The Contact
Copyright© 2026 by Sire Rickenbach
Chapter 2
Erotica Sex Story: Chapter 2 - For three years, Jenna has expertly fended off the crude advances of her company's top salesman. But when her husband’s texts suddenly push her to fulfill a dark, voyeuristic fantasy with the man she despises most, she finds herself crossing lines she swore she never would. The only problem? Her husband isn't the one sending the messages.
Caution: This Erotica Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa Coercion Consensual Reluctant Heterosexual Fiction Cheating Cuckold Sharing Slut Wife Wife Watching Masturbation Oral Sex Voyeurism
Ray Vogler woke up hard.
Not the vague morning kind that faded with the first thought of the day. This was specific. This had a face attached to it — dark eyes looking up at him, blonde hair wrapped around his fist, the wet stretch of her mouth accommodating something she hadn’t expected to accommodate. He lay in the hotel bed on the twelfth floor and stared at the ceiling and replayed it from the beginning. Again.
Jenna on her knees. The black lace bra pulled below her breasts — he’d done that, yanked the cups down, and her tits had spilled out, full and bare and better than all the imagining had prepared him for. The flat stomach, the narrow waist, the way her body tapered into those hips and then flared into the ass he’d been watching through conference-room trousers since the first Meridian-Cortec event. And then her on the floor between his legs, her small manicured hands wrapped around the thickest thing she’d ever held — she’d said so, her voice unrecognizable — and her mouth, God, her mouth. The sound of it. The wet, rhythmic sound of Jenna Whitfield choking on his cock while her mascara ran.
He’d had women. Conference hookups, the dead marriage before the divorce, a string of hotel encounters that blurred together into the same mediocre shape. None of them were Jenna. None of them had Jenna’s face or Jenna’s body or the particular quality that Jenna carried, which was that she genuinely did not want to be there and was there anyway and was better at it than anyone who’d ever wanted to be.
The photo was still on his phone. He opened it. His cock against her cheek, those eyes looking up at the camera, lips swollen, a thread of saliva catching the light. The woman who’d filed an HR complaint against him. The woman whose husband had helped draft the formal warning that sat in his personnel file at Cortec. That woman, on her knees, with his cum on her chin. He looked at the photo for a long time.
The HR complaint. Dallas, fourteen months ago. The formal written warning. The meeting with Cortec’s head of HR — a woman named Sandra who couldn’t look at him while she read the language of the complaint. The specific words: inappropriate, sexualized, hostile work environment. His sales numbers — nine consecutive years as top earner — had kept him in his chair, but the warning was permanent. It would follow him until he retired. Every performance review, every promotion consideration, every transfer request: the warning was there, in the file, with Jenna’s name on it and James’s fingerprints all over it.
He didn’t forget things that cost him.
But the revenge was the garnish. The steak was Jenna herself — the body, the face, the way she’d dropped to her knees without being pushed. He hadn’t expected that. He’d prepared texts that would have gotten her to a handjob at best. She’d gone past that on her own, and the moment she went down — the flicker of surprise he couldn’t hide, the half-second where his breath caught — that was the moment he understood he was dealing with something deeper than a reluctant wife following instructions. There was a need in Jenna that she didn’t know she was feeding, and Ray, who had been reading people for thirty years, recognized it the way a salesman recognizes an open door.
He hadn’t gotten to fuck her. That was the thing. The blowjob — extraordinary, transcendent, the best head of his life from the most beautiful woman he’d ever touched — wasn’t enough. He needed to be inside her. On top of her. Underneath her. The thought was consuming in a way that obliterated everything else. He was hard again, for the fourth time this morning, which hadn’t happened since his twenties. Jenna Whitfield had rewired something in him.
He got out of bed and showered. Dressed. His body in the mirror was what it had always been — the gut, the thick chest, the grey hair going thin on top. He didn’t look at it with appraisal because he’d never looked at his own body with appraisal. His body was a vehicle. What mattered was the machinery behind it: the reading, the patience, the thirty years of closing.
