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Across the quiet, dingy pub you call the waitress, lingering across her form, then, passing judgment coldly look away. She wears a pendant round her neck, it rests between two ample ******* Her hair is blonde and likely bleached. And as she turns to walk towards the bar - you see her shoes are high. Unsteady with her tray and fashion pumps she stumbles, shows a ladder in her tights. So when a bloke gives chase you’re not surprised she caught his eye, you’re not surprised to see him slap her thigh. She stumbles to the bar, and tries to laugh it off, to hide her face, her cheeks are red, so while he smirks to friends and winks at her, she looks toward the floor. Then smugly you remark, ‘I’m not surprised. She asked for it. She’s showing too much skin.’ Your face serene, you stroke your crucifix, ‘no self respecting girl would dress like that, she’ll have herself to blame if she gets ***** And in response, it swells against my teeth, I try to bite my tongue, to hold it back, But you have wound me far too tight for that. ‘How can you say she has herself to blame? When she got dressed this morning did she ask for this? And what of him is it his right to put his hands on who and what he likes, and you – you sit and smirk with your contempt you blame her, though she didn’t give consent, these notions you perpetuate, if she gets raped, it you and yours she’ll have to blame,’ Embarrassed now, I know I’ve said too much I taper off, unsure of my intent. My friend sits icy in her chair. Apart, we stare, in careful study of our plates. And as the waitress makes her slow approach, to ask us if we want desserts - we flush. Our indecision heavy in the air.
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Nov 4, 2013
Nov 4, 2013 at 3:18 PM UTC
The Exchange
Across the quiet, dingy pub you call the waitress, lingering across her form, then, passing judgment coldly look away. She wears a pendant round her neck, it rests between two ample ******* Her hair is blonde and likely bleached. And as she turns to walk towards the bar - you see her shoes are high. Unsteady with her tray and fashion pumps she stumbles, shows a ladder in her tights. So when a bloke gives chase you’re not surprised she caught his eye, you’re not surprised to see him slap her thigh. She stumbles to the bar, and tries to laugh it off, to hide her face, her cheeks are red, so while he smirks to friends and winks at her, she looks toward the floor. Then smugly you remark, ‘I’m not surprised. She asked for it. She’s showing too much skin.’ Your face serene, you stroke your crucifix, ‘no self respecting girl would dress like that, she’ll have herself to blame if she gets ***** And in response, it swells against my teeth, I try to bite my tongue, to hold it back, But you have wound me far too tight for that. ‘How can you say she has herself to blame? When she got dressed this morning did she ask for this? And what of him is it his right to put his hands on who and what he likes, and you – you sit and smirk with your contempt you blame her, though she didn’t give consent, these notions you perpetuate, if she gets raped, it you and yours she’ll have to blame,’ Embarrassed now, I know I’ve said too much I taper off, unsure of my intent. My friend sits icy in her chair. Apart, we stare, in careful study of our plates. And as the waitress makes her slow approach, to ask us if we want desserts - we flush. Our indecision heavy in the air.
verdana
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Nov 4, 2013
Nov 4, 2013 at 3:18 PM UTC
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