Doctor Peters
- 3 years ago
- 24
- 0
I opened up Dad’s notebook to the first page.
There was no heading, just the date written across the top in slightly bigger letters
Peter Stone, Wednesday April 5, 10pm
I’d found the book in among a whole pile of notebooks full of Dad’s circuit diagrams and calculations. It had sat forgotten in a box up in our roof since we’d arrived from England. The year scrawled on the cover meant it was written in the year we left England.
This book could be a clue about why we’d moved out of England in such secrecy. Or it could be nothing.
I read the first sentence. Then I blinked and read it again.
Louise has persuaded me to go back to seeing a psychiatrist on a regular basis.
My jaw dropped.
I read the first sentence again and shook my head in amazement.
I rolled over onto my stomach and began reading in earnest.
This was interesting.
Very, very interesting.
Peter Stone, Wednesday April 5, 10pm
Louise has persuaded me to go back to seeing a psychiatrist on a regular basis.
It seems my previous doctor has moved to Birmingham so I find myself with yet another new psychiatrist. Naturally the new doctor immediately asked me to keep a diary. I’m convinced that getting the patient to keep a diary is step one in the textbook. Every psychiatrist I’ve ever had has asked me to keep a diary. I’ve written so many of the blasted things that I could write a book – perhaps a series of books – about my life. Not that I would want to.
I expect all the relevant information about me is already in the files but I suppose I should summarise. I’m Peter Stone, age 36. I’m an electrical engineer and I’m a partner in a company that builds and supplies portable generators. I have a sister, Penny. I’m married to Louise, who is a graphic designer and an amateur painter. I have one son (Daniel, age 14), two daughters (Tara, age 7 about to turn 8 and Rebecca, age 6, who insists that we call her Bec) and a dog (Percival, age unknown). Percival is a black lab we adopted from an RSPCA shelter when Dan was five. He was already an adult dog when we adopted him so he’s now quite elderly.
Dan is amazingly sensible and mature for a fourteen year old and I’m immensely proud of him. He’s good at rugby and works hard at school. Like all teenage boys he makes mistakes and gets in trouble from time to time but it’s only ever minor issues and I have no complaints on that score.
The two girls are quite simply the light of my life. Neither of them are perfect little angels by any means but I’m not sure if I have enough superlatives to describe them properly.
That’s enough dithering about.
I came out of that first session today feeling tired and drained. Shattered might be a better description. It’s never easy starting with a new psychiatrist. It takes me a long time to start trusting someone, but in the first session with a new psychiatrist I always have to go through what happened and why I’m there. I loathe doing that. It’s really difficult telling my story to a stranger. I get choked up or start rambling about nonsense or get sidetracked and talk about something completely different. Despite the number of times I’ve had to tell the whole story, it never comes out sounding like a story with a beginning, middle and end. My last doctor told me that was normal and that it was an ‘avoidance strategy’.
I came home to find Louise busy in the kitchen and the kids doing their homework. Perhaps it would be more correct to say that the girls had finished their own homework and were quizzing Dan about his. My girls are really smart. I know it’s traditional for fathers to say that about their daughters but in my case it’s true, especially for Bec. Tara is clever but Bec seems to make intuitive leaps that can leave me gasping. The leaps are made harder to follow because Bec is terribly shy and quiet. Often, she’ll sit there and watch and listen and let Tara ask most of the questions while she soaks it up. Then she’ll make some little comment that shows that she has not only understood everything we were talking about but has already linked it to something else.
Just occasionally, if she feels completely safe, Bec will come out of her shell and chatter away like a normal six year old. I treasure those moments. Tara is much more social than Bec. In fact, Tara really comes alive in the middle of a crowd of her friends. She’s not a leader but she’s happiest in the middle of a mob.
Percival thumped the floor with his tail when I came through the door but otherwise didn’t stir from his spot in front of the heater. I did a circuit of the room and gained kisses from Louise and the girls before sinking into my armchair.
Dan’s homework was something to do with the solar system. He was trying to explain to the girls how the planets orbited the sun but was struggling because he barely finished each sentence before being hit by at least two lots of “but why...” Apparently it was a good day for Bec because she was matching Tara question for question. I relaxed and left Dan to it. I long ago decided that it’s good for Dan to explain what he’s learning at school to his sisters – when they’re interested. They’re both smart enough not only to understand most of what he’s talking about but also to ask intelligent questions. I’m convinced he’s doing better at school because of it. They both adore him and he adores them. He loves being able to explain things to them. He gets upset and frustrated when he can’t answer their questions. I think he’s working harder at school so he can give better answers to the girls. I’m not complaining. Whatever works is fine with me. I talk to other parents from school who struggle to get their teenage kids motivated to do schoolwork and I breathe a sigh of relief that I don’t have those problems.
Eventually matters got to the point where I felt Dan needed rescuing. He was stumbling to explain how the sun, appearing to move across the sky each day, fitted in with what he was saying about the sun being still and the earth moving. I sent Tara running off to fetch a football and some Blu-tack.
While we waited, I noticed Bec staring at me with those deep, hazel eyes of hers.
“Why are you sad, Daddy?” she asked in that quiet but clear voice of hers.
I brushed her off by telling her I wasn’t sad but I was merely tired from a hard day at work. Telling the girls that I’m going to therapy, and explaining the reasons why, is not a conversation I want to have right now. Maybe, when they’re older, I’ll be able to tell them about it.
Bec didn’t challenge my response but I don’t think she believed it. Sometimes Bec can see straight through me and that can be unnerving – she’s six years old, for heaven’s sake. Seconds later she was sitting in my lap and hugging me. Immediately I felt the panic start to surge through me. I lifted her off me and set her down on the floor beside me, giving her the old lie about how she’s too heavy to be climbing all over me. Isn’t that enough of a reason to need therapy? I can’t even get a hug from my daughter without panicking. That’s pathetic. And as the girls have been getting older, it’s been getting worse instead of better.
