This is a long love story in three chapters but you'll have to wait for the sex. If you want a plotless quick thrill, then there are plenty of those elsewhere on this site. Some characters from my earlier stories make an appearance in this tale (although it is not necessary to have read those stories, it might help to know the characters). Characters in sex scenes are eighteen years old or over. All characters are imaginary—any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental
Copyright © 2015 to the author.
*****
"
You!
"
We must have looked a pair of fools, standing there and gawping at each other. Then Dusty shook her head and turned to leave. "I'm sorry—this seems to have been a mistake." She almost dashed towards her car.
I caught up with her while she was fumbling to get the key into the lock. "Wait, let's talk. You've come all this way—don't you even want to see the carpentry shop?"
"What's the point? You won't want me here."
I took hold of her elbow, not hard but it seemed to affect Dusty. She flinched a little so I let go and rested a more gentle hand on her forearm. "Who said I won't want you here? I didn't say that," I told her, "We'd better thrash this out now. It's obvious that neither of us could have known who we were meeting. I was told to expect a Louise Duncan. I suppose you were told to see a Miss Roberts?"
Dusty nodded.
"Before we go any further, there's something I have to tell you," I said, "I went back to Radclyffe's several times hoping to see you and try to explain."
She shook her head. "No need to explain. I know how unattractive I am."
Unsympathetic of me, perhaps, but I found myself annoyed with such a defeatist attitude. "Where the hell did you get that nonsense from?" I demanded, my voice perhaps a little more harsh than it should have been. I saw Dusty flinch again at my tone and I softened it a lot. "Louise, or Dusty, whichever you prefer, you are not unattractive. You're a very nice-looking girl. As I told you that night, my leaving like that was nothing to do with you and everything to do with me. I told you then it was personal and I couldn't explain.
"You weren't to know but Dot, my lover, had died a few months before. We'd been together a long time and I loved her so much and I was hurting. 'As Time Goes By' was her favourite song and when it came on the radio that night, it just broke me up.
That's
why I ran out on you, and that's why I kept going back to Radclyffe's hoping to see you again so I could apologise. I'm apologising now and hope you can understand that it wasn't your fault. Now, can we start this visit again?"
I held out a hand and Dusty slowly grasped it. We shook hands. "Thank you," she said, "Before I came here, my father said he thought you were a widow."
I smiled a little. "I suppose that's as good a word as any. Come on and I'll show you the workshop. Call me Fran, please. Do you prefer Louise or Dusty?"
"I'm Louise at home but I'm used to Dusty."
There was quite a change as soon as we entered the shop. The shy girl suddenly became the total professional. She closely examined all the tools and tested some of the machinery, making little noises of approval as she did so. She transferred her attention to the unfinished works, picking up pieces and checking them over before turning to me and saying: "Your Dot was very good—better than very good. There's some lovely work here although it all needs finishing off."
"That's why I kept everything as it is, hoping that somebody could complete them one day. Dusty, what say we give things between us a try? Say six months. If you'd like to finish off these pieces to start, I'm sure a lot of Dot's former customers would snap them up and pass the word around. We'll sell them at a reasonable price and the money will be yours. At the end of the six months, if you decide to stay and run this as a business we'll work out a fair rent for the workshop and flat."
Dusty thought for a moment then said: "I'd like that. Okay, let's give it a go."
As I took her up to see the flat, I asked: "Why 'Dusty'?"
"It's from senior school. I opted to go to woodwork classes, the only girl there. I'd got about eight years' start on the boys and I was far better than any of them. So one of them nicknamed me Sawdust and that gradually turned to Dusty."
Dusty moved in a few days later and apart from helping her to settle in the flat I left her to it. She knew her business and I wasn't about to interfere. I saw little of her during the first week, although when I walked past the shop I could sometimes hear the lathe running or a saw being used. She obviously had the right work ethic for I noticed that sometimes she worked well into the evening. And then she came to me one day while I was working in the yard and said, in her shy way, "Come with me please, Fran, I'd like to show you something."
The 'something' she wanted me to see turned out to be quite a few things, completed items of Dot's furniture. Her work was excellent: my untrained eye couldn't tell where Dot's work had finished and Dusty's began. I wanted to cry. "Thank you, Dusty, you've done Dot proud. She would have been so impressed by this."
My prediction was right. The completed pieces were snapped up and Dusty continued to finish Dot's work. When there was nothing left she started to produce items of her own. Now I could see a difference, for her original pieces had their own distinctive mark. They, too, sold well. At the end of the six months I asked Dusty if she wanted to stay and she said yes, that she loved being her own boss. I was pleased because although we didn't see all that much of each other, I had started to grow fond of the girl. It was good just to know that there was someone around.
But God, Dot, I still miss you so
.
* * * * *
It wasn't just the sex, although I missed that very much—after all, I was still a youngish woman and my needs had not diminished with Dot's death. Meg, the Welsh woman, had helped me but that was a one-off. When I did have the urge, I had active fingers and my little vibrating friend to help me. I'd put Dot's dildo away, though, because to me it was part of Dot and without her it was nothing more than a funny-shaped piece of latex. So as I said, it wasn't just the sex. More than anything, it was the companionship. Although I was sleeping well, our great bed felt empty without Dot cuddled up against me during the night. I frequently hugged her pillows to my body as they still had the lingering scent of sandalwood clinging to them.