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Getting - Part 1


All stories on this web site are purely FICTIONAL. The people depicted within these stories only exist in someone's IMAGINATION. Any resemblence between anyone depicted in these stories and any real person, living or dead, is an incredible COINCIDENCE too bizarre to be believed. If you think that you or someone you know is depicted in one of these stories it's only because you're a twisted perverted little fucker who sees conspiracies and plots where none exist. You probably suspect that your own MOTHER had sex with ALIENS and COWS and stuff. Well, she didn't. It's all in your head. Now take your tranquilizers and RELAX.
This story is another from the archives, and is not written by me.
Requests for just about anything concerning these posts will be ignored.
See the FAQ in a.s.s.d for more information.

Author: [email protected] (Michael Kalen Smith)
Keywords: mf teen series
Archive-name: getting1

[...this one's for Leigh, who pushed just a little...]


GETTING IT RIGHT
(A Beginning)


Back in the Kennedy era, it wasn't easy for a 17-year-old male, going
to a good school in an upper-middle-class suburb, to lose his virginity.
Not without having to pay. Kids these days,... God, listen to the old
geezer! Kids in the '90s who haven't fucked on the second date probably
figure they've screwed up (so to speak). And that may have been the
case in L.A. or Greenwich Village when I was a teenager -- but certainly
not on the north side of San Antonio.
That decade held world-changing surprises for all of us, but at its
beginning things still moved slowly and cautiously. Call me a fogy, but
teenagers in the '60s and '70s gained sexual liberation at the cost of
romance.
The Locker Room Liars Club used the classic baseball metaphors in
describing their alleged successes on dates. "First base" meant the
girl had allowed you to squeeze her tits (through an armored bra) and/or
stroke her thighs (through a dress and petticoats); "second base" meant
removing the bra and petticoats and getting your hands on the girl
herself. "Third base" was getting her panties off (and probably a
garter belt, in that pre-pantyhose era) and soaking your fingers in
nectar; this was as much a cause for rejoicing as a three-bagger out on
the diamond.
A "home run," of course, meant replacing your fingers with your cock
-- and while the guys all talked like they were Babe Ruth, I doubted any
of them had actually scored.
For myself, I was reasonably good-looking, reasonably smart,
reasonably athletic, and had a reasonable amount of pocket money to
lavish on a date. So I had a lot of bases to my credit, but under 'HR'
on the scoreboard I was '0' for at least a dozen powerhouse swings. And
it sure wasn't for lack of playing the game.
Part of the problem was my practical restriction to "nice" girls ...
and nice girls didn't fuck. No girl worth liking would allow such a
thing. The "bad" girls were already hooked up with the bad guys, the
ones who hung around the school auto body shop in the afternoon. They
were lightweights by '90s pistol-packing standards, but we referred to
them as "hoods" and we didn't encroach on their women.

Then, quite magically, everything changed in September 1961, the
first week of my senior year. We had "open" summer school, which you
don't see much anymore: You could take virtually any of your solids for
first-time credit, not just to repeat courses you'd flunked. I'd had
most of my math, science, and language courses -- all of which I had
trouble with -- during the summers, so I could concentrate on a single
tough subject for six weeks, pass it, and get it out of the way.
By my senior year, I had two open periods in my schedule. One of
them was spent in the Journalism office, where I worked as Features
Editor on the school paper; I often worked there late after school, I
loved writing so much. The other period I worked in the library or in
the language lab; we actually had the first such lab in San Antonio,
reel-to-reel wet carrels and all.
On Thursday of that first week, I was sitting behind the check-out
desk in the library, saying 'Hi' to friends who had come to work on the
first round of themes and book reports, when a girl whom I hadn't seen
before came up to ask for directions. That meant she was almost
certainly a new student and I noted that the American Lit book under her
arm was for senior English. She was quite attractive and, in between
stamping book cards, I watched her moving in and out of the stacks in
search of her topic.
Then it got kinda busy and I lost track of her. When the rush died
down, I walked around the large room, discretely peering down the
aisles, but she'd already gone. And she hadn't checked out anything so
I didn't know her name.

