Sorority Sisters: Kimberly Massie
Copyright© 2025 by Emily Wendling
Chapter 5
Erotica Sex Story: Chapter 5 - He conquered football. He mastered science. But he never learned to resist temptation. Dr. Dan Harrison has it all: Ten Straight Super Bowl rings, a Harvard PhD, movie-star looks, and groundbreaking research that could revolutionize therapy. He's the impossible man brilliant, disciplined, untouchable. Until Kimberly Massie walks into his office.
Caution: This Erotica Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa Consensual Heterosexual Fiction MaleDom Rough Oral Sex
MASQUIRE MAGAZINE
“THE MODERN MAN’S GUIDE TO EXCELLENCE”
THE IMPOSSIBLE MAN
Dan Harrison Has Conquered Everything. What Does He Do for an Encore?
By Marcus Chen | Photography by Richard Avedon III
KINGSBRIDGE, NY - Dan Harrison is late. This is apparently a first. His assistant apologizes. She explains that the professor’s morning lecture on “Neural Plasticity and Peak Performance” ran over. Students kept asking questions.
“They always keep asking questions,” she says.
Her tone is weary. She has watched this happen daily for two years. Harrison finally arrives at the faculty club where we have arranged to meet. He wears dark jeans and a charcoal henley. The shirt fits tight against 280 pounds of muscle. He looks mildly irritated. This makes him more attractive somehow.
“Sorry,” he says.
He extends his hand. It swallows my hand completely.
“A student wanted to debate whether consciousness could be isolated in a VR environment. I could not just leave that hanging.” He orders a black coffee and an egg white omelet.
Then he reconsidered his choice.
“In fact, please prepare four egg white omelets.” And a side of bacon. The turkey bacon, not the real thing.” He said.
Even his dietary restrictions are overachieving.
THE STATS DO NOT LIE
Everyone knows the story by now. Ten Super Bowl rings. Eight MVP awards. He retired at 34 because he was “bored.” He got a PhD from Harvard while playing professional football. Now he runs the Center for Cognitive Performance Research at Kingsbridge University. He is apparently trying to hack the human brain using virtual reality. But statistics do not capture the Dan Harrison Experience. That peculiar combination of intimidation, fascination, and inadequacy surrounds him like a force field.
“People expect me to be dumb,” Harrison says.
He dumps his third packet of sugar into his coffee. So much for dietary restrictions.
“They see the Super Bowl rings and assume I got lucky. Then they find out about Harvard and they get confused. Then they get annoyed.” He said.
Does that bother him?
“No. Should it?” He pauses.
This is vintage Harrison. The man processes social cues like a computer debugging code. During his NFL career, teammates nicknamed him “The Algorithm” because of his robotic approach to reading defenses. One former 49ers lineman told ESPN that Harrison once diagrammed an entire defensive scheme on a napkin at a restaurant. Then he casually mentioned that the math “reminded him of a proof he had done for his dissertation.”
“He is the smartest person I have ever met,” says Dr. Jennifer Caldwell.
She is the chair of Kingsbridge’s Psychology Department.
“He is also somehow the most oblivious. He once explained to me how neural networks function during our department holiday party. For forty minutes. While people were trying to do Secret Santa.” She said.
THE BODY
We should address the elephant in the room. Dan Harrison is absurd and almost offensively good looking.
At 6’5” and 280 pounds, he has the physical presence of a Greek statue that decided to get a PhD. His face is all strong jaw and intense dark eyes. The kind of symmetry that makes you wonder if his parents’ custom ordered him. He has graced magazine covers from Sports Illustrated to GQ to Scientific American.
“The Scientific American thing was a mistake. They wanted to do a profile on athlete intelligence. I thought it would be a serious piece about cognitive science. They spent half the interview asking about my workout routine.” Harrison says.
For the record: He lifts six days a week at 5 AM. He runs stadium stairs on Sundays. He follows what he calls a “modified paleo-Mediterranean hybrid approach” that his nutritionist designed specifically for him.
“My metabolism is unusual. It always has been.” He explains.
Of course it is.
THE BACHELOR
Harrison has never been married. He has no children. His longest relationship lasted eight months. It ended when the woman realized she was “dating a very nonchalant man.” That is according to sources.
“I am not good at relationships,” Harrison admits.
He says this with the same clinical detachment he might use to describe a failed experiment.
“I get focused on work. I sometimes forget to call. I solve problems that do not need solving. Women do not appreciate it when you try to optimize their morning routine.” He said.
And yet his dating life is legendary. He has been photographed with actresses, models, journalists, fellow academics, and in one memorable instance, a former Miss Universe who was also a particle physicist. The tabloids have dubbed him “The Thinking Woman’s Fantasy.” This title makes him visibly uncomfortable.
“I like smart women. Intelligence is attractive. But I also like and variety.” He pauses.
His assistant overhears this. She coughs loudly from across the room.
“What I mean,” Harrison continues.
He seems unbothered.
“I appreciate different perspectives. Different backgrounds.” Dan said.
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