Bec clung onto my hand like a limpet and leaned against my leg. I could tolerate that, and I felt the panic sinking away.
Tara returned with the football and a lump of Blu-tack. We switched the light off and used a desk lamp to represent the sun. The ball became the spinning sphere of the Earth and a little lump of Blu-tack became us in sunny Preston on the surface of the Earth. With the visual aids in front of them, the girls quickly understood the concept. Of course, that led to other questions about seasons and stars and planets and the poles and the North Star. I made sure Dan didn’t get out of explaining the things he knew but it was a good conversation and I think Dan ended up with a better understanding of his homework, so I was happy. The girls’ minds are like sponges that soak up everything if it’s given to them in a form they can understand.
Bec
I stopped reading for a moment and let all that sink into my brain. I don’t have any distinct memories of that particular night, but I remember lots like it.
First there was the psychiatrist. I’d always known that Dad was hiding some terrible pain deep inside himself. I hadn’t realized that it was so bad that he needed to see a psychiatrist – lots of psychiatrists. For the longest time, I thought his constant rejection of my hugs was something to do with me. It had built up this huge seething hurt way down deep inside of me. I was convinced that he didn’t love me enough to hug me. Slowly, very slowly, I realized that it wasn’t about me. What Dad had written more or less confirmed that.
It was weird to read Dad’s description of me. It made me feel strange in my head. The little Bec in my brain that always stays back and watches had been nodding and saying “That’s what I see.” I felt bad about making Dad uncomfortable because I sometimes understand what he’s thinking. Sometimes I guess and my guesses turn out right. Sometimes I get it wrong. In all this time, Dad has hidden from me that he’s seeing a psychiatrist. I never guessed that. I don’t know if he’s still seeing a doctor or not. Maybe he’s stopped and that’s why I didn’t notice anything.
I thought about Dan. It had never occurred to me that Dan had worked harder at school just to stay ahead of us. I remembered any number of conversations about Dan’s homework that Dad had joined into. I had always thought that Dad was joining in because he wanted to. The Bec from way back then had never noticed that Dad was rescuing Dan from questions he couldn’t answer. I guess it never occurred to the younger Bec that there might be stuff Dan didn’t know about.
I still sometimes have those sorts of conversations with Dan. I get him to explain what he’s learning about. I think Dad over-estimates how much I understand. I don’t always understand everything. I like spending time with Dan and talking about his school is a way of doing that.
Peter’s Notebook (continued)
Throughout the evening Bec clung to my hand. Tara saw what was going on and soon I had a barnacle attached to each side of me. I can’t tell you whether Tara picked up on the same thing Bec did or if she saw what Bec was doing and her competitive nature meant that she had to do it too. Either way, their simple child-like attempts to comfort me were oddly effective. By the time we sat down for dinner, I was feeling much more like my same old self.
In honour of the homework discussion, after dinner I put on a video of an episode of Cosmos, narrated by the sonorous voice of Carl Sagan. I had to endure some complaints from Dan because he wanted to watch some other rubbish so I gave him the choice of watching Cosmos or going upstairs and watching his thing on the old set in our bedroom. I tried to hint that I would prefer him to watch this because it would help with his homework but my hints fell on deaf ears. I suppose he’s fourteen and he needs his space. I don’t want to be one of those oppressive fathers one sees on television.
Louise is always far too enthusiastic about joining any conspiracy to push my comfort zone as far as my dealing with the girls is concerned. Sometimes she’s subtle about it and sometimes she’s downright blatant. Tonight after dinner she literally forced me to sit in the middle of the couch instead of in the safety of my usual armchair. That way the girls could position themselves each side of me and squeeze themselves up against me. I was uncomfortable but happy.
I seem to be in a continual battle with myself – to hold them close and share their simple affection, or to keep them as far away from me as possible. I try with all my strength not to push them away. Louise has explained to me countless times, sometimes very forcefully, that to do so would devastate them. It took all my will power to sit there calmly rather than jumping up and leaving the room. The strain of sitting still left me trembling. The warm pleasure of being able to sit and have my girls cuddled up against me almost had me weeping.
Louise then proceeded to curl up in a chair opposite us and sketch while we watched the program. I suspect a fair amount of it went over the girls’ heads but I’m sure some of it stuck. I don’t dare try to predict exactly how much either of them understood.
After the video finished, I read to the girls. Tonight I went for an old favourite: The Sleep Book by Dr Zeus.
The news just came in from the County of Keck,
That a very small bug by the name of Van Vleck,
Is yawning so wide you can look down his neck.
Maybe the girls are getting too old for Dr Seuss but they still love having me read it to them. That makes me happy because I have fun reading those stories. The idea that such fun children’s stories existed was a revelation for me when I became a father. It’s enormous fun to read them out loud and let their rhythms and rhymes roll around on my tongue. I suppose the girls will let me know when they think they’re too old for Dr Seuss. Then I guess I’ll be reduced to reading the stories to Percival. Mind you, Dan told me loud and clear when he was finished with Dr Seuss, but I’ve noticed a few times that he’s cheerfully picked one up and read it to the girls with a great deal of relish.
I finished the story with a huge yawn which set the girls off yawning as well. Louise was still engrossed in her sketch so I told the girls they would have to go up and get ready for bed. I received a brief fluttering kiss on each cheek as my reward and they scampered off up the stairs.
Percival seemed a bit extra sluggish when I ushered him outside so that he could spend a penny. I think he might be getting arthritis or something equally nasty.
The girls weren’t in bed the way they should’ve been. They’d changed into pyjamas and were now both wrapped in their dressing-gowns and kneeling on the window-seat with their noses pressed against the double-glazing.
I coughed loudly – hinting that they weren’t where they were supposed to be. All the girls did was glance at me and then stick their noses back against the glass. Percival heaved himself up onto his place at the foot of Bec’s bed and did a tired half-circle to trample the covers into shape before slumping into a curled up ball.
I walked up behind the girls and looked over their shoulders. They were looking up at the sky. A break in the clouds had revealed a thin scattering of twinkling stars.
