"Are you done with your plate, Keith darlin'?"
"Yeah, Kammie. Thanks." Keith Winslow had pushed his plate away after finishing his bacon and eggs to watch the hummingbirds joust on a rainy August morning. Kammie Smith took the plate over to the sink to wash and rinse it before putting it in the drying rack.
She came back over to the table where the crippled veteran sat, biting her lip. "You're still glum today. What's up?"
He looked up at her. "It's still 'bout my pal Rusty. Poor guy deserves better than gitting stuck in the VA home."
"Mr. Dodge's a nice man. Thought his family would take care of him."
"They did. They stuck him in that damn place. The same damn place I'm likely to git stuck in a few years."
Sitting with her backside against the table overlooking the deck, she looked down at him. Keith was a lean weathered man with naturally dark hair in his late 50's, a disabled Vietnam vet how needed a walker and wheelchair to get around. Kammie was just over 5 feet tall, slender and perfectly proportioned with blonde hair. He was wearing a white t-shirt and green sweatpants; she wore an oversized Arkansas University t-shirt she slept in. She kissed him on the top of his head and murmured: "I'll take care of you."
He reached up and caressed her head. "Thanks, Sweetness. But you just got out of High School, and it's not fair for a young gal like you ta git stuck with an old fart like me. Someday you'll move on, and I'll have to git ready for th' future."
"Well, even if I'm not here thru some dam craziness, ya got Sandy and her kids."
He snorted. "Sandy's always had it in fer me."
"She's looked after ya for years. She cleaned yer place ev'ry week before I got here, and made sure ya had food."
"It goes back ta when she was little. I got home when she was a little over a year and a half, and it took a week ta make friends with her at all. Then when her mom died, she blamed me for not lookin' after her right. Din't want to move to the Lake, din't want to come back when Mike got the job with th' Water Patrol."
"But she's yer daughter. Don't know why she wouldn't take care of ya."
He grimaced. "She'll put me in that damn place first chance. Jest wait and see." Clapping his hand to her thigh, he looked up at her pouting face and came to a conclusion. "Yer missing somethin'."
"What?"
"My big smile. Know how to git it back. Been leavin' ya alone too long. Hop up on this table."
"What?"
"Need a little Sweetness this mornin'. Need to persuade ya t'stay awhile." He lifted her by the waist and sat her down on the solid oak table in front of him. Pulling her shirt bottom up, he took a playful nip at her crotch while she giggled. "There's a little man in there I need ta say hello to."
She leaned back and spread her legs to give him better access, her face smiling broadly. Rain pattered on the roof, drumming faster than her heart as his tongue sought amid her inner curves for her spring of nectar. His hands stroked the outside of her legs from her hips to her knees. A silent blue flash in the distance illuminated her frazzled blonde locks from behind, and her hand reached down to bury itself in his long dark locks unbound from their usual ponytail. His hands invaded her red t-shirt, running up her sides, making her giggle. The rain increased its patter, and another flash in the distance was followed by a low murmur of thunder.
"Yes, oh yes, Studmuffin. No little boy could do what you do to me," her voice husked as a quivering overtook her. His hands found her nipple tipped handfuls and started to massage them as his tongue focused on burying itself deep inside her while he sucked her bud. A light touch of upper teeth on her clitoris made her gasp and pull him closer, and she laid her legs over his shoulders, draping down his back. "I'll be yer breakfast any day you want."
Her nipples erected and he pinched them lightly. Leaning back, she crossed her legs behind his head and squeezed it in appreciation. The vibrations in her body grew in intensity with the rain, and distant flashes with crashes of thunder grew closer. The winds buffeted the trees next to the house, raking the branches across the shingles. The height of the storm came when she reached her peak, adding power to her howls of delight as she arrived the climax of her Clouds and Rain.
Letting his head go with her legs, she pushed it away, unable to take any more stimulation. He sat back and smiled, seeing the glow of satisfaction on her round face. "Knew you'd like that," he said calmly.
She took him by the ears, and leaned forward to kiss his head. "I'll give ya a few years to quit doin' that." After she regained her breath, she hopped down and knelt under the table. "Kin I repay the favor?"
He traced the outline of her chin. "Not now, Sweetness. Not up fer it. Happens ta old men now and then. Arthur's botherin' me too much t'day; probably need to go soak a while in the jaccuzi when the storm's over."
A brave smile looked up at him. "Sure, Keith. I understand. You take such good care of me."
The phone rang, and Keith picked the receiver up from its spot on the table. "Pawpaw, things are bad," his granddaughter Erin wailed on the other end..
Kammie got up from under the table and pulled her hem down as Keith turned to focus on the phone receiver. "What's up, Erin?"
"It's Momma. She's gone."
"Gone? How?"
"We got up this mornin' to a big crash. Daddy had a note from her, threw their weddin' picture 'gainst th' wall and was pounding his fists on another wall. Said she's left for Canada."
"Canada?"
"Yeah. Left a note fer us and one fer you. I'm scared, Pawpaw."
"Ya don't hafta be scared, Erin honey. What's yer daddy doin'?"
"Called in sick and went ta town. Just got back with a big bunch of beer and he's started drinkin' it. Stacey and I wanna get outta here."
"You kin come over here if ya want."
"That's what we was hopin'. We'll pack a couple bags and get there soon." The phone went dead, and Keith flicked it off.