Author's Note:
Welcome to the first of four or five chapters about a relationship between consenting adult (and fictional) women. This first chapter is to introduce the characters and set the stage for a deeper dive into their relationship. I'll be posting new chapters weekly (-ish). I'm just starting out as an author, so I welcome all feedback and suggestions for improvement. Comments and emails are welcome and eagerly encouraged. Thank you for reading!
**
Awareness seeped in and Kara's senses returned as she drifted out of a deep sleep. She was lying on her side in his warm, soft bed. It was morning. His familiar, welcome scent was in the sheets. Out of habit she reached out for him, seeking out his body, her hands eager for him, for that first contact with his bare skin. She felt impatient to begin another day by his side. Her lover. Her husband. Her Master.
But he wasn't in bed with her.
The sudden memory of his death slammed into her then, killing whatever was warm or welcome about the morning. She lay still, feeling numbness creep over her. She'd cried so many tears in the last five weeks and now there were none left, just a miserable sigh.
She wished for the thousandth time that she'd been in the car with him when it had skidded off the road. Why couldn't she have died at his side, in the same moment? She'd have preferred it to the horror and anguish of receiving the phone call from police.
Kara had dragged herself lifelessly through the process of putting his affairs in order, calling friends and associates, reciting the same words over and over like some morbid mantra. The funeral was a nightmarish blur in her memory. She'd returned to the apartment afterwords feeling lost and hollowed-out.
And in the five weeks since, she'd shut herself away, greeting friends at the door, absorbing their condolences, then politely seeing them off. Even her sister and two nephews hadn't managed to talk their way past the threshold. Phone calls were a constant nuisance. Peter had made a lot of wonderful friends in his sixty years, and it seemed every one of them pestered her with a call or a visit. Luckily, after a week or so the intrusions dwindled and finally died off entirely, leaving her to stumble alone through the fog of her dismal thoughts and feelings.
She closed her eyes. Why bother getting up? Her days had nothing to offer her anymore.
Oh, wait.
The Masquerade.
Ugh.
It wasn't like she HAD to attend. Sure, the vendor deposit was non-refundable, but Peter's pension and insurance settlement had set her up for life, money-wise. She never had to get out of bed again.
Her friends would understand if she didn't go, surely. Besides, the idea of attending a BDSM-themed trade show without her Master made her chest hurt. They'd gone together each of the past five years, and her memories of the event were inseparable from her memories of him.
He'd want her to go.
She had a workshop full of hand-crafted wooden bondage devices to sell, and a waiting list of people eager for custom-made pieces. That had been his idea - perfect synergy between his love of carpentry and his love of kink. And she'd been swept along for the ride, as his demo model, an occasional guinea pig for a new device idea, business partner, and, eventually, fellow craftsman. They'd built pieces together, and even the ones that hadn't sold had been fun to use themselves.
She gently fingered the stainless steel collar around her neck. She'd been wearing it the day he died and hadn't taken it off since. She'd worn it to the funeral, hidden by a scarf to avoid outing herself to her family and non-kink friends. She'd slept in it. She wasn't supposed to wear it in the shower but she'd done it anyway, the few times she'd bothered with hygiene.
It was the last tangible symbol of his 'ownership'. If she removed it, that final, sacred link between them would be broken and then he'd really, truly be dead and she'd be alone and scared and life would be joyless and empty.
She was being stupid, her rational mind screamed at her. Why wasn't she healing? Why wasn't she getting better? How much longer would she feel so hopeless? Dangerous, dark whispers inside her were getting louder as each day passed...how long before she surrendered to their seductive promises of a quick escape from the pain?
Kara groaned and peeled herself off the mattress. The bedroom hardwood felt unfamiliar to the soles of her feet. She didn't bother dressing. She peed, then got the coffee maker running. There was no cream in the house. No milk, either, nor eggs, bread, vegetables, or cereal. The remnants of a dozen order-in dinners stunk up the kitchen.
