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Subject: {ASSM} new "Danielle 1902 .02" {Uther} (MF hist rom 1st) (2/2) <*>
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If you are under the age of 18, or otherwise forbidden by law to
read electronically transmitted erotic material, please go do
something else.
This material is Copyright, 2004, Uther Pendragon. All rights
reserved. I specifically grant the right for all reproduction
necessary for normal Usenet propagation. I specifically grant
the right of downloading and keeping ONE electronic copy for your
personal reading so long as this notice is included. Reposting
requires previous permission.
Most of my other stories can be found at:
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Uther_Pendragon/www
All persons here depicted, except public figures depicted as
public figures in the background, are figments of my imagination
and any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly
coincidental.
# # # # #
Danielle 1902
Uther Pendragon
anon584c@nyx.net
Chapter 2:
Nellie and Paul wanted some privacy, and her brothers and sisters
weren't giving her any. Then Paul asked if she could walk out
with him. Papa said 'yes' on certain conditions. They walked
around the neighborhood. Whenever they met somebody she knew,
she introduced Paul. Papa might be strict on some things, but he
was fair. When some of the women from church commented that a
hostler for the streetcars was a poor match for a preacher's
daughter who went to high school and taught piano, Papa replied
"He's an honest boy doing honest work."
Well, Paul had graduated from high school and wanted to work up
to a job as mechanic. She didn't tell the women that, though;
they were Papa's congregation, Papa's responsibility. If he
wanted to address their snobbery, that was his business.
Paul, when he was in the barns and his own job was done, did help
out the mechanics repairing the horsecars. She knew that
sparking her was interfering with that. When he was with her, or
traveling back and forth, he couldn't help the mechanics. And,
since his fellow hostlers took care of his horses when he was out
of the barn, he took care of some of theirs other times in
return.
Paul told her that all the hostlers got some time off. Since
factory workers had to take the streetcars to work by 6:00, the
cars had to start their trips at 5:00. So the hostlers' busiest
time was between 4:00 and 5:00. Then, they could clean out the
stalls for the horses which were gone. From 9:00 to 4:00 the
same number of cars were on the street, with -- of course -- the
same number of horses, drivers and conductors. Mostly, it was
the same cars, but not the same workers or the same horses. In
the morning, as in the evening, cars were taken off the routes as
fewer people wanted rides. That meant that the hostlers had
barely cleaned out the stalls in the morning when the first
horses returned.
"The end of the day," said Paul, "is much easier. The last trip
is over at 9:00, but cars are coming in all the time. We all
help each other so that each of us can go to supper, and I don't
think I've ever left the barn later than 9:30."
"You leave at 9:30 and get there at 4:00. That's worse than farm
work! When do you sleep?"
"We all take a doze sometime in the day. Most of us sleep there;
there's plenty of hay, of course. They tell me that we'll go
back to our rooms in the winter. The rooming houses near the
barns keep their stoves going all day."
"So, when you visit me, you are giving up on your sleep?"
"But I'd rather visit you. Besides, the conductors know me. I
sleep on the cars, and they wake me when we're near the barns."
"And then we go walking; you must get awfully tired."
"But we walk slowly."
She had money from the lessons; Paul could ride the streetcars
free. She asked Mama to allow her to ride the streetcars with
him. Mama asked Papa and got his consent. So, once or twice a
week, she would get on a horsecar and ride south. Paul would
meet the car near the barns. Then they would ride to the end of
the line, then all the way back to the north end of the line and
back again.
She only needed to pay her two-cent fare when she got on the car.
The conductors knew Paul, and came to know her. They might have
objected to anyone else stretching the rules that way, but they
looked kindly on the two of them. One of the conductors even made a
point of taking the driver off the car with him at the end of the
line to stretch their legs. She and Paul, who usually sat in
back and talked quietly when others were on the car, had an
opportunity to kiss and hug in absolute privacy.
When school started, they only could do this on Saturday. She
knew better than to ask for permission on Sunday. Sometimes,
though, Paul would stretch his time away from the barns to
another round trip. She consoled herself that, if she were not
seeing him as much as she wished, he had more time for rest and
for helping the mechanics.
Then the weather turned bitter. "I don't want you riding the
horsecars for hours in this weather," said Papa. "Paul is, of
course, perfectly welcome to visit. Look, I can understand that
he is busy at meal times. But you might want to offer him a
sandwich and some hot tea when he comes."
