INTRODUCTION & DISCLAIMER - When Mr and Mrs Johnson host the Smith family from Adelaide when they visit Melbourne for Easter in 1962, their eldest son 18-year-old Jim immediately gets a crush on the Smith's 18-year-old daughter Annabelle, a beautiful blonde who stands at an incredible 6 feet 9 inches tall.
After Jim and Annabelle's younger siblings decide they would rather do something else, Jim gets the chance to take the tall beauty sightseeing in Melbourne and a picnic on the Yarra River for Easter Saturday. It turns out to be a pretty swell Saturday for both teenagers, until the most extraordinary thing happens leaving Jim and Annabelle completely mystified...
So what happened to Jim and Annabelle on what should have been a simple day out? Travel back in time to Australia in the early 1960s by reading 'The Lost Hours With Annabelle' - an entry in the
Literotica 2022 April Fools Day Story Contest
- and find out for yourselves.
All characters and events in this story are fictional, with any similarity to real persons living or dead coincidental and unintentional. Only characters aged 18 and older are in any erotic scenes, Please enjoy, and be sure to rate and comment.
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MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 1962
The grocery store where I worked some afternoons after high school and during school holidays today resembled the front bar of the local pub during the six o'clock swill. It was the Thursday afternoon before Easter, and the only opportunity to complete the grocery shopping over the long weekend save for a limited number of shops trading on Saturday morning.
I hastily put groceries into the paper bags while at the till, Sandra Fielding keyed in the prices as fast as she could. Sandra, a slim and pretty girl with long red hair and the associated green eyes and fair skin attended the same high school as I did. Sandra at age 17 was a Year 11 student, the year between myself who at age 18 was in Year 12 and my siblings, 16-year-old brother and sister twins Eddie and Doris both in Year 10.
Sometimes I had mused with the idea of asking Sandra out to a school dance, to the beach or amusement park at St Kilda or to hang out at the local milk bar and listen to the juke box like the other kids from our high school, but so far had not been able to work up the courage to do so. And this afternoon was definitely not the right time, we were both run off our feet like everyone else working there today.
Finally the store closed and the last customers left, and it was time to go home. Sandra and I walked out to our bikes at the racks outside, Sandra getting her skirt comfortable before she mounted her bicycle, but as I was obviously wearing trousers no such problems for me.
"Well, see you next week Jim, have a nice Easter," said Sandra as she cycled away with a friendly wave.
"You too Sandra, have a nice Easter," I said, returning the wave.
I cycled home at some speed to the house in the northern suburbs of Melbourne where I lived with my brother and sister, our parents Bert and Lillian and a pet cat named Patsy. Sandra would be going home to a far more crowded house. She was the second oldest and eldest girl of ten kids as well as their parents crammed into the house. A set of grandparents lived in a small dwelling at the rear of the property, plus they had a lot of animals.
With so many younger brothers and sisters, Sandra and another sister Judy close in age to her were kind of second mothers in the Fielding house to their younger siblings. True, we didn't have television in Australia until the Melbourne Olympic Games in 1956 and the Victorian capital had long cold and wet winter nights, but surely Mr. and Mrs. Fielding would have listened to their wireless some nights at least!
Our house would also be crowded this Easter, but it would be limited to the long weekend. Mum would want me home as soon as possible tonight to help get things organized before our house guests arrived and were welcomed, swelling the number of people in the Johnson house to nine plus the cat.
Dad worked as a sales manager at a company just outside the city, and a sales manager from the South Australian division a Mr. George Smith was visiting for the long weekend along with his wife Marjorie and their teenage kids, a daughter named Annabelle and a son named Chris. The company liked managers from its interstate divisions to visit with their families and meet everyone and we had met families from New South Wales and Tasmania in the past. Having the South Australian family stay with us was the first time we had hosted a family though.
Racing my bike up the street, I climbed off and parked it in the driveway, then assisted Mum, Doris and Eddie with the last minute preparations. Mum was always keen to keep a tidy house, and even more so when we had house guests. This was the case even if it was grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins staying. Tonight Mum wanted the house to such standards it was like Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies and his wife Dame Pattie, his English counterpart Harold Macmillan and his own wife Lady Dorothy, or American President John F Kennedy and First Lady Jackie Kennedy were staying at our house in the suburbs of Melbourne.
Certainly, there was some reorganization required. Our house had four bedrooms and one bathroom. The daughter Annabelle would be sharing Doris's bedroom, while the son Chris would be sharing a bedroom with Eddie. The parents Mr. and Mrs. Smith would be staying in my bedroom, while I slept on a camping bed in the sleep-out at the back of the house.
I joined my mother, brother and sister in completing some last minute cleaning tasks, Mum fretting about her roast dinner in the oven and me dusting the living room again, although it was spotless. Eddie was making sure there were no streaks on the windows and Doris was in action with the vacuum cleaner in the hallway, standing on a chair and using the brush attachment to clean the lampshades.
One party not impressed with things being different was Patsy. The cat -- a black and white tuxedo cat long and slim in stature -- let out a growling noise as she passed by, seeming to sense that things were different and like most cats not liking change. She leaped up onto the television set between the rabbit ear antennae, washing her paws and whiskers and regarding me with suspicion. No doubt Patsy was already wondering why I had moved to the sleep out, and why my sister was using the much disliked and greatly feared vacuum cleaner at such an odd time.
"It's okay Patsy, we've just got some people staying for Easter," I said to the cat, stroking her and seeing her wag her tail in response. Clearly not a happy cat.
Everything was in order and the house looked like a display home in one of those new estates in Melbourne's growing outer suburbs as we heard two cars pull into the driveway. "Your father's home with the Smiths, now remember to be on your best manners." Mum's reminder to us made it sound like I was 8 and the twins 6, rather than 18 and 16.