This story is a work of fiction. Some real institutions are mentioned, but they are used fictitiously. Insofar as the author knows, no real person affiliated with any of those institutions has ever behaved as do the characters in this story. The Heartland Bank referred to in this story is completely fictitious. Any similarities between any character in this story and any real person are coincidental and unintended. Comments on this story, both favorable and unfavorable, are always welcome. Thank you for reading this.
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Hello. My name is Will Lewis. A little background on me is, I think, important for you to understand my story.
I got a swimming scholarship to a selective university in the Chicago area that also tried to run a big-time athletic program. I was what coaches call a "role player." During my college career, I swam every event. My best finish was fourth in the conference in the 400 fly my senior year.
The scholarship allowed me to get my bachelor's in economics. I did well enough to be accepted into our well-regarded Graduate School of Management and, two years later, had my MBA. My concentration was finance, but I wanted to stay in the Midwest rather than going to New York. I took a position in risk management, reviewing proposed loans, with the large regional bank, Heartland, based in my hometown in the lower Midwest.
My parents had died in a car accident during my first year of B-school. I inherited the pre-Civil War farmhouse where I grew up. The house was in a pocket of rusticity about 15 miles east of the city, about halfway up a ridge that ran along the south side of Poplar Creek. From our front porch, you looked down at Poplar Creek and Poplar Creek Road. Across the road was another ridge. When I was a child, that ridge had been all second-growth forest. During high school, it was turned into a high-end residential development: minimum seven acre lots, houses in the $400,000 - 900,00 range. That development was served by a private road called Poplar Run.
I moved back into the house on Poplar Creek when I started at the Bank. In the post-pandemic world, I usually worked from home via computer. That facilitated my efforts to stay in shape. One of my workouts was to run Poplar Run. Poplar Run, about two cars wide, went off Poplar Creek Road on a steep incline for about three quarters of a mile. There was about 250 yards of flat land where Poplar Run made a broad S curve, first to the right and then left, before you went up another steep incline for a half mile. Poplar Run ended on top of the ridge with a flat three-quarter mile stretch that ended at the drive of a large, modernistic house.
I probably ran Poplar Run two or three times a week usually in mid-afternoon. During my first summer and fall, my only contact with the people on Poplar Run was an occasional wave from someone in a passing car. My running tailed off over the winter, but I started up again when the weather improved in March. Swimming, and working for the Bank, ingrained the notion that you did everything against the clock. I focused on improving my time on Poplar Run rather than adding distance.
There was a large brick house on your right as you entered the first part of the S-turn going up Poplar Run. I noticed it more than the other mansions because there was a brick wall about five feet high that came off the house and enclosed part of the yard between the house and the top Poplar Run's lower incline. If you looked through a metal gate in the corner of the wall closest to Poplar Run, you could see a swimming pool and diving board. The pool was positioned so that the house screened it from view from the upper incline of Poplar Run and, except for the small piece you could see through the gate, the wall screened it from view along the flat and the lower incline. If any other houses had pools, they were in backyards completely out of sight from Poplar Run.
That May was unseasonably warm. Typically, by the time I passed the house with the pool on my way back down Poplar Run, I was dripping sweat. It was about ten days before Memorial Day. I was pounding through the S turn on my way down Poplar Run when a voice called from the direction of the brick house "you're working hard." I looked to my left. I could see a woman's head above the wall around the pool. The wall covered her from the neck down.
I was close enough to see that the woman was probably in her forties and had dark brown hair framing a lovely face. She was smiling. "Hi," she said, "I'm Carol Webb. I've seen you out here running for several weeks now."
I gratefully slowed to a walk but stayed on the pavement. "I'm Will Lewis," I replied.
"Oh," Ms. Webb said, "you're in the house across Poplar Creek?"
"Yes," I replied.
"You have a beautiful setting over there," Ms. Webb replied, "and so private. With the trees leafed out, we can't see your house from the road. Sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt your run." I picked up the pace and went down the rest of Poplar Run and went home.
The next day was even hotter. As I came back down Poplar Run past the Webb house, I heard Carol Webb's voice again. "You look like you need fluids," she said. Again, she was standing inside the pool wall. All I could see was her head and a hand holding a bottle of Gatorade on the stones that topped the wall. Carol Webb raised the bottle of Gatorade slightly in a gesture offering it to me. I trotted over to the wall and gratefully took the bottle from her.
Ms. Webb was standing so close to the wall that I could not see her below her neck. Past her, however, I could see a nice-sized pool with a diving board. There was an outdoor shower, lounge chairs, a picnic table, and an expensive-looking gas grill.
"You have a nice pool," I said.
"Thank you," Carol Webb said, "we like it." She chuckled. "I'd invite you for a swim but Bruce, my husband, is in Chicago. I'm not sure he'd appreciate my inviting in strange men when he's not here."
"I've spent a lot of time in pools," I replied. Carol Webb raised an eyebrow inquiringly, so I explained that I swam in college. She asked where and I told her.
"Bruce swam for Michigan," she said. "He's quite a bit older than you though. Still, I'll bet he'd like to meet you. We're going to New Haven over Memorial Day. Our daughter is getting her BFA in dance. Maybe we can have you over after we get back."
I thanked Carol Webb for the Gatorade and finished my run. I did not think much about a possible invitation to the Webb's pool. I was from the low-rent part of the neighborhood.
It was Wednesday in the first week of June. I was making good time back down Poplar Run when I heard a male voice from the Webbs' house call out "Hello." Looking left, I saw Carol Webb standing behind the wall around their pool. Next to her stood a man slightly taller than her. The man said, "I'm Bruce Webb. Carol says you're a swimmer."
I slowed to a walk. "I was," I replied.
"You never really leave it, do you?" Bruce Webb said. "You look like you could use a dip right now," he added. "Why don't you come in?" Somewhat naughty-looking smiles, which I didn't understand, showed on his and his wife's faces. I did not wish to be rude to my neighbors, so I walked to the metal gate, unlatched it, and entered the pool enclosure.
I was shocked. What I couldn't see from the other side of the wall was that Carol and Bruce Webb were both nude. Carol may have carried an extra pound or two, but she was an exceedingly attractive woman. Bruce was very fit. Neither of them had any tan lines.
Smiling, Carol said, "I hope we didn't shock you. We don't like to wear swimsuits."
"In fact," Bruce said pleasantly, "we don't allow suits in our pool." He pointed to a sign mounted on the inside of the wall that had screened the Webbs' nudity from my view. The sign said, "SWIMSUITS ARE PROHIBITED. Skinny-dipping only."
"Although we're from the Midwest," Carol said, "we lived for several years in the Tampa area. Some friends down there dared us to go to a clothing optional resort. We did and became converts."
Before I could say anything, my attention was distracted by a young woman coming out of the house. "This is our daughter Danielle," Carol said. "Danielle, this is our neighbor across Poplar Creek, Will Lewis."
Danielle stepped towards me and said, "I'm pleased to meet you." Danielle had bright blue eyes, a wide smile, strong jaw, and high cheekbones, framed by brown hair a shade lighter than her mother's hair. I noticed that later. What I noticed immediately, because Danielle was also nude, were her proportional C cup breasts, flat stomach, firm legs, and the small brown landing strip on her mound. Danielle Webb was, quite simply, the most beautiful woman I had ever seen in person or in pictures.