The Affair, Part 1 | |
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This story contains adult language and themes. If such language and themes offend you, please do not read further. Copyright 1997 by SSTORYMAN. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to reproduce this story in any form and for any purpose as long as this notice is reproduced and no financial remuneration is received by the person reproducing it. THE AFFAIR 1. Setting the Trap. "Do you need anything before I leave, Anne?" asked a voice from the doorway. Anne Sturges turned around and looked away from her computer. According to the clock on her desk, it was just past five thirty in the afternoon. She smiled. "No, thanks, Robin. I'll be leaving myself in a few minutes." "Oh, that's right," came the reply. "Don't forget! Your meeting with John Crawford is at six fifteen at Robinson's Bistro. Have a good evening!" "I hope to," Anne whispered to herself as the door closed. "I certainly hope to." Robin's working out great, Anne congratulated herself. She's a bright, high energy person. In three weeks she's mastered the job as my secretary/administrative assistant. Anne closed her computer's email window. Yeah, she sighed, she needed someone with good organizational skills to keep track of the paper, the files, and Anne's busy schedule as in-house legal counsel for Global Technology Solutions. Yep! Robin was a godsend to her and to GTS! She stretched and turned off her computer. No, Robin, Anne smiled to herself. I haven't forgotten my meeting with John. I've been planning this little meeting all week. She slowly walked to the small mirror on the wall of her office and looked at herself. Anne nodded silent approval. At 32, she thought, I still look awfully good. She smiled. Anne had done fashion modeling part-time during law school. Almost seven years ago. But she still turned heads when she walked down the street. She adjusted her dress while admiring herself. Today she'd worn the simple, off-white dress which accented her figure. The dress was admittedly too tight and an inch or two too short. But, after all, that was the point. The tightness called attention to her big breasts. Nothing like big tits to get a guy's attention, she chuckled. She fluffed up her long blond hair, which fell graciously over her shoulders. Her red heels and red and gold accent scarf completed a nice ensemble. Anne smiled again. It was almost showtime! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Robin Sullivan opened the door and slid into the driver's seat of her Honda Civic. Starting the engine, she drove to the parking lot exit to begin her drive home from GTS. Reflexively, Robin opened her purse and reached inside. Then she stopped. "Shit," she muttered to herself. "Shit, shit, shit! Driving is one of those times I miss smoking the most!" She sighed with resignation and placed her purse on the seat beside her. It was not surprising. For the last six years, every time she got behind the wheel she'd lit a cigarette and felt the welcome relief of nicotine entering her bloodstream. It was a ritual, a routine she both looked forward to and at the same time did without thinking. Smoking and driving; they just seemed to go together. She sighed again. Instead of lighting a cigarette, Robin put a stick of gum in her mouth. It was a fucking poor substitute! It seemed like only yesterday, but she hadn't smoked for four weeks. Her car, her hair, her clothes and her apartment no longer smelled of stale tobacco smoke. Robin pulled her blond hair behind her ears as she pulled into traffic. Funny, but she missed the smell. She looked down. The car ashtray was empty except for the pack of gum sitting there. The ashtray always used to be overflowing with lipstick-covered cigarette butts. She looked at the clean floor beneath her feet. Stray ashes from her cigarettes used to be everywhere. But no more. Now she was a non-smoker. God, she hated it! Robin knew why she'd done it. She was tired of the shit she took from her mother. She was tired of constantly wanting (no, needing!) a cigarette, but unable to steal enough time to go outside for smoke breaks to relieve her incessant cravings. She was tired of being a pariah; so few other people smoked or understood why she needed to. So she quit. She still wasn't sure how long she would last. She quit right before she started her new job. If she was going to do it, she'd decided, it would be easier to do starting a new job. No smoking was allowed in GTS' offices but, more importantly, no one at GTS knew her as a smoker. She'd have no routine of stealing away for smoke breaks, going to lunch only at restaurants with smoking sections, hanging out with her smoking buddies. At GTS it was different. Robin didn't know who smoked or even where to go for a smoke break. That helped. The routines and patterns were different. By now, after a few weeks, she sometimes went for several hours without thinking about smoking. But even so, she still missed it. She knew quitting cold turkey would be hard. Damn! It sure was. She missed smoking in her car. She missed smoking after meals. She missed smoking at her favorite bar. God, she missed going out. She used to spend a couple nights a week at the Danube, drinking and smoking with her girlfriends. She hadn't gone once since she quit. She couldn't. Last night she went out for drinks with Anne, her new boss. To a different bar, not the Danube. She'd had a good time. But she missed smoking. Still, she wasn't going to give in. Not yet. One day at a time, she reminded herself. One day at a time. