Back
from Friday lunch to his office near the Barbican. The receptionist eyed him
speculatively. It was just after two. There was a message from Storm. Call
ASAP.
He
closed his office door and rang her mobile number.
‘Beattie,
is that you?’ Through her slurred words he realised she was in a bad state. It
was her last day at the bank. As a trader she’d taken far too many risks and
eventually it had caught up with her. She'd taken the boys round to a
subterranean bar restaurant on Eldon Street near Broadgate Circle.
‘Can
you come and rescue me?’ To give her her due she laughed at this. ‘White knight
routine. You know the form. Sorry. So very sorry…’
‘Not
a problem. I’ll be there in ten minutes. Don’t move.’
‘Not
very likely. I’ve a full wine glass in front of me. In fact I don’t think I can
without your help.’
He
grabbed a cab outside his office and directed it to Broadgate giving himself
five minutes to reflect on his damsel in distress, Sara Thomasina Oona Rhiannon
Montgomery. Her nickname had kicked in at St Mary’s. Sara had been shortened to
Sar but then one of her friends noticed her initials. When she left school for
the last time she threw her English dictionary out of the car window. It had
been presented to her on Prize Day some years earlier.
She’d
been born in Llangollen hospital. Her father, an officer in the Royal Welch
Fusiliers, had driven her mother across the border from her grandparents’ home
in Cheshire to ensure she was indisputably Welsh.
At
Cambridge Storm had been rusticated. She was doing more damage to the Boat
Club’s training regime than any night out. She worked her way assiduously up
from her college eight to the might of Goldie and the University boat crew,
sleeping with several of them along the way. And she was seldom sober, missed
classes and comported herself like some gin-sodden relic of the early
nineteenth century.
She
was alone at a restaurant table in the farther dark recesses when he found her,
in her chic charcoal grey office suit and Hermès
scarf. The staff were briskly cleaning up after the lunch crew had left. Her
wine glass was empty and she was about to pour herself another drink.
He
grabbed the bottle out of her hand. ‘I bet you haven’t eaten.’
‘Thanks
for coming. Can count on you. Was going to phone Foxy but didn’t think she
would be able to get away.’
‘Probably
not. Have you eaten?’
She
smiled, fingering the rim of her wine glass. ‘Whaddya think, Beattie? No, I
haven’t.’
‘You
will now.’ He scanned the menu, called one of the waitresses over and ordered a
lasagna.
‘You?’
‘For
you. I’ve already had lunch.’
‘Have
a drink. My card’s behind the bar. Stick it on my tab. One more is not going to
matter.’
‘I’ll
pass.’ He thought they might take a taxi to his car park and then he could
drive her.
‘Not
like you. Like you. Like you. I do. I really do’ She reached out across the
table for his hand.
‘Storm!
Just drink some water will you.’ He opened a bottle of San Pellegrino and they
both watched the bubbles in the glass.
‘Bubbles,
pretty bubbles. Why are you so good to me?’
‘I’m
not. Just want to make sure you get home safe and sound.’
Storm
had other ideas. She wanted him to take her to a bar in Clerkenwell where a
friend was having her own farewell party before leaving for Australia.
‘Got
to go. Texted me. Got to go. She insists.’
‘Not
until you’ve eaten something. At least.’ He thought it would provide some
motivation.
The
lasagna duly arrived and Storm ate it eyeing Beattie and the wine bottle.
‘Can’t
I have another drink?’
‘Water.’
‘You
have one then. Finish the bottle. Don’t want to waste it. Then see about my
tab.’
‘First
the water.’
‘Ok,
ok.’ She shuddered as she took a sip of the San Pellegrino.
Beattie
went over to the bar and sorted her tab. He returned with the credit card and
receipt for her to sign.
‘Much?
How much?’
‘Over
four hundred!’
‘Christ!
Bloody bankers. And all the back office staff too. Eh well.’ She signed with a
sigh.
Beattie
didn’t think much of bankers at the best of times but was really pissed that
they’d drunk at her behest, charged everything to her card and abandoned her.
‘Had
to get back to work. The market doesn’t stop. Except for me.’
‘What’ll
you do now?’
‘Haven’t
a clue. Something will come along. It always does. Let’s finish the bottle.’
Once
she’d demolished the lasagna he poured each of them a half glass of the white
wine which it didn’t take long to finish.
‘It’s
time we moved on. You up to it?’
‘Give
me your arm, Beattie, you lovely man.’
She
struggled to her feet leaning heavily on him and they swayed towards the door.
