio of two-story apartment buildings that surrounded the courtyard. It was a quaint, old-world arrangement of buildings, forming a horseshoe around the cobblestone courtyard with its garden and central fountain. The café was at the corner of the courtyard and the street it opened out onto. Anita liked Thérèse Fleury, and she liked living in this neighborhood. It was more French than the rest of the city, and although a bit inconvenient to downtown, it possessed a sensual charm and unhurried approach to life that appealed to Anita.
Below in the courtyard an older man was watering flowers in pots that were placed around the low stone wall that enclosed the fountain. He was neatly dressed in trousers and a white shirt with a brown vest and a green beret, and sported a light gray beard, clipped short. Anita recognized Monsieur Gagnon, Madame Fleury's uncle, come from France after his retirement to live with his niece and her family in the apartment directly across the courtyard from Anita. Anita looked at him for a moment, then turned and went to her closet. She took from it a strapless yellow sundress with a pattern of small blue flowers, which she laid on her bed while she removed her jeans and jersey, stuffing them into her shoulder bag. She removed her brassiere and put on the dress. After examining herself briefly in the full-length mirror on her closet door, she left the apartment and headed down to the café.
Emerging from the apartment building entrance at the back of the courtyard, she walked towards the fountain.
"Good morning, Monsieur Gagnon!" she said brightly as she walked to him, flashing a brilliant smile.
"Bonjour, Mademoiselle Anita," he replied, bowing slightly as she walked past him. When she had taken a few steps toward the street she stopped and half turned, raising her hands to shade her eyes as she gazed at the sky.
"What a beautiful day!" she exclaimed. The morning sun was still low in the sky, and its light was shining directly into the courtyard. Anita was between the man and the sun, and her tousled blond hair shone like an aura of molten gold around her pretty face. The light was streaming through the thin dress, illuminating her in profile. With her arms lifted her breasts were clearly discernable in silhouette, large, firm globes that curved upward to delicate nipples pressing against the front of the dress. The illuminating sunlight revealed that she wasn't wearing anything under the dress, except for tight panties that clung low on her hips. Their decoration of small pink hearts was faintly visible.
She turned to look at the man, her hands still lifted and shielding her eyes. "Aren't you enjoying this sun, Monsieur, after all the rain we've had? I just love it -- don't you?"
It took him a moment to respond. "Ah, oui -- oui, Mademoiselle," he said finally, lifting his eyes to her face. He was smiling nervously, and water dripped onto his shoe from the watering can that was dangling from his right hand.
"Well, time for breakfast," she said, turning back towards the café. "Have a wonderful day, Monsieur Gagnon!" she called over her shoulder as she walked away from him. His eyes followed her as she left him, graceful hips swaying slowly from side to side with her easy gait. Her panties, clinging tightly to her firm derrière, made a small triangle where the sun shone through between her thighs at the top of long, shapely legs.
Most of the morning crowd had left when Anita sat down at a small table. Madam Fleury arrived almost immediately with the café au lait and croissant that Anita always ordered.
"Bonjour, Anita!" she said, sitting down at the table. "It is early for you, no?"
"Hi, Thérèse," said Anita. "Yes, I'm going downtown to do a little shopping this morning. It's such a nice day, I'll enjoy walking around." She crossed her legs and took a nibble of the croissant.
Thérèse leaned to the side and peered around the table at Anita. "Oo la la, with a dress like that I think that maybe you will have a lot of attention when you walk," she said, wrinkling her nose and grinning playfully. "The men love such dresses."
Anita laughed. "Well, that's okay with me. They can look all they want."
"Oui, as long as they only look!" said Thérèse. "You be careful where you walk, chérie. You must take care, n'est-ce pas?"
Anita looked down at her legs, which because of the shortness of her dress were exposed almost to the top of her thighs. She noticed out of the corner of her eye that Monsieur Gagnon was still watching her as he stood next to the fountain in the courtyard.
"Oh yes, I'm careful," she said. "But I'm not terribly worried. Most men are like little boys -- they just like to play with you and with their toys."
Thérèse threw her head back and laughed long and loud. "Ah oui, c'est vrai!" she cried. "So true -- my Daniel, he is never so happy as when he is playing with my toys!" She looked down at her ample breasts and squeezed them, lifting them high as she laughed. "... except when I am playing with his!"
Anita almost choked on her coffee. It was a long time before the women stopped giggling.
"Speaking of your husband," Anita said finally, "where is he? I almost never see him."
"Eh bien, he is traveling, always traveling on business. It is not only you who never sees him." Thérèse looked off into the distance.
"I'm sorry," said Anita. "It must be lonely for you."
"Ah, oui," said Thérèse, "it is sometimes -- but one finds other ... entertainments."
"Entertainments?" Anita asked.
Thérèse looked wryly at her. "How does one say in English? Pas des questions, pas des mensonges...?"
"Ah," said Anita. "Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies."
"Exacte!" exclaimed Thérèse. "The world has many toys."
Anita smiled, sipping her coffee as she looked into the courtyard. "Your uncle seems well these days," she said. Thérèse rolled her eyes and sighed.
"Ah, mon oncle!" She said. "Oui, he is well enough, but he is a, how you say, a pest to live with sometimes."
"A pest?"
"Oui, a pest, he ... well, he doesn't seem to know that he's an old man now, and... Oh, don't misunderstand me, please, I don't mean to say that old men should not like the ladies any longer, it is natural for a man to desire women no matter his age, but he..." She trailed off, and then bent forward and spoke almost in a whisper. "Anita, tell me, has he ever acted ... impolite with you? Has he ever said anything méchant -- nasty -- to you?"
"No," Anita said. "He's always been very nice."
"And he has never tried to -- you know -- to touch you?"
Anita laughed. "No, Thérèse, never! Why would you think that? Has he done things like that before?"
Thérèse sat back and shrugged. "He likes to pinch," she said.
"Pinch?" Anita said. "Who?" Thérèse raised her eyebrows but said nothing. After a moment Anita's eyes opened wider. "You?" she asked.