“So Daddy, if there are only clouds and stars up there, then where is heaven?”
That caught me by surprise. Tara asked the question but it sounded like a Bec question to me. That probably meant that Bec had asked Tara and she didn’t have an answer. Bec was then happy to let Tara ask me. That type of teamwork is fairly common between them.
The first thing out of my mouth was harsh – too harsh. “There’s no such place as heaven.”
I realised that I’d made a mistake as soon as I said it. Two little faces crumpled in front of me and four little eyes suddenly filled with tears. In a frantic attempt at a save, I winked at them and laughed – trying to turn what I’d said into a joke. I don’t think it worked.
“But when Grandma Stone died in the car accident, you said she’d gone to heaven to be with the angels,” said Bec in the soft little whisper-voice that she uses when she’s upset – or anytime she’s in public.
“Yes, I did. And I meant it,” I said.
“So where’s heaven then?” whispered Bec.
I sighed. “Sit down, girls. That isn’t an easy question to answer.”
They sat side-by-side on the window-seat while I carried a chair over so that I could sit in front of them. I sat with my knees almost touching theirs and held out a hand for each of them to grasp – which they did. Percival watched me from his post on the bottom of Bec’s bed without lifting his head. He just rolled his eyes to keep track of me as I moved around the room.
I have to admit that all of the above was simply a stalling tactic. I had no idea what I was going to say. Why do Bec’s hardest questions always catch me by surprise? Nobody warned me that becoming a father meant having to answer the hardest questions right when you want to sit back and put your feet up. There should be warning signs in the maternity ward at the hospital. Except that by the time you get to the maternity ward, it’s far too late.
So this was my answer. I have no idea whether it was the right thing to say or not.
“There are the places that I know because I’ve been there and seen them with my own eyes. I can point to them on a map and tell you about things I did or saw when I was there. Places like Nana’s house and Manchester Cathedral and the Lake District and London.
“Then there are places that I’ve never been to but I’ve talked to someone who’s been there or read a book by someone who’s been there. I can point to those places on a map and tell you about things other people did or saw when they were there. Places like Peking and New York and Australia and Iceland and the Moon.
“Then there are places that nobody has been to but we know they are there, or were there, because of telescopes or archaeology. Places like Mars and Alpha Centauri and the places where dinosaurs lived and the palaces of the Pharaohs of Egypt.
“Heaven doesn’t fall into any of those groups. It isn’t anywhere that people can point to and nobody has been there and come back to tell us about it. A lot of people believe heaven exists because their religion tells them so or because their parents told them it was there when they were children and they’ve never had a reason to change their minds.”
Bec was looking at me suspiciously. “Do you mean it’s like Santa? Is heaven just a story for little children?”
I smiled at Bec. My first clue that either of the girls had worked out the truth about Santa had been three days before last Christmas. Only a week before, the two of them had cheerfully written letters to Santa and shown them to me so I could check their spelling before gleefully running down the street to the post box. Then three days before Christmas, the rugby club had a Christmas party with carols and a Santa and all the bells and whistles. The girls had happily queued up and sat on Santa’s lap and received their little gifts along with all the other kids. Naturally, Tara chatted away with Santa quite cheerfully. When Bec had her turn, she sat there with a smile on her face and didn’t say a word but only shrugged or nodded in response to Santa’s questions. Nothing unusual there.
A little bit later, Ethel Gallagher found herself standing next to the two girls and decided to do her version of being friendly. Ethel Gallagher is far too full of herself. She expects everyone else, especially children, to be in awe of her majesty. Ethel tapped Tara on the chest to get her attention and demanded to know what she was expecting from Santa. Tara had muttered something about a new pair of sneakers which was enough to satisfy the old crone. Ethel then turned her attention to Bec, poking her in the chest and repeating her imperious question. I think Bec must have been off with the fairies because the poke in the chest caught her by surprise and it obviously hurt her. She gaped at Ethel and rubbed her chest where she’d been poked.
I felt a flare of anger race through me. There’s an enormous difference between tapping a child to get their attention and poking them so hard that it hurts. That woman had hurt my little girl and I was furious. Burning with rage, I started across the room towards her.
Ethel Gallagher poked Bec again, “I asked you a question, child. It’s very rude to ignore your elders.”
Bec’s eyes flashed and she planted herself in front of Ethel Gallagher with her fists on her hips – every inch the image of an angry six year old – every inch a miniature version of her mother.
“If you poke me with that finger again, I’ll bite it. You think I’m rude? I’m not the one poking people with her bony old finger.”
I was awed to hear my shy little Bec barking at the woman so ferociously. I was half-way across the room. My fists were clenched so tight, my nails were digging into my palms. I fully intended to discover if the witch knew how to fly.
Suddenly, Louise appeared in front of me. She planted her two hands on my chest and stopped me dead. Her eyes were cold with fury.
“Let me!” she hissed. Then she turned and headed for Ethel.
Louise’s intervention allowed me to get my temper under control. In hindsight, that was probably a good thing.
In the meantime, Ethel had backed off from Bec with a shocked expression on her face. “Well I never!”
“And as for Santa Claus,” continued Bec. “Everyone knows Santa’s just a story made up for little kids. Well, I’m six years old now. I’m not a little kid anymore. So don’t treat me like a baby by asking stupid questions.”
Ethel drew herself up to her full height and raised her finger imperiously. At that moment, Louise stepped up behind our two girls, with me towering over her shoulder and glowering.
Never being one to let a good threat go to waste, Louise glared at Ethel.
“If you so much as point that finger in my daughter’s direction, Bec WILL bite you. What’s more, I won’t do a thing to stop her.”
Ethel turned rather white at that. I’ll never know how she was going to respond because Louise immediately launched a verbal assault at Ethel that would blister paint.
I snaked a hand around Bec and edged her back out of the combat zone. Louise didn’t need any help from me when she was fired up like that. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Dan copy me and pull Tara out of danger.