But, winter was the time for more work in the barns. Customers
who walked in the summertime rode the cars in the winter; snow
clogged the tracks, and ice ruined the horses' footing. Since
the horses worked harder, those who cared for them worked harder.
Some days, Paul couldn't get away even to sleep -- the long trip
to the parsonage was out of the question. The only good point
was that Papa allowed Paul to visit Sunday when he missed
Saturday.
Since Nellie couldn't spend pennies on the streetcars she saved
up and schemed. When the weather finally turned warm, she had
nearly a dollar saved up.
Paul came for a visit soon after Nellie got home from school
Thursday. "Mrs. Osborne," he asked before Mama left the kitchen,
"could Nellie come for a ride Saturday? I know Reverend Osborne
said 'no,' but he blamed the bad weather."
"I'll have to ask him," Mama said.
"Oh, Paul," Nellie said when she'd left, "she said *she* would
ask. If she does, Papa is sure to say 'yes.'"
"Well, I'll wait for the streetcar where it crosses Maple. If
you're not on it, I'll ride back and come here."
Mama spoke to Papa alone, or as alone as the two of them could be
in the house full of children. Papa's question to Nellie seemed
off the main point. "You pay the fare each time, don't you?"
"Yes Papa. When I get on. Paul doesn't have to pay a fare, and
the rules don't say you have to get off at the end of the line."
"Well, I know the conductors are Paul's friends. But I don't
want you cheating the company. We are supposed to be good
examples, not bad examples."
"Then I can go?" He hadn't actually said so, but the question
was senseless if he were going to say 'no.'
"You can go. Be a good example." Which didn't quite say she
shouldn't kiss Paul where people could see, but that might be
what Papa was implying.
She was on the streetcar when Paul caught it. They had a seat to
themselves in back, and the streetcar to themselves while it
waited before starting back. It had been so long since Paul had
kissed her. The kiss was so thrilling that she didn't hear the
conductor get back on the car until he rang the bell. They moved
around a short loop of track and started back. Soon, there were
other people on the car with them. They had much to talk about,
and she had longed all winter to have enough time to talk with
Paul. Still, the drive through the city seemed an endless wait
until they could be alone again. The last two passengers rode to
the north end of the line. The conductor and driver got off with
them, and she sank back into Paul's embrace.
That was their pattern for the Saturdays of the closing weeks of
school: four long -- but never long enough -- conversations while
they rode through the streets of Rochester, three short periods
of kissing when they were alone at the end points. The last
Saturday, she asked him, "Can you meet me Thursday? Same spot."
"Sure. Is school over?"
"It will be Thursday. Graduation is a week from tomorrow, but
classes are over Wednesday."
Thursday, she greeted him shyly. When they got to the turn-
around, however, she got up the courage to say, "Let's get off."
"I'm sure he'll let you on without paying again."
"That's not what I want. Let's get off."
They walked away from the streetcar. Soon, they came to a grove
of trees. He took her in his arms and kissed her. She kissed
him back until he heard the bell of the car clanging in the
distance. "We'll have to run to make it."
"We can take the next one."
At that comment, he took her in his arms again. Some time later,
she wasn't quite clear how long, he sank down to the ground. She
lay on top of him and kissed even more passionately. They heard
the bell of the next streetcar and hurried to catch it. She paid
her fare as she always did. She had a dollar saved; that would
pay for 25 days such as this one, not even counting the
additional nickel she got each week. "Monday?" Paul asked before
getting off. She had explained her schedule on the ride back:
lessons Tuesdays and Wednesdays. She daren't ask to go out both
Thursday and Friday.
And, although nobody in the family seemed to notice, she got back
earlier. Two streetcars traveled that route; they had caught the
second one.
Monday, while kissing her, he ran his hands over her hair again
and again. Her left pigtail came undone. She took out the right
one, too. "You have such beautiful hair," he said. "You should
wear it down."
"You like its look?"
"Its look, its feel. You are beautiful." He kissed her again.
His hands went through her hair and then down her back. He
shouldn't put his hands on her seat, but it felt exciting when he
did. Paul had marked where the sun was when they'd got to the
grove, and he marked where it was when the bell rang for the
second car. So, when the sun had traveled half that journey
further, they walked back closer to the tracks. They were still
in trees, if not so hidden, and they kissed until they heard the
bell of the first streetcar.
