I particularly didn't appreciate the impolite way he teased my wife. There were lots of pointed jokes about her weight and other impolite subjects. To my surprise Megan didn't immediately shut him down like I expected. She just tried to deflect his criticism and made it seem like a joke.
We did go to their wedding. Megan was a bridesmaid and I was an usher. The wedidng was nice, but Reggie made an ass out of himself at the reception. He got drunk and was hitting on so many women, Rita's Dad had to say something. I wanted to tell him off. But since he was marrying Rita I acted friendly to keep relations pleasant. It was difficult because he's a low class buffoon, with a loud booming voice and an annoyingly loud laugh. He would dominate whatever conversation was going on around him whether he knew anything about it or not. Nothing could shut him up.
"Sean!" Megan cried behind me and I nearly jumped out of my skin.
My wife entered the room and laughed when she saw I was startled.
"What's the matter honey." She giggled. "Did I scare you?"
"No...just...yeah I guess."
She set the bag of groceries down. Then came over, hugged me and kissed my cheek as she pressed her generous body against my back.
"Hey lover." She sighed, "I was thinking about you while I was shopping."
"Oh really?"
"Yes." She wrapped her arms around my waist and whispered. "I was thinking how I'd like to take you upstairs, throw you on our bed and ravage my handsome husband today, like you did to me Thursday night."
"That sounds...pretty daring..." I chuckled, "...with the kids around."
"Yeah. Too bad." She sighed with amusement. "But if you're good, maybe I'll let you ravage me again tonight. That is if you're up for it."
"I guess we'll have to wait and see."
She laughed and slapped me on the butt. "You coy bastard." She giggled. "Okay. We'll see. Just don't forget."
She was smiling as she went over to the table and began unloading the groceries from the bag.
"Be a Dear honey." She said sweetly. "Please go get the rest of the groceries out of the car while I fix some lunch?"
"Okay."
"And don't forget about tonight." She reminded me with a smirk.
"I won't."
This was typical behavior from my loving wife. Over the eleven plus years of marriage, we've enjoyed many expressions of affection like this. Its why the idea of her cheating on me was so preposterous. I'm crazy about her plump sexy body. She can turn me on with a suggestive look, a warm kiss or a tender whisper. I welcome her taking the initiative toward sex and love how assertive she is in our relationship. How can she be so loving if she's cheating on me? It doesn't make sense.
Megan has always been very sexually expressive. She was so emphatic about her desires today I nearly forgot about Jimmy's DNA results sitting on the counter. I'm glad she didn't notice it. I slipped the DNA results into the desk drawer on the way out of the kitchen and went outside.
Once outside, my thoughts were a million miles away.
I was an only child. My mother suffered complications during child birth and was unable to conceive after I was born. It didn't seem to be a problem though, at least not for me. I had the full attention of both parents back then. Mom stayed home and took care of me and the house while Dad went to work. When he got off, he and I would play catch or throw the football around. Later we'd eat dinner then watch TV as a family He'd take us to the park to play and we'd go swimming at the lake in the summer.
Unfortunately he smoked like a chimney and died from an aggressive form of cancer at a relatively young age. He was older than my mother, but still pretty young to die like that. The odds just caught up with him. It was sad to lose him, but at seven I didn't realize how much. My Mom took it extremely hard.
We lived in an apartment and after Dad died we weren't well off at all. Mom didn't work and in her depression after Dad's death, she wasn't able to take care of an apartment, pay the bills and handle a young son by herself. We moved in with my Aunt Betty, who was a spinster her whole life. As Mom's depression got worse, my Aunt would try to take care of her. I knew Mom had problems and tried to keep out of their way.
That was how I lived my early life, basically without either parent. Dad was gone and Mom was too depressed to pay much attention to me. Aunt Betty had a tough time making ends meet. My Aunt had a doctor check out Mom and he gave her medicine when she got too bad. But the fun, easy time I enjoyed before Dad died was over. Life became a dreary, lonely repetition of going to school, eating dinner, watching TV and going to bed. I had a few friends and played with them on the weekends. But basically life after Dad died was not a lot of fun.
