This is an offering for the
Literotica Valentine's Day Story Contest 2025
. I reserve all the usual rights in relation to copyright etc. All persons are figments of my imagination.
None of this ever happened!
Anyone being rude is over 18. And surprise, surprise, it's set in Australia. You might be alarmed to learn that romance here is pretty much the same as everywhere else in the world, with the singular exception that we get more kisses 'down under' where it really counts.
**^**
Best Friends Forever Act. 1985.
Registered Valentine's Day, 14 February 1985.
Volume one.
Section 1. Best Friends Forever Act. 1985. Don't be a cunt.
a) A friend must not be a cunt to another friend.
b) Ever.
c) Not even over boyfriends and girlfriends or music.
Section 2. Best Friends Forever Act. 1985. Other people being cunts.
a) A friend does not let any other person be a cunt to their friend.
b) If a friend brings their friend's attention to the fact that another person is being a cunt to them, the first friend may limit or suggest appropriate action but must accept anything that the second friend does in their protection. If bitches get stitches, you can't hate on your friend for it.
c) If a person uses friendship to manipulate a friend into hurting someone by misusing this section, then the friend is absolved from all obligations under the act. Refer to section 1.
* Excerpt only. The act is reproduced in full below.
**^**
Have you ever loved somebody like muscle memory? That's how it felt every time she rang.
"Greg?"
"Char! How are you spunky?"
"Oh god..."
"Hang on. Sounds like you need to talk. I'll just grab a beer." Charlotte doesn't often ring so any chance for a chin wag is a beer-worthy moment. I left my phone on the outdoor setting, grabbed three beers, an old Tupperware container and some ice and hurried back to where I'd been doing 'homework' (training modules on my week off about new steer-by-wire systems).
"You there?" I asked and cracked a beer.
"Yeah." Damn. She sounded despondent. After all these years, I knew her well enough to know this was going to be a 'big' talk.
"So, at the start, spunky. Give me the skinny then let me ask some questions."
"I knew you'd say that arsehole. You're so autistic."
"We use the word, 'spectrum' these days, Judgie McNamecallerson."
Her laugh was welcome.
"Faaaarkin... hell." she sighed, and I waited for her to launch. "Justin and I split up. He was such a fucking narcissist. And his willy... My god... I've had more fun with a Tampax mini. Fucking shallow bitch, right Greggy?"
"We all have healthy limits and expectations... Section seven if I recall. Limits and boundaries." I giggled. "I'm assuming he didn't meet the hundred points?"
"Not even close. Fuck." It sounded like she was scrabbling in a bag of snacks, so I waited like best friends do.
The one hundred points rule was one of sheer measurement. At the very least a hundred millimetres long and in circumference. And at least a hundred dollars spent on a first date. She had a list of dating rules just like she had rules for everything else. Section seven of our Best Friends Forever act had a similar section.
Section 7. Best Friends Forever Act. 1985. Limits and boundaries.
a) All signatories to the act are expected to communicate healthy limits and boundaries according to their personal needs.
b) Friends will respect the personal limits and boundaries communicated without being petty cry-babies about them.
c) Limits and boundaries
may
be negotiated to ensure fairness and understanding.
S7. C) .1 Section 7 part c) does not preclude a friend from demanding a hard limit or boundary.
As she said, her dating rule was probably shallow but in my own reckoning, it was more likely a matter of bringing the wrong tool to the job. Charlotte was a very tall girl. At five-ten and a bit, she was taller than me by at least an inch. I admired the gentleman's ambition but perhaps he should have done the math.
As you have probably gleaned, we have a strange friendship. We grew up as neighbours and have very few filters.
We had whiteboards, wipe-off markers, and bedroom windows that faced each other. Long before mobile phones, we had our own text system well in place. She was the lanky, awkward girl, and I was the boy with glasses and wonky legs, who didn't play football. We shared everything.
I was even there when she 'lost' her virginity. She was too scared about going all the way with her boyfriend, on the off chance she ever got one and whether it would hurt like her friends said it had. Her solution was to make me wait with a whiteboard in hand while she deflowered herself with the handle of her hairbrush. It had been a massive anti-climax. The ambulance was not required as she had feared they would be.
That kind of friend.
And it hurt so damn hard for me because with every shred of my biology, I loved her.
I couldn't help it. I met her. I loved her. That was it.
She was six at the time I met her. That was the whole goldfish at the beginning of my world. She had ringlets of strawberry-coloured hair, the cutest freckles and dimples you could kiss all day. I was seven and had a brass arrangement of scaffolding from the waist down. Anti-vaxx might be all the rage now, but I was one of the last polio kids. Remember that scene in Forest Gump where he runs out of his orthotics? I never did.
Even at the time of this story about us back in ninety-two, I still needed a cane. I was the youngest man you'd ever see at some event stumbling around clutching a walking stick. I tried to make it elegant.