Literotic asexstories – Escape from Cimarron by NotWise,NotWise
Steve rolled to a stop at the hotel where, not long ago, gold miners rubbed shoulders with gun slingers, land barons, and thieves. Dusty pickups lined up along the street, and a row of Harleys leaned on their stands where travelers once tethered their rides.
The clerk worked behind a battered wooden counter darkened with time. “Check out’s at one,” he said and handed Steve a key. He didn’t have much to say.
Steve bounced his bag on his bed and found a seat at the bar. “Rye,” he told the barkeep. “Straight up.” He glanced over his shoulder. A blonde with curly hair piled on her head wiped her hands on her apron and worked a dimly-lit room–bikers in leathers and bandannas on one side, and cowboys in black hats and bluejeans on the other.
The bartender set a shot glass in front of Steve with one hand and added a glass of water with the other. He picked up his dish towel and started drying glasses while the elk’s head mounted above the mirror watched over his shoulder.
“That ragtop caddy out there–that yours?”
“’57 Eldorado,” Steve said. “Picked her up just to drive her here.”
“Ain’t seen a car like that but in parades–you know, with beauty queens waving from the back. Where you comin’ from?”
“New Guinea.” Steve sniffed at his shot then slammed it. He put the glass down, braced himself, and a shudder went through his shoulders. “Damn!”
The waitress set her tray on the bar. She hopped onto the stool beside Steve and asked, “What’s in New Guinea?”
“This is Josie,” the bartender said. Josie held up four fingers on one hand and three on the other and he set up seven shots–three with Jacks and four with Cuervo.
Josie found Steve watching. “Bourbon for the cowboys. Tequila for the bikers,” she said.
“There’s a gold mine in New Guinea,” Steve said. “I got out when the natives got restless.”
“They might be gettin’ restless here.” Josie picked up her tray and Steve watched her little skirt sway on her way to the tables.
“Best knockers in town,” the bartender said. “Not that you can tell from this side.”
“Hit me again,” Steve said.
The barkeep filled Steve’s shot glass and spilled in a little extra. “New Guinea. Ain’t that a long way from here?”
“I travel some.” Steve tipped his glass to the keep. “Columbia next. But first I’m gonna see my kid sister graduate.”
Josie climbed back onto her stool. “Sure you didn’t get your dates mixed up? High school graduation was last week.”
Steve took a lingering look down Josie’s top. She straightened her back and made sure the ruffles didn’t hide his view. “Good for tips. What’s your name, stranger?”
“Cox. Steve Cox. She’s graduating from the convent school.”
The barkeep scratched his head. “There’s a convent school?”
“You know,” Josie said. “You see them nuns come to town, but mostly they keep to themselves.”
A big laugh, loud and mean, came over Steve’s shoulder. Someone bellowed Josie’s name and she slipped off the stool. “Look,” she said, with her hand on Steve’s bulging bicep, “if you see me duck out the back, that means things in here is goin’ south.”
Steve spread his elbows on the bar and kept an eye on the mirror. This time he took the rye a little slower.
A chair hit the floor, and a biker squared up on a cowboy. The biker snarled, “Some respect for the little lady.”
Josie gave a little “Eep!” and headed for the back door.
The cowboy that stood up to face the biker looked like he wrestled steers for the fun of it. He tipped his hat back as if he might have something to say, but then slammed a right cross into the biker’s jaw. The biker’s head snapped to the side, but he dove at the cowboy’s chest and knocked him over the table.
The barkeep pulled a sawed-off shotgun from under the cash register while the cowboys and bikers swung fists and chairs. He checked the breech and closed the gun. “Just gonna sit there?”
“Not my fight.” A chair hit the stool where Josie had been, and a biker threw a cowboy against the bar. The cowboy lurched into Steve, and Steve’s whiskey splashed on the bar.
“Where’d you get your manners?” Steve pushed him away, and the cowboy took a blind swing that glanced off Steve’s shoulder.
“That’s it,” Steve said. He shoved the cowboy back into the fight, and followed him in.
Steve caught a cowboy who stumbled into him and shoved him over a table. He ducked haymakers and turned, and he found himself back-to-back with a big biker. “We good?” he asked. “I’m Cox.”
“Bear,” the biker answered, and they took on anyone who dared–until the barkeep pumped his shotgun and blasted a round into the timbers overhead. The bikers and the cowboys were showered with dust and debris.
Steve caught sight of the clock over the door. “Gotta meet a nun!” he said, and stumbled out past the Harleys and the pickups. He straightened his back and brushed grit off his shirt.
