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I thought of Milka most of the evening while listening to the Elvis LP or watching TV, or later in bed next to my younger brother him asleep, and I under the covers with my small white transistor radio playing Radio Luxembourg. I thought about the first time we had *** in the woods behind the farm house where she lived with her parents and brothers, how we lay on my jacket in amongst bushes, birds overhead, branches with the sun blinking through at us, sounds of traffic going past on the farm road now and then, and us lying there exhausted after our first effort, and she said: Think that's how it's done. I said nothing (not wanting to say yes it is or she would say: how do you know?) just lay there watching her breathing deep: suppose it is, I said eventually. She smiled: now I know when other girls say about it and probably don't do it: anyway that I have, she said. The radio was playing some American woman singing about breaking a heart and not going to Heaven if you do. My brother stirred; and I turned off the radio and lay in the dark musing on Milka, and what she called our *** game lark.
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Nov 14, 2016
Nov 14, 2016 at 4:33 AM UTC
*** GAME LARK 1964.
I thought of Milka most of the evening while listening to the Elvis LP or watching TV, or later in bed next to my younger brother him asleep, and I under the covers with my small white transistor radio playing Radio Luxembourg. I thought about the first time we had *** in the woods behind the farm house where she lived with her parents and brothers, how we lay on my jacket in amongst bushes, birds overhead, branches with the sun blinking through at us, sounds of traffic going past on the farm road now and then, and us lying there exhausted after our first effort, and she said: Think that's how it's done. I said nothing (not wanting to say yes it is or she would say: how do you know?) just lay there watching her breathing deep: suppose it is, I said eventually. She smiled: now I know when other girls say about it and probably don't do it: anyway that I have, she said. The radio was playing some American woman singing about breaking a heart and not going to Heaven if you do. My brother stirred; and I turned off the radio and lay in the dark musing on Milka, and what she called our *** game lark.
A BOY MUSES ON A GIRL IN 1964.
TerryCollett
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Nov 14, 2016
Nov 14, 2016 at 4:33 AM UTC
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