I jes' turnt twunny-one an' muh Pa tol' me that crops was bad this year, so he couldn't gimme much o' nuthin', but he gimme five bucks an' tol me ta go inta town an' have myself a good time. On the way there I saw Uncle Odell. He asked whut I was doin' an' I tol him, an' he gimme five more dollars and said, "Follow Main Street to Willow, take a left, and three houses down is a woman what'll give you the time of your life. Jes' tell her ya wanna sixty-nine."
I follered his directions an' got to the house an' tol' her my uncle sent me with ten dollars. She tol' me to come in, an' when I did she took me upstairs. I laid the money on her dresser, then I got undressed as she got undressed. She asked me if I knew whut a sixty-nine was an' I tol' her no so she tol' me to lay down, then she crawled up on top o' me an' she said, "Now, you lick my coo-coo while I put a hobbin on yer nobbin."
We started doin' each other, an' about a minnit later I heard an almost silent fart come outta her, and it stank somethin' fierce. All I could do was just lay there till the smell went away, but once it did I began lickin' her coochie again, then "Ffffffftttt." She farted again, an' this one was worse'n the last. I lay there waitin' for the smell to go away, an' it finally did, so I began lickin' her privates again when, "PWERMNPFH!" It was loud an' wet an' it stank so bad I thought a skunk done sprayed me. I pushed her offa me, grabbed my money, an' said, "I'm sorry, Lady, but I can't take 66 more of those."
I left her house an' started walkin' toward town again when a man said, "Watcha doin' there, young fella." I told him what had just happened an' he said, "Nonononono, you step right in here. Our ladies know how to treat ya right." I tol' him I ain't had but ten dollars an' he tol' me that was okay. "Got just the gal for ya." He took me inside and said, "This here's Sandpaper Sally. She'll take care of all your needs." So I went upstairs with her, put the money on the dresser, took my clothes off, then laid down on the bed.