While she’d been in the bathroom last night — the shower running, the door closed — he’d checked the laptop.
He’d noticed the green camera indicator light during the encounter. A small LED, top-center of the screen, glowing steadily while Jenna was on her knees. He’d clocked it the way he clocked everything in his visual field — without reaction, without breaking rhythm, filed for later. When she went to the bathroom, later came.
The laptop was open on the hotel room desk. A standing video call — the same corporate platform Cortec used — connected and live. The call timer showed over an hour. The recording software was running in the background, the same tool every company in their orbit licensed for compliance recording. He knew it well. He’d used it in his own sales reviews for years.
He opened the recording. Scrubbed to the beginning. And there was James.
The inset window showed James at his home desk, lit by the glow of his own screen. The first thirty seconds were gold: James’s face registering what he was seeing. The shock, the slow-motion horror, the hand reaching toward the screen as if to stop it. His mouth forming what Ray read as his wife’s name. The disbelief.
Ray watched it twice. The reaching hand, the silent mouth, the face of a man watching something he couldn’t stop and couldn’t look away from. This was the man who’d sat across from HR and confirmed the complaint. Who’d backed up his wife’s account of what happened in Dallas. Who’d cost Ray a formal warning and a year of sidelong glances in every conference room at Meridian. And here he was, lit by his own screen, watching his wife on her knees for the man he’d reported — and falling apart.
And then the shift. Gradual, undeniable. The horror softened into something else. James’s hand dropped from the screen. His breathing changed — Ray could see it in the rise and fall of his shoulders. His eyes stayed fixed on whatever he was watching. His hand disappeared below the frame. The shoulder began to move in a rhythm that Ray recognized from the opposite side of the same act.
James came before Ray did. Ray watched the recording to confirm it: James’s face at the moment of orgasm, caught by the laptop camera in clear resolution. His wife was on her knees for another man in a hotel room and James had jerked off to it and finished first.
Ray sat on the bed with the laptop and thought about this for exactly fifteen seconds. Then he opened the editing function in the recording software — trim, a feature he’d used dozens of times to cut dead air from sales recordings — and he cropped. He cut everything before the shift. The shock, the horror, the reaching hand — deleted. The recording now started minutes in, at the point where James was already visibly aroused, hand below the frame, watching with undisguised fascination.
Save. Overwrite original. Thirty seconds of work. The raw footage was gone.
What remained was a recording of a husband who’d watched his wife with another man and gotten off. No ambiguity. No horror preceding the arousal. Just a man enjoying the show.
He closed the laptop and put it back exactly as he’d found it. Jenna was still in the shower.
He had one more night. The conference ended tomorrow afternoon. The text thread — Ray’s phone spoofed as James ❤️ — was still live, and the real James was still buried three contacts deep under JM Consulting Grp, notifications silenced. The architecture he’d built last night was intact.
The plan was crude and direct, because Ray was crude and direct and this was the only way he knew how to operate. Keep the text thread warm through the day. Find a way to lead Jenna to the recording — she’d see a husband who enjoyed it, and the permission she’d been operating under would harden into certainty. Then push for tonight. Push for more than a blowjob.
He wanted Jenna Whitfield underneath him. He wanted to feel her around him. He wanted the ass he’d been fantasizing about since Dallas pressed against his hips while he fucked her, and he wanted to know — while he was inside her — that her husband had helped put a formal warning in his personnel file, and that her husband had watched her suck his cock and jerked off to it, and that none of them knew what Ray knew.
He checked his watch. Conference sessions started in forty minutes. He had time.
He thought about her body. The tits, unhooked from the bra, full and bare in the room’s low light. The curve of her back when she bent over. The ass — Christ, the ass. Years of charcoal trousers and pencil skirts and the green dress in Dallas, and none of it had prepared him for the real thing, bare except for the black lace, presented to him while she held her own underwear aside. The pink of her. The wet gleam. The sound she’d made when his thumb found her.
He was hard again. He would deal with it later, or he wouldn’t. It didn’t matter. What mattered was tonight.
