S.M.O.M.S. - the Origin
Chapter 3

Copyright© 2018 by DiscipleN

Incest Sex Story: Chapter 3 - - For extra context read my 1st, SMOMS (sub. moms...) story, set in modern times. This story tells how the organization was founded by one, tough but submissive, southern woman after the Civil War. Imagine half the country with its adult male population decimated. Some women must assert themselves in roles that were male only. Other women, raised to be controlled and without a nature able to break the control of men, find themselves at their sons' mercies.

Caution: This Incest Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   NonConsensual   Reluctant   Historical   Incest   Mother   Son   MaleDom   Rough   Anal Sex   Masturbation   Oral Sex   Pregnancy   Slow  

Our first child was born two months after Grandfather passed away. Hortence was twenty and unmarried. Twice, women in the township had met him with obvious intent. One was nearly my age and reeked of desperation, for alcohol not a husband. The other was a cute fireball who expected men to jump when she snapped her fingers. I can’t say who disappointed my son more. He rejected both, simply by not inviting them again.

I had kept my pregnancy a secret. A backwoods church is the center of community events and religious services. I received comments about gaining weight, but I never encouraged that falsehood. My past lies weighed heavily. About the time of my third month, an incredible series of rumors crisscrossed communities for fifty miles. Every third week or so, news came of a miracle baby. Folk assumed the nonsense regarded a particular baby, born to an unwed mother. With successive tales giving details of births to different mothers who were solid members of society, a pattern formed, a pattern who’s familiarity terrified me. The women, their husbands all casualties in the war, had born sons in recent months. My peers suggested the reality of lonely women succumbing to temptation. Consistent rumors over the next three months, from different communities, inspired a truth of faith, especially when the rumors claimed the miracle sons resembled the lost fathers! Pastors began to laud the “Danlick Blessings.” God was giving sons to devout Christian widows. Locals attending church nearly doubled. Hope and pride, devastated by the war, swelled in their hearts.

Mentioned more casually in the rumors, the women had children already, daughters sometimes, but always sons who had survived or were too young to have been recruited. I suspected women who bore girls were not as news worthy. As the number of stories increased, doubtlessly many added out of sheer religious enthusiasm, my fear changed. I prayed that a son lie in my womb.

Our Reverend Hannity, dismissed the stories as wishful thinking. He lauded the spirit of fellow holy men, but simply disagreed. “One miracle is all heaven requires, to prove God’s love for mankind.” A week later, his message changed. “I am humbled, dear Lord, by your majesty and magnanimity. Two nights ago, a suffering widow, whom we all know to be beyond reproach, Mrs. Eleanor Tuttle, bore a son. Lord please forgive the unchristian judgement I harbored when your good servant woman refrained from my services for the last several months, but truly your blessing has made me a better sheep and shepherd, as it will every flock who hears of it. Let us sing, Praise to Glory. Let our song welcome mother and son to our hearts.”

I sang with more zeal and less piety than I had ever sung in church. After the service, the community bubbled with spirited amazement. I sought quietness, a place to rest my feet and to think. I found a log by the creek that ran nearby. It’s soft gurgling soothed. Eleanor Tuttle lived to the west, farther into the woods. She was a thin, young woman with three boys too young to be soldiers and too young to mention here. Her husband was killed near war’s end. More devout than I, she never missed a service, and she had farther to walk with three sons of wild temperament. I did not know her well. We spoke rarely. They lived hand to mouth from the woods, with a garden and chickens assisting. Church folk were especially charitable towards her. I had given her a mateable pair of piglets from different sows, a year ago. She did not seek attention, though. Like me, we spoke when spoken to.

With the sun setting behind me, I stood and arched my aching back.

“Sweet Jesus, it is another miracle!”

The shout turned my head, heart racing anew. On the lawn, Ann-marie Smith, a sweet twelve year old stared at me and fell to her knees. Her mother ran to her and saw my belly protruding. She knelt instantly and with her daughter, prayed. The congregation surrounded.

I was given no choice but to confess I was with child. However, I warned that I might bear a girl, and that I was unworthy of a miracle. My caution provoked suspicions of impropriety. I was saved that humiliation when Reverend Hannity took my hand and proclaimed that all of god’s children were miracles.

The morning after my news reached home, Hory found his great-grandfather had died in the night. Grandpa had reacted uncharacteristically quiet, when I confronted him with my pregnancy. Hory had never seen me pregnant, and had not asked about my increasing belly. Humans look very different than pigs with full wombs.

At his simple burial, the reverend said, “The lord taketh away. The lord provides.”

Though I was not happy for it, Grandfather’s passing returned a measure of solemnity to my life. Neighbors spoke to me as a friend again, instead of an incarnation of The Virgin. Trade for our meat and sucklings doubled. The young, firebrand of a girl, came calling for Hortense. I encouraged him, “She is strong and looks to bear strong children.”