The first school dance of the year was that Friday. I went stag
since it was essentially a social mixer to kick off the year and I
wasn't dating anyone in particular. Tommy Thompson, my chemistry lab
partner the previous year and a perfectly nice guy, brought a casual
date, a pretty brunette who had recently moved in a few houses down from
him.
You guessed it: The girl from the library the day before. Fate
works. He introduced her to me as Mary McAllister, and I basically
stole her from him that night. It wasn't intentional, I swear.
Mary had moved down from Dallas that summer because her father was
the new head of the biology department at Trinity. I knew Tommy lived
up in the Heights, off Cambridge Oval, so I could make a good guess at
Mary's social and economic status (the area was all big Victorians on
large lots, the kind of houses that sell in the mid-six figures these
days).
I asked Tommy would he mind if I asked his date for a dance; he
laughed and told us to go ahead. He'd only asked Mary as a neighborly
gesture so she wouldn't have to come by herself. So Mary and I danced
during the slow dances and talked during the fast ones. Each time
through the cycle, our dancing became slower and closer and our talk
warmer and deeper. And I had the opportunity to catalog her more
closely.
Her hair was down in waves and curls around her shoulders and it
smelled wonderful. She wore a crew-neck cashmere sweater, pleated wool
skirt, and black suede loafers, just like 80% of the other girls in the
gym. And her pearls emphasized her long neck. But what captured me was
her face. Her eyes were large and luminous brown with slightly arched
eyebrows that made her appear always a bit surprised. Her lips were a
bit more full than average, soft and very red, even without lipstick.
We ended up out in the gym parking lot, leaning side by side against
somebody's fender and holding hands. I was smitten. We eventually
realized, from the growing emptiness of the parking lot, that the dance
was ending and so was the evening. We went in search of Tommy and found
him drinking a coke and gossiping amiably with two other guys. We took
him aside and apologized abjectly -- me for absconding with his date,
Mary for deserting him.
He took it all in good humor; he had seen us deep in conversation and
holding hands, and apparently decided to cast himself as unintentional
Cupid. He'd gone off and found plenty of other girls who were delighted
to dance with him. As I said: a nice guy. Mary had come with Tommy,
however, and it was Tommy who took her home. We had unwritten rules
about things like that.
I spent most of Saturday and Sunday mooning over Mary. I had already
asked if I could see her again, like that weekend, but she was committed
(regretfully, it seemed) to some kind of family get-together. We had
agreed to meet at lunch on Monday, though, since we both ate following
Third Period.
Lunch was a 45-minute hustle, but I beat my own best time that day
getting to the cafeteria. Even so, Mary had gotten there first and had
staked out one end of a table off to the side of the big, noisy room --
the side that was, by general agreement, reserved for seniors,
especially couples who always ate together. I took her choice of
seating as a signal.
The way her eyes lit up when she spotted me in the jockeying lunch
crowd ... well, I never forgot it. Her hair was pulled back in a
ponytail that bobbed as she smiled and waved to me. God, she even had
cute ears.
There was technically a rule about public displays of affection on
school grounds, but it was only enforced occasionally, when a couple
lost control of themselves. Small infractions like holding hands below
the corner of the lunch table were winked at. We didn't do much eating
-- just held hands, talked, and exchanged a number of long, searching
gazes. Several of the guys I hung around with noticed my preoccupation,
naturally, and they grilled me without mercy at my locker that
afternoon. I didn't say a word -- just grinned like an idiot.
We met after school, of course. Mary lived too far in the wrong
direction for me to walk her home and get home myself before supper, but
we were able to spend half an hour sitting under a tree at the edge of
the softball field behind the Band Hall. And I worked up the nerve to
touch her hair, to wind the end of that bouncy ponytail around my
finger. She blushed, but she liked it, and that gave me a tingly
thrill.
We met somewhere, for a little while, every day that week. Twice, I
walked her home anyway and the heck with supper (which got me a look of
disbelief from my mother). And Friday night we went out on our first
real date.
As an "only child" since my older sister's marriage a couple years
before, I had no trouble borrowing the family car, and I hurried home
from school to hose it down in the driveway and vacuum out the inside
(which got me a look of disbelief from my *father*).
We were just going to go to a movie at the Olmos, with vague plans
for a hamburger after, but I was more nervous than I had been as a
freshman going out on my first high school date. Mary could see I was
trying to do everything just right, just for her, and she seemed
flattered by the careful attention. When I held her hand in the
theater, she squeezed it a little and laid her other hand on my arm.
After that, I had *no* idea what was happening on the screen.
Afterward, we walked up the block and split a big steak sandwich and
onion rings at the Nighthawk. I know it all sounds pretty tame -- but
when Mary motioned for me to open my mouth and fed me an onion ring that
she herself had personally selected ... well, it was the best onion ring
I'd ever eaten. That's romance for you.
Back in the car, I hesitated before turning the ignition and asked
Mary if she'd like to go and see Eisenhauer Road. She kind of smiled
and gazed at me thoughtfully, and then said "Okay, let's go take a
look." It was obvious someone had already told her about our "legal"
parking territory.
Eisenhauer Road was out on the very edge of town, out beyond
MacArthur Park, almost in the country. Now it's in the middle of an
expensive housing development, but then it consisted of two straight and
narrow lanes edged by pasture. Along one side was a wide gravel
shoulder overhung by big oak trees. And not a street light for three
miles.
The students at my high school had an informal arrangement with the
police patrols. We could park on that gravel shoulder without being
hassled as long as (1) we didn't park too close together, (2) we stayed
in the car with the doors locked, (3) we didn't honk the horn and annoy
people, and (4) the patrol car that passed once or twice an hour could
see bodies above the lower edges of the windows. In return, there were
no assaults or bottle-throwing and the patrol officers -- most of whom
were only in their early 20s -- effectively protected us from
interlopers.
Parents, of course, weren't supposed to know about Eisenhauer Road,
but I'm sure most of them did. They didn't say anything because they
knew their kids were going to go parking *somewhere*, and this was the
best option around. Girls knew they could go there and be as safe as
they wanted to be. It was a good deal all round.
Driving slowly down the dark road, watching for a vacant spot, I
wondered if I was doomed to disappointment. Then Mary pointed and said
"There!" A big Olds I recognized as belonging to Roger Simak (to his
older brother in the Marine Corps, actually) had turned on its lights
and was pulling out. Roger stuck his arm out the window and waved a
thumbs-up as I pulled in to take his place.
I cut the engine and turned off the lights -- and suddenly it was
dark and very quiet. Somehow, stupidly, I had forgotten about that.
With my hands still on the wheel, I turned my head to look at Mary, and
my brain seized up.
She was sitting quietly, gazing through the windshield at the shadow
patterns the oaks made on the hood. Neither of us moved a muscle for
maybe thirty seconds. Then she glanced in my direction and cranked her
window down an inch, so we could hear the cicadas.
"I was looking at your profile in the dark," I said. Which was true,
but I was mostly trying to cover my fumble-mindedness. "I think you're
beautiful, Mary." That got me a soft smile. As my eyes adjusted to the
dimness, I saw that -- true to the game -- she was waiting for me to
make the first move. Then she would decide how to respond to it. Nice
girls didn't make the first move.
I fooled her, though: I didn't *make* a move, or not much of one.
Actually, I was nervous as hell. I was already breathing faster than
usual. There were all kinds of things I could imagine experiencing with
Mary, but I was afraid to attempt any of them for fear of rejection.
This wasn't just some girl I wanted to wrestle with. Mary was
different, special, and I didn't want to mess things up. In later years
I read Sun Tzu: Never fight a battle unless you know you'll win.
Mary breathed a little sigh, perhaps of exasperation. "What's the
matter, Mike?"
"You scare me a little," I replied candidly. "Or, I guess *I* scare
me. You're so pretty, Mary,... I'm afraid to touch you." She looked at
me a little oddly; this probably wasn't the kind of thing she was used
to hearing back in Dallas.
"Don't you even want to kiss me?"
I moved hastily from behind the wheel and turned to face her. "Oh,
yes,... very much." She leaned her head back against the car seat and
tilted her face toward me. In the body language of the time, that meant
'Do it, you idiot'.
I leaned over carefully and kissed her cheek, then the corner of her
mouth, then her lips. She kissed me back, which was what it took to
unfreeze my brain. I slipped my arm around her shoulders and she leaned
closer and put one hand on my shoulder. I took it slow, trying to be
very gentle and romantic. I knew how to kiss, having deliberately honed
my technique: Romantic, respectful, and (usually) no tongue-play on the
first date. But kissing Mary was very different, somehow. In
retrospect, that was the night I fell in love for the first time.
We only stayed out there an hour or so. Mary had to be home by
midnight and I didn't want to push my luck; I knew already this was the
beginning of a unique relationship.