Ethel was actually physically backing away. Then she got broadsided from the other side by Bridget, Bec’s Nana, who arrived from the kitchen where she’d been helping serve tea through the hatch. Now Ethel was being double-teamed by Louise and Bridget. Having been on the receiving end of that pair in full attack mode, I was tempted to feel sorry for the woman. But then my arm around Bec’s chest felt the rapid fluttering of Bec’s heart, racing wildly after the brief encounter, and any temptation to feel sorry for Ethel completely vanished.
The slanging match was conducted in such broad Lanky accents that I could barely follow half of it. I’ve lived in Lancashire for over 20 years and I still can’t follow Bridget when she gets angry. I could swear that half the words she uses don’t exist outside of the village she was born in. Louise is nearly as bad, but I think I’ve been a good influence on her. Her accent has softened a lot since I first met her.
Faced with overwhelming odds, Ethel had little choice but to retreat and she fled the clubhouse. I suspect she’ll think twice before attacking other people’s children in the future – even if originally she was trying to be friendly. She’ll probably go back to ignoring all children everywhere – something I’m sure the children will be grateful for.
Bec didn’t utter a word for the rest of the evening. She sat herself astride my hip, wrapped her arms around me and hid her face in my chest, leaving me to assure the steady stream of well-wishers that Bec was fine. Somehow, my overwhelming urge to protect Bec, combined with her desperate need to be held, allowed me to overcome the usual strangeness I feel when holding her.
The two of us spent the rest of the evening flanked by Louise and Bridget. They were both wearing identical relaxed faces and half-smiles that many people mistake for friendly. If they knew what those smiles really meant, most sensible people would run screaming from the room.
Tara stuck to Dan like glue for the rest of the evening. I could see him in the corner of the room, sitting on the floor with a group of his friends. Tara sat right beside him, securely hanging on to his arm. But she sat upright, with bright eyes, and looked as comfortable and confident with Dan’s friends as she does with her own. It was good to see that Dan’s friends appeared to accept her presence there without complaint. Boys that age aren’t always tolerant of younger sisters hanging around.
Bec
I smiled quietly to myself. Reading Dad’s account had brought back some clear memories of that night at the rugby club. I didn’t think that I’d been quite as ferocious as Dad described. I remember being frightened witless by the lady suddenly looming over me and poking me. Part of the problem was she kept demanding that I answer a question I hadn’t even heard. I know I said the stuff Dad wrote about, but I didn’t think I’d been that – I don’t know – dangerous. I think that really dangerous version of me is a more recent development.
Peter’s Notebook (continued)
The next morning at breakfast, I asked Bec what made her think that Santa wasn’t real. Bec and Tara had looked at each other and shrugged their shoulders. Finally Tara explained that Bec had worked it out from watching a couple of Santa movies. Bec had asked Tara and Tara had admitted that she’d heard it at school from some older kids.
“But in all those movies, Santa is real!” I exclaimed.
“Yes,” said Bec, as if that explained everything.
I still have no idea how she worked it out. I guess I never will. Sometimes, Bec isn’t very good at explaining what’s going on inside that little head of hers.
“But you wrote letters to Santa.”
They both rolled their eyes at me in that ‘Dads are so stupid’ sort of way that always leaves me feeling uncomfortably – well – stupid.
“That sort of stuff is really fun,” said Bec.
“We made sure we showed them to you and Mum before we posted them,” added Tara. “There’d be no point in writing them, if we didn’t.”
Two days later, we’d been woken well before dawn by excited squeals as the two girls discovered what “Santa” had left for them. Later that morning both girls had taken turns to breathlessly describe to Nana and their aunts what Santa had given them and how some of it was exactly what they’d asked for. They knew it was a game, but they were playing anyway.
Sometimes I worry about Bec. She appears so shy and fragile that I worry about how she’ll survive in the world. But then, every once in a while, things like her encounter with Ethel Gallagher remind me that Bec has inherited a full dose of her mother’s fiery nature. She keeps it hidden most of the time but her shyness and fragility is a cover. Scratch the surface too hard and you end up getting burnt.
Tara seems to have learnt that. Tara is about the only person Bec will fight with. It doesn’t happen all the time but every so often, they have a blazing screaming row about something or other. I suppose it’s to be expected occasionally, with two girls sharing a room like that. Louise and I try to let them go as much as we can in the hope they will learn to sort it out themselves rather than rely on us. I’ve noticed that Tara is becoming better at putting us in a position where we have to intervene, or she turns the fight into one of long, glaring sullen silences before Bec gets to the point of really showing her claws. Tara has learnt that it’s a bad idea to push Bec too far. Fortunately their fights usually end and after a short truce they go back to being sweet with each other.
I seem to have wandered off the point. Where was I? We were upstairs in the girls’ room. I was talking about heaven and Bec was looking at me suspiciously.
“Do you mean it’s like Santa?” she asked. “Is heaven just another story for little children?”
I smiled at Bec. “Not really. I doubt if there’s a single adult anywhere that thinks Santa is actually real, but many, many adults think heaven is a real place. If someone we love dies, I think it’s comforting to think they end up in a happy place. It makes us feel better and that’s what’s important.”
Bec looked at me with those penetrating eyes. “But you don’t think heaven is real.”
I was tempted to lie to her but it was far too late for that. Besides, I realised that she had made that a statement and not a question. All I could do was agree with her and leave it at that.
Once the girls were safely tucked into bed and the light switched off, I was stopped from leaving the room by a quiet whisper.
“Daddy?”
“What is it, Bec?”
“I’m glad you’re feeling better from before. You never told why you were sad.”
I shrugged at the shadowy shape on the bed.
“Sometimes I just get sad. There isn’t always a reason.”
There was a silence and I realised that Bec was lying there in the dark, looking up at me.
Finally, she rolled over in the bed, putting her back to me. Apparently I was dismissed – judged, found wanting, and then dismissed.
I scratched Percival under the ears a couple of times and let myself out of the room.