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- At 5:45, Anne Sturges left the building and walked to her car. The March winds gusted, but it was surprisingly warm. She got in her red Miata and drove north to Robinson's Bistro. It was John Crawford's favorite meeting place. Robinson's was close to his house, on his way home from the office. He and Anne had met there many times before to discuss business. But Anne hoped tonight would be different. Three years ago Anne became in-house legal counsel for Global Technologies Solutions. Since then, she'd worked with outside lawyers on many projects. Their main outside counsel was Cromwell & Houston, the firm she worked for after law school. A large, old-line firm, Cromwell was expensive. Jim Thompson, the partner in charge of their account, was a stuffy older man. Anne didn't like him and didn't like how Cromwell's high fees bloated her budget. But Jim Thompson was Carl Anderson's buddy, and Carl was her CEO. So despite high hourly rates, she still used Cromwell for outside legal work. But even Carl had been upset at Cromwell's fees for GTS' public offering. So last year Anne got Carl's approval to use a new firm for GTS' purchase of Aggre-Tech. She'd hired Williams & Connors. And she met John Crawford. As a 40 year old corporate lawyer, John had a good reputation. His firm, Williams & Connors, was smaller than Cromwell & Houston. The rates were more competitive. The Aggre-Tech acquisition had been complex, and John had done a great job. Even Carl was impressed. More importantly, Anne liked working with John. After the Aggre-Tech deal closed, Anne started sending additional projects to Williams & Connors. An employment discrimination case, a bank refinancing, a licensing dispute. Of course John didn't do all the work, but Anne made sure he became the partner in charge of their account. It gave her an excuse to meet with John regularly, ostensibly to get status reports on various matters his firm was handling. The truth was, Anne just liked him. They'd become friends. She liked John's practical approach to solving legal problems, his sense of humor, and his easy-going, non-pretentious style. John's practical advice made her life as general counsel easier. So, slowly but surely, John got more and more of GTS' outside legal work. Growing the GTS account was important to John, and Anne knew he'd do whatever it took to keep her happy. Anne passed the university on her left. She turned off the CD player to concentrate on what she was going to say. In her younger days, Anne was a party girl. She still smiled when she remembered the time in law school when she'd slept with four different guys in three days. She and her ex-roommate, Gretchen, used to keep track of how many different guys they slept with. Sort of a competition. Anne smiled. It was a wonder either of them graduated! But Anne always accomplished what she set her sights on. Despite wild living, she graduated second in her class. After graduation, she started a big bucks, high pressure job as an associate at Cromwell & Houston. Unfortunately, Anne's social life died at Cromwell. She worked fifteen hour days. So Anne jumped at the chance to take the in-house legal position at GTS. However, GTS was a growing company. Things weren't much better as far as time for playing was concerned. But Anne was going to use her position at GTS as a stepping stone to an even better and more prestigious one. When the time was right. Now the GTS public offering, the Aggre-Tech deal and a second public offering were done. Finally, for the first time in a long time, Anne had time to rebuild her social life. Oh, she was never celibate, even when not seeing anyone. She'd always been sexually aggressive. The staff at GTS called her "the Lawyer Bitch" behind her back. It was true; she'd screwed her share of GTS software developers, often late in the evenings at work. Once she even screwed a mail room guy in her office. She always got sex when she needed it, but now that her schedule was clearing out, Anne wanted something more. She needed some new friends. Her old roommate now did trial work at the attorney general's office. Gretchen had no time for partying anymore. Last night Anne and Robin went drinking. Although she was her boss, Anne enjoyed going out with Robin. A petite, very attractive, 25 year old single girl with long blond hair, Robin was even wilder than Anne was in her prime. They'd had a great time and agreed to do it again. But even more than drinking and partying, Anne wanted