“Her tongue is stronger, Ma. And she came because of you, not me.” Hory did not seem troubled by that fact. It merely helped him to ignore the girl’s later request to visit.

His other change, suited me well. My son chose to spare his child further intrusions of his manhood. Thereafter, come morning he commanded me to suck it until his seed flowed into my mouth. In the evenings, after a long day, he allowed me to wrestle it with my hand, which was easier for me. As my breasts grew, he took to sucking on them. Only in my last month, did my son taste the milk destined for his child. He disliked it but did not stop his perverse use of his mother’s teats. He took to spitting it into a jar, while I pulled on his cock. Afterwards he would add it to the pigs’ slop bucket.

I get ahead of myself. I spent a week mourning my grandfather’s passing. Afterwards I told Hortense that I must see a neighbor. He might have guessed it regarded my pregnancy, but the lie I told was, to check on two pigs.

My belly was great, but another month would pass before it grew ponderous. My work at home hardly slowed for the first six months. Since learning of my condition, Hory spared me moments to catch my breath and gave lighter tasks while he managed strenuous ones.

Several miles into the woods tired me little more than usual. I sought the home of Mrs. Tuttle. Word spread before me, as I asked directions. Many times I was offered a guide, but I took only their kindness. To hear neighbors tell it, days later, I sought to commune with my fellow miracle mother. I had told them only that I would check on the pigs I had gifted a year earlier.

The kind of pigs I encountered near my destination did not hear me approach. The trees here grew well apart, allowing brambles and underbrush to carpet the woods. Paths were maintained by monthly pruning. New ones were formed by widening deer trails. Every inch of the woods was alive. Birdsong and scuttling varmints surrounded me. The crunch of my footsteps carried no farther than my toes. A girl’s laughter rang through the woods. It was almost a shriek, but if you have raised children, you know the difference. Her laughter sparked similar cackling. Mischief was certain. As I approached, other voices tittered and giggled. When I could understand their words between their exclamations, I paused, accepting the sin of eavesdropping.

“I win!” The girl declared. “Took all three of you to hold me down.”

“Yeah, but WE win ‘cause, um-” Another young girl argued. I guessed from her shrill tone.

“Now we can tickle you.” I guessed a younger boy said.

“MAY-be we will tuck you, too!” He cracked. It was the changing voice of a young man.

“How, my naughty raccoons? If you let go, I will escape.” She laughed.

A silent moment ended with a wail. “I wanna tuck Mama!”

“Hush, Ken, your Ma needs to be with baby Joe. Don’t you want to play with me?”

“You got no teats, Sheel, not worth suck’n.”

“And you fight too much.” I imagined the young boy pouting.

“Mama, she comPLAIN, but she don’t fight.”

“Mama Ellie, loves you all. But you listen to me. You don’t go tucking her until I say so. She was hurt from d’liver’n.

My shock surprised me. I expected what I would find here. I knew none of the details, but hearing words that confirmed my guesses, shook my heart like when Hory shamed me for the first time. I could not bear to hear more.

“Hello!” I called. “I’m looking for the Tuttle family.”

“Hush!” the girl called low. Speaking louder, she answered. “Howdy! Wait a bit, while I get there.”

She appeared, pushing through low brush to the path before me. My heart wrenched a second time. Though her dress was just a loose, bushel sack, cut for arms and legs and a head, the bulge in her belly was unmistakeable. She was maybe thirteen, carrying the responsibility of a woman. Not an unknown event but rare.

“I’m Sheila, and the Tuttles live just that way. Follow me.” Her spirit was bright, a bonfire keeping the forest safe, it seemed.

Other than my name, words failed me. I followed, as if a man had told me to.

Ahead of our slow pace, crashing brush kept its distance. Sheila dawdled, maybe to respect my condition, but more certain to give the Tuttle children time.

Reaching the clearing around a lean-to, a tiny shed of a home, three naked boys fidgeted beside their door, like wooden soldiers rocked by the wind. Caked in dirt and decayed leaves, they brandished crooked teeth. If I had to guess, they were eight, nine, and twelve.

“You get to a bath, Ken, John, and Grady.” Sheila scolded them. “This here is God’s other miracle, Mrs-”

“Aw, we know t-HAINT, no miracle.” Grady’s voice cracked.

“I’ll fetch a switch!”

The boys scattered. When Sheila had greeted me, she’d given me no reverence for the miracle she threatened the Tuttle boys with.

“Do come inside, Ma-am.” She bent a knee to me, pretending to be impressed, and opened the door.