I joined Dan in my bedroom and spent a very enjoyable twenty minutes watching the last half of an episode of that ‘Seinfeld’ show from America. It’s very typically the American style of humour but it’s better than the usual tripe that gets passed off as comedy, and I had a few good laughs before it was over.
When it was finished, I sent Dan off to his room and sat down to write this. So that was my day.
There’s something magical about cars. They’re like spaceships. They carry you from one world to another. For example, Nana’s car was carrying me from the world of school to the world of home – two entirely different worlds with their own rules and expectations. I think even the laws of gravity are different. And since I’m a different person in each of those worlds, the spaceship-car has the additional power to transform me from one person into another. I get into the car as Rebecca Freeman...
The thing about guns is that they have only one purpose – to shoot people. That’s why they were invented. People got bored with shooting each other with bows and arrows so they invented something better. Mikael says that more people in America die each year because of cars than because of guns. That might be true, but cars were invented so that people could travel around. It’s terrible when people die in a car accident. I think that usually when someone dies in a car accident, it’s a side...
I was still hugging Nana goodbye when we heard the front door open and shut. Dan came into the kitchen with a bag of ice dangling from each hand. “Mmm! Something smells good.” Dan sniffed the air and then his eyes lit up when he saw the covered trays. “Fresh biscuits?” he asked. But then his pleading expression turned into a pout because Nana had crossed her arms and stood herself between him and the biscuits. “They’re for tomorrow,” said Nana. Dan kept pouting, but Nana didn’t...
I lay on my back and stared up into the darkness. My busy brain kept spinning and spinning. There was no way I was getting to sleep any time soon with so many thoughts whirling around inside my head. There was some animal moving around in the bushes outside my window. I listened to the quiet rustling as it pushed its way through. It wasn’t unusual to hear animals moving around in the dark. It could be a cat or a dog or a bird or a squirrel or any number of things. Then the window...
“Wake up! Wake up, Bec.” “Huh? What? What is it?” “You were dreaming – thrashing around all over the place. I felt like I was trapped inside a washing machine.” I looked around, which was pointless because it was pitch black inside the closet. I could feel Tara directly in front of me, crunched up against me. “Sorry! That was a really weird dream. I think I have a talent for weird dreams.” “Really? What was this weird dream of yours about?” asked Tara. “Well, it gets all mixed up with...
The problem with standing right behind your bedroom door is that if someone decides to come bursting into your room WITHOUT KNOCKING, then the door tends to thump into you and send you flying across the room. “OW! THAT HURT!” I yelled. “WE HAVEN’T FINISHED TALKING,” screamed Mum. The problem with being thumped by a door so hard that your brains rattle in your head and then being screamed at by an insane mother is that it gets hard to think calmly and sensibly. It makes you do dumb things...
I sat backwards on the back seat of Dan’s car and watched our house get smaller as we drove away. Then we swung around a corner and our house disappeared completely. It seemed symbolic, somehow – watching my house disappear. Maybe I was watching the past disappearing behind me. My past, I mean. It represented a time when I thought all adults were like my parents – kind and loving, even if they occasionally made mistakes and sometimes did mean things. I spun around and sat properly on the...
“We’re home!” yelled Tara, as we came in through the front door. “Yay!” squealed Angie from the kitchen. She came running out towards us and ran full tilt into Dan so that she could hug him around his legs. Dad and Nana followed from the kitchen a bit more slowly. I was kind of glad that Dad didn’t come running at us because he had a sharp knife in one hand and half a carrot in the other. He was wearing an apron over his suit which looked a bit weird. On the other hand, Nana was wearing an...
In all the furniture shifting, the coffee table had been pushed against the wall directly below Mum’s painting. That made it difficult for me to retreat to my favorite place – but not impossible. I sat on the coffee table and slid back to lean my back against the wall. I kicked off my shoes and crossed my legs inside my skirt. Carefully I smoothed out my skirt and made sure that it draped down to completely cover my legs, my ankles and my feet. The material of my skirt stretched between my...
Oil paint is thick and gloopy. It takes ages to dry. If you pile it on thickly enough, it can take weeks to get dry enough so you can handle it without smudging or smearing it. You’re not supposed to put a lacquer coating on an oil painting for at least six months because it’s still drying in all of that time. And even then, it isn’t completely finished – that takes years. Mum told me it’s because the oil doesn’t evaporate like water, it slowly congeals until it gets hard – a bit like fat in...
I let my brain run and stepped back to see where it would go. It was a bit like riding a bicycle down a hill and taking your hands off the handle bars. Then the bicycle keeps rolling down the hill and you feel as if without being guided it should go in weird directions or fall over but it doesn’t – it mostly goes straight. But it goes faster and faster until the wind is racing past your face and blowing your hair out straight behind you. But the bike doesn’t go perfectly straight. Gradually...
I was sitting and thinking about nothing. “Nothing” seemed like a safe topic to think about. The aunts had gone into the living room to watch the rest of the football game. It seemed like an amazingly normal thing to do. I wasn’t ready for normal yet so I stayed in the hallway, sitting and thinking about nothing. To be honest, I was only trying to think about nothing. I wasn’t really succeeding. The problem being that I was angry. I was so very angry that it frightened me. Maybe angry is too...
Priming Peters Perpetual Perversion Priming Peters Perpetual Perversion Priming Peters Perpetual Perversion Say it fast 10 times... As funny as it sounded coming from my lips as I pressed the button to replay the trilogy of messages that Peter left, I heard the desperation in his voice. Begging. It was a melody that I sang myself just a few months ago on Marks cell phone, but only after doing a few previous versions of the...
Ruthie struggled with another issue during March. She realized something she really had not wanted to think about. Increasingly she was attracted to Jen. Whenever the two women were in the room together it was very hard for Ruthie to keep her eyes off her roommate. The two roommates continued their nightly ritual of "unwinding time" at the window. "Unwinding time" was a chance for Jen to relax and look across the Pacific Ocean towards her home in New Zealand. For Ruthie "unwinding...
