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A female Buddha, the way she sat, not love making, that some other. Cross-legged, he remembered her, on that blue sofa, the Mahler playing from her hi-fi, her oval face, soft features, that loud laughter, the Glaswegian accent cutting through the attempted English tones. The bottle of whisky opened, the glasses filled, supped, sipped or what ever the word is, it happened. It’s no good taking some people out of the slums, she said, you need to take the slum out of the people. She looked then nothing like the former nun she had been, he thought, perfume invading the nose, her hair piled in some out of date Beehive, some French queen prior to revolution, she sat, glass in hand, other plump hand toughing his thigh, rubbing her fingers up and down. She wanted to stir his pecker, wanted motion through his jeans. He listened to Mahler, gazing beyond her at the painting on the wall, that tat she collected. Her hand rubbed higher, her soft tones suggestive, her talk of slums and slum dwellers put aside. An evening of *** ahead, in bed or on the sofa, with the female Buddha, her plump ******* thighs, arms, maybe lost there amongst the folds of flesh. She despised his Marxian philosophy, loved his ****** prowess, his proud perfect pecker. He loved her whisky, her soft to touch skin, her spread legs to allow him in. The female Buddha gone now, her heart gave out, he was told, and looking back, years after years, his youth misspent at times, too much ***** *** and moral lack, he had moved on, improved, but loved to smile and look back.
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Apr 13, 2013
Apr 13, 2013 at 2:57 AM UTC
FEMALE BUDDHA.
A female Buddha, the way she sat, not love making, that some other. Cross-legged, he remembered her, on that blue sofa, the Mahler playing from her hi-fi, her oval face, soft features, that loud laughter, the Glaswegian accent cutting through the attempted English tones. The bottle of whisky opened, the glasses filled, supped, sipped or what ever the word is, it happened. It’s no good taking some people out of the slums, she said, you need to take the slum out of the people. She looked then nothing like the former nun she had been, he thought, perfume invading the nose, her hair piled in some out of date Beehive, some French queen prior to revolution, she sat, glass in hand, other plump hand toughing his thigh, rubbing her fingers up and down. She wanted to stir his pecker, wanted motion through his jeans. He listened to Mahler, gazing beyond her at the painting on the wall, that tat she collected. Her hand rubbed higher, her soft tones suggestive, her talk of slums and slum dwellers put aside. An evening of *** ahead, in bed or on the sofa, with the female Buddha, her plump ******* thighs, arms, maybe lost there amongst the folds of flesh. She despised his Marxian philosophy, loved his ****** prowess, his proud perfect pecker. He loved her whisky, her soft to touch skin, her spread legs to allow him in. The female Buddha gone now, her heart gave out, he was told, and looking back, years after years, his youth misspent at times, too much ***** *** and moral lack, he had moved on, improved, but loved to smile and look back.
terry-collett
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Apr 13, 2013
Apr 13, 2013 at 2:57 AM UTC
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