James woke to a house that was too quiet in the specific way a house is too quiet when the person who makes it a home is somewhere else.
He’d been awake since four. Not the slow surfacing of a normal morning — the abrupt, total kind, where your eyes open and your heart is already running and you know before you’re fully conscious that something has gone wrong. He lay in bed for twenty minutes, staring at the ceiling fan that Jenna had picked out at the hardware store three years ago — brushed nickel, mid-century, she’d been very specific about the blade angle — and he replayed what he had seen last night until his chest hurt.
His home office was the second bedroom at the end of the hall. Dual monitors on an oak desk he’d bought at an estate sale and refinished himself, a task that had taken three weekends and produced a surface so smooth Jenna had run her palm across it and said I married a craftsman. The chair was ergonomic, expensive, the one indulgence he’d allowed for a job that kept him seated twelve hours a day. The bookshelves held textbooks from his graduate program — applied statistics, econometrics, two volumes of Bayesian methods he still referenced — and framed photos of Jenna. Jenna at their wedding, laughing, her head thrown back. Jenna on a beach in Tulum, her hair wet, her body in a white bikini that had caused a small traffic incident among the staff at the resort bar. Jenna at a conference gala two years ago, the green dress, every man in the frame oriented toward her whether they knew it or not.
James was a data analyst at Hadley & Morrow, a mid-tier consulting firm that punched above its weight on government contracts. He was good at his job — genuinely good, the kind of good that got him pulled into projects he wasn’t staffed on because someone needed the person who found the error that changed the conclusion. He lived in patterns. He ate the same breakfast every morning — two eggs, toast, black coffee — and ran the same three-mile loop through the neighborhood at 6 AM and showered at the same temperature and sat at the same desk and did the same meticulous, patient work that had built a career and a marriage and a life that, until twelve hours ago, he had understood. This morning the run hadn’t happened. His shoes were by the door and he hadn’t touched them. The thought of being outside — visible, in motion, in a world that didn’t know what he’d done — was unbearable.
He sat at the desk now with his coffee going cold and his monitors dark and his hands flat on the refinished oak and he understood nothing.
He had watched his wife suck another man’s cock through a laptop screen last night. He had heard the sounds — wet, rhythmic, unmistakable. He had seen Ray Vogler’s thick hands in her blonde hair. He had seen her on her knees in the black lace set he’d bought her for their anniversary, her breasts bare, her mascara running, her head moving in a rhythm that he could still hear if the house got quiet enough, which it was, constantly, because she wasn’t here.
He had come. He had come before Ray did. The most intense orgasm of his life, his hand inside his pants, watching the woman he loved perform an act she hadn’t performed on him in two years. The shame of it sat in his chest like a stone placed there by someone who intended it to stay.
He picked up his phone. The text thread with Jenna showed his messages from last night. The normal ones. Drink everything. You’ve earned it. Miss you. And then, hours later, the ones that went into silence:
You okay? Having fun?
Nothing.
Hey. Starting to worry. Text me when you can.
Nothing. Three calls — 10:00, 10:10, 10:30 — each ringing into oblivion. He hadn’t left a voicemail. What would he have said?
This morning he tried again. Careful. Calibrated. The text of a man pretending he hadn’t seen what he’d seen.
Morning, love. How’d you sleep?
He watched the screen. The minutes accumulated like evidence. She always texted back. Seven years of marriage and four years of dating before that and she always texted back — within minutes, usually, sometimes within seconds, the quick bright rhythm of a woman who kept her phone close because the person she wanted to talk to most was on the other end of it. The silence was unprecedented. The silence was data.
He called at 8:15. It rang and rang and went to voicemail — her voice, warm and professional: You’ve reached Jenna Whitfield, please leave a message. He didn’t.
He didn’t know about the contact switch. He didn’t know that his texts were arriving on her phone under JM Consulting Grp, filed somewhere between spam and conference logistics, notifications silenced. He didn’t know that she had never seen his messages. He didn’t know that she wasn’t ignoring him — that from her perspective, James had been texting her the most shocking things.
