Part 2
With an audible pop, Lorelei removed Beauregard's swollen cock from her mouth, and waited in delicious anticipation as his tongue licked the outer folds of her pussy a mere inch from her clit. Beauregard knew how she loved it when he prolonged her release, tongue dancing everywhere except her hot, little button. He lapped hungrily at her tight anus, and then at the smooth skin where her inner thigh met her pussy.
Gripping his cock at the base as she lay naked upon him in the 69 position, she cried out, "Beauregard, I can't bear it! I beg you. Do it now!"
She heard him chuckle and could easily imagine his lazy smile. A second later, his mouth was all over her clit, kissing it, taking it between his lips, lovingly caressing it with his tongue. He moaned as though the taste of her pussy was the most succulent fruit, her nectar the sweetest honey, and the sound of his moan coupled with his hot mouth all over her clitoris rocketed Lorelei to an instant orgasm. She reveled in the intense sensation, wishing it to last forever. When it faded, she regarded his cock with a blissful smile. A pearl of semen glistened at the tip. Long-limbed and so lean that without his clothes he was practically skeletal, Beauregard possessed a cock of legendary proportions. Looking at it, Lorelei nearly laughed, for it seemed as though his cock nearly outweighed him.
Lorelei ran her lips up and down the length of his shaft while Beauregard continued to lavish attention on her clit. They both knew her second orgasm was moments away. She stroked his cock with two hands and still had enough of his cockhead exposed to bathe it with her eager mouth. Her jaw stretched to accommodate his girth. She licked the underside of his thick head, touching the trigger that released a torrent of semen down her throat.
Sweaty and spent, Beauregard collapsed atop a heap of fluffy pillows beside her and she curled against him.
"My goodness, Lorelei. My goodness," he held her close, and murmured into her hair, "Come back to Charleston with me."
She smiled, letting him think whatever he wanted, knowing she was in New York to stay. If circumstances were different, Lorelei would have happily become Mrs. Beauregard Caulfield. She'd be the mistress of a grand house in Charleston, tended to by many servants, riding to church in a fine carriage. But after the War of Northern Aggression, as Beauregard called it, Charleston was a place of bitter memories.
As a girl of ten, she watched her mother waste away from consumption as armies circled her beloved city and burned it to the ground. The Langley home, one of the finest in Charleston, escaped the flames but not the crushing poverty that followed. When her mother died, her father lost himself in bourbon and dreams of better days. It fell on Lorelei to keep the creditors at bay by selling off the Langley heirlooms one by one until the house echoed with emptiness. There was no surer way to discover the real value of something than when pawning it in order to ward off starvation. The yard grew wild for she let all the servants go save one, Daisy; towards the end, since Lorelei couldn't afford to pay Daisy anymore, their relationship became one of roommates rather than mistress and servant.
One advantage of having a father half in the bottle on any given day was that it allowed young Lorelei an unusual amount of freedom to do as she pleased. Although barely into her womanhood, the effect she had on the men of Charleston was amazing. Unlike other girls her age, when men touched her—chastely at first, but with increasing boldness—the feel of their arms around her waist or their lips on her throat did not frighten her. She loved their masculine ways; deep voices and whiskers, roaming fingers always prying past her lacy garments to probe her hidden wet spots, dangling cocks so quick to spew milky juice. She enjoyed it all, taking great pleasure in the way they made her body feel, and taking even greater pleasure in the gifts they spent their last dollar to buy her.
Lorelei's days of personal freedom and pleasure went on like this until her father's death during her twentieth year. The coroner cited her father's official cause of death as "complications from apoplexy." Lorelei knew he simply drank himself to death. Creditors descended on what remained of the Langley estate like a locust plague upon her father's death. Evicted from the family home, Lorelei had no choice but to appeal to her mother's sister, Aunt Harriet in New York. Moving to New York meant leaving Daisy behind. This broke Lorelei's heart. Via letters prior to leaving Charleston, Lorelei pestered Aunt Harriet to find a place in the household for Daisy, but Aunt Harriet wrote back that they, "had no need for a colored servant at this time" and that she was "sure your Daisy will find suitable employment with a different Charleston family."
The fact that Aunt Harriet reduced Lorelei's dearest friend in the world to "a colored servant" was Lorelei's first inkling that life under her aunt's roof would be a trial. Living with Aunt Harriet held one tantalizing possibility, however. Aunt Harriet promised to introduce her orphaned niece to young men of far greater means than those who lived in the battle scarred South. This presented an opportunity that Lorelei intended to pursue with mercenary zeal.
"Say you'll come home with me," Beauregard cupped her chin and kissed her. "Come home with me and be my wife."
She rested her head on his bony chest. "Did I tell you Cousin William is studying law? He's introduced me to some of his classmates, all young men from good families who are also studying law. You'd laugh to see how they compete for my attention. One of them sweats so profusely every time I so much as smile at him, I fear the poor man is delirious with fever. Still, one of them could make a suitable husband. Not the one who perspires so heavily, of course. Can you picture me the wife of a lawyer?" Beauregard sunk into sullen silence, and taking no notice of it, she went on, "Why, just yesterday I had tea with the Patersons—a lawyer and his wife. They own a lovely brownstone. Their son, Perry, is quite smitten with me. He intends to be a lawyer, as well."
"You shouldn't let this one slip away," Beauregard said with a hint of anger.
Lorelei ignored his tone. "Oh, no. I'm nice to him, of course, but Beauregard if you could just see him. With his buck teeth and bulging eyes, why, the young man reminds me of a catfish."
"That's too bad. He'd have been the perfect catch," Beauregard quipped sourly.
"I'm not saying I cannot marry an ugly man," she went on. "Beauty fades, though I daresay I hope mine won't for a very long time," she caressed her silky cheek as though to reassure herself. "No, the thing about an ugly man is that his financial means must be in direct proportion to his lack of physical grace. The less comely of appearance, the wealthier they must be. Now, let's say Perry finally passes the bar exam—I've heard some men take several attempts to pass. Apparently, the test is quite hard, but then, of course, you'd want the test to be hard, wouldn't you? No one wants a fool for an attorney. So let's say Perry passes the bar and joins his father's firm. How much income would he have starting out?"
Beauregard shrugged.
"It cannot be much. His father seemed in vigorous health, so there's little chance of an inheritance any time soon. All said and done, after many years and with his father's passing, we may eventually be worth a hundred thousand dollars. Undoubtedly, that's a great deal of money, but don't forget, I'd have to be wife to a catfish for twenty years before I see it. No, I think I can do better—much better, and Cousin William will help me." Animated with excitement, she rested her pretty chin on her hands and flashed Beauregard a dazzling smile. "Cousin William has been courting Charlotte Bordune, and although I haven't had the pleasure of Charlotte's acquaintance as of yet, I can see by the way she dangles poor William on a string that she takes his romantic attentions lightly. Now, that's bad for William, but good for me because Charlotte Bordune has two brothers—two
unmarried
brothers, I hasten to add. The whole family is richer than Midas with real estate and railroad lines stretching to the farthest frontier. Aunt Harriet tells me they live in a stunning limestone chateau on Fifth Avenue and have an even grander home in Newport. Cousin William promised to introduce me to Charlotte. I'm sure once I meet her we'll become fast friends, and then it's only a matter of time before I meet one of her brothers."
"And when you meet one of these Bordune brothers?"
"I get them to marry me, of course."
"You sound so sure of yourself."
"I didn't come to New York to fail."
Beauregard abruptly turned away from her so that her head plopped down on the mattress.
"Beau, what's wrong?"