“Then show me.”
“All right.” I took Denise in my arms and kissed her. Her response was hesitant, as if she’d never been kissed before—which was probably the case. But after a moment her lips grew warm and clung to mine. Her breathing quickened and her breasts rose and fell against my chest. Instinctively, her lips parted and she gasped when she felt the tip of my tongue touching hers.
The first kiss over, I buried my lips in the crevice between her neck and shoulders. I shifted position and cupped one of her breasts. It overflowed the palm of my hand. I pushed down the material of her nightie and stroked the bare tip of the breast. The large pink aureole darkened and the maroon nipple started to pulsate and grow rigid.
Denise gasped again and her lips found mine. Her hand closed over my wrist and urged on the caresses inflaming her bosom. With my other hand I stroked her thigh. It burned under my touch.
I bent and covered the deep cleft of her bosom with a series of kisses. She writhed and urged my lips to one of her nipples. When my tongue touched it she pushed harder as if trying to squeeze the whole of her large, soft breast into my mouth. I guided her hand to my manhood and she exclaimed at the way passion had increased its girth. Her grip on it was tight and eager and it inspired me to remove her nightie and dig my fingers into the plump flesh of her nether cheeks.
She emulated the caress with her free hand and her sharp nails provoked me to press against her until the tendrils of her pubic triangle were tickling my groin. I reached down and found the exquisitely sensitive flesh stick nestling in the curls at the entrance to her womanhood. When I touched it Denise moaned aloud. I stroked it and her sharp little teeth bit my shoulder. “Show me now!” she panted.
I did as she asked. I clambered over her, noting the way the nether mouth was pulsating, and then filled it with the full length of my ardor. She cried out, and then her hips heaved upwards, her buttocks tensed and she wrapped her limbs around me as if afraid I would withdraw. Soon we were moving together in perfect rhythm, an ever increasing tempo that raised us high towards the ultimate joy. Finally we attained it and broke apart, sated.
I lay panting a moment. My mind was a hodgepodge of disconnected and inconsistent thoughts. The future is what a man makes it, I mused. No, I decided, the future’s a nice place to visit, but I wouldn’t want to live there! Only I have no choice, I remembered.
“It’s really much nicer than stirring a cauldron,” Denise remarked.
“I think so,” I agreed.
“You’ll really have to show the other girls. They don’t know what they’ve been missing.”
The future was looking brighter all the time! There was something to be said for being the only man in the world with the equipment to make love to women. I was stuck in the future, but it might not be so bad after all. Except that there was just a hint of possible drawbacks to come in the next remark Denise made.
“One thing puzzles me,” she said. “Why did you stop stirring?”
How long would I be able to last under these conditions? I saw a long line of women demanding satisfaction stretching out in front of me. Would I be able to survive with that question confronting me time after time? Right now, reaching for Denise again, I felt quite capable of negating the question.
“Why did you stop stirring?” she repeated, murmuring. I set about proving that I had not yet begun to stir. But even as I did so, I knew that question might come to haunt me as I continued to live in the future. Age would catch up with me and I would only be able to remain mute in the face of the pouting female lips framing the words:
“Why did you stop stirring?”
WILL STEVE BE PRISON OF THE FUTURE IN SAIGON?
FIND OUT IN THE SEQUEL
COME BY MY O.R.G.Y.
Notes
[←1 ]
H.G. Wells and Jules Verne, XIX century novelists delving into time travel fantasy.
[←2 ]
Credibility gap is a term that came into wide use with journalism, political and public discourse in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s. At the time, it was most frequently used to describe public skepticism about the Lyndon B. Johnson administration's statements and policies on the Vietnam War. It was used in journalism as a euphemism for recognized lies told to the public by politicians.
[←3 ]
Helen Adams Keller (June 27, 1880 – June 1, 1968) was an American author, political activist, and lecturer. She was the first deaf-blind person to earn a bachelor of arts degree.
[←4 ]
Rinso is a brand name of laundry soap and detergent marketed by Unilever.
[←5 ]
Tuesday Weld (born Susan Ker Weld; August 27, 1943) is an American actress. She began acting as a child, and progressed to mature roles in the late 1950s.
[←6 ]
The three Rs refers to the foundations of a basic skills-oriented education program in schools: reading, writing and arithmetic. It appeared in print as a space-filler in "The Lady's Magazine" for 1818, although it is widely quoted as arising from a phrase coined in a speech given by Sir William Curtis, Member of Parliament, in about 1795.
[←7 ]
Authentic.
[←8 ]
Himyaritic or Al-Himyariah is a Semitic language that was spoken in Yemen, according to some by the Himyarites . Others consider it to have existed after the demise of the Himyarite period. It was a Semitic language, but did not belong to the Old South Arabian languages. The precise position inside Semitic is unknown because of the limited knowledge of the language.
[←9 ]
In stating this, Ted Mark is grossly misinformed. Yiddish is a jargon that emerged in the 9th century in central Europe, providing the nascent Ashkenazi community with a High German-based vernacular fused with elements taken from Hebrew and Aramaic as well as from Turkic languages, Slavic languages and traces of Romance languages. Sheba is dated to between 1200 BCE until 275 CE. Therefore Yiddish cannot have been known by anyone there.
[←10 ]
If Steve Victor speaks Yiddish fluently then it is somewhat astonishing that het (at least) does not understand German. However, in a preceding adventure he was fluent in German, while in a later he claimed not to be.
[←11 ]
David Dean Rusk (February 9, 1909 – December 20, 1994) was the United States Secretary of State from 1961 to 1969 under presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. As Secretary of State he believed in the use of military action to combat communism
[←12 ]
To be precise, after the battle of Actium and the defeat of Antony and Cleopatra, in 30 BC, Octavian, adopted son of the murdered Julius Caesar and not yet having taken the name of Augustus, was in a position to rule the entire Roman Republic under an unofficial principate. After courting the Roan Senate an some political maneuvers, on 16 January 27 BC the Senate gave Octavian the new titles of Augustus and Princeps. Augustus next styled himself as Imperator Caesar divi filius, "Commander Caesar son of the deified one".
[←13 ]
A Lex Julia (or Iulia) is an ancient Roman law that was introduced by any member of the Julian family. Most often, "Julian laws", Lex Iulia (or Leges Iuliae) refer to moral legislation introduced by Augustus in 23 BC, or to a law from the dictatorship of Julius Caesar. One of them was the Lex Iulia de Adulteriis Coercendis (17 BC): This law punished adultery with banishment. The two guilty parties were sent to different islands, and part of their property was confiscated. Fathers were permitted to kill daughters and their partners in adultery. Husbands could kill the partners under certain circumstances and were required to divorce adulterous wives. Augustus himself was obliged to invoke the law against his own daughter, Julia (relegated to the island of Pandateria) and against her eldest daughter (Julia the Younger).