When she got back home, she carefully brushed her hair. Charlie
commented at supper. "Well," she said, "Paul likes it this way."
"And so do I," said Ethel.
"Well, I think you're putting on airs," said Charlie.
"We all have opinions," said Papa suddenly, "but it's Nellie's
hair. She can wear it the way she likes as long as it's decent."
"She does it 'cause that Paul likes it."
"Charlie, you said that you didn't like it down. Nellie, did
Paul say he didn't like it in pigtails?"
"Well, long ago he told me he liked it down." She wasn't going
to say he'd pulled out the pigtail while running his hand through
her hair. She'd never hear the end of that, and not only from
Charlie.
"I'm not saying your *sister* would do something 'cause you said
you'd like it," Papa continued. "But, Charlie, listen to that.
Paul said he liked something; you said you didn't like something.
If you really want somebody to cooperate, you might try saying
what you like instead of what you don't like."
"I," said Charlie, "really like this chicken."
They all laughed. Mama blew Charlie a kiss, but she didn't pass
him another piece of chicken.
Thursday, Paul was carrying a blanket and a picnic basket. "I
should have brought the food," she said. He put his finger to
his lips in a shushing manner.
"I didn't," he said when they were in the privacy of their grove,
"actually have any food to bring. I just didn't want to be seen
carrying only a blanket."
They sat on the blanket just as if it were a picnic anyway.
Soon, they were lying on it side by side. They kissed hungrily
while they hugged tight. Paul stroked her back when he wasn't
combing his fingers through her hair.
When he finally pulled away, it was to say "I really like your
hair. You are a beautiful woman." He kissed her hair once
before kissing all over her face. His strokes moved from her
back to her side. Finally the heel of his hand touched her
breast. The both froze in place.
She relaxed first. "Oh, Nellie," he said, "Oh, Danielle." When
he kissed her again, his hand cupped her breast fully. Now he
leaned on one elbow with that hand in her hair; his other hand
caressed the entire front of her body, from her belly to her
breast. She'd never felt like this. The day had been barely
warm before, but now her whole body was on fire. She held is
face pressed tightly against her lips.
When he did break out of that grip, he kissed all over her face.
His kisses went to her throat and then to her shoulders through
the blouse. This was wonderful. She combed her fingers through
*his* hair this time, and pulled him tighter to her when his
kisses reached her breasts. What made her push him away was the
sound of a clanging bell.
She grabbed the empty basket while he folded the blanket. The
driver slowed the streetcar when the conductor saw them running
after it. Both driver and conductor gave them fond smiles when
they climbed aboard. They didn't kiss on the streetcar, but her
hand never left his. "Monday," was his last word.
Monday, when he climbed on the car, Paul was carrying the blanket
and basket again. Looking at the way he was carrying the basket,
she could tell that it was empty. Could anyone else? "I have
something to tell you," he said, "but let's wait until we're
alone."
She tried to think of something else to talk about, but couldn't.
"Tell me now," she asked.
"Can't you wait?"
"Not really."
"You know I've been helping some of the mechanics who fix the
cars."
"Yes?"
"They are willing to take me on as an apprentice."
"Paul! That's what you've wanted. That's delightful." Then she
thought of something less delightful about it. "What is an
apprentice's hours?"
"Same as a mechanic's. The barn is too busy when the cars are
starting out, so we only have to get there at 7:00. 7:00 in the
morning 'til 7:00 at night. But we get Sundays off. And 45
minutes for dinner."
"Papa is not going to let me go out riding the streetcars after
7:00. And 45 minutes is too little time for you to come to our
house for dinner."
"Well, I could see you on Sunday, but I have another idea."
"Sunday? You could visit me -- only if you go to church first,
though. And Mama would be happy to have you come for Sunday
dinner. But that would mean only seeing each other when
everybody else is around."
"Well, as I said, I have another idea. But we have to talk about
it in private." This time, by the set of his jaw, she knew that
he wasn't going to discuss it on the car even though there were
fewer and fewer people on it. They got off at the end of he
line, and walked towards their grove. He lay the blanket down
but took her hand before she could sit on it.
"Danielle..." he began but didn't seem able to get any farther.
"Yes."
