* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Author's Note
: Before reading this Part 03 in the series, first please read Parts 01 and 02 [
How It Ended - Laurence & Ma Duck Ch. 01
(link:
https://www.literotica.com/s/how-it-ended-laurence-and-ma-duck-ch-01
);
and,
How It Ended - Laurence & Ma Duck Ch. 02
(link:
https://www.literotica.com/s/how-it-ended-laurence-and-ma-duck-ch-02
)]
, without which predicate many of the references herein would make little sense. One other point: occasionally I get e-Mail complaining that my contributions to
Literotica
are lacking in true erotica. These critiques are fair enough. But be patient; it will come. Think of this Installment mostly as foreplay.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
They were the perfect couple. Thoroughly smitten with each other at first exposure, their platonic friendship took three years to gel into a romantic union. When it did, they were truly soul-mates. Yet they broke up.
The disintegration can best be ascribed to "sexual politics." That term, coined in the late sixties as a by-product of the feminist movement that started on college campuses, is defined as:
The principles determining the relationship of the sexes; relations between the sexes regarded in terms of power.
In other words, power in the bedroom.
This is the continuation of their story.
================================
Laurence
:
I put on a tie and donned a white coat kept in my car. It was a Friday night, reasonably late, and the staff parking lot was three-quarters empty. I was able to park quite near one of the staff entrances and went inside, Ma Duck in hand.
"Now, look," I cautioned her, in a low voice. "You may find me engaging in repartee with the phlebotomist on duty. Do not grow upset. It is nothing more than a means to an end."
Ma Duck
:
"What is a phlebotomist?" I asked.
"Someone, usually a nurse, trained to draw and analyze blood using lab equipment," Quack responded. "Every one of them in this hospital is female. During the day there is a staff of six or eight; on the overnight shift there is only one. It may be an older woman who prefers the shift differential, or it may be a younger woman who was forced to this duty based on rotation and lack of seniority. If the latter, she won't be a happy camper. Either way, I shall have to use all my charm and then some because what I will be requesting of them is not exactly
kulturniy
[pronunciation:
k(ʊ)lˈtʊəni
]."
"And what does 'kulturniy' mean?"
Laurence
:
"The first use of 'kulturniy' in English literature is found in Ian Fleming's James Bond novel
From Russia With Love
. The term is used by Tatiana Romanavo, 007's love interest; a spy dispatched by Smersh to seduce Bond. She uses this word when explaining her hope that James would turn out to be a man of culture and class -- this would help her feel good about engaging in the intimacy required to trap him.
"So while the Russian adjective originally meant 'cultured,' over the years it has acquired a meaning more like 'proper' or the non-religious usage of 'Kosher,'" Quack explained.
Ma Duck
:
"And what will you be requesting that is not appropriate?" I inquired.
"I will be asking her to draw blood from a non-patient, and run a battery of blood tests out of order, while I wait."
"Oh," I said.
"I will be asking for a CBC, that is a wide variety of blood values, so that it will not be particularly noticeable that I'm seeking to determine if you have become infected with the clap. So I'll also be able to tell you your cholesterol, albumin, AST, triglycerides, thyroid activity, phosphorous, and so forth. As well as if you've gotten a dose."
Laurence
:
"If it is an older nurse on duty," I told Ma Duck, "I will employ my boyish charm to wheedle out of her what I need."
"And if it is a younger woman?" she asked.
"In that event I will have to go full throttle with my considerable sex appeal."
"You have a very high opinion of yourself in that regard," Ma Duck noted.
"Tell me that opinion is not accurate," I retorted.
Ma Duck
:
I couldn't.
"Now, look," Quack admonished, "if I have to resort to Plan B, exuding my massive charm combined with some implied heat, I do not want you looking daggers the phlebotomist."
"Huh?" I asked.
"Like you did with the concierge," Quack stated. "That woman was just doing her job."
"Was slipping you her home phone number part of her job?" I asked.
"And what did I do with it?" he asked.
"I think you put it in your shirt pocket."
"And do you think I will call her and be unfaithful to you as soon as you get on your return flight?" he continued. "You'll have to believe me, Ms. Duck. I am a man of integrity. I have never cheated on
anyone,
and I'm surely not going to start with you. How I interact with other women is something you'll have to get used to."
"And if I flirt with other men?" I asked.
"Do you
want
to flirt with other men?"
"No," I admitted.
"Then we have no problem," Quack stated. "And if you change your mind, then that's up to you. As long as you are content with me, I very much doubt you would be able to do so. Right?"
"Well, yes," I admitted.
"So, look, in all modesty, I will take such great care of you that you won't be able to even
conceive
of being discontented."
Quack was so arrogant he was truly insufferable. And thoroughly delightful.
It was not until the next morning that I realized Quack had never responded to what would happen if I did flirt with another man.
================================
They proceeded to a door marked 'Blood Lab' and entered. Ma Duck sat in the waiting area, where Laurence indicated, and he proceeded to the sole occupied desk where an attractive young nurse in light green scrubs and a name tag Ma Duck couldn't read from 15 feet away was doing paperwork. Laurence stood in silence until she looked up.
She seemed to recognize him, smiling and addressing him as 'Dr. Godard' though he wasn't wearing a name tag.
Laurence spoke quietly, and she followed suit. Ma Duck saw the nurse frown and explain something, and Quack nodded in agreement. He leaned over, nearly closing the gap between them, and whispered something further. She was tense. He whispered something else. Her body language palpably eased and she smiled. Quack smiled. She whispered something to him. To Ma Duck it sounded like 'Station A' and also the phrase 'ten minutes.'
Laurence whispered something else to the nurse, she hesitated and then she nodded yes eagerly. He whispered something further. Ma Duck thought she heard the name 'Baltimore.'
Laurence
:
I returned to Ma Duck and told her that we were going to another room and that Ms. Criscione, the phlebotomist, would take her blood sample in a few minutes. Together we went to a location a few doors down the hall, where Ma Duck sat in a chair in a paneled-off cubicle marked 'Station A' while I stood. I explained that the nurse would then run the blood through their equipment ahead of samples previously drawn and we could wait for the results. I shouldn't be too long, I told her, less than a half hour for the print-out.
I explained that at first Ms. Criscione was resistant to breaking the rules, but had eventually come around. "She didn't exact any promises from me," I explained. "So I probably won't have to sleep with her."
Ma Duck frowned, then smiled.
"Don't volunteer any information," I concluded. "Just let me do the bulk of the talking."
Ma Duck
:
"Why?" I asked.
"Because you're not a very good liar," Quack responded.
"Oh," was all I could say.
================================
Soon the nurse, young and as she drew nearer increasingly attractive, came up to them. Laurence told her, "Ellen, this is my cousin Michelle Duczynski, who is visiting from Detroit."
The phlebotomist found a vein in Ma Duck's left forearm, swabbed it with an alcohol wipe, and drew blood with a single needle, deftly depositing the contents into three vials with different-colored caps. She put a small cotton ball on the draw site and held it in place with Coban self-adherent tape.
Laurence and Ma Duck went back to the Blood Lab and sat together in the waiting area. About a half hour later, Nurse Criscione returned with a two-page print-out.
Laurence