A Reader's Delight: Sex While Reading
By: AnonymousNin
One
Upon entering college, my mantra was: Why have sex when you can read about it; I would much rather read about Murakami characters fucking than have sex myself.
Now I am not so sure.
The only thing better than reading about sex, is having sex while reading.
Two
In my first semester of college, I made a mistake and signed up for Anthro 100 early in the morning. The class started at nine, aka the college break of dawn..
On the first day, I sat next to this cute knucklehead named Jake.
Jake was a west coast skinny, surfer. He had a tan skin, a sun-freckled face and medium-long blonde hair. His hair wasn't long enough to tie into a ponytail, but it was long enough to grip.
When I walked to class, Jake would nickel-board past me, turn around, get off his board, and walk with me.
Three
One morning I awoke to the vibration of my phone.
Jake texted me:
"Skipping class Kiko. (short for Akishino) Shame on you. Did you at least have a good time last night? ;)"
(The second part of this text was a joke).
Jake sent me another text
"If you want, you can borrow my notes to copy?"
"Sure!" I replied. "That would be awesome, can I stop by VV (Valley-View Hall) at like 1-ish?"
Four
At one, I arrived at Valley View. Jake let me in the dorm and led me down the hall to his room
Although Jake sometimes acts like a meathead, his room was not the room of a meathead..
Jake's dorm room was a room dedicated to books.
Not for sleeping, not for watching tv, not for playing video games, not even for doing homework. This room was set up for the pure enjoyment of reading.
All of Jake's shelves were bookshelves; his floor to ceiling window frames were bookshelves; and his desk was a bookshelf.
There were only two non readable objects: Jake's nickel-board, and, in the corner— a lone fiddle-leafed fig.
Upon inspection, the spines were sorted alphabetically: Hammett, Hawking, Hawthorne, Hemmingway, Hesse, Hugo...
You can learn all you need to know about a person from their living spaces: the first time I came into Jake''s dorm room, I knew I wanted to have sex with him.
Jake handed me his notes and I left.
Five
In my exit, I opened the front door of Valley View— onto the quad— and hesitated.
"Surely Jake must like me?" I asked. "He noticed me when I was absent.."
"Just go for it," I rationalized. "What's the worst that can happen."
Last second, I stopped the door before it locked me out.
I let myself back into Valley View.
I walked back down the hall to Jake's room and knocked— my patented jingle— on his door.
"Oh hey, Kiko, it's you again," Jake said. "Did I forget to give you something."
"Oh, no, it's not that," I replied. "It's just. if you ever need a friend to go get coffee with, or something, you should call me."
Six
That evening— as I read Faulkner's
As I Lay Dying
for Freshman Comp— Jake called me.
Jake invited me to get coffee with him tomorrow once classes were over.
Faulker became impenetrable. I gave up, rolled around in bed, and laid there.
Seven
I awoke early the next morning; it was already a nice, warm, fall day.
Eventually, my last class ended, and I returned to my dorm room to change for our coffee-date.
I changed from jean short shorts and a white T, into a blue sequined sundress— a dress a cut shorter than I had ever worn.
I looked good in this dress. The blue went well with my warm, Asian, skintone. And the cut of the dress somehow balanced good taste, while showing off my skin.
The sundress had a tasteful sluttiness.
I was shocked when Mom said she would buy this dress for me. This dress was low cut, and made no effort to hide my cleavage— not that I had much to hide— nor my legs.
I think Mom knew what type of dress this was— what it was for.
My tits looked great braless, so I just slid on— matching light blue— panties.
Eight
Arriving at the cafe, in my dress, I found Jake sitting at a table next to a window, paging through a tattered Steinbeck novel.
"Alright Akishino, I whispered. "Don't mess this up,"
I smoothed my dress, and walked to his table.
Nine
As Jake and I sipped our coffee, our legs and hands inched closer. Neither of us noticed the beginnings of rain.
"Ah man, Kiko," said Jake. "you wore the wrong outfit today."
"I know, right?" I replied.