SHE stunk, too - when had she last bathed? Or shaved? She tried to run her fingers through her long, brown hair but gave up immediately - it was a matted, massive tangle.
He'd hate to see her like this; weak, defeated and wallowing in self-pity, shuffling around the apartment like an old lady. She was only forty-three, for Christ's sake!
He'd want her to go to the Masquerade.
Even without him.
She snatched the coffee pot while it was still half-brewed and filled a mug, then made her way stiffly to the living room. She knelt on her pillow next to his chair and took a sip. Strong, bitter and unfit for human consumption. She set the mug down on the hardwood floor.
Why was she kneeling? She had an apartment full of furniture and now it was all hers. She was being dumb again, like with the collar. As if by obeying her protocols...what? He'd come back? Stupid!
She picked up her mug and took another sip. It was still awful.
Her bleary eyes took a moment to focus on the wall clock. Half past four in the afternoon! Where had the morning gone? It was almost time to think about ordering something for dinner. She had some planning to do, if she was going to attend the Masquerade tomorrow.
He'd want her to go. That would be his wish, and hadn't she always been attentive to his wishes?
She rose unsteadily to her feet, then staggered to the kitchen to dump her coffee down the sink. Maybe Chinese tonight? Or did she have that last night?
She decided to go to the Masquerade. Just one last time. For her beloved, departed Master Peter.
*
The Masquerade was held at the expansive main pavilion of the O'Hanlan Private Golf Club. Admittance was by invitation only, and at five-hundred dollars per couple it wasn't a cheap date. But dinner was always high-quality, the wine flowed freely and the conversations were usually engaging. If nothing else, the spectacle made it worth the price of admission.
The Masquerade had only three rules, printed prominently on each ticket. No genital exposure or contact. Get permission before touching anyone. No recording devices allowed. That was it, and although there was a strong security presence to discourage rule-breaking, the Masquerade was a permissive environment.
To begin with, 'no genital exposure' wasn't a terribly restrictive dress code and the outfits that people wore ranged from trashy to regal. Most of the attendees wore masks - it was a bondage-themed event, after all, and there was both safety and freedom in anonymity. The masks themselves could be simple or ornate.
To add to the spectacle there were 'exhibition stations' where the attendees could sample and demonstrate different implements and equipment relating to bondage and sex. There were also two or three vendor booths - like Kara's - where kinky paraphernalia of all kinds could be purchased. It was a pervert's paradise and made for an evening of lively and decadent fun.
Or it had, when Peter had been with her.
Kara was all in white as she stood in her booth; she wore a contoured corset top with a plunging neckline that showed off the tops and inner swells of her breasts, then flared out into an ankle-length lace-and-linen skirt. Elegant white, silk gloves stretched to her elbows. Her mask was a simple swath of white silk with tiny rhinestones speckling the perimeter. Kara had chosen white flats with a nod to comfort. She'd worn the same outfit last year and hadn't bothered to alter it this time.
It had taken her almost four hours to set up the booth all by herself, and she'd been dressed and ready when the pavilion opened to ticket-holders. She decided to hole up in her booth and be a spectator to the flamboyant madness all around her.
"Did we stumble into the junior prom by accident?" said a voice from behind her. "I think we're the only ones here over forty."
Kara turned to see Harold Sachs gliding up to her with his usual graceful stride, dressed in a cream-coloured, sequinned tuxedo and a truly ridiculous fake, white moustache that made him look like an elderly Yosemite Sam. Despite herself, Kara smiled. Harold possessed an aura that was corrosive to melancholy.
"Kink is mainstream now, I guess," Kara said, casting her gaze over pavilion. The crowd did appear to be largely twenty-something. "How have you been, Grandpa?"
"Grandpa?" he huffed in mock outrage. "I'm just a few years your senior, young thing."
Impossibly, she found herself chuckling. Harold was in his seventies, at least.
"And what have you done with Phil?" she asked, looking around for his partner.