Quick writer's note:
The tags for this story are Polyamory, Polyamorous, Poly, Open Marriage, Romance, and Sharing.
This story is about three lifelong friends, two guys, and a girl, who grew up together and loved one another. It follows their lives from elementary school through high school, college, and into adulthood, and recounts the trials and tribulations of a multi-partner relationship.
Stories where three lifelong friends end up in a polyamorous relationship, either on purpose or as a result of cheating, are common here in LW. I don't think I've seen many where it's what the triad wanted. So hopefully, you will find this to be a refreshing take on a reoccurring theme.
My Boys
is quite long. I broke it into two chapters to give readers a break between acts. They should post within a few days of each other since the entire story is already written. I've turned off comments for Chapter 1. Please read both chapters and score or comment on them as a unit after Chapter 2.
I want to thank my editors for their collaboration and advice. Charlie, John, KenD, Demosthenes384bc
,
Ma Fille Rouge, and HighLuster assisted. Each contributed to the story in their own way. The whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
Collaborations consistently improve results, so I'm always open to expanding my editing team. If you're interested in participating in our collaborative effort, please send me your email address through private messaging. I'll shoot you my stories.
Where does my story start? That would be in the third grade, in Ms. Wilson's class at Creekside Elementary School in San Diego, California. My family moved into the area about a week after school had already started in late August.
On my first day in the new school, Ms. Wilson sat me between the two boys who flanked the only open desk. It took no time to discover that those two were best friends and, according to them, had been since pre-school. Their shared middle name must have helped them bond immediately.
Even then, they made a funny pair. Timmy sat on my left. He was taller than the other boys in the class, with dark brown hair and the most bottomless hazel eyes I'd ever seen; they were a glorious brown-green color. There was a touch of gold to them and an uncommon soulfulness. Even when he was only nine years old, I could tell that Timmy was quiet and reserved. He wasn't quite awkward, but he could have been labeled that way if not for Mark.
Mark sat to my right. His piercing blue eyes complimented his bright blonde hair and his amazing smile. Mark's height was average for a nine-year-old, but nothing was average about his personality. He could be brash, deliberate, and aggressive, but mostly he was fun, wild, and charming. His personality would only get better with age and wisdom.
"Hi, what's your name?" Mark was the first to greet me, though I couldn't help but stare at his keen partner in crime.
Turning towards the impressive blonde dynamo, I said, "I'm Briella, but everyone calls me Brie."
"I'm Timmy." The voice came out from behind me. Even then, Timmy was a man of few words.
"I'm Mark." He boasted like it meant something to me. It didn't at the moment, but that would change in time.
"Alright, class, please take out a piece of paper, and we'll have a quick pre-quiz on this week's vocabulary words," Ms. Wilson called out. I looked into my backpack only to find that my mother hadn't filled it with the appropriate school supplies.
"Ms. Wilson, I don't have any paper," I said quietly to avoid drawing attention to myself. Mark's blonde mop shook as he laughed at my predicament.
Life could've been different at that moment if it wasn't for the quiet steadiness of the dark-haired boy on my left who slipped several sheets onto my desk.
"Mark, give her a pencil." His piercing eyes held the soulful gaze of Timmy for a second, smiling as he handed me a new pencil.
That was it.
We became 'The Three Amigos.' 'The Three Musketeers.' 'The Fab Three.' 'The Three Stooges.' 'Hellspawn.' It all depended on who was calling us and for what. We were the best of friends. Our parents thought it strange, but we didn't care. If you saw one of us, the other two weren't far off.
Mark and I came from affluent families. His father was a real estate developer, and his mom stayed home to take care of their two sons. My parents were both tax attorneys, so they were always busy. I was pretty much a latchkey kid, and it felt like I had always been one. Mark lived a street over, so I spent a lot of time at his house. His mom loved me and treated me like the daughter she longed for.
Timmy lived with his single mother in an apartment complex just outside the district's border. She was a secretary at the school's district office, which facilitated an enrollment variance for the school we all went to. It was the best in the district.
Mark and I walked to school. Timmy's mom dropped him off each day. During the summer, Timmy would ride his bike the thirty minutes it took to come to spend the day at Mark's while his mom worked a second summer job at a daycare center to help make ends meet. It was no wonder that he grew up independent and self-reliant, almost to a fault. They were traits that I would learn to love and rely on.