Copyright © 2018
Forward: After getting the general idea for this tale, I realized there were 3 different directions in which I could go with it. For days, I ran each scenario over and over in my head trying to decide which would make the best story. I finally settled on the following. I hope I made the right choice.
***
By the way Kendra was picking at her dinner, I was pretty sure I was finally going to find out what had been bothering her for the last couple of weeks. I tried talking to her a few days prior but when I inquired about her sudden change in mood she told me she simply had something on her mind with no further explanation.
That's not totally out of character for her. Kendra's a registered nurse and a hospital is not the most uplifting place to work. I've seen her come home running the gambit of human emotions; sadness, anger, frustration, fear, joy, you name it. Sometimes it helps her to talk about it, sometimes she just buries it deep within. In twenty-one years of marriage, if I've learned anything it was to let her make the decision as to if and when she wanted to get it off her chest...whatever it was.
I had finished my dinner and asked if she was done. She set her fork down on the plate and just nodded. I was scraping all her wasted food into the garbage disposal when she finally spoke.
"Darin, there's something I have to talk to you about. Can we go out on the patio, maybe open a bottle of wine?"
"Sure, hon. Why don't you go ahead. I'll stick these in the dishwasher and bring the wine out in a couple of minutes."
She leaned over and gave me a kiss on the cheek with a half-smile, then walked out the glass sliding doors to the patio. Something was telling me that whatever was on her mind had nothing to do with work, it seemed more personal all of a sudden.
Of course, with having a wife in the medical trade, my first thought was of her health, was she going to tell me she's sick? I tried to prepare myself as I opened the wine. I joined her outside, set the two glasses of wine on the patio table then took a seat next to her. I reached over and took her hand in mine. My heart was pounding so loud I'm surprised she couldn't hear it as she gently squeezed my fingers.
With a sigh to prepare myself for bad news, I barely got the question out. "What is it, honey? Are you sick?"
"Sick...no, what gave you that idea?" she stated reassuringly.
"The way you've been acting lately. Honey, it's like you've been on another planet for the last two weeks. When you kissed me in the kitchen a few minutes ago I got the feeling you were going to tell me something terrible."
"No," she scoffed. "It's...well, I don't think you're going to like what I'm going to say but it's nothing that bad."
"Okay, lay it on me. What am I not going to like?"
She reached over for her glass and took a sip of wine—I supposed she needed a little liquid courage. "I've been selected to take part in a medical study. It's a clinical trial for a new drug."
I was confused. If she wasn't sick why was she testing a new drug? "What kind of drug?"
"Well, it's called, Beuticimiacin. It's a hormonal drug designed to help women with menopause symptoms."
"Honey, are you going into menopause already?" I was getting scared. I'd heard all about the horrific terror of living with a woman who was going through the change and I was hoping for more time before it happened to us.
"No," she replied. "It...ah...it turns out that the drug has an unexpected side effect, it..." she hesitated again. "It appears to make intercourse much more enjoyable for a woman."
Okay, this was starting to sound exciting. "So, what's wrong with that? Sounds like fun. So you'll be screaming your head off in ecstasy the next time we make love?" I said with a lecherous grin.
"Well, ah honey, that's not how these trials work. Everything has to be observed and recorded under strict controls."
I didn't like the sound of that. "Observed...you mean we're going to have people watching us?"
Kendra took a deep breath then reached over for more liquid courage. "Not exactly, honey. In fact you and I won't be able to make love for three months. I..."
"Hold it," I interrupted. "This is starting to sound like a load of crap. What the hell do you mean we can't make love for three months?"
"Honey, the study is being done at the Southwest Medical facility down town. I'll be going down there three times a week after work. Nobody stands and watches us but I did have to sign a video consent form so I assume everything is taped so physical reactions can be monitored as well as heartbeat, blood pressure, things like that. To keep everything accurate, I'm not allow to have sex anywhere but the medical center and only during the trials."
I was starting to get the gist and I wasn't liking it one little bit. "And just who the hell would you be having sex with?" I snarled.
"One of the male volunteers," she answered with a nervous tremor in her voice.
"And what—I'm just supposed to settle for blow jobs for the next three months while you're screwing a bunch of other guys?"
"No, I'm sorry, honey. I can't even do that. We can't have any sexual contact outside the study."
"No—uh ah, no way! You're not breaking our marriage vows for some stupid study!"
"Honey, don't be silly. I'm not breaking my vows."
"Really? I seem to remember something in there about forsaking all others."
"Yes, and that refers to having a sexual relationship with someone other than your spouse. Honey, it's not like I'll be making love to them or anything like that. It's a clinical study for crying out loud."
"I don't care what you call it, the end result is you having sex three times a week with other men, the answer is no, emphatically NO!"
"Honey, there is no, no. I've been selected and..."
"What do mean there is no, no—selected by who? What--God reached down from heaven and touched you on the shoulder? Who selected you?"
"Honey, please don't be sarcastic. The people who are running the study selected me. It's an independent research group that was hired by the drug manufacturer. They do this kind of thing all the time, Darin. Everything's on the up and up, I swear."
"How did they select you? What'd they do, pull your name out of a hat?"
"Nooo," she derisively sang. "I heard about it at the hospital. I looked into it and thought it was a worthwhile cause so I filled out an application."
"So, they didn't select you, you volunteered."
"No; there's all kinds of criteria involved. I went through two interviews. They're looking for people with certain characteristics and backgrounds so they get a well-rounded study; age, health, sexual history, how many times they normally have sex, things like that. They only selected the people who met their requirements."
"And you were one of the lucky ones; good for you," I said with as much sarcasm as I could possibly muster. "Who are the men you'd be having sex with?"
"I don't know, honey. The men are selected just like the women. I'm sure there's a range of compatibility issues the researchers are looking for."
I thought, yeah, like an eight inch cock but I didn't want to sound insecure so I let the comment slide.
"And of course everyone gets a complete physical to make sure no one has any STDs," she added.
"Honey, I honestly don't know what the big deal is," she continued. "I work with naked men every day at the hospital. When we're short of candy stripers I sometimes have to give them sponge baths, I insert catheters, I sometimes have to wipe their ass for them for Pete's sake; this is no different."
"The hell it's not. Sticking a straw up some guy's dick is a whole lot different than him sticking his dick in you. Have you ever slept with one of your patients?"
"No, of course not."
"There you are!" I said with conviction. By that time my heart was pounding, my blood pressure was out of sight, and every muscle in my body was tight as a drum. I couldn't stay seated so I got up and started pacing back and forth in front of our chairs. I just couldn't understand how she could even consider such a thing. In all our years together she'd never come up with anything like this before.
"Why now?" I asked.
That seemed to catch her off guard. I could tell she'd been anticipating my argument but that question escaped her queue and she wasn't ready for it.
"What? What do you mean why now?"
"You said you heard about this at the hospital. You've worked there for sixteen years. This can't be the first time you've heard of some medical study but you've never signed up for anything before; why now?"
"Ah, well with both boys in college now I have more time."