a serious relationship. One with more than just sex. That was why she was meeting with John. His marriage was on the rocks. He'd talked candidly about it. John was blunt when he talked about things. Simply put, John Crawford was the man she wanted. She wanted to have an affair. A real affair. And if it worked out, maybe more. But mostly Anne wanted to fuck him. He was good looking, smart and fun. If it ended his disintegrating marriage, so what? That wasn't her fault. But she'd get what she wanted. Anne pulled into Robinson's parking lot. She put on her bitchiest attitude as she walked into the bar. John was waiting for her. Briefcase on the table. Ready for business. Well, so was Anne. "Hi, John," Anne purred. "Been here long?" "Hi, Anne," he replied. "Not long. Five minutes. Sit down. What'll you have? The usual?" Anne ordered red wine. Supposedly she and John were meeting to do business or she'd have ordered a gin and tonic. For twenty minutes they drank wine and talked about the Nevins case, a matter Anne had referred to Williams & Connors. As the Nevins discussion ended, it was time to spring the trap. "So, John, tell me. How are things at home these days?" John stopped to light a cigarette. Anne didn't smoke, but she didn't mind that he did. Her old roommate Gretchen used to smoke like a chimney! And Anne had dated guys who smoked before. She'd never minded kissing a smoker. Not in the slightest. "Not too well, Anne. Thanks for asking." John frowned. "Sherry and I still fight. All the time. About stupid things. To be honest, I'm thinking about moving out and filing for divorce. At least maybe trying a separation." Anne smiled sweetly. "I'm so sorry to hear that, John." A long pause followed while she waited for the sincerity of her remark to sink in. "Tell me," she went on in a very matter of fact tone. "Do you still sleep with her?" John looked surprised. "No," he admitted. "Sherry and I haven't had sex for months. I don't think she's interested. I know I'm not. Why do you ask?" Anne didn't answer right away. She picked up her wine glass and took a long, deliberate sip. "Oh, I don't know," she smiled. "I just wondered whether you'd be interested if I knew someone who'd like to sleep with you?" A wry smile formed on his face. John took an extra long drag on his cigarette while the impact of her statement registered. "Really? Who might that be?" Anne smiled back. "Before I tell, I have to know if you'd cheat on your wife. Divorce or no divorce, some men wouldn't. Are you willing to fool around?" She was toying with him. But he didn't seem to mind playing her little game. He smiled. "Well, I guess that depends. It depends on who the person is. Anyone I know?" Anne took another sip of wine. She was enjoying this. "Hang on. Let me get this straight. You'd have an affair if you liked her? You'd cheat on Sherry, even though you're still married?" "Christ, Anne," John sighed. "What is this? A morals examination? God, yes, I'd cheat on her. In a second. She's been a real bitch. She deserves no better treatment than she's given me." "Okay," Anne went on. "But let me ask you this. Have you ever cheated on her before?" John knew Anne was playing a game. She wasn't going to divulge more until she got what she wanted. "I have nothing to hide," he replied as he crushed out his cigarette. "Yes, I've cheated on Sherry before. Most men do it at one time or another. Do you want details?" He didn't sound upset. "Yes, please," Anne grinned mischievously. She loved dirt. Friend or not, it might prove interesting and even helpful. "It was about five years ago," John began. "I had a real cute secretary named Laura. It was the same time Sherry and I started having difficulties. Laura was single and worked long hours. She was great. She listened to my troubles. She sympathized and encouraged me to be true to myself. God, I appreciated her. She was good for me, and good to me. So on more than a few nights, we did it in my office." Anne's eyes sparkled. "So, you fucked her in your office?" "Yes, sure," he replied. "I fucked her." Anne took a sip of wine. She'd established that John would cheat on his wife. "Whatever happened to sweet little Laura?" John frowned. "She quit two years ago. It was painful. Laura said she did it to take a better job. I didn't believe it. After she left I wanted to continue our relationship. I tried to reach her but she wouldn't return my calls. Eventually she moved out of town. A friend of hers later told me Laura left because she feared she'd destroy my marriage if we continued to see each other. Of course, Laura was right. I was prepared to leave Sherry for her. But I never had the chance." He shrugged. "That's about it." An even bigger smile spread over Anne's face. The next lie would be harmless, but necessary. Even though John would probably see through it. "John, that's a good story. You're a typical male. You let your cock do your thinking. Frankly, I expect that. Now, what would you say if I told you the woman who is hot to sleep with you is my new secretary, Robin?" John was