The coals in the small fireplace hardly pushed out the room’s darkness, compared to the shade in woods on a bright day. On a stump, hewn into a seat, Eleanor Tuttle rocked with her baby at her breast. Her skirt was also sack cloth, but hand sewn well enough. Skinny, except for her mother breasts, the woman looked sad but content. The baby, Joe, sucked greedily.

She looked up, and a fright overtook her soft face. “Are y-you, Besha?” Eyes like saucers worried over me.

“I am Ma-am, but-” I wanted to reassure her of my good will.

“Sh-shiela, I-I need to talk alone with her.”

“Um, okay, Mama Ellie. I’ll see the boys get their bath.” The girl regarded me again, a bit more impressed, or did I imagine it?

“Lord o mercy, I fear you be reckoning come, Besha.” Eleanor gasp the moment the girl left us.

“No, Mrs. Tuttle, I-”

“You got a son, right? He didn’t go to war and git killed?”

“It’s true.” I hung my head. This would be my reckoning, perhaps. “My husband and oldest boy are gone, though.”

“Now you got another son in your belly.”

“It may be a girl.”

“Maybe.” She switched baby Joe to her other breast. Looking back up at me, her eyes were tear filled. “But I pray it be a boy, or wicked rumors will send hell your way.”

“The preacher said-”

“The preacher be a good man, but he is only one of, too few, true lights in a forest teaming with foolish will-o-wisps.”

I was amazed by the woman’s heart. At church, she was more meek than church mice. Had she been deceitful?

Then Eleanor sighed. “Lord, be my strength, for I am worn tired.”

“Mrs. Tuttle.”

“Eleanor, please.” The church mouse returned. Her thin face lost it’s halo. “Did you come to lay my sin before me?”

“No. Eleanor, I came bearing mine. I suffer it still. I once found a moment of rescue, and for that I would cross mountains.” I fell upon my knees before the madonna and let my tears flow. “Will you hear me?”

I wailed and cried, telling my story, until noon. Sheila knocked and said the boys were hungry.

I had brought a basket for the family. There was bread, and a pot of jam. There was a pie, ham hocks, beets, and crock of butter. We ate outside, on burlap squares of different sizes sewn into a sheet.

Eleanor put her baby to bed. Unlike it’s older brothers, Joe lay peaceful inside. They could not sit still for a minute. Bathed and in the linen pants that Sheila forced them to wear, they tugged at them as if suffering unbearable itches. The oldest, Grady restrained himself best, but his look worried me. At one point, Ken escaped his pants and ran, shaking his bud like a rooster’s crown. Sheila chased him down and bound him back into his breeches.

“I tuck good, Ma-am.” Grady whispered, while his mother watched the chase. “Even with child, Sheila says I’m good. I got her and Ma good, she said.”

My blush spoke for me.

Alerted to her son’s whispers, Eleanor intervened. “Don’t listen to the boy, Honey. He is wicked, not like your son. Grady be wild wicked. Yours’ just sad and lonely sinful.” She told her son, “God will punish you, I promised. That’s why you boys go hungry more now. You got me with baby Joe, and now I can’t fend much in a day. I gotta eat to make sure Joe gets fed.”

“Aw, Ma, I can tuck Mrs- Besha, if I wanna, I bet.” Pie crumbs dotted his face.

Like an angel, Sheila, fresh from depositing Ken back to his ham hock, grabbed Grady’s shoulders. She heaved him up like an amazon and dragged him down the trail, out of sight.

After stuffing themselves until their bellies poked out, Ken and John grinned at each other, laughed, and ran into the woods after their kin.

“She’s a wild thing, too, poor dear.”

“I didn’t know you had a daughter.”

“Ain’t my daughter. She’s got a grandpa who live in a cabin a day from here.” Eleanor wiped her lips with a corner of the sheet. “She works here to feed him. He still hunts, and can bleed and butcher but small critters only. Someday, maybe not soon, she gonna be my daughter when he die. She’ll be Grady’s woman then.”

“I’m sorry.” I had to ask. “Can you tell me now- I mean, you are so strong compared to me. How did your boys-?” I had no more words.

A fear darkened her eyes. “I wasn’t, Honey. I lost my man. I lost my heart. That baby in the house, he is my strength. It was Sheila who told them about tucking, a couple years prior. She learn it from her Grandpa. At first she teased them, cuz they were too young. She didn’t mean harm. She has real strength. She kept me alive and working for the sake of my sons. I spared time only for the Lord’s day, to worship Him and to love my neighbors.

“But the boys, once they figured Sheila’s game, they came to me. It was John at first. Ken was too sweet then, and Grady he was stuck on Sheila. I hollered at them, and I cursed them with the almighty’s wrath, and drove them from me, but they come back time and time again. After a year of it, my threats proved hollow. They got older, wore me down faster, and Grady reached the burning age. Sheila stayed just out of reach. When Grady found John with me, he demanded me the next day.”

