Dear reader:
If you have not read the Prologue that precedes this, I would urge you to do so. It establishes the background to the events that occur in this part of the story and also introduces some important information about the characters involved.
As I have discussed in the introduction to the Prologue, I would like the reader to be informed that this is not a quick and easy read. If you are looking for instant gratification then you're probably better off looking elsewhere. The following scene is lengthy and detailed and takes time to build. However, my hope is that this makes for a more stimulating read overall by placing the erotic elements in a wider context.
This is the first story that I have submitted to Literotica (and who knows - it could be the last!).
I really do hope you enjoy and please consider leaving feedback or a vote.
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PART ONE
When she went to answer the knock at the door Emily found a tall man standing outside. He was dressed in black brogues, black trousers and a crisp white shirt unbuttoned at the collar. Emily didn't think she'd ever seen him before. But she felt sure her parents would have let her know had they been expecting any visitors.
'Hello?' she said.
The stranger looked her over as she held the door ajar.
'I want to speak to Dennis,' he said. 'Dennis Curran.'
He was a man in his early thirties with a well-kempt appearance. Dark hair was cut to a neat short-back-and-sides. A strong jaw line sported trim stubble.
'Dad's not in this evening,' said Emily
A stiff breeze swept in from outside and she hugged herself against the cold. The man said nothing. His forehead creased a little.
'Mum and Dad are both out until late I'm afraid.' The southern Irish accent came through strong. 'You see it's...'
But the stranger cut her off.
'For fuck's sake!' His voice hissed between gritted teeth. Emily was taken aback. It wasn't only that he had sounded so angry. Her parents never swore and nor did her teachers so hearing an adult use bad language was shocking to her.
'I... I'm sorry,' she said.
But Tom had had enough with all this. He was at the end of his tether now. He stood kneading his brow with his knuckles.
'I fucking told him to make sure I could get hold of him tonight,' he growled, 'and look...' he whipped his iphone out from his trouser pocket, 'no answer to my emails, no answer from his fucking phone,' he jabbed his finger at the iphone as if to demonstrate his point, 'and he's not even in when I'm forced to come round to his fucking house. Fucking imbecile!'
Emily let him finish. She thought for a moment about saying goodbye and quickly getting back inside the house, shutting the door and locking it. That's what her parents would have told her to do, especially in the face of a man so rude.
But whatever had brought him to her door seemed to be serious business and Emily felt the need to find out what was up. Already worried about her parents, she sensed that this man's startling visitation somehow meant bad news for them.
Three weeks back Shannon Curran, Emily's Mum, had been involved in a car accident on the motorway so bad that the car had been written off. Graciously, Shannon escaped with nothing more critical than whiplash. All the same, it had shaken her up badly. For some reason the insurance hadn't paid out on the damage. Emily didn't know why that was and her parents wouldn't tell her. She supposed they were trying to save her from all the stress. But sometimes not knowing what was going on made worrying about it so much worse.
The accident had meant her Dad had to pay for the cost of buying a new car. The savings he'd accrued in order to take Shannon away for their anniversary that year had gone on the new car. He and Shannon would have to make do with dinner out one evening instead. Besides, money was already tight what with them having to pay for Grandma's care as well.
Those past couple of weeks or so Emily could tell her Dad had been getting increasingly anxious about life. It seemed to be affecting him on a daily basis. Often he'd come home from work late and in a bad mood, stressed out. That evening had been the same. When he'd suggested to Shannon that they might have to postpone the anniversary dinner she went off on one big time. It was rare for her parents to fight like that and when they did Emily found it truly alarming. Her Dad had relented of course. He was good like that.
The stranger outside the front door paced back and forth across the garden path as these thoughts were going through her mind. When he eventually came to a stop he rounded on Emily. But his face was no longer as angry as before.
'So you must be Dennis' daughter?'
Emily nodded.
Tom looked her up and down. Short and blonde, she was all innocence. To his eyes she looked about twenty or twenty-one years of age but he knew he was so bad at guessing a girl's age that she could easily have been as young as fifteen or sixteen. He felt bad then for having shouted and said as much in somewhat awkward fashion.
'Is... is Dad in trouble?' Emily asked.
Tom seemed uncertain how to answer. He was a man who did plenty of morally questionable things in life but one point on which he prided himself was that he never told lies - not under any circumstances. In any case, after his angry outburst it was quite obvious that Dennis might have been in a spot of bother.
'Erm... you could say that,' he said eventually.
'Oh no.'
Emily brought her right hand up to play with her blonde hair - a nervous habit of hers. Somewhere in the distance, a siren wailed out across the London skyline.
'Why is Dad in trouble?' she asked. 'What's wrong?'
She had the Irish accent almost as strong as Dennis did, Tom thought to himself. It sounded decidedly better in a female's voice. He said nothing in answer to her question.
For a moment Emily thought he might be about to walk off into the night. But she was sure she needed to know more. Whatever was happening seemed like serious business. The manner of this man's unexpected appearance and the way he got so agitated had filled her with foreboding.
'Can't you tell me?'
'No. I'm sorry,' Tom muttered.
'Is it about work?' Emily guessed. But he wasn't saying anything.
A car raced down the street outside, passing narrowly between the parked cars that lined the pavements either side of the road. The roar of its engine slowly faded away into the night.
'Look, I should go,' said Tom.