All he knew was silence. And the silence, coming the morning after what he’d witnessed, was worse than any response could have been. If she’d texted We need to talk — that would have been something. If she’d texted Last night was a mistake — that would have been something. Even I’m leaving you would have been data he could process. But this? This was the absence of signal, and for a man who made his living extracting meaning from information, the absence of information was its own particular hell.
The questions circled. He couldn’t stop them and he couldn’t answer them and they wouldn’t leave.
Why did she do it. The question had no clean edges. She’d been wearing lingerie. The black lace. She’d changed into it, which meant she’d made a decision before Ray arrived. She’d opened the door. She’d let him in. She’d dropped to her knees. None of this was coerced — at least not in any way the laptop camera could show him. She’d looked, from what he could see through the desk-angle shot, like a woman who was choosing to be there.
Why Ray. Of all the men at that conference — men who were handsome, men who were charming, men who looked like they belonged in the same room as Jenna — she’d chosen the one who repulsed them. The belly, the smell, the crude mouth that had cost him a personnel-file entry. The man who’d said that ass is wasted on one man in front of four colleagues. The man James had sat with Jenna in an HR office to file against. That man. On the receiving end of his wife’s mouth. Why?
Why was he aroused. The rage was constant — a hum in his chest that spiked every time a fragment surfaced. But underneath it, pulsing with the same rhythm, the arousal. He’d gotten hard watching. He’d stayed hard. He’d come harder than he’d come in years, maybe ever, and the timing of it — before Ray, beating the man to the finish line from a thousand miles away — suggested something about himself that he did not want to look at directly.
He thought about the forum post. Eight months ago, written on a throwaway account, late at night, in this same office chair. The careful words: consumed, overwhelmed, another man’s wanting. A fantasy he’d written in the abstract, using the precise, hedged language of a man who was trained to qualify his assertions. He’d posted it and responded to two comments and then deleted the browser history and never gone back. But the words had existed. The fantasy had existed. And now it had happened — not in the abstract, not in the controlled theater of his imagination, but in a hotel room with the worst possible man, and his body had responded exactly the way the fantasy said it would.
The gap between the man he believed he was and the man he had proven himself to be last night — that gap was where he lived now.
Why isn’t she answering. He texted again at 9:30. Just checking in. Hope the sessions are good today. Love you.
Nothing. The house was quiet. The coffee was cold. He got up and poured it out and made more and sat back down and stared at his phone and the phone stared back.
Jenna woke with the taste of him still in her mouth.
Not literally — she’d brushed twice, gargled with the hotel mouthwash that stung, drunk a full glass of water — but the memory of the taste had settled somewhere behind her tongue like a stain that cleaning couldn’t reach. Salt and musk and the faint bitterness at the back of her throat. She lay in the hotel bed and stared at the ceiling and the taste was there.
She showered for fifteen minutes. Hot enough to redden her skin. She scrubbed her face and brushed her teeth a third time and dressed for the morning session in a navy blazer and cream trousers and a silk camisole that was professional and nothing else. She dried her hair and put on makeup — light, precise, the minimum required to look like she hadn’t spent the night on her knees for a man she’d filed an HR complaint against. The woman in the mirror looked composed, competent, sharp. The woman in the mirror was a liar.
The morning session was supply chain risk modeling — her wheelhouse. She sat in the second row and took notes that were better than anyone around her expected, which was the same quiet pleasure it had always been. She asked two questions during the Q&A that the moderator called excellent and a panelist from Deloitte spent three minutes answering with visible respect. She was good at this. She was good at this and she held onto it the way you hold onto a railing when the floor is moving.
Coffee break. She was pouring cream into a cup at the station when Diane stopped beside her — the colleague who’d been at the mixer in Dallas, who’d put a hand on her arm when Ray said the thing that got him written up.
“You look amazing,” Diane said. The word carried its usual freight. Women told Jenna she looked amazing the way they told her the weather was nice — accurately, with a faint undertone of something that wasn’t quite resentment but lived in the same neighborhood.