Over the next few months, things really blossomed for us. We spent
most of every weekend together, went to every football game together,
went for long walks in Brackenridge Park -- anyplace where we could hold
hands and neck. We also spent a lot of time on her front porch glider,
since her parents wouldn't let her go out on week nights. I stuck notes
through the slots in her locker and found replies in mine with tiny
hearts drawn neatly around the edges. We spent hours on the phone, in
those days before call-waiting, which annoyed the hell out of both sets
of parents.
After about a month, I overcame my fear of rejection; I told Mary one
evening, very earnestly, that I loved her. I'd never said that to a
girl before. She kissed me but didn't reply. Two days later, she left
me a note: She'd been thinking about my declaration and examining her
own feelings, and had concluded that she loved me, too. I carried the
note in my wallet until it was illegible tatters.
For her birthday at the end of October, I gave Mary a modest pearl
ring -- not too expensive and not too personal a gift, so neither her
parents nor mine could object. She understood that her acceptance of it
meant we were going steady; I was already regarding it as one step short
of an engagement ring.
We went out driving and parking regularly after that and my hormones
were in full gallop. Mary had very sensitive breasts and when I
squeezed them and sucked avidly on her nipples, she moaned and shivered.
She liked to ride around with her back leaning against my shoulder so I
could slip my hand down the front of her blouse and play with her tits
as I drove. As I rolled and pinched her nipples between my thumb and
forefinger she pushed her feet rhythmically against the passenger door.
It's a mark of my own woeful inexperience that it took so long for me
to realize that sweet Mary was nearly as horny as I was ... and that it
embarrassed her. Girls were supposed to submit (within limits) to a
boy's passion, not contribute their own.
I began making territorial assumptions. Mary would resist my
advances beyond a certain point and get angry; I'd apologize and we'd
make up -- until the next time.
That "certain point" kept moving, though. As an unofficial Christmas
present, Mary stuffed her panties in her purse and allowed my hands full
access to her cunt. She also handled my cock for the first time --
something only a couple of girls had done before. The feel of her soft
hands on me was almost more than I could bear.
I really did love Mary; I convinced both of us, anyway. But I lusted
for her, too, and that began to get in the way. We also started to
argue a lot. Our friends, in fact, joked that when we were together,
all we did was argue -- and when we were apart, all we did was talk
about each other. Things were beginning to unravel, though I hadn't
realized it yet.
Our dates now were just a pretense to get out to Eisenhauer Road as
quickly as possible. We spent long hours passionately making out and
very little time cuddling or talking ... or listening. But that was
what you did with someone you loved, wasn't it?
I began pressuring Mary to "go all the way," which she adamantly
refused to consider. You know: "If you loved me..." It was a
reprehensible tactic and it made her cry more than once. Then I'd be
miserable and ashamed and I'd beg her forgiveness, and we'd be okay
again, for a week or two. It was like being on drugs, I guess: I was
high on Mary and no matter how much she gave me, I wanted more.
Everyone, including us, assumed that she and I would go to the senior
prom together. I'm not sure I ever explicitly asked her; I only
remember inquiring what kind of flowers I should get for her corsage.
Neither of us thought very highly of orchids, so she ended up with
bright yellow roses. I found myself holding my breath, watching her
come down the stairs in her strapless ball gown. She was absolutely,
breathtakingly beautiful and I fell in love all over again.
I beamed at everyone when I walked into the hotel ballroom with Mary
on my arm. She was gorgeous and I was as solicitous as I had been that
first week in September. We spent the evening dancing and exchanging
melting gazes. Without doubt, one of the most memorable and romantic
evenings of my life. And then I went and messed it up.