Introduction: if well received, i have ome ideas for the next few chapters. please let me know what you think and vote. you might also want to have a look at some of my other stories and share your thoughts? As I walked up the long driveway to the house I felt a familiar tingle of excitement. The thrill of the unknown and the prospect of earning some good money always seems to have that effect on me. Every time I start a new job, I tell myself that this time its going to be great, different and...
This time however, was definitely going to be different I told myself as I rang the doorbell on the large front door of what was probably the most luxurious home I had ever seen. A small, drab man in a grey business suit answered the door and raised an eyebrow as he looked at me. ‘good morning, I’m Tom’ I said with my best smile, ‘the new agency nurse?’ ‘come in’ he said, ‘My name is Mr Stevens, I’m Mr Peters’ attorney. I’ll show you around, check all the papers and then you can...
James sat upright on his bed, with his legs crossed and hishands holding his head up. He just stared at the small, red notebook that lay in front of him, this mysterious gift that was granted to him. His own name was engraved on the front. It was almost like it was glowing, beckoning him to open it, to control reality even more. His mind was racing, full of thoughts of Amy, Kirsty and the words written inside the book: ‘Kirsty is going to change her mind and ask me to come over to work on the...
SupernaturalI had myself prepared and ready for john to pick me up with 5 mins to spare. I chose a slightly shorter black lycra skirt., 4 inches above the knee, but respectable enough for the neighbours. .My quarter cup bra was lifting my boobs enough for my nipples to push through my black net top, so I had to put a jacket on for the short walk to the car. I was just beginning to feel the effects of the cider I had been drinking. My pussy was nice and moist, just wet enough to lube my butt...
It was a dark and cold Halloween night and Lydia was walking in an alley outside of her apartment. She was your typical Goth with the white pale skin, black lipstick, and dark mascara. She wore a low-cut black sheer shirt with a red bra underneath that cupped her perky C-cup breasts, and black skinny jeans hugging her every curve. A 21-year-old senior in college and knockout to all straight guys and some lesbian girls, however, she was depressed and alone. Every relationship she had been in...
FantasyJohn Doe was a successful agent in Hollywood. He'd been that for years, and enjoyed the job, although that was mostly due to his client being a sexy female celebrity. He remembered when he first got her and made her a success, and he got no thanks for it. He had a huge crush on her as well, but was rejected time and time again, and after that, well, his client chose to be as bitchy as possible to him. That was about to change, however. He was walking through the woods one day and found a...
Mind Control“I want your project,” Samuel said out loud as the door closed behind him with a loud click. Startled, Edward slowly looked up at Samuel with a look of surprise on his face that was quickly followed by irritation, “Have you been snooping through my notes?” Edward asked him angrily. For a while, Edward had suspected that someone had been rifling through his papers. It wasn’t anything solid, but all too often things felt a little too much out of place. “Well you can’t have it, as you well...
She looked up when she heard the sound of the door open. A middle aged man walked into the shop, carrying a large cardboard box. Clara walked over to greet him. She helped him set the box on the counter and smiled. “Hi! Are you looking to sell?” The man smiled kindly. “Yeah. My mother recently passed away and I was looking to get rid of some old books. No room for them,” he explained, glancing around the shop interestedly. He turned back to Clara. “Sure, we’ll look at these tonight. You can...
A notebook has fallen to planet earth with the ability to change reality. Whatever is written inside changes reality. You can travel through time, change people's fetishes, change laws and rules, change societal norms. Anything you want to become reality can become so. Who will be the lucky person to find this notebook? What will they use it for? They can fulfill their wildest fantasies by just writing in a notebook. They can relive any moment in their life the way they want to live it. The...
Darkness fell. Rick sat at his laptop reading student essays. He heard a rap at his door. "Brenda?" "Rick -- have you seen Roger today?" "Yes ... earlier." "He didn't come home for dinner." "He hasn't left for his conference, yet -- has he?" "Conference?" Brenda asked. "What conference?" Rick sighed. "An economics conference in Philadelphia. Didn't he tell you?" "No but he always waits 'til the last minute to break news like that. He knows it upsets me to think...
Willkommen in Peters Welt. Peter ist ein Typ wie du und ich, nur mit einem Schwanz, der ständig sein Recht fordert. Und so versucht Peter, alles flachzulegen was ihm vors Rohr kommt und einigermaßen fickbar erscheint. Aber nicht daß er jetzt jemand wäre, der jede bespringt. Peter hat schon ein paar Prinzipien und Lebensregeln an die er sich hält, vor allem im Umgang mit Frauen: Alles ab 16 gehört gefickt. (Jungfrauen sind vor ihm nicht sicher ;)) Ficken, die zu wenig Kleidung tragen, dürfen...
[So, is this Exhib, Anal or GROUP?] “So when do the games begin? I’m not here for the gossip, just for the hot, real action.” “Hold your thick horse with both hands, you stud.” replied my wife, Sue. “We promised a good time, but no one said anything about ‘action’, whatever that means to you.” She knew very well what it meant and that at least one of the wives would introduce her pussy to four stiff peters, but she HAD to protest no matter how transparent. “Let’s refill our glasses and listen...
You stare at the writing in the back of your old notebook. Obviously this had to be a prank, right? Things don’t just become reality because you write them in a notebook. Still, it does interest you that you’ve never used the notebook before. Maybe I should try it, just to check, you think, turning back to the first page. Walking back to your office to grab a pen, book still open, you think about what your “check” note should be.
FetishJames had always been extremely awkward in social situations. Being painfully shy, he struggled to keep conversations going with anyone. At the age of eighteen, he was in his final year of sixth form (further education in England) and he knew that in a few months he would be venturing out into the big, scary world of university life. He was quite average in most aspects of his life. He wasn’t too tall or too short and not too overweight, but not exactly the poster boy for physical health. He...
SupernaturalLast week I flew to Tucson upon hearing of my father's death. He'd lived a good life, had been a school-teacher, and had been married for fifty-three years and raised three k**s. Our mother had died six years earlier and he'd continued living in their little duplex in Green Valley, Arizona, surrounded by his books and extensive classical music collection. As neither of my younger brothers could stick around after the funeral, it fell to me to go through and dispose of his possessions and get...
