WARNING: This story contains explicit sexual activity and rough sex. If that offends you, please move on and read something else There is something for everyone on Literotica.
Name: LILITH
Origin: Babylonian
Meaning: Belonging to the night
Lilith is of Babylonian origin meaning "belonging to the night". According to legend, Lilith was Adam's first wife. Caste out for her wickedness, Lilith turned into a demon.
Isaiah 34:14 "And the demons and monsters shall meet, and the hairy ones shall cry out one to another, there shall Lilith lay down, and find rest for herself."
The Story of L...
Sprinting through the driving rain as the wind swirled around them, the three men rushed toward the front entrance of the busy diner. They were dressed like lumberjacks, the preferred attire of the weekend warriors who flocked to the Sierra high country on weekends. They would come to hunt, fish, ski or just hang out in the fresh mountain air and wide-open spaces. The tall trees provided these city dwellers a welcome respite from the tall buildings and hectic pace of San Francisco and the surrounding bay area.
But these three men were not professionals escaping the hustle and bustle of urban life, nor was their choice of attire a fashion statement. The clothing was simply what they had found in the deserted summer cabins they had broken into the two previous days. They were escaping something else.
It was lunchtime and the diner was filled with men from the adjacent truck stop. Big rigs filled the parking lot in front of the bustling eatery. The busy gas station and diner were on the south side of Interstate 80, just outside Truckee in the infamous Donner Pass and was a favorite way station for big rig drivers.
The three men had chosen the diner precisely because it would be full of other rugged looking and similarly dressed men. Three more rough looking characters like themselves would go unnoticed among the throng of men in work clothes who grabbed a meal after filling up their rigs and before descending the high mountain pass into either Sacramento to the west or Reno to the east.
As they rushed inside out of the cold rain, they were hit by a blast of the warm humid air from inside the teaming diner. The diner's air was close, with too many people sharing too little air in too tight a space. The man in the lead noticed that the waitress was clearing a booth at the far end of the diner. The large corner booth along the windows provided visibility into both the front and side parking lots, the man quickly noted.
"Let's grab that booth," said the tall athletic looking man in the lead who had the build of a linebacker. "We can keep an eye on both doors, and not too many people will walk past us."
Neither of the other men responded, they just followed the tall man as he crossed the diner. The counter seating was on their left and the booths along the windows were on the right.
"Keep your heads down, and avoid making eye contact with anyone," the man said in a hushed tone, so that only the other two men could hear. He was counting on the fact that these men were too busy driving their rigs to pay much attention to the local news.
He was pleased as he looked around and saw no newspapers at the busy counter or at the tables. It was going to snow, and he rightly guessed that these men didn't have time to read a newspaper, a newspaper like those in the racks out front that were filled with their photos and stories about their daring escape.
Once seated, the three men allowed the waitress to pour each of them coffee and they ordered immediately without looking at the menu. Two of the men ordered the lumberjack breakfast advertised on the window poster next to the entrance. The sign above it proclaimed 'breakfast all day' in big bold red letters. The third man, the tall man who had been in the lead, ordered a steak and fries, something he had been craving for a very long time.
As they sat waiting for their orders, the three men continuously scanned the room and the parking lots. They couldn't afford to let their guard down. They needed to be vigilant.
"There's an emergency exit in the back corner next to the restrooms, just in case," said the leader, looking to his left as he sat with his back to the rest of the diner. He was the most recognizable of the three and was most in need of hiding his face. All three had shaved off their moustaches and beards and trimmed their hair, but you couldn't be too careful. One had even colored his red hair black, since it was usually the first thing people noticed about him.
The rain started to pour even harder, and it was coming in sideways, pelting the large windows and sounding like a phalanx of snare drums. The leader looked out through the window into the darkening parking lot toward the rows of pumps and the traveler center on the other side of the parking lot, and then to the freeway beyond.
The traffic was getting heavier, and the vehicles all had their lights on now. Everyone was trying to beat the storm before the snow clogged the pass. He and the other men had noticed the snowplows staged next to the freeway entrance as they came down the off-ramp.
Although it was midday, it looked like late dusk or early dawn outside. The tall amber colored streetlights of the parking lot had come on and were casting on orange glow on the wet asphalt. The parking lot looked like the kind of old sepia photograph you would see in a museum or a history book, the tall man thought to himself, losing his focus for just a moment.
He reminded himself that he needed to focus on the fact that the snow would be coming soon, and they needed to get off the mountain and down to Reno quickly, since they neither had snow chains or the money to pay for them.
They had been trying to outrun the storm all morning, as had the truckers in the diner. Most of them were wolfing down their meals and leaving cash on the tables without waiting for their change. They all made a dash for the door as soon as they were done.
The table right behind them was just being cleared. They had overheard the two men talking about the storm that would be on top of them within a couple of hours and bringing blizzard like conditions. One of the men had apparently been monitoring Caltrans' website on his smart phone.
The three fugitives sat in silence while they waited for their food, each engrossed in their own thoughts. One of the men finally broke the silence.
"You know Tom, lunch is going to cost us most of our cash," said the man, making it sound more like a question.
"Yeah, Hank is right, Tom," said the third man, echoing his concern. "What's the plan?"
"The plan is to get more money, Shorty," replied Tom evenly as he continued to scan the parking lot and the rest of the diner, which was mirrored in the window behind the other two men.
"Whatever!" replied Shorty flippantly, as Hank nodded his agreement.
"Eat up," said Tom as the waitress delivered their food. "We'll have to make tracks down the mountain before the snow hits."
All three men dug into their food voraciously while continuing to scan their surroundings.
Suddenly, Tom's attention was drawn to a motor home that had just driven past the front window and turned left into the nearly vacant side parking lot. The driver was awkwardly preparing to back into the last space in the back corner of the lot. The expensive Mercedes Benz motor home looked out of place at the decidedly working-class truck stop and diner, Tom thought to himself.
Tom watched the driver make several awkward attempts to back the large motor home into the space before he finally got it straight. He probably doesn't want to get his expensive ride scratched, Tom concluded.