“Thank you. Long night.” She said it without thinking and Diane’s eyebrows went up a fraction and Jenna corrected: “Reviewing the Hartley case study. Couldn’t sleep.”
She moved through the morning. Between sessions she fielded questions from two junior analysts from her own firm who wanted her opinion on a methodology paper, and she gave it, clearly and patiently, and they looked at her the way junior analysts always looked at her — with professional admiration that they were trying very hard not to let migrate south of her collarbone. She noticed and didn’t notice, the way she’d been noticing and not noticing since she was sixteen.
Between the second and third sessions, her phone buzzed. James ❤️.
How are you holding up today?
She read it twice. The words were fine. The concern was right. But the phrasing — holding up — snagged on something. She and James had a running joke about that phrase. It was HR language, the kind of thing a manager said to you after a layoff round while holding a coffee they’d bought themselves: How are you holding up? They’d mocked it together for years. James would never use it sincerely. Not with her. Not even in a text.
She stared at the message. She thought, for the first time and with a clarity that frightened her: Is this James?
The thought branched before she could stop it. If not James — then who? Someone who had stolen his phone and known the exact thread, the exact context, the exact history? Someone who had orchestrated last night’s escalation, the what about Ray, the coaching toward the hotel room, as an elaborate fraud? Her mind grazed the shape of it for a split second — Ray — and recoiled. The idea was insane. Ray Vogler did not have the sophistication, the patience, or the access. Ray Vogler was a crude, sweating salesman who couldn’t keep his eyes off her chest during quarterly reviews. The paranoia was absurd. She could feel how absurd it was even as it settled into her chest like something cold.
She typed Good. Busy day. and sent it and put the phone in her blazer pocket and went to the next session and the doubt went with her, small and persistent, lodged somewhere behind her sternum like a splinter she couldn’t reach.
The afternoon breakout was hosted by a Cortec VP she’d met at three previous conferences. She took a seat near the front and opened her notebook and then she felt him before she saw him.
The cologne arrived first. Heavy, department-store, sweet and chemical. Then the body heat — Ray ran warm, the way large men often did, and the air around him was always a degree or two above the room. He sat in the chair beside hers, which was not the only empty chair in the row, and his knee was closer to hers than geometry required.
She didn’t look at him. She wrote the date at the top of her notebook page and underlined it twice.
“Good morning, Blondie.”
“Good morning, Ray.”
“Sleep well?”
She turned to him. His face was the same face it had always been — the small eyes, the ruddy pockmarked skin, the jaw that needed a better razor. The grey hair was damp at the temples. His shirt strained across the gut, the buttons doing structural work. He looked like a man who sold industrial equipment at regional trade shows, which was functionally what he was, and the distance between his body and hers — the distance between what he was and what she was — was a chasm the size of a species divide.
Last night she had been on her knees with his cock in her mouth. The thought landed and she held her face steady and said: “Fine. You?”
“Best night’s sleep I’ve had in years.” He held her gaze. The smile didn’t reach his eyes because Ray’s smiles never reached his eyes. His smiles were instruments.
The session started and he watched the presentation with the half-attention of a man who already knew the material, and she stared at the slides and saw none of them.
She caught him in the hallway during the mid-afternoon break. She’d planned it — waited for the crowd to thin, positioned herself near the water station at the end of the corridor where the foot traffic was lightest. He came out of the men’s room and she was there.
“Last night was for my husband,” she said. Her voice was level, professional, the tone she used in vendor negotiations. “It will not happen again.”
Ray looked at her. He was holding a paper cup of water and he drank from it slowly, watching her over the rim with those small appraising eyes.
“I understand,” he said. He didn’t sound like a man who understood.
“I need you to hear me, Ray. What happened in that room — I did it for James. Not for you. You were — a means to an end. And the end has been reached.”
He crumpled the cup. Tossed it in the bin beside the water station. His expression hadn’t changed — the same unhurried, unconcerned composure he brought to every interaction. Nothing she said had landed on anything vital. She could see it in his face: her rejection was a weather event he’d been expecting and had already planned around.