surprised. That was not what he expected. But he recovered quickly, and smiled. "Your new secretary is pleasant and very attractive, Anne. I like blonds, you know" Anne smiled. Sherry was a brunette. "Yes, I thought you liked blonds," Anne smiled. She deliberately fluffed her own blond hair. Not subtle, but an important part of the game. "There's something else," John went on. "One more criterion to be satisfied before I'd have an affair with Robin .... Or with any other beautiful blond who wanted to sleep with me," he added. "What's that?" "Does Robin smoke?" Now it was Anne's turn to be surprised. "Why?" she asked, stumbling a bit. "Why does it matter?" "It matters to me," John answered. "It's important. I'll never get involved with another woman who doesn't." Anne was perplexed. What the hell difference did it make if she smoked? Or, to continue the charade, whether Robin did? John saw Anne's look of confusion. "You see, Anne, Laura smoked. For years I'd been a closet smoker. No one knew. Not even Sherry. Laura helped me face the fact that I am a smoker. She helped me come out of the closet and tell everyone the truth. With her help I realized the opinions of others don't matter. What matters is being true to myself. As a person and as a smoker. Because that's who and what I am." Anne still looked confused. John had smoked as long as she'd known him. But she'd only known him for the last year and a half. She had no idea his smoking in public was a recent development. "I still don't get it," she replied. "That's great, but it's in the past. Why do you care whether ... whether Robin smokes?" As if to make a point, John paused to light another cigarette. "Because Sherry was furious when I told her I'd been smoking behind her back for years. She said she felt betrayed. Said she'd always been afraid of men who smoke. And she hates the smell. She couldn't accept it." John took a drag and exhaled. "I did mislead her. I smoked behind her back throughout our marriage, always very careful not to let her find out." He laughed suddenly. "It involved lots of breath mints and clever lies." He paused. A serious look reappeared on his face. "Even then our marriage wasn't doing well. My little smoking revelation made it worse. Much worse. Sherry didn't understand and didn't like it. She thought it set a bad example for our kids. And now she didn't trust me, either. I mean, if I could hide that from her, I could hide anything. She suspects I was sleeping with Laura ... excuse me, fucking Laura. To this day Sherry won't let me smoke in my own house, except in the basement." An undercurrent of anger appeared in his voice. "I swore that if this marriage ended, I would never again get involved with a woman who's not a real smoker. Never." Anne tried to recover. This was an unexpected setback. "Well, what if I told you that Robin does smoke?" she asked cheerfully. Actually, she was pretty sure Robin didn't. After all, yesterday she spent all evening with her and rode in her car. She doubted Robin did. But it didn't matter. This wasn't about Robin anyway. "Anne, you don't understand. I don't just want a woman who smokes. I want a smoker, a woman committed to being a smoker whatever happens. Someone who won't quit in the future. Because I'm not going to, and I refuse to go through hell twice." Anne tried again. "Shit, John, even just for a roll in the hay? Just for a little affair?" She couldn't believe it was so important. It didn't matter to her that he smoked. Why would he refuse to fuck her just because she didn't? "No, not even for a one night stand," he replied solemnly. "I wasn't kidding. Never again. Never." He took a drag on his cigarette. "Since emerging from the closet I've reoriented my life. Except my marriage. The guys I hang out with? Smokers. The activities I attend? I want to be with smokers." He lowered his voice. "I was pissed when Williams & Connolly's offices went non-smoking a couple years ago. I even thought about leaving the firm because of it. I can't smoke there. Not even at night." "Where would you go? Aren't most firms and office buildings non-smoking theses days?" "There's a small firm which split off from Williams & Connors a while back. About half a dozen lawyers left over this issue. It's called Johnson & Myers." Anne nodded. She'd heard of it. Pretty good reputation. "Randy Johnson was a friend of mine at Williams & Connors. There were lots of reasons why they left, but part of it was because our offices became non-smoking. Randy and some of the most productive litigation partners were pissed. They formed their own litigation firm and signed a lease for office space in a building which permitted them to set their own smoking policy." John smiled. "As a practical matter, their policy is simple. Almost everyone who works there smokes. And the firm has grown. Others joined for the same reason. Randy and I recently talked about me joining them, too. They don't have much of a corporate practice. I'd be the head of their corporate law group." He laughed. "Hell, I'd be their corporate law