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It was the summer of love, at least that's what they said. There were guys with long hair and beards and beads, with wide trousers, and loud shirts, and girls with long hair, and dresses like nuns, or short skirts, showing off their not so good legs or thighs. There was Hendricks, Beatles and Stones and playing, music loud, live. Julie was out for the day; the hospital quacks, giving her a day pass, no shooting up, no pill popping. She met Ben in Trafalgar Square, tight skirt and top, hair held in a ponytail, bright eyed, big smile. He was by the fountains having a smoke, eyeing the girls, listening to some long haired guy strum a guitar, his skinny girlfriend doing a dance, her bony legs looking breakable, **** non existent. Been here long? Julie said. No, just a few moments, he lied, not wanting to give her reasons to moan or row. She wanted to go for a beer. So he took her to the bar off Charing Cross Road and ordered two cold beers and lit up some smokes. She spoke of some nurse who almost lost her her pass, all about some **** up, over   drugs, she’d forgotten to take. She said the quacks were ok with it, the tall one is hot, she said, shouldn’t mind him poking around in my parlour. He told her about the Charles Lloyd jazz album he'd bought, how he'd met him outside Dobell's, got a sign copy of the new L.P. She drained her drink and he ordered another two, she took one of  his smokes and lit up and sat back, crossing her legs, her black short skirt riding her thighs, ******* in his eyes. No place for *** she said, unless you know of a bed and room going cheap for an hour or so?  No luck, he said, wishing he did, remembering the fast shaft, the quickie in the hospital broom room, amidst brooms and brushes and buckets or boxes and all. She said her parents rang, and they argued, and she slammed down the phone. They said it was the summer of love, but where they sat, boozing and smoking, it fell pretty flat.
0
Dec 18, 2013
Dec 18, 2013 at 2:41 PM UTC
SUMMER OF LOVE 67.
It was the summer of love, at least that's what they said. There were guys with long hair and beards and beads, with wide trousers, and loud shirts, and girls with long hair, and dresses like nuns, or short skirts, showing off their not so good legs or thighs. There was Hendricks, Beatles and Stones and playing, music loud, live. Julie was out for the day; the hospital quacks, giving her a day pass, no shooting up, no pill popping. She met Ben in Trafalgar Square, tight skirt and top, hair held in a ponytail, bright eyed, big smile. He was by the fountains having a smoke, eyeing the girls, listening to some long haired guy strum a guitar, his skinny girlfriend doing a dance, her bony legs looking breakable, **** non existent. Been here long? Julie said. No, just a few moments, he lied, not wanting to give her reasons to moan or row. She wanted to go for a beer. So he took her to the bar off Charing Cross Road and ordered two cold beers and lit up some smokes. She spoke of some nurse who almost lost her her pass, all about some **** up, over   drugs, she’d forgotten to take. She said the quacks were ok with it, the tall one is hot, she said, shouldn’t mind him poking around in my parlour. He told her about the Charles Lloyd jazz album he'd bought, how he'd met him outside Dobell's, got a sign copy of the new L.P. She drained her drink and he ordered another two, she took one of  his smokes and lit up and sat back, crossing her legs, her black short skirt riding her thighs, ******* in his eyes. No place for *** she said, unless you know of a bed and room going cheap for an hour or so?  No luck, he said, wishing he did, remembering the fast shaft, the quickie in the hospital broom room, amidst brooms and brushes and buckets or boxes and all. She said her parents rang, and they argued, and she slammed down the phone. They said it was the summer of love, but where they sat, boozing and smoking, it fell pretty flat.
terry-collett
Written by
Dec 18, 2013
Dec 18, 2013 at 2:41 PM UTC
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