Everyone else went to "Earl Abel's" after the prom and then to one of
the several parties that lasted all night. Mary and I ended up at a
house party being hosted by a guy I didn't know very well, a friend of a
friend. I wasn't a drinker, nor was Mary, but there was booze available
so we entered into the spirit. It didn't take much to demolish my
resolves of good behavior and Mary's defenses. And it didn't dawn on me
until much later that she might be as frustrated as I was at holding the
line on sex.
Whatever the motivations, we found ourselves in a temporarily private
upstairs bedroom, behind a locked door. Mary let me unzip the back of
her gown and she pushed it down to her waist herself. I had never seen
her entirely naked from the waist up and her display was incredibly
exciting for both of us.
We lay down side by side on the bed and her gown crackled and rustled
as I worked my hands under it and up her legs. She raised her hips so I
could remove her petticoats and her panties. This was going to be it, I
thought.
My tux trousers were unzipped and Mary was slowly masturbating me as
we kissed very deeply. I stroked her clit and she responded with little
jerking movements and squeezed my cock tighter. And we held the kiss as
I began to maneuver my way on top of her. I don't think it was until I
took back my rigid cock and settled myself between her wide-spread knees
that Mary really comprehended what was about to happen. She got a
panicky look and struggled to push me off.
"No, Mike, we can't!" She didn't strike at me, though, or yell, so I
put it down to stage fright or denial 'for the record'.
"Sure we can, Sweetheart. No one's going to bother us here. We love
each other, don't we?" She continued to push at me as I got my virgin
cock into her virgin pussy on the second lunge, and gasped in momentary
pain. A few tears showed at the corners of her eyes.
"No,... no,..." she whimpered and her head swung back and forth. On
my third or fourth shaky stroke, though, she stopped struggling and even
raised her knees against my ribs. She began breathing harder and just
as she seemed to accept what I regarded as inevitable,... well, I came.
I had been in her less than sixty seconds and it was over.
I pulled out, leaving a sticky trail across her leg, and tried to
kiss her again, but Mary turned her face away. I couldn't get her to
look at me at all.
She got up from the bed, the top of her gown still flapping
loosely, and took some tissues from a box on the bedside table. She
tossed the box to me without a word and then turned her back while she
cleaned herself up. I wiped enough semen off myself so as not to stain
the tux and when I looked up again, Mary had her top back in place and
her undergarments back on.
I got up, pulled on my jacket, and tried to put my arms around her
but she easily evaded me and grabbed up her clutch purse. Then she
looked at me for the first time in five minutes, a very unhappy look,
and said evenly "Take me home, please."
It was not a pleasant drive. Mary sat miles away, over against the
passenger door, and all the way back to her house I kept telling her I
loved her and asking what I had done. Hadn't she wanted to make love as
much as I had? That only got me a stony stare and deeper silence. When
we pulled up to the curb in front of her house, I turned off the engine
and set the brake, and turned to face her.
"Mary, please -- for God's sake, *talk* to me! You know I love you.
You must have known this was going to happen--"
"You keep *saying* you love me, but I don't think you really do," she
said. There was bitterness in her voice. "I trusted you to stop before
you went that far."
That didn't sound quite fair. "I wasn't there by myself, you know.
And you seemed to be enjoying it."
She looked down guiltily. "You think only boys get those feelings?
That's why I had to trust you."
I didn't know how to respond to that and I was hurt by her
accusations. I got out and went around to her side of the car but she'd
already opened the door and was climbing out. It stung even more that
she hadn't waited for me to open her door for her (as I always did),
especially on such a formal date. I walked up the flagstone path and
climbed the porch steps.
When the evening began, I had expected we'd sit a little while on the
glider and talk about what a wonderful time we'd had at our senior prom.
What actually happened was that Mary said, very politely, "Thanks for
taking me to the prom, Mike," and gave me a brief, almost ceremonial
kiss. Then I was standing on the porch by myself. I've never felt so
awful in my life, before or since -- except for two weeks later.

