A literotic sexstories: THE AMOROUS ADVENTURES OF JULIANA L., PART 5 by Anna_Roid ,
I’m not one of those women who normally like having sex for the sake of fucking only. After all, if it were that I might as well make love exclusively with my fingers or a dildo (which I do almost every night when I’m not with a partner, anyway). But there was a time in my life when I went through a phase of craving sex, and sex alone, without any emotional entanglement but at the same time with another human being.This is that story.
One evening, I recall, I had just got home to the little flat I rented (a much smaller affair than the one I own now), stripped naked as usual, and was actually in the bath when she called on my mobile. I hadn’t yet then thought of assigning a ringtone to her (a mistake I remedied speedily afterwards), and ordered me to drive to the airport. According to her, an important business contact was supposed to arrive by a late flight, and he needed to be met, dined, and escorted to his hotel.
Now not only was I on my own, and not company, time, I knew – since I bloody well ran the place – that there was no “important business contact” expected. I wanted to tell her to shove it and collect him herself if she wanted to. But if I had, I would have been looking for a new job before the week was out, and I wasn’t ready to look for one right then. Not yet.
(Later I realised what had happened. The Bitch had invited one of her boyfriends from out of town to visit her, but forgotten that she’d already fixed up a tryst with one of her other boyfriends for the night in question. So she fobbed him off with some excuse – probably that she had to be out of town on work, a sudden emergency, don’t you know – and sent me to pick him up.)
It was a winter night, cold and rainy, and the airport was quite the most cheerless I have ever seen in my entire life. And after waiting for a solid hour the plane was diverted to another city until the morning due to weather, so I had to drive back again, thoroughly chilled, out of humour, and ready to punch the Bitch right in the clitoris if she called again. Fortunately she didn’t, also proving said “business contact” was nothing of the sort.
That was what working for the Bitch was like.
Then one day I developed a pain in my tummy. I thought I was developing an ulcer or maybe cancer (do not attempt self-diagnosis from medical websites, people!), and when I couldn’t bear it any longer I decided to visit a gastroenterologist. I didn’t know any gastroenterologists, and in the end I just picked one online, because there was a photo of him on his website, and he looked sympathetic, while the rest were hard-faced women or men who looked like elderly bloodhounds with dyspepsia that they didn’t know how to cure.
Let me call him Dylan, because I can’t conceive of another name further from his real one. When I called him to make an appointment he told me to come over right away – “I wouldn’t want you to get second thoughts, would I?” – and told me that since his nurse had taken an unexpected day off, I should bring along someone if I felt I needed a chaperone. I did not need a chaperone, so I went alone.
Dylan’s office was on the ground floor of a commercial building, between a furniture dealership and a hardware store. I must have gone past this building many times without knowing he was there – the only announcement he deigned to make to the world was a small bronze-coloured plate with his name and degrees. The waiting room was empty. When I entered he opened the inner door to the consulting room and invited me right in.
Dylan was fairly tall, well built, probably a year or two older than me, with a shaved head and a clipped goatee. He had a friendly smile and an accent which I couldn’t identify; later I discovered that he’d spent his childhood abroad and his accent was leavened by that of the country he’d grown up in. He checked my blood pressure and temperature, asked a few questions, and then asked me to get on his examination table.
“Naked?” I asked, just to lighten the atmosphere. ”I thought medical examinations were always done naked.”
“Well, perhaps I’m not a doctor then,” he said with a grin. “For now, just take your top off.” He didn’t need to ask if I had a bra on. I’m a built girl, and I’d be jiggling all over if I hadn’t been wearing one. He bent over my stomach, prodding and poking and asking if it hurt, and then he stepped back and looked at me with a slightly strange expression on his face.
“Are you sleeping well?” he asked.
“Well…” to be honest, the Bitch had been invading my dreams of late. “Not always.”
“And have you also been getting pain in your jaws in the morning, when you wake up?”
For a moment I goggled at him. I had absolutely been getting pain in my jaw joints when I woke, but it went away when I got up and I had forgotten it. “Well,” I asked, “what is it? How long have I got left to live?”
He grinned again. “It’s not terminal, except in that life is a fatal disease. Since I have nothing much to do today – as you can see, I’m not exactly overburdened with patients – can I take you out to lunch? We can discuss your case over some food.”
“Isn’t that supposed to be unethical or something, going out with your patients?”
“I won’t tell if you don’t.”
So we went out to a restaurant nearby. It had a faux Afghan decor, I recall, done up like a cross between a village hut and a cave, and the doorman wore a beard, turban, and what’s known as an “Afghani suit”. But the food – I assume it was supposed to be authentically Afghan, I’ve never had any – was surprisingly good; flat bread so thin as to be almost translucent, mutton swimming in butter and spices, and sherbets of rose water over crushed ice.
After we’d eaten for a while, Dylan sat back and stared at me until I was compelled to look up and into his eyes. “Do you feel a bit better now? Relaxed?”
I blinked. “I suppose. Why that question in particular?”
“Because, Juliana, you don’t really have anything physically wrong with you. I could of course order a lot of highly expensive tests – ultrasounds and CT scans, endoscopy, you name it- but though they’d cost your insurance company a pretty penny, I can tell you they’d be a waste of time. There isn’t anything wrong with you except stress.”
I took a quick gulp of sherbet and he waited until I’d finished choking.
“I’m right, aren’t I? What is it? Family? A boyfriend? Your job?”
“Ah…I don’t exactly have a family. There’s only my mother and I’m estranged from her. No boyfriend, right at the moment. So it must be the job.”
He reached out and touched my hand with the tips of his fingers. “Bad boss, is it?”
“You have no idea.” And I found myself telling him all about the Bitch, and how she made my life miserable. “Even at this very moment, she might call me to make some preposterous demand.”
“And I suppose changing jobs is out of the question?”
“It is, right now. I need the experience to get a better job, and I need to be able to leave on my terms, when I want, not when she wants me to. In other words I can’t get fired.”
“Ah. Well, I will prescribe you some medicine against acidity and irritable bowel syndrome, that’s going to help, but in the end you’re going to need to find some way to reduce stress, and I can’t do anything to help you about that. Professionally, at least.”
“Professionally?” I was intrigued. “How about non-professionally?”
“Um…how would you like to go out on a motorcycle ride with me?”
I blinked, astonished. “Don’t tell me, you’re a biker?”
“Well, yes, but if you’re imagining that I’m a Hells Angel or anything like that, forget it. Not all of us bikers are patch-wearing criminals, you know. I just ride a bike for fun. But you’re welcome to come along. It’s a hell of a stress buster.”
I thought for a moment. I had not been on a motorcycle for many years. “All right. When?”
He grinned. “You need de-stressing, I need to get my mind off the fact that I haven’t been overburdened with patients today. So how about right now?”
I swallowed a piece of mutton. I needed to swallow, anyway. “Fine. Let’s go.”
His motorcycle was in the basement car park of the same building in which he had his clinic. I regarded it with some trepidation.
“You won’t crack my head open, will you?”
“I always have a spare crash helmet.” He unlocked a bulging pannier and took it out, It was bright red. “Try it on, it should fit you.”
“How come you carry a spare helmet?” I asked, buckling it on. “Do you take your women patients on rides often?”
“I only wish I did.” He pressed a button and the engine rumbled into life. “Get on.”
I don’t recall what model his motorcycle was. It was long and low and red and black, and its engine rumbled so that I could feel it at the junction of my thighs. And as we leaned around bends, I found myself, unbidden, throwing my arms around him, and hugging tight. He didn’t seem to mind it.
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