I am grateful to NewOldGuy77 for his editing.
(Evelyn)
"Have you heard about that new haunted house?" Faith asked.
I rolled my eyes, "you'll have to be more specific than that. There's a bunch of new ones, every year."
"Not like this one. It's X-rated!" Faith exclaimed loudly.
"Not so loud!" I admonished as several of the other women in our church knitting group glared at us.
Faith blushed furiously.
I laughed, "what's supposed to be scary about naked people?" I asked quietly.
Faith frowned and whispered, "I think they still wear some kind of costumes, and they do the normal scary things..."
I shrugged, "Sounds normal then I guess."
"It's going to be in the warehouse right down the block from the church! Daddy's going to stop it though, he told me."
I eyed Faith. She really was the perfect Catholic. She was also the only grown woman I knew who still called her father 'Daddy'.
"How about a bet?" I asked, slyly.
"Gambling is a sin," hissed Faith primly.
"Well, I don't think your father is going to be able to shut down a haunted house."
"He will! Daddy can do anything!"
"If that's true, then it's not gambling, it's a sure thing."
Faith pursed her lips.
"Come on, if you don't take the bet, it's like saying that you don't believe your father can do it. I mean, that's the only way it's gambling, right? If you aren't sure?"
I just loved pushing her buttons; she was so cute when she was angry. Her jet-black eyes would get all squinty and her little pert nose would crinkle up and her ears would twitch behind the wisps of black hair that always escaped her tight bun. And if she was irritated enough, she would let go of some of her tightly held principles and be just a little wild.
"I suppose that's true," Faith said finally, just a hint of light reflected from her squinted eyes. "And when I win, I want you to join the choir." She nodded firmly.
I let out a breath. Faith had been trying to get me to sing with the choir for months, ever since she overheard me sing Adele's 'Rolling in the Deep.' The problem was I had terrible stage fright.
"You know I can't do that." I said.
Faith smiled, "then I guess there's no bet."
"Come on, ask for something else?"
"No way, it's the choir or nothing."
"Fine." I said.
"Really?" Faith looked shocked and excited.
"Really. But if I win, you have to go the haunted house with me."
Faith gasped and instinctively shook her head. "Come on, ask for something else?"
"It's the haunted house or nothing," I told her resolutely.
Faith looked at the hat she was knitting critically as she mulled over my offer. I looked down at the scarf I was working on. It was the ugliest piece of crap that had ever been knitted. Faith's hat, on the other hand, was impeccable with perfect small stitches and a colorful pattern too. She knitted tons of hats for cancer patients and was pretty great at it. She really was too perfect. It was my job to liven up her life with silly bets and pornographic haunted houses.
"Alright," Faith said finally, "it's a bet."
She beamed at me, and my clit tingled the way it always did when Faith was happy with me. That was something I tried not to think about. Faith would never explore that feeling with me, even if she felt the same. But that tingle was the reason I went to her church and joined her knitting group. Unrequited love was a bitch, but it was all I had.
At night when I was dreaming, I liked to imagine that someday, somehow, I'd find a way to open her up to the idea that being gay wasn't sinful. But in the daylight, I knew that would never happen. And even then, so what? She'd never indicated that she liked me as anything more than a friend, no matter how much I tingled when she smiled.
Still, my little eternal flame of hope flickered optimistically as I imagined taking Faith to an X-rated haunted house. That was exactly the kind of thing a person needed to really relax some inhibitions.
(Faith)
The idea of a sex-themed haunted house made me more excited than I wanted to admit. It embarrassed me that I wanted Evelyn to win our bet. I wanted to go see the debauchery in person, and I wanted a way to do it where I didn't have to admit that I wanted to go.
Evelyn always found a way to give me an excuse to do the things I knew were wrong. Like how she'd argued that I had to take her bet or else I wasn't properly honoring Daddy. She was so clever like that. I wondered if she knew how much I liked that about her.
But the wonderful thing about this bet was that if I won, she would sing. The first time I had heard Evelyn sing just a few months ago, I nearly wept at the beauty of her voice. And when I saw her, the passion in her face as she sang of love... Shamefully, I had imagined it was me she sang to.
I could never decide, since then, if it was a good thing or a bad thing that she never sang when she knew someone was listening. On the good side, it made it easier to pretend she was just a friend. The way her singing affected me, I am not sure I could hide my adoration. On the bad side, I didn't get to hear her sing unless it was by accident. I spent more time than she knew hiding out of her sight, listening to her glorious voice.
Was it a good idea to push her into joining the choir? Was I playing with fire?
"Alright ladies, that's enough knitting for today. See you next week!"
Evelyn and I packed up our projects. I glanced at Evelyn's scarf and couldn't quite stifle a laugh. She frowned at me.
Even unhappy, she was beautiful with her curly brown hair that spread out in uncontrolled frizz from her round face. Her light brown eyes always seemed to hold a gleam of amusement at the world and her full lips were far more likely to be quirked up in a wry grin, than pursed down as they were now.
"What? Don't you like my work?"
"It's beautiful, Evelyn, really." I said.
"Well, I'm glad you think so, because when it's done, I'm giving it to you! And I expect you to wear it."
My heart fluttered wildly as I imagined wearing her scarf that she'd made with her own hands. It would be like her hands caressing me, through her work. With an effort, I pushed away that improper thought.