This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, events, and incidents are the products of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead is purely coincidental. All characters are over the age of 18. As always, check the tags! This story includes CFNM and cheating.
Trailer Park Trixie, Pt. 1
It was a very nice day in late April of 1986. I'm certain of the date because the meltdown at Chernobyl had just happened and it was on every news report for weeks and CNN nearly 24/7.
It hadn't gotten Jesus-Christ-it's-fucking-hot yet, which is something we never take for granted in Florida. I'd just gotten my grade for the one course I was taking in tech school. An "A" if you're wondering, in my AC circuits class.
I had turned my twelve-speed Raleigh touring bike into the Live Oaks Trailer Park, the place where I'd been hanging my hat for the last six and a half years. As trailer parks go, it wasn't... great. If we'd had train tracks nearby, this place would have been on the wrong side of them.
I didn't choose it, it's where I was placed for the last four years of my time in the foster care system. I finished high school, turned eighteen, and signed up for selective service. My foster "parents" gave me a graduation card with fifty bucks in it and just like that, I was on my own. So, I moved away. About four trailers away.
Live Oaks was set in, yep you guessed it, a big stand of live oak trees. Which was in the town of Lakeview, about thirty miles north of Tampa. Calling it a town was a stretch at the time and it was also affectionately referred to as Snakeview, or for the folks who enjoyed looking down their noses at poor folk, White Trashview.
When I left my foster home, I was invited to move into a double-wide with a married couple in their mid-thirties. I knew almost everyone in Live Oaks and had done yard work for lots of them, so many knew my situation. There was no funny business, at least at first, and I was sort of their live-in maid and caretaker. In return for a rent-free roof over my head. They were two very busy folks. Whatever they did for a living wasn't an eight-to-five gig, so it worked out for all of us for about two and a half years.
That's where I was headed when I turned the corner and found the double-wide surrounded by sheriff's squad cars. Six of them, all with their light bars flashing like mad. I hit the brakes and skidded to a stop in front of Trixie's single-wide mobile home, next to her late 70s Chevy Malibu wagon.
The couple that I lived with/worked for, were Penny and Jim Horton. I sighed deeply as I watched them both get led out of the home in handcuffs. Jim was struggling quite a bit, and two big deputies had a hold of him while he was screaming about his rights as an American entrepreneur. He and I had gotten along well for the first two years or so, but for the last six months, he seemed to have taken a dislike to me. I suppose it was understandable, as I was fucking his wife with some regularity, though I doubt he had anything more than a suspicion about it.
I looked around and all the neighbors were outside watching the drama unfold. Just then a county impound wrecker showed up and backed up behind Jim's Ford pick-up. I knew they'd find plenty of evidence in that. I looked nervously across the street and was happy to see there were no cops near Chrissy, my pride and joy.
Chrissy was my 1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass. God, I miss that car. It had a 350 V8 with a four-barrel and rally wheels. It was Viking Blue; the prettiest color to ever roll off a Detroit assembly line. I bought it after graduation from a retiree who couldn't drive anymore, with forty-five thousand miles on it, for seven hundred and fifty dollars. I kept it parked across the street from our trailer, in an empty lot.
I was weighing my options (none) when I heard a hiss behind me. In Florida, we take hissing noises seriously. In that area and at that time, rattlers and water moccasins likely outnumbered the people.
I did a sort of jump turn and my bike fell to the ground. All I found was Trixie smiling at me from her kitchen window. She motioned for me to approach the screen.
"Hey, Matty, you should probably come in here before one of the looky-loos spots you and mentions it to a cop."
I hadn't thought of that. I was sure I knew what Penny and Jim were being arrested for, and I wanted no part in that action. I stood my bike up against the trailer, opened the door, and stepped into Trixie's trailer, a place that I had fantasized about for quite some time. It was surprisingly clean. A Felix the Cat clock was on the wall, smiling at me. His curled tail wagged from side to side. The swing left was tic, and the swing right was tock.
The walls were covered in faux-wood paneling, in a white and black dogwood pattern. And like a lot of rental trailers, there was no carpet, just kitchen linoleum in every room, in a blue and white china pattern that didn't match the walls very well.
I turned toward the kitchen to find Trixie standing there with a hand on her very shapely hip. Trixie was the sort of woman that no wife wanted to see move in next door. The single, middle-aged floozy. She was a little over fifty I figured and worked as a stylist in a local salon. And God, she always looked so good. She kept trim and had curves in all the right places, and she showed them off. Remember how Peg Bundy dressed on Married with Children? With those tight pants and animal print tops and high heels? Make her a peroxide blonde and that's Trixie, to a T. She was also rumored to be loose as a goose, but I knew of no one who could attest to that from experience. But in my heart, I always hoped it was true.
She was standing there in a bright pink body suit, athletic shoes, and a pink terrycloth headband. Her blonde hair was put up in a high ponytail, that bared her neck beautifully and made her look years younger. I glanced at the floor model television to find Richard Simmons frozen on the screen, mid-oblique crunch.
I looked up at her eyes quickly because I knew I would stare. She waved me over to the counter and she turned to the debacle outside. I walked over and leaned over the counter next to her. After Penny and Jim were put in separate squad cars, eight guys in street clothes went in there with crowbars. In no time they were making a hell of a racket in there.
"I wonder what they're looking for in there?" Trixie said, with her pleasant southern drawl. We were so close our hips were touching, and I could smell her cinnamon chewing gum. I knew exactly what those cops were looking for.
Jim was the owner of a small wood furniture refinishing shop. It operated out of an old barn down on Dixie Highway. But I wouldn't say that was his job. He probably spent about three hours there every week, tops. He employed three or four other guys who dealt with customers and did the work. I found out what Jim and Penny actually did, by accident.
One of my jobs at home was laundry. Yeah, I didn't dig folding his boxers, but on the other hand, I did get to fold
her