My thanks go, as always, to my editing team. My editors are Girlinthemoon, Hal, Olddave1951, GeorgeAnderson and Pixel the Cat. Thank you for your efforts to make me better. Harddaysknight is my mentor and gives me critical review. SBrooks103x also gives me a pre-post read. You are all the best.
The category description for Loving Wives says, "Married extra-marital fun: swinging, sharing, and more." I am very well aware of the implications of that description. They are guidelines, not rules, as many suppose, and the Admin gives us a wide latitude, for which we are grateful. My issue with the "swinging, sharing" aspect has always been that much of that writing is dreadful. They are stroke stories of cheating, mis-categorized IR, BDSM, humiliation, fetish material; they are cookie-cutter sex stories with no plot and character development, just over-the-top sex. I began to imagine what a story might be like of the "swinging, sharing" variety if some time and effort were put into developing the plot and characters, and the humiliation aspects were taken away. This repost of an older story that has not been on the site for years is a preview of what will come. I have persuaded several old hack LW writers and some Bebop3 guy, to write such stories. I anticipate seeing what they do with the theme. Sharing without the cuck element? Should be entertaining. I hope the readers will find them interesting, Randi.
*****
The first time I saw her she was walking a bobcat down the sidewalk. I was spreading mulch around the rose bushes in the yard, and I heard someone walking down the sidewalk. I looked up and saw the bobcat. I was somewhat startled, to say the least, and prepared to flee for my life. Then I noticed her. Something was wrong with this picture. First, you just don't walk any kind of cat. They don't cooperate like that. Second, you don't walk bobcats: you run away if they don't run away from you.
It had a little harness on and a leash was attached to the top of the harness. It was walking along quite happily, stopping to smell things occasionally. Attached to the other end of the leash was a dusky goddess. God, she was gorgeous. She was tall and slender, but very muscular. She must have been close to six feet. Her long, creamy brown legs went from red athletic shoes about a mile upward to the bottom of white shorts that were about mid-thigh. You could see the muscles flexing in her calves and thighs. She had on a t-shirt with some cartoon figure on it and it swept in from slender hips to what looked like about a 24-inch waist. It flared upward to some very nice looking breasts. They weren't huge, but they certainly weren't small. They were perfectly proportioned for her body, very high and firm. My eyes made it up past those breasts and my breath caught in my throat. One of the most beautiful faces I'd ever seen sat on a long, graceful neck. Her lips were full, almost puffy and her mouth was maybe a little too wide for classic beauty. Her chin was little and pointed, and her jawline was strong. Her nose was little, and not very wide. The jawline swept upward to high cheekbones; her cheeks were a little hollow and her eyes were amazing. They were huge, almond shaped and a soft brown. I was close enough that I could see green and gold flecks in them.
She had pounds of curls, reaching down to the middle of her back and standing up in studied disorder around her head. They were a glossy black and there was a strand of brown or red here and there. I was stunned. This was one of the most beautiful women I had ever seen! What was she doing walking down my sidewalk, and what was she doing with a bobcat?
I found my voice. "Hi," I said. "New to the neighborhood?" I know, brilliant conversation, right?
She noticed me and smiled shyly. It was dazzling in its radiance. That smile lit her up like a beacon and told me everything I later found out about her character. She was beautiful, a little hesitant, innocent and confident, all at the same time.
"Hi," she said. Her voice was as beautiful as the rest of her, low, husky and musical in a way that made you want to hear her speak some more. "Yes, I just bought a house on the other side of the block."
"Do you raise bobcats?" I asked.
She laughed and I wanted to make her do it again. "He isn't a bobcat," she said. "He's a Pixie Bob. He does look like a bobcat, though, doesn't he?"
"Does he like to be petted?" I asked.
"Sometimes, if he likes you," she said.
"Can I give it a try?" I asked. "He's so cute! He won't kill me, will he?" She laughed and I came and knelt down in the grass. He looked me over for a few seconds and apparently decided I needed investigating. He came over and rubbed against me. I scratched his cheeks and he began to rumble, his purr sounding more like a threat.
"What's his name?" I asked.
"He doesn't really have one," she said. "He's never seemed to want one. We just call him Cat."
I laughed. "Well, he certainly is a lot of that." He was panting in the summer heat. "He looks thirsty," I said. "Should we give him a drink?"
"If you don't mind," she said.
"Wait here," I told her. I went and got a little plastic bucket off the deck, filled it with water from the hose and brought it to the sidewalk. He was lying in the grass, panting, and I set the bucket down by him. He stood up and began to drink.
"I'm Kara," I told her. "Welcome to the neighborhood." I stuck my hand out. She shook it with a firm grip.
"I'm Syndy," she said.
"Nice to meet you, Cindy," I said.
"I know how you're spelling that in your head," she smiled that smile again. "Whoever named me was weird." She spelled it for me.
"That's an interesting name," I said. "Did your mother ever tell you why she spelled it like that?"
"I never really knew her," Syndy said. "I know about her, but she gave me to an orphanage when I was a baby. I don't know who gave me the weird name."
"How do you know about her?" I asked.
"The Sisters told me," she said. "She was a seventeen year old black girl who got pregnant by an older white man. Her parents were sort of racists and they made her give me up. She told the Sisters and they wrote all the information down in a file."
"Honey, that's just awful," I said. "I'm so sorry that happened to you." I hesitated, not wanting to seem too forward, but my heart already went out to this beautiful woman with a tragic past. "Syndy, would you like to come over for dinner tonight?"
She looked conflicted for a minute, like she wanted to but couldn't. "I can't, I'm sorry," she said. "I have to go pick my daughter up in..." she looked at her phone," thirty minutes. I don't have a babysitter yet. I should take Cat and go home so I can go get her."
"Where is she?" I asked.
"Do you know the Wilkens?" she asked. "Amy Wilkens took her to story time at the library. I really have to go now."
"Bring your daughter," I said. "I made a chocolate cake this morning. We'd love to meet her and I've loved talking to you. Let us make you feel welcome here."
She tugged on Cat's leash and he stood up. "What time would you want me to come?" she asked.
"Come at six," I told her.
"Can I bring something?" she said as Cat began to lead her away.
"No, I've got everything," I said. "Your daughter and an appetite. Bring Cat, too, if you want."
She waved and I watched until she turned the corner.
Randy pulled into the driveway just as she disappeared. I had sent him to Lowe's for more mulch and he had two bags under each arm when he got to me. "Where do you want them?" he asked.
"Right there," I pointed. "Randy, I just met the sweetest, most beautiful girl I've ever seen. She's coming to dinner this evening. She just bought Sam and Allie's house. I didn't know it had sold, did you?"
He shrugged his shoulders, shaking off the weight of the mulch. "No, I haven't been on Pine Street for a week or two. Tell me more about beautiful girls."
"You big lecher!" I punched him in the leg. "She's stunning, Randy. She's black and she's got this hair! She has a little girl. She didn't say anything about a husband and she wasn't wearing a ring. She has this mammoth cat, too, that looks like a bobcat. She was taking it for a walk! Who takes a cat for a walk? We started talking and she's adorable. Help me spread this mulch around and I'm going to cook dinner. You go clean up and look nice after we're finished. You'll want to make a good impression. Trim your eyebrows!"