"Danielle, I won't get much better pay as an apprentice than I
get as a hostler, but apprentices get to be journeyman mechanics
after a few years. A journeyman mechanic is paid better and can
work anywhere."
"I didn't say I wanted you to refuse this opportunity. I said I
wanted to be with you; you want it, too. That doesn't make being
an apprentice the wrong choice; you're too good a man to spend
the rest of your life in a job you could get at 18 -- a job you
could have done much younger. It's not the wrong choice, it's
just that I don't like some of the consequences."
"Danielle, will you marry me?"
"Oh Paul!" She sank into his arms. He held her tightly, too
tightly for his lips to reach hers. After a moment, he kissed her
ear, her shoulder through the blouse, her neck. Finally, he
eased her down on the blanket and lay beside her.
He kissed her face, forehead, ears, chin, nose, cheeks. When he
finally reached her mouth, she pulled his head against her. She
released him when she needed to breathe. He licked her lips
while his hand held her breast. The licks felt so strange that
her tongue ventured out to taste what he had done. When it
touched his, a thrill shot though her.
"Oh, Darling," he said. His hands were on the buttons of her
blouse.
"Let me," she said. She took off the blouse and set it aside.
He kissed her all over her shoulders and kissed her breasts
through the slip. When he pushed the shoulder straps of her slip
down, she struggled up to her knees. She pulled in her stomach
so the belt of the skirt would let the slip slide higher. Then
she struggled each arm free. The slip fell to her waist.
"Oh, Nellie," he said, "oh, Danielle, oh, sweet." He rose on his
own knees, and she pulled his head against her breasts. Soon,
she was lying down again, and he was lying half on top of her
kissing her everywhere and sucking on her nipples as if he were
her baby.
A clanging bell roused both of them. Had all this happened while
the streetcar was still at the turnaround? No. Looking at the
shadows, it had to be the second car. Well, they could wait for
the first one to come back.
As they relaxed, they sank back into a kiss. Paul's hands moved
all over her upper body. He touched her breasts, and -- oh --
how she welcomed his touch on her breasts. But he touched her
side and back too. Wanting to feel him as well, she moved a
little away from him to unbutton his shirt. He loosened his belt
to get the shirt off.
Then he kissed her again while hugging her. They were lying side
by side and pressed skin-to-skin. It felt warm and delightful.
His hand stroked her from her neck to her seat and back; his lips
pressed against hers; his hairy chest pressed against her
breasts. When he licked her lips again, she put her tongue out
to meet his. Soon his tongue was inside her mouth.
When he broke that, he pushed himself down on the blanket while
kissing lower on her torso. While he kissed all over her
breasts, his stroking covered even more of her back. His hand
was on her leg through skirt and slip. Then the strokes raised
the skirt. Finally, his hand was under the slip as well. He
touched the back of her bare leg above the top of her stocking.
"Oh, Nellie," he said. "Nellie, I love you."
"I love you, Paul."
He kissed her again, hugging her so tight that he breasts were
crushed against his chest. When he relaxed, his hand stroked her
breast. Then he was stroking the top of her bare leg. He
trailed his fingers up to touch her through her drawers.
"Oh, Nellie," he said. "We shouldn't"
Well, they shouldn't be doing any of this. "Can you stop?"
"No."
"Nor me." Her hand went to his fly. He rolled away,
unbuttoning and pushing down. He was wearing long Johns. He
pushed them down.
It was the first adult organ she'd ever seen. The first of a
human she'd seen since John had learned to wash himself five
years before. It was larger than John's had been, of course, and
sticking out and up. The end was glistening.
His trousers and long johns were still tangled about his knees.
He managed to kneel between her legs. Her drawers were still on,
and she couldn't take them off like this. She pushed them down a
little.
He moved them aside, putting his hand right there, where no hand
but hers had been since she learned to wipe herself as a toddler.
"Danielle," he said, "sweet, sweet, Danielle." He moved over her
and his organ touched her. Then his hand was back, parting her
folds. Then the touch was even more intimate. She moved her
legs to clasp his. When he pushed against her, she gasped. "I
can't," he said, "I can't hurt you."
Well, he'd have to hurt her some time. They stayed there, looking
into each other's eyes, until the bell of a streetcar startled
them. She jumped a little. His reaction drove him in. "Oh!"
she said. That had hurt, but the pain was over. Paul slowly
continued inward.