“I’m late.” I yelled. I grabbed my travel mug. I kissed my wife and headed out the door. It was an hour’s drive to work depending on the traffic. I hate being late it’s a good thing I’m the boss. I parked in my spot and took the elevator up to the third floor. My office was at the other end of the floor and I said good morning to staff as I passed. I was just about to enter my rooms when my personnel officer stopped me. “You’ve got a new secretary this morning. She’s been vetted and just needs...
As a hypnotherapist my practice was doing pretty good. People would come in for all kinds of problems like smoking addictions, food addictions, ritual abuse, compulsive behaviors, and just about everything else. I had seen them all, and I knew how to cure them all. My power as a healer was a godsend. People would pay me eighty to a hundred bucks an hour to put them under hypnosis and help them. I would give them some auto suggestions while in a trance and upon waking their minds would do the...
Elsewhere in the mansion, a Shadowcat hunted. Moving with more stealth then any normal cat could hope to imitate, she went from the first floor to the second floor and finally up to the attic on the western side of the mansion. The eastern attic was assigned to Ororo Monroe, who had turned it into arboretum, which was allowed by the massive skylights in the roof of the mansion. The western attic was turned into a large studio apartment. The only piece of furniture was a very large, custom...
The young woman walked around the corner and willed herself visible, before walking back to her father. This time he looked at her. “I could’ve sworn you were right in front of me,” he said with a smile. “What’s up, Honey?” “Oh, I just forgot to say hi to you… so hi,” Clara said awkwardly. “Okay,” he said, looking confused. “Hi.” Clara nodded and went back to her room. She closed the door and leaned against it, trying to slow her heart. She had a magic notebook. She could do anything....
James sat upright on his bed, with his legs crossed and hishands holding his head up. He just stared at the small, red notebook that lay in front of him, this mysterious gift that was granted to him. His own name was engraved on the front. It was almost like it was glowing, beckoning him to open it, to control reality even more. His mind was racing, full of thoughts of Amy, Kirsty and the words written inside the book: ‘Kirsty is going to change her mind and ask me to come over to work on the...
I first met Peter twenty eight years ago. He picked me up in a pub where pretty young boys went to be picked up by men who had a preference for them.He got into nervous conversation with me and bought me a drink. I was dressed more like a girl than a boy and being the swinging sixties I was wearing make up. He couldn't resist stroking me bum as we talked and we moved to a secluded booth. Peter was most concerned that I had a fully functioning cock and that I could cum. I suggested he had a feel...
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salomeee Notebook I: Close encounter Chapter 4 Close to where Harry grew up is a road that leads to a place called Horseshoe Bay. There's a highway up high if you're in a hurry, but the low road is slow and winding right along the water. As one drives out to Horseshoe Bay the water is on your left. Vancouver harbor is back behind you and its mostly open water to your left out in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Just before Horseshoe Bay there's a little cove...
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salomeee Notebook I: Close encounter Chapter 1 It was almost a year since I had moved to Boston, and I wasn't yet fully engaged with the city. It is really a nice and cosmopolitan town and I had lots of things at hand that should have been enough to make me happy: several art galleries beside the one I was working for, museums, exhibitions, and other art schools like the one I was attending to. I felt however that something was lacking in my life, and...
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salome E Notebook I: Close encounter Chapter 2 It was breaking dawn outside, a dim sunlight starting to paint the streets around the neighborhood, and it was quite cold. I had my clothes just hanging over my body, but I didn't stop until a few blocks away. There were nobody around anyway, a lonesome area and being so early in the morning, so I just walked on and on until I found the first open cafe about two hours later, maybe. It was just to the side of...
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salomeee Notebook I: Close encounter Chapter 3 Boston was a different city when I got back. Indeed the world was different. It was like I had reborn in a different era. Everything was transformed, of course, by my own inner change. It took a few days for me to realise what was actually happening. Maybe it took even longer for me to stop fretting I'd wake up and find out everything was a wild fantasy. But I finally convinced myself it was not. This was...
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salomeee Notebook II: Full time slave Chapter 5 After many days without sleeping, I decided what my future should be. I spent a couple weeks arranging all my job and family affairs, selling my apartment, my old car and everything of value I had. I opened a canadian bank account and dropped all the money there. It was not a big fortune, but enough to help me live for a few years with a cheap job, if I could stop spending money in trivial things....
Notebooks on Girl-Making by Salomeee Notebook II: Full time slave Chapter 6 It was a rainy Sunday, and I couldn't agree with anybody to let me do her shift at the Cafe, so there I was, alone and bored. I wasn't at home very much, so I didn't even have a TV. I tried to keep sleeping until later, but I couldn't. I felt somehow nostalgic and a bit depressed. You know how bad Sundays get when you're alone and had nothing to do. I didn't expect to see you, either, as I know you...
We are finishing up a rehearsal for our small group piece for term two. We are rehearsing in St. Peter’s Room 2. It’s in the basement room of the church extension. It has crazy purple carpet and a very low ceiling. The best thing about this group is that my girlfriend Jess is in it. We are talking and taking more time to get ready to leave than the other group members. The others leave fairly quickly leaving us alone. I lean in and kiss Jess lightly. She pushes against me and kisses me back...
We are finishing up a rehearsal for our small group piece for term two. We are rehearsing in St. Peter's Room 2. It’s in the basement room of the church extension. It has crazy purple carpet and a very low ceiling. The best thing about this group is that my girlfriend Jess is in it. We are talking and taking more time to get ready to leave than the other group members. The others leave fairly quickly leaving us alone. I lean in and kiss Jess lightly. She pushes against me and kisses me back...