When I saw Mary in the hall Monday morning, she smiled and greeted
me, but not very enthusiastically. This rift wasn't going to go away.
I spent all that day and most of the next writing a long note to her --
a combination love letter, apology, and plea for understanding and
reconciliation. I've always communicated much more easily on paper than
in person. I stuffed it in her locker on Wednesday morning and crossed
my fingers.
And it worked. Wednesday evening, I called Mary for the first time
in four days. The conversation boiled down to her accepting my abject
apology and agreeing to give us another chance, and my promise that
things would be different. We made a date for Saturday night -- the
last weekend before the early senior finals.
It went pretty well, considering my nervousness. I took her out for
a bite and then we came back and strolled for blocks around her
neighborhood, talking things out, agreeing that we were both to blame
for what had happened on prom night, and that we would both be more
aware of each other's feelings. By the time we arrived back at her
front porch, we were holding hands and exchanging warm smiles. Then we
sat on the steps and I got anxious again. I squeezed her hand.
"Mary, may I kiss you...?"
"You'd better!" Then she beat me to it by leaning over and kissing
me first. We went into a clinch and sobbed quietly on each other's
shoulder.
That should have been the end of our crisis. I thought I had learned
my lesson and I tried very hard to behave myself around Mary for the two
weeks that remained until graduation. We only went out to Eisenhauer
Road once more and that was mostly a replay of our first couple of
visits: Much hugging and passionate kissing, but only casual contact
below the shoulders.
The next Wednesday was the last day of school for graduating seniors.
We received our yearbooks and sat on the floor in the halls, leaning
against the walls, so we could pass the books hand-to-hand and sign our
pictures and write little messages and the traditional verses to our
friends. Later, when we had a chance at privacy, I filled half a page
in Mary's yearbook with my hopes. Her inscription in my book was much
more restrained.
On Thursday afternoon we came back to pick up our caps and gowns for
Friday night's Commencement. Mary and I posed in them in front of the
school while a friend took our picture; she wouldn't hold my hand.
Looking at that photo now -- oh yes, I still have it -- looking at it
from a distance of thirty years, the sleepless worry lines on her pretty
face are obvious. Why didn't I see them then?
Commencement was held in the Japanese Tea Garden at Brackenridge
Park. A nice setting, but the ceremony itself was as boring as I had
feared -- except for the part where they handed me my fake diploma
scroll; that was fun.
Afterward, in the congratulatory crowd, Mary excused herself from her
family and motioned to me from across the expanse of folding chairs. I
made my excuses to my folks for a few minutes and went to join her.
"Congratulations!" I said and tried to give her a quick kiss.
She turned her head away and said flatly, "We have to talk." Her
expression hoisted all my anxiety flags. There were a dozen all-night
graduation parties scheduled and I asked her hesitantly which she wanted
to go to first.
"I remember the *last* party we went to," she said grimly. I was
stunned. I thought we'd put that behind us. "I'm late," she whispered
furiously.
"What?" I had no idea what she was talking about.
"I'm two weeks late on my period," she said.
Oh, shit. She was pregnant. We were only eighteen and I'd knocked
up the girl I was in love with. My parents would kill me. Her parents
would kill me again. I certainly wasn't so stupid as to think I could
support a wife and child on what little I could earn working in a
supermarket or whatever. But this was Mary.
"If I'm responsible--" I began.
She turned on me with a hiss. "Of *course* you're responsible! How
many guys do you think I've *been* with?!" I thought she was going to
burst into tears and slug me, and I put up my hands in a placating
gesture.
"No, no -- I was going to say 'If I'm responsible, then I'm
responsible'. I love you, Mary. I hope you don't think I was going to
ditch you, run off or something...."
"Oh... No, I guess I didn't think that." Her anger receded into the
background and she went back to being merely tired, unhappy, and afraid.
"What are we going to do, then? What am *I* going to do?"
"I don't know yet. Give me a chance to think."
"Okay, but you'd better make it fast. I have to know whether to
start looking for a job for the next six months, because we're going to
need money. And whether or not we're staying in San Antonio, or moving
to Austin, or what."
God, another complication. I had already been accepted at UT for the
fall while Mary was committed to going to Trinity, her father's school.
Seventy miles hadn't seemed far to travel to see each other on weekends.
Now that whole future was in doubt.
I suppose my abstracted expression gave Mary the wrong idea because
she grabbed my arm suddenly. Her nails hurt. "You *are* going to marry
me, aren't you? If I'm pregnant?" She managed to look aggressive and
defensive at the same time.
I stared back at her in disbelief. "Mary, I love you. I *love* you.
Haven't I said I want to marry you? I just didn't expect it to happen
like this." No, I sure didn't.