‘Wait,
wait. Please. Gotta pee. Loo’s here. Take me in.’
‘Storm!’
‘It’ll
be alright. Don’t make a fuss. Don’t want to piss my pants or go all over the
floor.’
He
stood her in the cubicle. ‘Make sure you…’
‘Yes,
yes. Good grief, man. You’d think I was a little girl. Promise to behave. Do
you want to see me take off my knickers? Thought not. Go now and wait outside
for me.’
There
was a marked improvement in her deportment as she came out of the loo. However
she took his arm to mount the stairs and would not let go as they waited for a
taxi. He hoped she had forgotten about her other farewell party but she had
not. She insisted they go.
‘Look,
I’ll drop you off there and then go and pick up the car. Then we can get back
to the flat in Pimlico.’ There was no way he wanted to take her on to her own
place.
She
agreed to the plan and as she stepped out of the taxi she turned and smiled.
‘Foxy’s a lucky girl. Why are you only my tennis partner?’
His
mind was running to tennis as he went to fetch his BMW. Storm played a mean doubles
game. They’d entered tournaments in London, Berkshire, Hampshire and East
Sussex with Foxy happy to see them go. Even all the way through her pregnancy
she played. Towards the end she could not run round very much but still
dominated the net. Their opponents found her already large breasts difficult to
avoid watching as they rose and fell with her every breath – a thing of beauty
and a joy forever!
Back
at the bar in Clerkenwell Storm was waiting for him. Her friend had already
left. Beattie was relieved at this news although he was sure Storm had indulged
in at least another glass of wine while he was away. As she slid into the seat
she arched over and tried to kiss him on the mouth. He pulled back and her lips
brushed his cheek. Her green eyes flashed as she turned away.
They
did not speak as he headed down Farringdon Road towards the Thames. He would
take his customary rat run south of the river and back across Lambeth Bridge to
Pimlico. Storm had a benign expression on her face. She liked being driven.
When
they reached Blackfriars Bridge, without a word, she unfastened her seat belt,
leaned over and adroitly pulled down the zip of his suit trousers and reached
for his cock.
‘Storm!
What on earth?’
‘Shush,
Beattie. You’ll like it.’
And
in the midst of the traffic crossing the bridge she began skillfully to suck
the tip of his cock while holding the growing shaft between her hands. He
squirmed momentarily in his seat, trying to fend her off with one hand.
‘I’m
going to stop the car.’
‘What?
And back up all the traffic behind you? I don’t think so.’
Beattie
could see in his mirrors what seemed an endless line of traffic. She was right.
After a further effort to pull her up from his lap he abandoned himself to her determined
and vigorous attentions. There was no way out and he could not, would not make
a scene. He just hoped no oncoming lorry or pedestrians would be able to see
what was going on. Her mouth was wet, almost as wet as a baby’s kiss, and,
despite feeling guilty, he was very aroused. She kept curling back his foreskin
with her tongue, gently caressing him. He looked straight ahead, focused on
tightening all his muscles, and resisted the urge to explode.
This
resistance only made the moment more intense. By the time they crossed Lambeth
Bridge he was in agony, a delicious agony and by the time they reached Pimlico
he knew he would not be able to prevent his orgasm. She had become more
insistent and took him to another level of pleasure going down deeper and
deeper on him.
‘Look,
Storm, I’m going to come. You’ll have to swallow.’
‘But,
Beattie,’ she half chuckled, her mouth full, ‘I’ve told you before I just don’t
do that.’
‘This
time. Please. For me.’
‘No.
No. Not even now. Not even for you.’
And
by the time they were turning into Alderney Street within sight of his flat,
with Storm knowing the inevitable and clutching his cock in both hands, he
ejaculated what seemed an enormous jet of fluid which spilled out over her
hands.
‘Oh
God, oh God! Quick, there’s a box of Kleenex in the glove compartment. We’ve
got to clear up this mess.’
Storm
did not help by rubbing his cock with the tissue, not letting him subside, as
he parked. She was laughing, gales of laughter emerging from that wicked mouth
of hers, as she thrust his cock back in his pants and pulled up his zip.
‘There.
There. No one will know.’
By
the time he got her up to the flat her ebullience had diminished and after she
had visited the bathroom he took off her shoes and lay her down on the black
leather couch in the living room. Within seconds she was asleep and he went
searching for a comforter to cover her, thinking how he would explain all this
to Foxy when she got back from work, and whether he would tell her that her
best friend had fellated him while he was driving across Blackfriars Bridge!
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