Roland grunted as Angela raised and lowered her broad hips one last time, causing him, while clutching and releasing his two-handed grip under her drooping breasts, to shudder, tense, release at his core and then to repeat: shudder, tense, and release. His hands went to cupping her breasts as she leaned down into him, going for the kiss on the lips, which Roland avoided at the last second by turning his face and taking the kiss on his throat. Grunting, Angela rolled off to the side of the bed, reached for her clutch purse on Roland's nightstand, extracted a pack of cigarettes and a lighter, and lit up. She exhaled a couple of streams of smoke in dramatic pose before turning and looking down at the man in the bed beside her. She gave him the best coquettish smile a zaftig woman of forty-eight could manage. It was a pretty good smile; she still was a handsome woman, if a bit hefty. Some men like a fair amount of meat on the bone, though.
"I think we need to clean up and get on the road or we'll be late to Kenneth's garden party," Angela said.
"We're already late for his party. And I'm not sure we should go at all." Roland sat up in the bed, turned away from Angela, and rolled the spent condom off his cock, giving it a look of distaste as if it were some alien object that had nothing at all to do with him. He dropped it into the wastebasket beside his side of the bed and pushed the basket under a desk there, which was covered with textbooks and exam papers.
Roland was tall and lean to Angela's short and not lean, and he was a fine-looking late fifties to her attempts to continue looking under forty. He was a distinguished-looking late fifties—one would almost say he looked effete. But then he was a college professor at a small, liberal arts institution, so he was in character.
"Of course we should go," she countered. "Why on earth not? He's been working on something in secret. I want to know what it is." Angela and Kenneth were both artists, teaching at the small university in an even smaller college town. Angela was senior to Kenneth—she had tenure and position; Kenneth didn't have tenure and his position was eroding. The kicker was that Kenneth had more art talent than Angela did, and Angela knew it.
Roland felt the competition with Kenneth, but for the moment at least, Roland had Angela, which was a power chit at the university. In many ways being on the faculty of a small, family-run university, was akin to a board game of strategy.
"In view of our decision this morning not to give Kenneth tenure, I think it may be tactless to take his hospitality," Roland said. "He'll have to find someplace else to work now, which means some other town than here. And he's still reeling from Marianne's unexpected death."
"He doesn't know the vote went against him," Angela responded. "He shouldn't even know the meeting was this morning. And you say it 'may be' tactless. So, are you having second thoughts? You know that it was your and my votes in the tenure committee that sank him."
"It was mostly your argumentation. He teaches fine arts; yours was the influencing voice in that realm." Roland Smyth was chair of the art department, but his area was art history, not studio arts. He enjoyed being the chair, but only when the decisions to be made were popular and raised no dust. "No, not second thoughts, I guess," he added. "I'm sure you spoke as you did for the good of the university."
"Of course," she answered, taking another puff on her cigarette. She didn't show the man her face, though. She hadn't given two thoughts to the university in her campaign to move Kenneth on. It was, in part, of course, his artistic talent compared with hers. That threatened her position. But it also was their cut-off affair, ended by Kenneth when Marianne had been diagnosed and given a short time to live. Kenneth had given it all to his wife then—and he hadn't come back to Angela when Marianne had died. Three months now and he'd shown no inclination to come back to Angela. Having more talent was one thing; no longer being in Angela's thrall was quite another.
"And of course you voted against him for the good of the university too," she said.
It was Roland's turn not to look at Angela. He rose from the bed, pulling the bed sheet around his waist, modest now, after having been coaxed into the act. Angela had couched it as his reward for going with her on the tenure vote. He had only succumbed for camouflage purposes. He would have voted that way in any event. Kenneth had spurned him. Roland had assumed that, after Marianne no longer was in the picture, the two of them could return to their undergraduate days' relationship. He and Kenneth had been roommates and lovers as undergraduates. Roland had gotten Kenneth the position here with the hope of rekindling that heat. After Marianne died there was no reason why they couldn't come back together again—discreetly, of course. But it didn't happen, and when Roland pushed it by showing up at Kenneth's house one night and offering himself, only to be rejected, it was obvious that it wasn't going to happen. And it was equally obvious then that Kenneth had to go. Roland already had a young man in mind as a replacement who was quite attractive and approachable.
"Of course," he said as he swished his tall, willowy fifty-year-old body toward the master bathroom. "Our university is coming up in the world. We can't tolerate having second-class talent here anymore."
Angela reddened and shot a pointed look at Roland's disappearing back. The man had a sharp tongue and a razor-sharp mind. That hadn't been a dig at her, had it? No, of course not. He wouldn't dare.
"He's working on something new—and entirely at home," she said. "I want to know what it is; what it might reveal of his state of mind. He hasn't been completely stable since Marianne died. He knows there's a tenure meeting in train, although I doubt he knows it was today. He will suspect the ax has fallen more if we don't show up to the garden party with jolly faces on than if we do."
It was Roland's turn to pause en route to the bathroom and to mentally assess what Angela had just said. Was it a warning to him? Did she know or suspect about the relationship he and Kenneth had once had? Was she going to hold it over his head until Kenneth was gone? Angela had a razor-sharp mind, a glib tongue, and a mean streak. If he'd had any second thoughts about separating Kenneth before—he still ached for the handsome man with a god-like body even after all of these years—having Angela in the departmental machinations equation decided that.
Roland wasn't sleeping with Angela because she aroused him. It was a classic case of keeping your friends close, but your enemies closer. After Kenneth was gone, Roland could give his full attention to moving Angela on as well. It also, in Kenneth's case, was a matter of sending your personal weaknesses and failed desires out into the distant darkness to keep your enemies in check.
* * * *
So, this is what he's been up to, Angela thought as she roamed around Kenneth's art studio in what had once been a greenhouse conservatory built onto the side of the Victorian house he and Marianne had restored on a shady street in the old section of the college town. She had slipped away from his garden party shortly after she and Roland Smyth had arrived—at different times in separate cars, of course. When you were in a small college town with sharp-witted competitors, you went to great strides to keep your appetites and activities secret. It was a revelation to be uncovering one of Kenneth's. This explained a lot.