Is it possible for a woman to be too attractive? Flawless skin, perfect hair, sexy long legs, a true hourglass waist, and an especially ample bosom: 36--18--33. All this and fifty--years--old, born in March, 1959.
Most definitely she does exist. She owns a collectables shop near Malibu, and she's everything I've described and more. Her lips, her eyes, those long, lithesome fingers, and even the way she dresses so stylishly retro; I wish I could take her out on a date to a carnival where some fool would attempt to guess her age. We'd stock her bedroom with every stuffed animal they had.
The only reason I'm in on the secret that she's fifty, is because I was fortunate enough to receive an invitation to her birthday party. Millicent Barbara Roberts, but don't let the Millicent throw you. She goes by her middle name, at least if you're lucky enough to be a close friend.
I'd probably never have met her had it not been that I'm a bit of a closet Transformers fan. When I was five--years--old, for my birthday I got an Optimus Prime action figure, and I played with that toy for years and years. Yet, in going off to college, graduating, getting a job, and finally my very own condo, sadly, somewhere along the way Optimus and I parted company. So you can imagine my surprise after going to lunch with a client in a different part of town, while pulling out from the restaurant, I saw one displayed in a shop window next door. Of course, I might have been able to have found one on eBay, but I hadn't even thought about Optimus until just now when suddenly I saw the action figure in the window.
I almost kept driving. But there happened to be an open parking spot on the street, and on a quick impulse I pulled in. Inside, the shop was incredible. Santa Claus would no doubt have wet dreams about the dolls and collectable toys on display. Power Rangers, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Gi Joe, there were toys I hadn't thought of in years, most in their original boxes. Not only was there the vintage Optimus Prime in mint condition; she had a number of toys even I could recognize as extremely valuable collectables.
With all the plastic playthings dazzling my eyes I must admit I wasn't prepared to meet a real--life plaything. Just as a fish is attracted to the flash of a lure, I'd gone straight for the shiny Transformer in the window. Holding Optimus up and marveling at him, no doubt with a smile every bit as beaming as that which I'd displayed on my fifth birthday, he appeared exactly the same as the one I'd owned. I hadn't really even noticed in back of the counter behind the cash register hung a red velvet curtain, yet when she suddenly slipped from between the slits of the curtain, instantly the sight of her snatched my attention away from the toy.
Focusing upon me with the most peculiar expression, I couldn't help but focus upon her cheery-red lips as she asked, "May I help you?"
Seeing her appear from the curtain, she completely took me aback. She didn't seem real. All I could muster as a reply was a stunned, "I'm just looking."
Never will I forget the way in which she moved as those long legs brought her around from behind the counter and right up to me.
"My--oh--my!" For the very first time she treated me to her smile. "A Transformers fan, are we?"
Dressed in a slinky, form--fitting, zebra--striped pantsuit, with a daringly deep neckline displaying the depth of her dΓ©colletage, the sixties-styled flared bellbottoms added a bit of camp to an otherwise sexy and sultry outfit. Her hips swaying dramatically with each step, she came up to stand a little closer to me than a demure saleswoman might with an unfamiliar customer.
For a moment, I thought she might laugh and take a step back. Yet instead, reaching up slowly, her fingers brushed over mine as she slipped Optimus from my hand, then held him up appraisingly. "I knew this morning when I put him up in the window he'd draw some special attention."
Overwhelmed by her invasion of my personal space, I almost couldn't believe her. Up close, her eyelashes were impossibly long, and her blonde hair cascading down over her shoulders seemed to shine with its own luminescence. I've never been much on women who wear a lot of makeup, but never before had I encountered a woman who was so striking, I felt as though I was in the presence of a Hollywood movie star who might look into my eyes and purr, 'Alright, Mr. Demille, I'm ready for my close up.'
Watching her in wordless wonder, quickly her fingers swiveled this and clicked that, adeptly transforming Optimus Prime into his alter ego, a semi--truck. Handing the transformed toy back to me, that deliciously seductive smile of hers was as alluring as her voice. "You see, I was right to put him up in the window. Look what he brought me?"
I had no idea what she was talking about. I think I was still trying to get over that sixties mod--style pantsuit. Finally I did manage, "Who brought you what?"
Reminiscent of a game show hostess displaying a prize, delicately she wafted her hands to either side of the toy. "Why Optimus, of course. He brought me you."
As a reflex, I looked down to the shiny red and blue truck in my hands, but could only keep my eyes off of her for a moment. When I again met her gaze, I'm sure my own eyes went wide. Laughing! Her eyes were laughing. Not teasing or making fun of me, but elated, alive, filling me with a sense of how thrilled she was that I was here in her shop.
Fumbling for something to say, all I could think of was, "So how much?"
Ever so coyly she leaned in a little closer, dropping her voice to a whisper. "How much? That depends on what you want."
The effect she was having over me, it took a moment to marshal my thoughts and stumble to an answer. "The toy ... the Transformer ... him ... it ... Optimus Prime."
"Oh!" Her exclamation was so bright and innocent. "Silly me." She pointed to the shelf in the window, my eyes following and spying an orange dog with black spots, a vintage Scooby--Doo. "I thought you might have meant my pal, Scooby." Her laugh was sparkling and totally disarming. "You know...?" Playfully, she sang, "How much is that doggy in the window? The one with the waggily tail----"
At a total loss, I couldn't have come up with a response if I tried for a million years.
Suddenly getting to business, she took the Transformer from my hands. "Well ... well, let me see." Locating a small tag dangling on a piece of white string, she held it up, obviously having trouble reading the small numbering.
Maybe mentally I was starting to catch up to her, but finally I showed some life. "Here, allow me."
Clutching the toy closely to her bosom with both hands, she gave me a glare of tender reproach. "Now ... now ... don't be impatient. I have my glasses back at the counter."
Before I could protest, she turned about and sashayed her way to the counter, each lilting sway back and forth of her hips causing me to imagine I was hearing a shameless, but all--too real ... "badda- boom--badda--boom" truly as though there was a phantom drummer hidden behind the red curtain from which she had emerged.
Sheepishly following her to the counter, by the time I arrived she already had her glasses in hand, slipping the bookish, black plastic librarian--styled glasses down over her nose and peering at the tag.
"Fifty dollars." Bending down with one elbow on the counter, she peered back at me over the rims of her glasses. "Not bad, huh?"
Leaning forward, I couldn't stop my eyes as they admired the view of the tops of her breasts. Creamy and full, luscious and alluring, the cleft of her cleavage so daringly exposed to my eyes was so deeply enticing. Before I knew it, "Not bad at all," formed in my mind and escaped from my lips.
Again she showed me that curiously sweet look of reproach. "When you say, 'not bad', are you referring to this toy..." her smile spread, "...or to me?"
Feeling my flush I had to think quickly. "Oh ... uh ... the Transformer ... of course."
Putting her fingers up to the side of her glasses and fingering the black plastic she pouted. "So I guess it's true?"
Again, she was so many steps ahead of me; all I could manage was to echo a vague, "What's true?
Composing herself as if she was playfully on the verge of tears, she rhymed, "Men don't make passes at women who wear glasses."
All I could do was stand and gape.
"So!" She resumed the lead. "What'll it be? Cash, check, or plastic?"
An incredible bargain at fifty dollars, there was no question that I was going to buy it. Not having much cash on me at the moment, I shrugged, "It'll have to be plastic."
Again that incredible smile reappeared. "Groovy! I don't know what it is," she tapped the toy with her pink fingernail, "but I truly love anything to do with plastic."