Covid ruined a lot of things for students. One of those things was the annual Sadie Hawkins day dance. So parents went to some remarkable lengths to try to make things go as well as they could. In this case, Helen suggested she and her son, Bobby, have the dance at home, and she'd be his date. It was sweet, and then things got passionate for both of them. It was safe to say a cartoon character changed their lives forever.
A couple inherit a country estate due to a kind deed. They start to have fun, but who is really in charge? Is it the man, or is it the woman? Or perhaps the women? Who is ahead of the game? The Player, or is he being played?
A delightfully mushy romantic story of a man who gets a second chance at love at first sight with a girl (now a woman) he glimpsed once long ago from across a crowded room. Their teen-aged romance was postponed, but not lost or forgotten forever.
As homage to Lubrican - and by popular demand, here is my continuation of "The Cheerleader Blues" - a great story that originally ended much too soon...
An elite Soldier pledged only to the empire is put into stasis for a mission. What he does not know is that it was rigged and the mission was supposed to fail. He awakes to a new time where his unit no longer exits and where his cadet family is gone. As the emperor's champion his authority is second only to the emperor who is in need of help and his is family.
Kimberly Woods is not your average teenager. Incredibly intelligent, physically fit, endlessly energetic, seductive. Oh, and she has a MASSIVE FUCKING COCK. But it turns out that there are more like her. And the world is threatened by those who have decided that they should rule! And so, teaming up with a snarky team of sexy spies, it's time for Kimberly Woods to save the world.
A story in the Toby Wakefield Stories Universe
While working at St. Bart's Catholic Church Toby Wakefield has sex with and falls in love with nineteen-year-old Sister Mary Cecile who is transferred back east to Baltimore and later appears in another Toby Wakefield story, "Rina Strelnicov."