I didn't have much to celebrate that evening. My parents were
puzzled that I wasn't planning to go to any of the parties and they kept
asking prying questions, so I left the house after all. But I didn't
party. I just drove aimlessly around the north side of town, tailed
closely by guilt and despair, trying to figure out what to do.
I didn't want to get married. That is, I *wanted* to marry her --
but not yet and not like this. We'd either starve or be forced to go to
our parents for financial support, and I wasn't sure which was worse. I
finally went home after my folks had turned in and I lay in bed most of
the night with my eyes wide open.
I got up the next morning tired and drawn and sat on the porch for
hours, becoming more and more depressed. I didn't call Mary at all that
Saturday because I had nothing to say, yet.
Sunday afternoon, Mary called me. "I've started," she said with
unnatural calm.
"You what?" God, I was dense.
"I started my period, just a little while ago. Why don't you ever
listen?"
The surge of relief left me weak in the knees and I had to sit down.
"Thank God," I said softly. "Mary, I'm so sorry you had to go through
this."
"Not as sorry as I am," she replied, still very calmly. "I don't
think we should see each other anymore."
"But, Mary--" She cut me off.
"I've made up my mind, Mike. Don't call me, don't try to see me.
Not ever again."
"But I love you, Mary...." I could hear the despondency in my own
voice.
"No," she said coldly, "you don't."
"Please, don't do this--"
"It's over, Mike. I'm sorry, but it is. Goodbye." And the line
went dead. I sat and stared at the receiver, shocked by the finality of
it, until the off-hook beeping started.
I was seriously depressed for weeks. I felt I didn't want to live,
not cut off like this. If I'd really had a suicidal streak, I
undoubtedly would have killed myself.