ExhibitionismThis is public. You're walking through the mall when you notice a run down shop. Curious you enter. It's mainly populated with stationary for a student. You notice two note books which seem to pull you in. When you read the titles they say. 'Book of creation' and 'Book of life'. You buy them and go home. You open the notebooks and they each have their 'powers' written in them. Book of creation- If you write the name of any inanimate object it will appear. You may also add properties that have...
It was a time of horrible raids by terrible marrauding hordes, which caused untold misery, fear and poverty in all of Pelopones. It was a time when Xena and Gabrielle were needed by all the towns, before it is too late, but she was nowhere to be found. The century before had been a good time for all, under the Cooperation Accord of Olympia, there was piece between all the polises, and Xena could concentrate on petty crime and feuding Gods. But now Xena had been on a mission in Asia for years,...
‘Oh yeah! Oh yeah, fuck you feel so good. Love your fucking ass, and it loves me back. Hey! Are you jerking off down there? I told you very specifically that you are my bitch and that you are not allowed to do that without my permission.’ ‘Nnng sorry Keith, I want to be a good boyfriend for you but when you fuck me, I just lose my mind and my sex drive takes over!’ ‘Your cock is a false idol, boy, getting fucked is what you love most.’ Keith pushed his pet down and then flipped him over. ‘I’m...
James had always been extremely awkward in social situations. Being painfully shy, he struggled to keep conversations going with anyone. At the age of eighteen, he was in his final year of sixth form (further education in England) and he knew that in a few months he would be venturing out into the big, scary world of university life. He was quite average in most aspects of his life. He wasn’t too tall or too short and not too overweight, but not exactly the poster boy for physical health. He...
"Oh yeah! Oh yeah, fuck you feel so good. Love your fucking ass, and it loves me back. Hey! Are you jerking off down there? I told you very specifically that you are my bitch and that you are not allowed to do that without my permission.""Nnng sorry Keith, I want to be a good boyfriend for you but when you fuck me, I just lose my mind and my sex drive takes over!""Your cock is a false idol, boy, getting fucked is what you love most." Keith pushed his pet down and then flipped him over. "I’m...
To: Curriculum Committee, Capton Springs High School From: Holly Rennick, Language Arts Subject: Proposed Academic Elective To further our CSHS Language Arts curriculum, an advanced elective, “Composition about Ourselves,” is proposed, relevant to our students’ age, and as a gateway to multidisciplinary inclusive skills. This memo suggests the potential breadth of such a course. A subcommittee will pursue the details. With each point I include a brief transcript of how the topic might be...
(Author's note: I didn't write this, one of you folks, my readers, did. It is the transcription of part of a TV report when word starts leaking out of this amazing Sisterhood that has descended upon a university in Alabama. Don't get confused. This vignette is a bit into the future compared with the actual story line. You'll see some things that haven't happened yet. It's also good to keep in mind that when you're tagged by the media for an interview or an article, they get a lot of...
Eyes a bit bleary, Izzy looked at her brother, who was actually being nice for a change, and took the cup from his outstretched hand gratefully. Taking a sip, seeing if he got the cream and sugar right, she sighed as her morning drug hit her tongue. Sighing a bit in immediate satisfaction, she took another sip as she went and collapsed into one of the chairs at the kitchen table. “Fuggg ... yes ... oh, you too, remember? You were like out of it when I came in, zonked out standing up right...
Dinner was its usual bit of chaos, everyone actually at the table for the first time in about a week. Usually one or the other of the girls had an activity, or Alex was out ‘studying’, but tonight, they were all home. It had been a few days since his first, (admittedly inadvertent) trial of what Alex had just taken to calling “The Formula”. This was partly because he had felt he should go over the recipe with a fine toothed comb since he was, after all, feeding it to the women in his family....
Getting ready for school the next morning, Abby walked to the bathroom without bothering to put on any clothes. She just did not see the point. It’s not like she was in public where someone could get upset, or there were laws. She was in her house, and everyone had seen her at one time or another. Besides, she was seriously considering asking her mother to take her to that Red White and Blue beach she had heard about. Everyone seemed to be ok with being naked there, and it was not one of...
Abby was excited to go swimming, and to see Kaylie. Not sure she could explain her new home life activities, she nevertheless was curious to see her friend, and maybe have some more fun ... though simply thinking about that made her feel a bit funny. Maybe she would laugh or not be wanting to, ya know, now that she’d gone on a real date and everything. Lost in her own world, she did not pay much attention to her brother, other than to be aware that he was driving. She’d found her swimsuit...
Everything went so fast and furious from there. With Riki’s heaving chest partially exposed, he was eager to get even more of her revealed, for so long had he fantasized about a moment just like this. He needed to take in as much of it as possible. Drunk on the excitement, John was having difficulty undoing the rest of Riki’s shirt. He pulled her button off and it clattered to the floor. The small room echoed with their moans, and as he pulled at her clothing, Riki aided him, eager to have...
“Going to show off a bit again, Gwen?” he asked pulling Izzy’s hand before she could entirely get away and drew downward thinking to pull her down on the bed beside him. “I’d like to see more of you,” he encouraged her, his eyes as hungry to watch her as they were to watch Izzy. Standing up, she moved nervously to her dresser and turned back around. “Um, I don’t have anything like that ... I mean, I got another top ... and” she paused, her mind reviewing just what else they had bought that...
The heated water sent pleasant steam all through the enclosed shower, as well as filling the confines of the communal bathroom. Abby was lost in memory, the pressure of the water jets as she sprayed between her legs adding to her imagined picture of Kaylie, once again touching her, and ... even more. She was thinking such naughty thoughts, of Kaylie on her knees, touching, and kissing her ... there. Gasping, she felt her clit throb. To answer that need, she ran the water over and over in a...
Standing naked in front of the mirror and critically looking over her body, Riki traced her stretch marks with one finger, feeling the altered texture, remembering the cause with a smile. She had never been as happy as when she had been carrying Gwen inside of her, it had been a magical time. With a smile, she critically looked at her trimmed pussy hair and felt confident that she would not be exposing anything if she got herself a bikini, as Alex seemed so insistent upon. Shaking her head as...