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People build their own prisons, she said, build up their own walls. He said nothing, knowing not what to say. He liked just that she spoke, her voice, the tone and timbre of it. As she spoke he watched her lips move, the way her tongue danced inside her mouth, upon teeth. Mental wards are full of people who have totally entombed themselves, she added, placing one of the sandwiches she’d bought inside her mouth, while she spoke. The park bench was hard, there was a smell of spring in the air, he watched her chew, now silent, her mouth closed, masticating. Her silence drew his attention to the way she sat, one leg crossed over the other, the black shoe and foot dangling. The lower length of stockinged leg, showing, the dark skirt just over the knee, nothing else to see. He lifted his gaze to her cloth hidden thighs, the way they disappeared into her waist, slim, drawn in. Ones I used to see on my tour of the wards had drooling mouths and cross eyes, she said, swallowing the small sandwich bits. He moved his eyes from her waist to her impressive **** let his eyes settle, rested them there, as if they were weary travellers after a long journey. And the smell, she added, reeked of ***** everywhere one put one’s nose. He wanted to lay his head between or upon or even beneath those beautiful ******* She jawed on, he wasn’t listening anymore, he was engrossed in a different story, an actor in a different play. She took another sandwich and was silent again, staring at him, taking his measure, unaware, no doubt, of his silent pleasure.
0
Jan 30, 2013
Jan 30, 2013 at 3:03 AM UTC
ON A PARK BENCH.
People build their own prisons, she said, build up their own walls. He said nothing, knowing not what to say. He liked just that she spoke, her voice, the tone and timbre of it. As she spoke he watched her lips move, the way her tongue danced inside her mouth, upon teeth. Mental wards are full of people who have totally entombed themselves, she added, placing one of the sandwiches she’d bought inside her mouth, while she spoke. The park bench was hard, there was a smell of spring in the air, he watched her chew, now silent, her mouth closed, masticating. Her silence drew his attention to the way she sat, one leg crossed over the other, the black shoe and foot dangling. The lower length of stockinged leg, showing, the dark skirt just over the knee, nothing else to see. He lifted his gaze to her cloth hidden thighs, the way they disappeared into her waist, slim, drawn in. Ones I used to see on my tour of the wards had drooling mouths and cross eyes, she said, swallowing the small sandwich bits. He moved his eyes from her waist to her impressive **** let his eyes settle, rested them there, as if they were weary travellers after a long journey. And the smell, she added, reeked of ***** everywhere one put one’s nose. He wanted to lay his head between or upon or even beneath those beautiful ******* She jawed on, he wasn’t listening anymore, he was engrossed in a different story, an actor in a different play. She took another sandwich and was silent again, staring at him, taking his measure, unaware, no doubt, of his silent pleasure.
terry-collett
Written by
Jan 30, 2013
Jan 30, 2013 at 3:03 AM UTC
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