But I didn't, of course. I sobered considerably that summer. Losing
the girl I loved had the odd effect of maturing me, cold turkey. I had
gone to the brink and peered over, and now I became much more cautious.
And I did a lot of ruminating about the past year.
A few days before I left for freshman orientation at UT, I sat down
and wrote Mary a calm, composed letter, apologizing for my behavior and
the emotional strain I had caused her -- not just for the pregnancy
scare but for everything. I wished her the best in the future and hoped
she'd at least keep some of the good memories of our months together.
She'd be in my thoughts and I hoped she wouldn't hate me. I didn't
plead or grovel and I didn't throw myself on her mercy. I accepted that
our relationship was dead.
I didn't receive a reply, but I didn't expect to. But making a
gentlemanly final exit made the whole thing easier to accept.
I did manage to keep track of Mary for a few years, though. A close
girlfriend of hers who attended UT for a year before dropping out told
me she had sobbed for most of a day after receiving that last letter.
That made me feel much better -- not out of revenge, but because it
meant she *had* loved me, for awhile. She had to have felt something,
to feel its loss. There really *had* been two people in that
relationship, before I killed it.
Other people we both knew updated me on Mary at intervals. She was
married the year she graduated from Trinity, to a guy from Chicago. She
had a son a couple years later. And a couple years after that, she got
divorced. Thereafter, she worked in a law office in Houston, the name
of which I discovered quite by accident.
My last indirect contact with Mary was on her thirtieth birthday,
when I had thirty long-stemmed yellow roses delivered to her at work. I
included no card but I was pretty sure she would know who had sent them.
It was like a last apology.

* * * * *


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Copyright 1993 by Michael K. Smith. Copies may be made and posted
elsewhere for personal enjoyment, but all commercial rights are reserved.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Kalen Smith / Dallas, TX
Internet: [email protected] / CompuServe: 73177,366
*** It doesn't TAKE all kinds; we just HAVE all kinds ***
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
I will ignore all requests for: reposts, e-mailing missing parts, archive
locations, ftp sites, gif sites, and subscription requests. These stories get
deleted immediately after they are posted. For more info on the ARCHIVE
postings, read the FAQ posted bi-monthly to a.s.s.d

DISCLAIMER: I did not write this story, nor do I condone its actions.
These files were archived several months ago, it is now time to kill
the archive, I am posting and then deleting these files. requests
for reposting will be ignored. - These stories belong to whomever they
belong to. enjoy!



 
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