* * * * *
Author's Note: All Characters Depicted Herein Are 18 Years Of Age Or Older.
* * * * *
Bimbo Office - Her Takeover
Happily slurping Miles's Cock behind the desk of his office, Delilah conveniently realized a Perfect Truth.
Her big, perfect young 36D tits spilled out of her blouse, leaking urgent hot milk all over her Master's lap, so that she was constantly coating his manly length with her saliva, her milk, and licking up his precum and endless stream of cum. His Cock had no refractory period, no need for rest. Her body was tight, gorgeous, and completely owned by Him. She dressed for Him; strutted for Him; sucked for Him and Him alone.
Miles had The Cock, and the The Cock was all that mattered to her.
These Perfect Truths revealed themselves to her fairly often when she sucked Miles off. This only made sense to her; he was her God, after all, and Gods were full of Truths.
And Cum. Her God
filled
her with Truth and especially
cum
all the time. Glorious, sticky, warm, yummy cum that made
her
cum and drilled all her spare braincells to bits until she was a brainless babbling bimbo babe who wasn't good for anything but fucking, sucking, and serving.
Just like she liked it.
The Perfect Truth she realized then, on her knees in her Master's office, was this:
There's dick, which was kind of lame, and then there's Cockâwhich is mindblowing, important, and necessary for happiness.
Only her boss Miles had Cock.
And Delilah didn't a
fuck
about dick her whole life; she hadn't even hardly had a boyfriend.
But now? Now, she
Lived
for Cock...and that meant she lived for her Master.
She happily sucked up and then back down, moaning and urging her leaking tits all over his thighs, realizing that this was her salary now. That cumshots down her throat were bonuses. That her wages were basically just pretty clothes and jewelry to wear so she would be fucked more.
Her tight young body urged against his knees, heavy tits sliding into muscular man thighs, as she willingly choked herself harder on his Cock. She needed him to understand just how
badly
she needed him, needed the Cockâhow badly she needed to
serve
.
It hadn't always been this way. In fact, just a week ago, her life had been much different...but Delilah was delighted that it had come to this.
* * * * *
Delilah wasn't sure how it had come to this but she was mad as hell about it. Not for the first time, she stood dumbstruck in a pair of tall heels that she was barely comfortable in, making copies.
Ivy League educated. Interned for years. Expert in web campaigning. Reads a new political strategy book every week. Somehowâhere. Making copies for pretty much her worst enemy.
Somehow, despite all her terribly hard work for nearly a year of her life, she had been somehow positioned as the "office manager"âa role which meant in this particularly small office she was a glorified secretaryâfor a man she absolutely loathed.
And by "loathed" she meant all kinds of thingsâhated, despised, held in complete contempt, would prefer to murder, and so on. She held regular fantasies about his death. Most of them involved stampedes by various zoo animals.
In fact, Miles Abram was pretty much the
definition
of a man she hated. A chauvinist bully who treated other people in his life like disposable objects and somehow
got away
with it all because he was just...somehow...lucky! It drove her insane.
To top it all offâhe had
her
job somehow. After a virulent campaign fraught with drama, he was the councilman for St. Gilbert's 3rd District.
That job by all rights was supposed to be
hers.
And somehow, here she was, in front of the copying machine and making fliers for some town meeting that
he
wouldn't even bothering showing up for.
That Delilah should have his job was no idle exaggeration. Being the campaign manager for Barbara Claytonâa progressive female candidate who had
won
the nomination, who had all but
won
the officeâDelilah had worked her tail off for a year. She canvassed, she made phonecalls, she organized polls and managed interns and arranged interviews. She had done
everything
.
When Barbara dropped out suddenly a mere
three weeks
before the date of the vote, citing a sudden illness, she should have by all rights thrown all her support Delilah's way.
And Delilah was a shoo-in as a candidate as well. She was educated, with a graduate's degree in Political Science from Berkeley. She was friendly, with a famously good rapport with the press and local communities. And she was good-looking to boot, with the kind of body that showed she tried and the kind of face that was pretty but didn't put people off from being too severe or that implied that she was an airhead.
Sophisticated, smart, and looking both; she would have been a home run.
Insteadâ
instead
!âMiles Abram came back from some weird vacation in South America after missing more than half the campaign and insisted to Barbara that he's the man for the job.
And even worse, Barbara
listened!
She
loved
the idea! She seemed to love
Miles
, actuallyâlike, in an intimate fashion. Those long soulful looks. The way she giggled and played with her hair. The strange moaning sounds that Delilah had heard when Barbara visited Miles's office (which used to be Barbara's office).
The only reason Delilah adamantly refused to believe Barbara was romantically involved with him was that she knew to a certainty Barbara played solely for the other teamâmeaning she had seen Barbara hit on girls at bars when they had gone out with each other after long days of campaigning.
Now Delilah stood, dressed smartly in her last-day-of-work outfit, a modest and respectable brown skirted suit with a brief jacket and cream-colored button-up blouse, taking a breath at the copy machine and mentally preparing to enter Miles's office.
"You going to do it or what?" Mona chided her.
Mona was their intern. The real secretary of the office, who barely even needed to have a job since Delilah and the industrious Bonnieâin the middle of rearranging their entire list of donors by gender, height, and weight for some weird Miles-related reasonâwere more than capable of handling every last part of the work the district needed.
Which was lucky, because it didn't seem like Miles himself did any work outside of long cigar-smoking sessions with the other councilmen.
"Of course I am," said Delilah. "I'm just preparing. It's important to be prepared. To know arguments andâ"
"Counter-arguments, yes. You said."
Mona's brief foray into interests of life outside of her phone receded and her attention snapped back, fingers shimmying along her screen. She played some game where you built a castle and a town and defended it from multi-colored walking rocks.