“Sure,” he said. He adjusted his collar. “I hope your husband enjoyed it, at least.” He turned to go, then stopped. Offhand, as if remembering something trivial: “By the way — Last night, I think I saw the recording light on your laptop. The green one. Might want to check that.”
He walked off down the hallway. His footsteps were heavy and unhurried and he didn’t look back.
She stood at the water station with her hand on the paper cup dispenser and the words settled into her like something dropped into still water.
The recording light.
Her laptop recorded video calls automatically. It was a Cortec-licensed compliance tool — every company in their orbit used it, calls recorded by default, stored locally until manually deleted. She’d never thought about it. The standing video call with James was a nightly routine when she traveled. She’d never thought about the recording because the calls were just — them. James’s face before bed. Her face before bed. Nothing worth recording.
She carried the thought through the final session of the afternoon. She sat in the third row and took no notes and heard nothing the presenter said and when the session ended she walked to the elevator and pressed the button for nine and went to her room.
The laptop was on the desk where she’d left it. She opened it. The video call application was still installed, the recording archive accessible from the sidebar. She found it immediately — last night’s call, timestamped 10:47 PM, duration one hour and fourteen minutes. A standing video call between her laptop and James’s.
She pressed play.
The recording opened on her hotel room. The desk-angle view — herself in the frame, the bed behind her. In the inset window, smaller but clear: James.
He was at his home desk. The oak surface, the dual monitors dark behind him, the bookshelf with the framed photos she’d hung herself. He was watching the screen. His face was — she leaned closer — his face was focused, intent. His lips were parted slightly. His hand was below the frame.
She watched his shoulder begin to move.
The recording, as far as she could see, started here. There was no preamble. No shock. No horror. No hand reaching toward the screen. The recording began with her husband already engaged, already aroused, already watching with the rapt attention of a man seeing exactly what he wanted to see.
She sat on the edge of the hotel bed with the laptop in front of her and watched her husband masturbate to the sight of her with another man. His face — the face she loved, the face she kissed goodbye at the door, the face that looked at her across the kitchen table every morning — was transformed by something she recognized but had never seen this nakedly. Want. Consuming, urgent, helpless want. The want she’d been missing for two years.
He finished. She watched his face at the moment of it — the tension, the release, the brief closing of his eyes. He’d come watching her. He’d come watching her with Ray.
This was not a surprise, after all James had instigated the entire encounter. That said, she couldn’t shake the feeling that perhaps she had gone too far, they had never agreed to a blowjob. She wasn’t sure if making the fantasy real would lead to regret from James. But now she had evidence — video evidence, timestamped, unmistakable. Her husband had watched her suck Ray Vogler’s cock and he had been aroused and he had finished and at no point in the recording did he look like a man who wanted it to stop.
She sat with that for a full minute. It settled into the architecture of her understanding, reinforcing the load-bearing belief she’d built the entire night around: this is what James wants. I did this for him. And it worked.
Then she looked at the main feed.
The main camera — her laptop’s front-facing lens — showed the hotel room. Showed her. She watched herself from the outside for the first time. The black lace. The bare skin. Her hair falling forward. She was on her knees between Ray’s legs, her hands wrapped around him, her head moving. From this angle she could see what the room’s occupants couldn’t — the full picture. Her body, the lingerie, the curve of her back as she leaned forward. Ray above her, his thick hands finding her hair. The contrast between them: her beauty, his bulk. The beautiful woman and the ugly man. The wrongness of it visible from the desk-angle camera in a way it hadn’t been visible from inside the act.
She watched herself take him into her mouth. She watched the way her jaw stretched, the way her cheeks hollowed, the way her eyes looked up at him with an expression she did not fully recognize. She watched the saliva. The thread of it catching the light when she pulled back to breathe. She watched herself go deeper.
Her hand was on her thigh. She was gripping the fabric of her trousers. She was breathing harder than the moment warranted.