Note to Readers
This is the second story I have submitted to Literotica and the first one written specifically for the site. I've discovered that I really enjoy writing erotic short stories. I have another one well underway and four or five good ideas for others. So if you like this story, more are on the way.
If you're tempted to conclude that the nineteen year old man in this story is unrealistically ignorant and naΓ―ve about women and sex, I would encourage you to consider the era in which the story is set:
Sex education was virtually non-existent then.
The sexual revolution hadn't yet occurred.
There was no internet or mass media.
Societal attitudes toward sex were more puritanical.
Television and advertising weren't saturated with sex, and sex and nudity in movies was rare.
Lady parts and even pubic hair were never seen in Playboy.
Pornography was hard to come by.
For those of you who are not fans of pubic hair, Brazilian waxes didn't exist either :>)
I hope you enjoy the story. Comments and feedback are of course welcome, publicly or privately.
All sexually active characters in the story are eighteen or older.
* * * * * *
Day One
August 11, 1960
Ben sat in the back seat of the car watching the trees go by. Next to him were his two sisters, eight year-old twins Anna and Barbara,
Double Trouble
as he liked to call them.
Thank God
, he thought, Marge--
Marge the Barge
, at twenty-one, two years older than Ben was, a hundred pounds heavier, and a thousand times more obnoxious than anyone he had ever known,
Vlad the Impaler in a gazillion size sack dress
--had refused to come, preferring to stay home lying on the couch watching TV while cramming potato chips and Hostess Twinkies into her mouth. Rather than endure a screaming match and endless angry histrionics for the entire vacation, his parents had relented and let her stay home.
They drove along the narrow two-lane road through the woods of northern Minnesota. Edgar, his father, was looking for the turn-off to Little Mey Lake where he had rented a cabin at the Little Mey Lake Resort for the next two weeks. They had been in the car for seven hours and Double Trouble took turns loudly demanding to know "Are we there yet?" His mother would turn around every time, glare at them and say "No, stop asking!" Two minutes later the ritual would be repeated.
"Aha!" Edgar yelled, "There it is." The car slowed. Ahead on the right was a small dirt road and a faded blue and yellow sign proclaiming LITTLE MEY LAKE RESORT--THE FINEST RESORT IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA!
"Here we are!" he proclaimed, as he turned onto the road. The car continued on the bumpy rutted road through the trees until it eventually emerged in a clearing. It stopped in front of a ramshackle wooden building with a small faded "OFFICE" sign tacked above the door. Beyond the building, Ben could see a handful of cabins scattered among the trees. Beyond them he caught glimpses of Little Mey Lake, poor cousin to Great Mey Lake four miles away. He had argued that they should go there but his father insisted, against obvious reality, that Little Mey Lake was better. Plus, he added, Great Mey Lake is ridiculously expensive.
"Stay in the car," Edgar ordered, another unnecessary order in a limitless stream of unnecessary orders he issued to his family. He got out of the car and disappeared into the office. Ben sank back into the seat, impatient to get out of the claustrophobic car and away from its occupants for a while. He couldn't see much of the resort from where he sat but it sure didn't look like much. After what seemed an eternity, Edgar emerged from the office and got in the car. "Cabin Five," he announced as he started the car.
Cabin Five, like the office and all the other cabins, was old and ramshackle. In front of it were a cooking pit with a grill and a picnic table. A few lawn chairs were placed along the front of the cabin under an awning. It wasn't bad inside with running water and an indoor toilet. Ben was unhappy to see that it only had two bedrooms, meaning he would have to share one with the twins, something certain to interfere with his favorite nocturnal activity. There was no TV.
What the hell am I going to do
?
When Ben and his father had finished unloading the car, Edgar yelled "Come on Dorothy, time to get some groceries. There's a store six or seven miles down the road." As his parents got in the car, Edgar yelled at him "Watch the twins!"
Great,
he thought, then brightened. "Hey Anna and Barb, let's go look around." As they walked down toward the lake, he counted seven other cabins but couldn't tell if they were occupied or not. Beyond the cabins was a grassy area with some old playground equipment--a few swings, a teeter-totter and a slide. Two children, a boy and a girl who looked about Anna and Barb's age, and looked like they were twins themselves, were sitting on swings watching them. The twins stopped and stood there looking at them before Ben, with his own interests in mind, said "Go say hello or something." The twins looked at each other and headed off to do so. He watched for a moment then walked down to the lake. A weathered old pier extended about thirty feet out into the water. Next to the pier, three beaten-up aluminum canoes were pulled up on a gently sloping grassy bank. The swimming area was a similar bank on the other side of the pier and a wooden raft floated some fifty feet from the shore.
He walked along the shoreline. What seemed to be a hiking trail led off into the trees along the shore and he followed it for ten minutes or so before it petered out in a marshy area. He turned and came back to the main clearing. The two sets of twins were playing some sort of tag game. He looked around and noticed what seemed to be a worn path through the trees on the opposite side of the clearing from the playground. As he approached it, he could see another ramshackle wooden building partially hidden by the trees. He followed the path and when he came to the building he saw that it was bigger than the cabins and a hand-painted sign over the door said SHOWERS.
He opened the door and went in. It was dim and gloomy inside. There was an overhead light with a bare bulb and a pull cord to turn it on. He found himself in a narrow passage facing an eight-foot high partition made from old gray wooden boards with four doors spaced along it. The inside of the building was of open design with the peaked roof high above the partition. He opened one of the doors and stepped into a spacious shower enclosure. A wooden bench ran along the front, and there were pegs for clothes, and a small shelf on the rear wall for soap and shampoo and pegs for towels behind the shower. He stood in the middle of the enclosure and smiled.
Perfect
, he thought.