A flag pole marked the post office just across the road. That’s where he needed to be, but there wasn’t a nun in sight until an old two-seater jeep skittered around the corner and rattled to a stop in a little cloud of dust.
“I’m Sister Clarice,” The nun said. She hiked up her black tunic and climbed out of the jeep. “You’re Steve Cox? Sorry I’m late, but it took a prayer and a kick to get Betsy started.”
Sister Clarice walked around the jeep and gave Steve a close look. “I see the family resemblance.” She touched her fingers to Steve’s broad shoulder then pulled her hand back. “And differences. You look like you’ve been in a fight.” She turned around, bent over Betsy’s door, and came back with an envelope. “This is from Nita.”
“Thanks for all you’ve done–getting Nita’s letters out to me.” Steve tore the envelope and unfolded the letter inside. He held it up in the sunset’s last light to read, and he barely heard Clarice.
“Nothing your sister had to say would have reached you if I didn’t bring them to town and mail them. Mother Superior screens all the outgoing mail. ”
Steve’s voice crackled with anger. “She says she can’t leave. Someone named ‘Father Thomas’ is keeping her here.”
Clarice watched the barkeep toss one cowboy out of the bar and then another and said, “We should go somewhere else. You have a room?”
“Second floor,” Steve motioned toward the hotel, and Sister Clarice dug into Betsy again and came up with a first aid kit.
“Take me there.” She tucked her hand around Steve’s arm and pulled herself close. “I’ll clean those cuts for you.”
The clerk behind the desk watched Steve lead Sister Clarice through the lobby, and Steve whispered so he wouldn’t hear. “Taking the barmaid to my room would feel normal. This is kinda awkward.”
“Just unlock the door,” Clarice peeked at Steve from under the edge of her black veil and a little smile curled her lips.
Steve closed the door behind them and sat down on the end of the bed while Clarice wet a washcloth in the sink. She held the cloth in one hand and lifted his jaw so he looked up at her. “Tell me why you’re here. I know Nita’s story. Tell me yours.”
“Nita was a sassy kid. Our step dad couldn’t handle her.” He winced a little while Clarice scrubbed at his cheek. He didn’t have anywhere else to put his hands, so he rested them on her hips. “He found your school, sent her away, and tried to forget about her.”
“She was mad at everybody when she got here,” Clarice said. “Your dad, the church, the world.” Clarice peeled Steve’s hand off her hip, stepped back a little, and scrubbed at his gashed knuckles. “She was mad at everybody but you.”
“I didn’t forget her. I saw her every year when y’all let me, but that was just for Christmas Mass. Then it was hard to come back from New Guinea, or Rwanda, or Borneo.”
“Nita stopped being mad,” Clarice said. “She started being frustrated, and then she kind of gave up.” She wrapped Steve’s hands with gauze. “But she memorized every word you sent her, and she read them to me. You were her world.”
“It’s time for me to take her back.” Steve watched Clarice lean close again and turn her attention to the line of his jaw.
“Back to where?” she asked.
“To town. To university.” Steve watched Sister Clarice and lifted his hand up from her waist. Her tit filled his hand. Her nipple thrust out under the fabric of her tunic. “Then maybe I’ll go to hell, the way this is going.”
Clarice laughed in Steve’s ear. She leaned on his shoulder and reached to the bulge in the front of his jeans. “Being a man isn’t a cardinal sin.”
“But lust is.” Steve unbuckled his belt and his hard cock sprang up.
“Deus meus,” Sister Clarice said. “Nita didn’t tell me about this!” She knelt between Steve’s legs and wrapped a hand around his missile. She slid her grip down to the hilt of his shaft then wrapped her other hand around it. His cock stood out above both of her fists. Its veins bulged, and a drop of clear pre-cum trickled over its smooth head.
“Suck it,” Steve said. He tucked his hand under Clarice’s veil to the back of her wimple, and pulled her mouth to his throbbing cock. She resisted long enough to catch her breath then opened her mouth wide, and her lips stretched to wrap his thick shaft.
Sister Clarice engulfed Steve’s cock in her mouth’s wet warmth. Her tongue caressed him. She took him to the back of her mouth and slowly out again. She kissed his balls and slipped her tongue up along the length of his shaft.
Steve fell back on the mattress, and Clarice sent thrills through his tight muscles. Her veil spread over his lap. Her crucifix swung between his thighs, and her hot breath heated his balls. Clarice’s lips, her tongue, her soft hands flooded his mind with excitement, and pressure built in Steve’s groin until he couldn’t stand it.
Clarice grunted through her nose and Steve’s cock pulsed in her hands. His orgasm overwhelmed him. He arched his back and pumped his cum into her mouth–one blinding contraction after another until his empty balls ached.
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