There is no graphic sex into this story. This is actually pretty much true story, with names, places and some other details changed for privacy. Special thanks again to sbrooks103x for the editing. Any remaining errors are entirely mine -- probably added after his assistance. I made some significant changes.
*****
It's not like I hadn't been warned about Maitland girls my whole life. Everybody knew. A Maitland girl would always be beautiful. A Maitland girl would always be clever. And funny. And make you feel lightheaded and dizzy with rapture.
But most of all, a Maitland girl would always be faithless.
Steady just wasn't in them, as my Mamma would say. She'd certainly warned me enough times about those Maitland girls. The whole clan of them, she'd insist, had been put on this Earth by the Devil himself to confuse and perplex men. They could, she said, hypnotize men with their eyes and words and ever-swaying hips.
It didn't matter what family name they took if they married -- O'Malley, Smith, Robard - it'd never change their nature. They'd always be Maitland girls and they'd always flicker off to chase a brighter light, a momentary pleasure without a second thought.
You'd better, they said, look close at your children to see who their real father was if you took up with a Mailtand girl.
Steady just wasn't in them.
So as I walked slowly up the path to the front porch of my farmhouse, I could hardly claim to be surprised that my wife Jenny was standing next to my best friend Mark, with his baby girl balanced on one hip.
My son Tommy was staring fixedly at me from behind Jenny's blue calico dress, confused and lost. Mark was gently touching my son's shoulder, jaw set in hard determination, as of someone seeing a storm approach and knowing it'd have to be weathered.
Jenny was frozen between fascination and horror, eyes wide, one hand reaching out as if to touch me across the ten feet between us, seeking to prove I was real. Or not real.
***
I'd listened to my mother growing up. I stayed clear of fickle Maitland girls and their magnetic eyes. Though I'd certainly seen them. They were like burning comets, brilliant against the background of dour, church-going people of the county. Flickering from boy to boy in school, and man to man out of it.
My best friend Mark and I heard more stories about Maitland girls and their appetites for pleasure from the older boys -- the ones that'd fallen for them and been cast aside. The only Maitland girl close to our age was Jenny Maitland, a bright-eyed, impossibly lovely girl, who was never with the same boy for four months. We'd passed words occasionally, friendly enough, but I'd wisely stayed away from her until she ran off to the City, chasing that something that Maitland girls were always seeking. I'd been worried that I was next on her list of conquests, and my Mamma would have killed me if I'd taken up with a Maitland girl, so I breathed a sigh of relief when she disappeared from school.
I'd not found any other kind of girl that suited me either, and when I finally came of age, after Mamma passed away from fever, I sought a bit of adventure with the Navy before settling down to farm the rich Southern Indiana soil. Mark would have joined up as well, but he'd lost half a foot to a carelessly dropped ax when he was four. But he encouraged me to go, to have fun for both of us. So for four years I'd kicked around the world wearing the whites of a Navy sailor and working in the radio room of a cruiser, though I always knew I'd always be coming back. I sent him postcards and letters relentlessly.
Philippines, Macao, Hong Kong, Singapore, Fiji, Hawaii, San Francisco. I met plenty of girls -- mostly exotic, and not one I think Mamma would ever have approved of. We certainly had fun though.
Eventually, I knew I had to return -- I missed farming; I missed the soil, the seeds and the solid land.
Mark met me at the train station, in the mid-summer heat, and we walked over to Mrs. Strickland's boarding house. Mark stayed there when he was in town. He worked delivery for the cord factory and was always making his rounds from town to town, sometimes into the City. He had half a dozen girls he saw in various tops on his route, but none that he was serious about.
Mark chatted on and on about the postcards as I carried my sea bag up to his room, now our room.
Then he stopped suddenly and a sly but sad look crept across his face.
"Best hurry up John, supper's down in the main room in 10 minutes and you won't want to miss it. Mrs. Strickland's got no patience for boarders who can't be seated on time. And you don't want to miss it."
He seemed a bit odd about the way he said that and I was still puzzling over it after grace while the food was being served out by a skittish girl with lank hair and lifeless, hollow eyes.
The food was okay, but it wasn't so great it'd have been a tragedy to miss -- it was solid, plain fare, although there was plenty of it.
Mark nodded in the direction of the kitchen where the broken mouse of a girl had disappeared.
"You know who that is, right?"
I shook my head.
"C'mon John, think."
When I still couldn't get it, he sighed.
"That's Jenny Maitland."
"Bullshit." I meant it, too. There'd never been a Maitland girl so scared or lifeless.
Mark gazed toward the door. "Seriously. She came back like that from the City about two years ago. Hardly talks at all. Don't touch her, it'll set her off. I brushed her hand one day picking up a roll and she ran from the room in tears."
"But..." I stopped. It seemed so impossible for the light to dim in a Maitland girl. And Mark was an inherently gently soul, one of the kindest people I'd ever known, nobody could fear him.
"I know."
We waited as she brought out cake. When she put my slice of Red Velvet down with trembling hands, I whispered her name.
"Jenny?"
She jolted, nearly flipping the cake over and jerked back staring at me cowed, like a dog that'd been kicked.
She didn't answer at all.
I dropped my eyes and pretended I hadn't seen her reaction, even though we both knew I had.
"It's nice to see you Jenny. Been a long time since school."
She shivered like someone had crossed her grave. She seemed to steel herself a little, watching me warily.
"J-john? It...it's been a while. Are...are you back?"
Her voice was fragile, unused, like old paper that's been folded too long and doesn't want to open anymore.
I looked back up at her, but tried not to stare at the dark eyes too hard. "Just got back from the Navy. I'll be looking for a farm to buy. I miss planting."
"That's... nice."
She hesitated for a second, mumbled something I couldn't hear and scurried from the room.
Mark was staring at me with his head cocked to the side. "That's the most I've heard her say since she came back. She wouldn't hardly talk with me at all."