Sheila and the boys reeking of humus, found us hugging over an empty basket. Eleanor and I dried our eyes. I noted white dotting Sheila’s sun tanned cheeks. Her sack was worn opposite the way it had faced earlier. The boys sat nearly still and devoured every scrap remaining in my basket.

Before I left, Eleanor told her boys she wanted a last moment alone with me.

“Bear your child private, Besha. I’ll send Sheila to you to help with the birth. If you bear a girl, she’ll bring it to me, and I will give you baby Joe for it.” One would be justified to be stunned, hearing that, but I knew poor folk. Giving a child to a willing, rich family was a godsend. I knew she meant well for me and her baby. Realistically, three months would pass between Joe’s birth and my baby’s day to come. The deception would never be believed.

I walked away from the Tuttles, without spending one thought for the pigs I’d gifted. They’d been eaten months ago. I would return home well before sundown. I plodded there with inner peace.

“How were the pigs, Mother?” My son had figured out they were not the reason for my visit.

“Poor, Hory. Poor but happy.” I explained. That night, when my son told me to suck on him, I undressed without complaint. Instead of kneeling before him, I turned around and settled on my hands and knees. My belly hung nearly to the floorboards. My breasts swatted my face when, my son took me from behind, for the first time. Secretly, I fingered myself to the most wicked sensation I had ever experienced.

It was not the last time I tracked down Danlick’s Blessings. The farm and sty had to be worked, though. I was great with child and bore a son. Luke would be christened with my husband’s middle name. Despite my soreness, Hory, who had resumed abstinence from intercourse after our night as beasts, could no longer restrain himself. He fell on me the moment I woke the next day. He did not let me feed our baby before crawling up my nightshirt, but he left my breasts alone, tight though they were with milk, and saved them for his son and brother. After I relieved my son of his pent up seed, Luke relieved the pressure in my teats.

There was a hullabaloo, of course. Neighbors flocked to gift Luke with toys and charms. However, the stories of miracle babies had dulled, and I was regarded well below sainthood, thank the lord. Eleanor returned to attending services a few weeks before Luke was born. The Sunday after my delivery, hours after Luke’s baptism, she congratulated me on his sex, and prayed for his soul with me. When we returned to the congregation, she was asked why her sons remained at home, a snoop’s jibe.

I stepped up when it was clear that my sister, lost sheep could not answer. “Shirley Johnson, be more Christian, now. If you had sons living in the woods, you would know that God speaks with them there, like in the old book. They would wither in civilized society.” I indulged a sin similar to hers. “If you live in your neighbor’s house for one night, you will better understand God’s commandment.”

I said it loudly, a dare before our congregation. Shirley was recently married to a veteran with all of his limbs, but word everywhere told of his drinking. At eighteen, she was hardly in a position to be picky. For his drink, he worked as hard as any, but come night, it was said their bed reeked but remained un-blooded.

Months passed. The news to mention was heavy with sorry. Sheila died in childbirth. Eleanor told me in confidence, at church. I longed to visit her home again and console her at length, but she warned me away. “Grady went on a rampage. I fear Sheila’s grandfather. If the two meet, Grady will be the one without a gun. My oldest sulks in the woods and yells at me and his brothers, even the baby. Starving, he will steal into the house and eat everything he finds. Then he flees like a fox. John has taken to tell Ken, their brother is mad.”

She spoke to me in private. Not finished, she led me farther from the church. “Once, I went into the woods.” She wept. “Like Lilith I went to seduce my boy to bring him home. God saw my sin and sent punishment. Grady cursed me with the same words of the Lord I once repelled him with.”

Another month passed, and two stories found me at church, one during the service, and one after. Reverend Hannity announced that Shirley Johnson had disappeared. Details surfaced over the next few days. She’d had words with her husband, left her home, and was never seen again, according to her husband. He was sober when the sheriff questioned him. Neighbors had heard her yelling foul words blaming him for not giving her a child. One rumor that only men told each other, came to me by my son. Their marriage may never have been consummated.

The second story, Eleanor told to me after the service. Shirley Johnson had appeared at the Tuttle door. She was in a frightful state. She beseeched God with a temper. Why was a beggar from the woods given a fourth son, when she, a proud Christian, generous to the church and to her neighbors, had none! She yelled at the hovel but never announced herself. Eleanor swore that Shirley fled with her tears. My lost sheep was steeped in the worst of sins, but unlike me, Eleanor was no liar. It was news we could never tell the sheriff, not even risk anonymously. I asked her about Grady. She brightened then. His madness had ended, but he continued to live in the woods. She suspected that Sheila’s grandfather had had something to do with the boy’s change of heart.

 
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