I took a job in a mid-sized city some distance from home when the mine where I worked closed. There were no other opportunities nearby for an electrical engineer. I was in my late twenties and still single. I had a fiancΓ©. It looked like we were beginning to build a life together. But she decided she didn't want to relocate with me despite receiving lucrative offers from the three hospitals in and near the city where I now lived. I didn't want to relocate either. I had no choice if I wanted to avoid poverty.
Initially, I knew nobody outside of the people at work. I was fortunate in some respects though. The new job paid well, better than the one I'd lost. My new city had an active arts and music community, a technical community college, a small, prestigious liberal arts university, and a large branch campus of the state university.
My new employer provided a cash payment to help defray the cost of relocation, rather than covering moving expenses. I brought only my clothing, music collection, and some personal items. Everything fit into my mid-sized SUV, so I made out much better than if a relocation package covered moving expenses. The check was enough to put a sizable down-payment on a house or condo, but I didn't want to buy anything until I was established, knew my way around, and was sure I was staying.
I found a nice furnished two-bedroom apartment above a three-car garage. My new landlord, Stephanie, was an early fifties widow that worked as a flight attendant on international routes. Her husband built the apartment to rent to university students. But after several successive student tenants proved problematic, she left it empty. She finally decided to rent again because she wanted someone responsible around when she was away from home. In return for an absurdly low rent, I kept the grass cut and monitored the house during her frequent, extended absences. The state university golf course was across the street.
My new colleagues at work were nice folks. I quickly felt at home and soon gained respect for improvements I made in the manufacturing process. But most employees were married with families. And I was one of the youngest employees. I found little opportunity for socializing through work. My family wasn't religious, so I had no desire to get involved with a church. I decided to take a course or two in the evening division of the state university the next school year. Perhaps pursue an MBA. Maybe I could meet some people there.
Like any college town, there were lots of bars. I wasn't then, and still am not, much of a drinker so I was reluctant to start crawling pubs to socialize. I did occasionally frequent a few clubs that featured live entertainment and met some people, but none progressed beyond being casual acquaintances. I played softball for the company team. I played in a recreational basketball league. But outside of these activities, I spent most of my time alone.
After a few months, I began having trouble sleeping. I often went for a walk when I couldn't sleep. On several occasions, my presence on a deserted street at 1:00AM on a weeknight attracted the attention of a police patrol. These never amounted to more than a casual inquiry along the lines of 'Are you alright?' or 'We received a call that someone was prowling the neighborhood.' In every instance, an explanation that I was out for a walk because I couldn't sleep and proving I lived nearby sufficed. But they were a nuisance. And I worried that an interaction with a cop might one night escalate because of some unrelated incident, such as an assault on a female student.
To avoid dealing with the police, I decided to explore walking the golf course at night. The university course was open to the public. Though a good athlete, my name and good golfer were never used in the same paragraph, much less the same sentence. On my best days, I might hit a handful of good shots a round. I played the course a few times to learn the layout. It was a challenging course, far above my meager skills.
Once confident I could walk the course in the dark without stumbling into a ditch, I started frequenting it nights when I couldn't sleep. It was convenient. It was quiet. I was always alone. I could relax with my thoughts. There was no chance of being stopped by the city police. Campus security didn't patrol it. If I avoided wandering close to campus where I had run into students a few times, I'd have no trouble.
The students I'd encountered at night on the course were typical of the friends I had when I was in school. Groups at night were usually a small group of guys not far from campus, either stoned or a little drunk. Sometimes a little loud but otherwise harmless. When I had run into students, they usually offered a friendly greeting or cracked a joke. Sometimes they offered a beer or a toke. But they were also likely to attract the attention of campus security.
I typically walked the twelfth hole, a long par-five uphill dogleg. It was close to home and distant from campus. When you crested the hill, there was a wide gully. The hill continued to the right, turning into rough. A paved cart path through the rough led to the backside of the green and then to the thirteenth tee. From the top of the hill, you looked down on the green, across the gully to the left. The green was elevated about fifteen feet above the bottom of the gully, up a nearly vertical incline with several bunkers at the base. The bottom of the gully was fairway. But you didn't want to be down there. The way to play the hole was to get to the top of the hill with your second shot and hit a short iron onto the green. But knowing how to play it and being able to execute are very different things. My best score on the hole was a triple-bogey.
One warm, clear mid-Spring night, I was walking the edge of the twelfth fairway, along the tree line that separated the course from the road where I lived. The moon had been full a few nights earlier. When I got to the crest of the hill, I saw someone lying on a blanket spread out on the green. There was a something else on the blanket that looked like a pile of clothes. Though I was still more than fifty yards away, I could see there was a naked woman was lying on the blanket.
I dawdled, unsure what to do. I should have quietly turned around and gone back the way I came. But my curiosity kept me where I stood. Instead of leaving, I couldn't resist moving closer. Her head was toward the cart path. Unless I made noise, she'd never know I was there. I stayed close to the tree line and on the grass until I reached an area where the cart path was behind some trees, moving silently. Before long, I was to her right, close enough to see her more clearly.
I had managed to get within sixty feet without being detected. I stood close to a tree and remained motionless while I watched. Color perception was poor in the moonlight. I could see her hair was dark, black or brunette, maybe a dark shade of red. Her body was slender. Her breasts were flattened because she was on her back. She didn't look either flat-chested or buxom.
Her legs were bent, knees spread apart. One hand was kneading a breast and pinching the nipple. The other was positioned down the front of her torso. The hand between her legs moved steadily. I felt the pressure in my groin as I grew hard watching her, listening to the soft hum of a vibrator moving in and out of her. Its buzz was barely discernable between soft moans and whimpers.
Despite the erection uncomfortably tenting my pants, I didn't do anything about it. I just watched as she reached an orgasm, crying out softly. After taking a few minutes to catch her breath, she began again. This time the vibrator hum was higher-pitched, running through a series of short bursts, followed by a single long, intense burst, before repeating the pattern.
I watched her hips writhe as her excitement grew. My own arousal grew with hers. It was difficult to resist relieving the pressure in my groin, but I was afraid she would hear me. I didn't want to frighten her. Or know I was watching. This was something new for me. Though my fiancΓ© and I had an active sex life before we split, there were some things she'd never do. Masturbating while I watched was one of them. She wouldn't even talk about whether she ever had.