I got through high school with decent grades, went to college and met my first wife Cynthia. She was a lovely young coed, the same age as me, attending some of the same classes. We began dating and life was suddenly wonderful again. I took classes all day and spent the rest of the time studying with Cynthia, dating Cynthia and making love with Cynthia. At the young age of 20 we got engaged and she was the love of my life.
A few months before graduation Mom finally died, more from depression and a broken heart than any physical ailment. I went to the funeral with my fiancee, and was surprised how few people attended. After being a shut in for so many years she didn't have many social contacts. Other than Aunt Betty and my Grandma Edith, who was getting old, there were only a dozen or so people there.
Cynthia and I went back to school to finish our education. We both worked part time jobs to afford a small studio apartment. We were great together and so much in love. We had sex everyday, if not more and made plans for when we were out of school and on our own. At graduation I met her parents and they were nice and friendly to me. No one from my family attended, which wasn't a surprise because other than Aunt Betty and old Grandma Edith there wasn't anyone else.
After school Cynthia got a job at an advertising agency, and I worked at a trucking company. They had a supply system they were implementing and needed someone with software knowledge to program their delivery devices. It was a perfect fit for me. Now that we were both making money, we were planning to start a family and Cynthia had gone off the pill. After so many hard years, life had now become beautiful for both of us.
We were together for 3 incredibly wonderful years, when on the way home from her job Cynthia was run over at a stop light by a drunk driver. She was killed in the most senseless accident I could ever imagine. We were going to have a baby and she was pregnant with our first child when she died. The drunk was killed as well and they couldn't save the baby. I was crushed.
I went to her funeral and nearly collapsed on the coffin. Her father had to help me to my feet and led me outside where I threw up. There were dozens of people there watching me stagger away sobbing. I was so distraught I couldn't even attend the burial the next day.
I went through hell for the next six months, quit my job, lost my apartment and was homeless for a while. Cynthia's parents gave me money and tried to get me into therapy. They made appointments but I never showed up. I know they meant well, but just seeing them reminded me of my dead wife. After a couple times I never spoke to them again.
Later I panhandled for liquor money and got food from a church that gave me a hot meal in the afternoon. I spent a lot of time passed out drunk. Aunt Betty somehow got hold of me and told me to come home and live with her and Grandma Edith. But I was so angry at the world I couldn't. I remembered how hard it was for her to take care of my depressed Mom, and didn't want to put her in that situation again.
I bummed around for a while, sleeping in abandoned cars or on porches that weren't in use. But as they say, time heals all things. It didn't heal the hole in my heart. But the longer I was on the street, the hungrier I got and the more ashamed I felt at how I had collapsed so badly. A preacher at the church I was eating supper at began to council me. He got me a job in a super market, stocking shelves at night. That led to another job in a warehouse where, of all things, they used the same automated supply system I used to work on at the trucking company. Once my Boss found out I could program their delivery devices I was hired full time. I saved some cash, got an apartment, and started to crawl out of my dark hole of depression.
I was still drinking quite a bit to forget Cynthia's death. But unlike when I was on the street I now had money and had regained some pride. I also had some guy friends from work I could drink with; drinking buddies if you will. We'd hang out Friday night at clubs, checking out chicks and getting hammered. One guy invited me to a Frat party near a college. I had a great time and they invited me back for another party the next weekend. That's where I met Megan Grady.
There must have been hundreds of people at the Frat house. It was a pretty wild scene, and with all the hot coeds running around I wouldn't have even noticed Megan if we didn't end up next to each other in the beer line. I was no where near drunk and she wasn't either. She was a big girl, overweight but not obese, with a creamy white complexion, shoulder length auburn hair and a colorful tattoo on her shoulder. She had a cute face flushed from alcohol. We were standing next to each other, waiting to fill our cups with beer. I started a conversation and found she was a fun chick, three years younger than me, friendly, with a nice, pretty smile.