She hugged him. He was holding himself up by his arms, so he
couldn't hug her. He did, however, kiss her forehead. She
kissed his shoulder. She held him tight against her and rubbed
her cheek on his neck. "Does it hurt?" he asked.
"Not any more."
"May I?"
Whatever that meant, the answer was clear. "Yes."
Slowly he moved back and then into her again. He repeated that,
moving more rapidly each time. It was hurting a little, now, but
not much. "Oh, Nellie!" he said. With his face looking pained,
he thrust hard against her. She felt him throbbing where she had
never felt anything before this day.
He dropped onto her. She hugged him, welcoming the closeness and
the weight. The bell was clanging loudly now, and for an
awfully long time. They couldn't make that streetcar, though.
She, for one, didn't want to.
Sometime afterwards, he rolled over on the blanket. This time,
she could be the one doing the kissing. She covered his face
with kisses, then his chest. Finally she dropped back. "Love,"
he said. "I love Danielle."
"And I love Paul." She did. She didn't regret what they had
done -- well, not much. But her skirt and slip were all bunched
around her. Her drawers were knotted uncomfortably and there was
something oozing down there as if the moon were in a different
phase.
He got out a handkerchief and dabbed between her legs. She
winced at the touch. "Poor darling," he said. "I didn't mean to
hurt you."
"I know." She got her drawers and her slip back where they
belonged. She rose to her feet to loosen her skirt and put on
the blouse again. Finally, she was as completely dressed as she
could be without the aid of a glass. Paul turned his back to
finish his own dressing.
"It's still chilly in the mornings," he said, apparently about
the long johns. They lay back down to do a little more kissing,
but they were back to the line before the next streetcar came.
They sat and talked on the streetcar, behaving very respectably,
until Paul had to get off.
Where the time had gone, Nellie couldn't tell, but the sun was
far west when she got off the horsecar on the corner. She
stopped off at the church. She would tell her parents about the
engagement at the same time. Luckily, Papa was alone. "Please
come home as early as you can," she asked him. "There is
something I want to tell both you and mama at the same time."
"Give me a moment."
"You don't have to come now."
"It is not that long until supper."
"There is something Nellie wants to talk about to the two of us,"
Papa told Mama when they got to the kitchen.
"Very well. Give me a moment. Somebody came home late with her
chores undone."
"I'm sorry, Mama," Nellie said.
"Let's go out back." They walked over to the lot behind the
church and Mama looked a question at her.
"Mama, Papa, Paul asked me to marry him."
"And," Papa asked, "did you tell him he would have to ask your
father?" Mama *never* criticized Papa, but she did look annoyed
at this joke.
Truly, she hadn't told Paul *anything*. What they'd done was
acceptance enough, but her lips were sealed about that. "I told
him that I would. Paul has been taken on as an apprentice
mechanic at the traction company."
"And," Papa asked, "where can you live?" She hadn't asked that
question. Somehow, they had spent all that time together without
discussing anything.
"There are respectable rooming houses out by the barns for
married couples," Mama said. Where had she learned that? "It
won't be like this parsonage, but neither of them are
particularly spoiled."
"And," Papa continued, "did you make his apprenticeship a
condition on your acceptance?"
"No Papa, he told me before he proposed."
"That's all right then. I don't want my daughter acting like a
gold digger. There is nothing wrong with a boy's looking at how
he could support a wife before proposing -- a man, really.
That's part of being a man."
"His proposal was as much as a surprise to me as it was to you."
"Maybe more of a surprise, dear," Mama said, "Dan, why don't you
go in and wash up?" When he did, she turned to Nellie. "It's
fine that you said 'yes' to the wedding, daughter mine. I can't
approve of your saying 'yes' to other things."
"But...."
"That's for after the wedding."
"But...." How did she know?
"Not another word. I just hope your sisters don't guess."
The End
Danielle 1902
Uther Pendragon
anon584c@nyx.net
2004/06/16
Thanks to Denny for editing this.
For another story of another couple in another century:
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Uther_Pendragon/www/Gjt/sch_01f.htm
"Honey Bee"
More than a hundred of my stories can be found through:
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Uther_Pendragon/www/index.htm
--
Pursuant to the Berne Convention, this work is copyright with all rights
reserved by its author unless explicitly indicated.
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