EDITED BY:
Miriam Belle
INSPIRATION BY:
Simply_Cyn
*
I had moved out to the suburbs from the city, mostly to escape the hectic pace of the thriving metropolis. My doctor had said stress was taking a toll on me and that I should try and find new ways to relax. Simple activities that many of my associates enjoyed like tennis eluded me both in skill and interest. So I decided to move away from the thick, bumper to bumper traffic and loud white noise.
While the neighborhood was a warm slice of suburbian pie, complete with meticulously maintained yards and litter free cul-de-sacs, I soon discovered the commute to my office was nearly as bad as living in the city. Through the summer I worried my purchase of the three bedroom house was a mistake that I would regret by Christmas. But when the leaves turned gold and began falling I knew I had made the right choice.
The further into fall the year progressed, the more I felt at home. Living in the city had never allowed for the possibility of gardening, and to be honest I had never even considered the idea I might like it. But when I was charged with my own lawn and hedges I found myself enjoying the activity as much as I did going to the movies. There was something soothing in the yard work, a routine ease that didn't require a whole lot of thinking.
The weekends became more than just a break from the deadlines and spreadsheets that ruled the weekdays. It became a soothing ritual that calmed my mind from a raging cauldron of stress to a placid pool of calm. To say that I had found an oasis in the middle of my own life would be an understatement. I suppose you might call the neighborhood and my newfound hobby a natural sedative with no side effects (save for a feeling of regret that preceded every return to the office on Monday).
It was a moderately warm day in the middle of September when I met my neighbor Cindy Martin. My morning had consisted of raking leaves and making several large mounds around the perimeter of the house. Burning wasn't allowed in anywhere near my home, so I was faced with the unenviable task of scooping the dead foliage into several large black trash bags. My sinuses were a little clogged from the pollen I kicked up around me during the day's work. By about three o' clock that afternoon I had cleared my lawn of all the leaves and discovered I could hold three pounds of mucus in my sinuses without having my head explode.
I stood there in my jeans and t-shirt, my boots coated with dust and face grimy with sweat. I was twenty-seven at the time, and I suppose you could say I had done well for myself for being so young. I had skipped having a social life to make it this far, and while I enjoyed the perks of owning my own house and having a decent car, I had fallen short in the area of female companionship.
It wasn't that women hadn't been interested in me. I'm decent looking guy with a stocky muscular frame, blue eyes and a face that doesn't cry for a bell tower. My hair had been falling out steadily since I was nineteen, so in response to this travesty I had shaved my hair down to near baldness. Strangely enough, the look worked for me (though my friends at the office had nicknamed me "Mr. Clean"). I guess what I'm saying is I turned down a lot of dates to pursue my career, a decision I applauded when my paycheck came in and lamented when I got into bed alone at night.
In retrospect, I think it was my growing realization that I lonelier than I had ever thought and the sudden breaks of clarity on Saturday's and Sunday's that opened my mind up to the idea of dating again. When Cindy showed up that day, her timing was impeccable and almost to the very beat of my own thoughts. I had been feeling the need to find someone, even if it was just a friendly ear to bend. All the success I had enjoyed, moderate as it was, came at a price.
"Hello?" came a soft feminine voice.
I jumped, almost letting my rake fall from gloved hand. I turned and saw a woman walking across the lawn towards me from next door. She had slipped through a break in the hedge that divided my yard from next door. The house next to me had been empty as far as I could tell ever since I moved in three months prior. A small gardening crew would come by and tend the property regularly, but otherwise it had been still and quiet. I noticed a large green suburban in the driveway as she walked over to me.
"Hello," she said, a thick Texan accent lacing her words, and held her hand out, "My name is Cindy Martin."
"Dennis Hassek," I smiled, fumbling to remove my gloves and shake her hand.
"Just moved in?" she asked.
"No," I replied, "I got here in June."
"Welcome to the neighborhood," she released my hand.
Cindy was beautiful to say the least. I guessed she was in her early to mid thirties from the quick once-over I gave her, trying my best to be as subtle as a sexually frustrated man can be. Her hair fell in golden red curls, hanging loosely about her shoulders and framing her delicate white skin nicely. The blue t-shirt and tan khaki shorts she wore displayed her utilitarian attitude but did nothing to hide the natural curves of her body. In a fleeting moment of arousal I let my eyes rest on her full breasts as she turned to look back at her house.
"I just got back from my vacation," she motioned to her suburban, "Three months in the woods with just a truck, fishing pole and shotgun."
I smiled, the conversation leaving my area expertise rapidly, "Never a dull moment, eh?"
"Not with me anyway," she said, "You here with your family?"
"No," I replied, "I'm not married."
"Oh," she said and cocked a brow, "Well, maybe there's something to be said for being single?"
"Sometimes," I agreed.
"I was married," she said, "And believe me, you're not missing much."
I could hear the slightest hint of bitterness in her voice as she talked about her own failed marriage.
"You like it here?" she asked
"Yeah," I nodded, again sneaking a glance at her tits, "I moved here from the city for a little peace and quiet."
"You came to the right place," she said, "This is Tranquilville."
"Just what the doctor ordered," I said.
"Well, maybe we can get together for a drink or something? A proper welcome to the neighborhood?"
"That would be nice," I nodded. It would be very nice. Come to think of it, with the exception of Cindy I hadn't really gotten to know any of my neighbors. Truth be told, I didn't really want to know of them beyond the perfunctory introductions and pleasantries. I didn't want to involve myself in the lives of the people around me. I couldn't manage my own life half the time. But Cindy Martin had managed to change all that. At least, she had changed it where she was concerned.
"Well," Cindy turned, taking her leave of me and walking back across the yard, "I'll talk to you soon."
"I'm looking forward to it."
As the afternoon became evening, I found myself thinking more and more about my attractive neighbor. I suppose it wasn't very smart to have designs on the person living next door to you, let alone someone you just met. But I couldn't really help it. My sexual dry spell had been allowed to go on for far too long, and simply by virtue of her being the attractive nice woman she was I had become incredibly horny at the thought of her.
After I showered, I tried to distract myself with some television.
It didn't really help.
***