group if I joined them." He paused. "Anne, I didn't mean to tell you. It's highly confidential. No one at Williams & Connors knows. And I may not do it. But I'm serious about smoking. I'm not going to have an affair with Robin or anyone else who's not a smoker. It's that simple." "Well," Anne smiled after she thought for a minute. "I'll have to find out whether Robin smokes, won't I?" John smiled back. "I like Robin," he winked. "And I'd fuck her in a minute if she's a smoker. Seems like a nice girl, and I love that blond hair. But if she doesn't smoke, that's the way the ball bounces." John wasn't really talking about Robin. Anne was sure. Hell, he'd never spoken more than a dozen words to her. But the mutual charade allowed both of them to save face. Because John's answer to the real question Anne was asking was "no." John announced he had a basketball game to attend. One of his daughters had a game. The meeting ended. Anne drove home in a daze. She arrived at her condo after a short drive. Robinson's was a stone's throw from her complex. Anne poured herself a Diet Pepsi and sat down to think. She didn't need any more wine. She needed a clear head. The original plan had been to invite John back to her place. To start the affair. Anne still wanted him. But now there was a problem. She wasn't a smoker. Damn, Anne thought. I've never smoked in my life. Well, that wasn't true. She'd tried smoking a few times as a teenager. Shit, who hadn't? But she didn't care for it. It seemed stupid. She'd never understood its appeal. Never wanted to. Until now. But I could learn, she decided. It wouldn't bother me, not really. God, after living with Gretchen for three years I probably inhaled enough second hand smoke to screw my lungs anyway. Anne smiled. If Gretchen weren't so busy, I'd ask her to teach me. But Gretchen had no time for anything anymore. Anne picked up the phone and dialed Gretchen's number. Maybe Gretchen would teach her. She'd get a kick out of it. But Anne realized she didn't know whether or not Gretchen still smoked. They never saw each other. Whatever she was going to do, it had to be this weekend. Time was of the essence. The answering machine kicked in. Damn! Anne left a brief, nondescript message on Gretchen's machine asking her to call back right away. Well, I'll do it myself if I have to. I have to learn to smoke. God, John practically admitted that if I smoked he'd jump into bed with me. He likes me blond hair. The thought excited her. She began to fondle her breasts for several seconds, then moved her fingers down, up under her short dress, and inside her panties. She began to stroke her clitoris. Masturbation was her main form of sexual activity these days. But it felt good. It always did. But not good enough, she interrupted herself. I'll do it myself. I'll go to the store and buy some cigarettes. Right now. Then she laughed. God, that didn't work when I was a teenager. No, I need someone to teach me. But who? The unanswered question hung heavy in the air as Anne turned on the TV and distracted herself with a movie. She'd figure it out this weekend. She had to. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Robin headed for her car. It wasn't late. Just after ten o'clock. The cool, outside March air was a welcome change from the hot, smoke-filled bar scene at The Hole in the Wall this Friday night. She'd had too much to drink. But she had to drive home. She sighed as she buckled her seat belt. She'd make it okay. She wasn't drunk. Robin put another stick of Juicy Fruit in her mouth and chewed frantically. God, why had she agreed to this get together? Usually Robin enjoyed seeing Lisa, Bonnie and Heather. Originally the four of them met two years ago at a legal secretaries association Christmas party. The other girls worked at Johnson & Myers. Since then they frequently got together. A girls' night out thing. But Robin had purposely avoided them for the last month. Because they all smoked. Lisa Robinson was the most recent addition to their group. Witty and friendly, she was Robin's favorite. Lisa worked for her firm's senior partner. She'd only been a smoker for a short time and, accordingly, was not sympathetic to Robin's attempt to quit. Lisa'd teased Robin mercilessly all night, offering cigarettes and blowing smoke in her face. But, frankly, neither Heather Summer nor Bonnie Robertson had been much kinder. She'd taken a lot of shit from them. As she left the parking lot, Robin knew getting together had been a mistake as far as she was concerned. She wasn't ready to handle the temptation. Not yet. It drove her crazy to be the only non-smoker in a group of smokers. She wanted a cigarette every time the other girls lit up. At one point she almost broke down. Robin was sitting next to Heather who was smoking Marlboro Light 100's, Robin's old brand. As soon as Heather lit up, she laid her pack on the table directly in front of Robin and exhaled a cloud of smoke in her direction. God, it smelled so good! Robin almost reached over, grabbed Heather's pack, and took a cigarette. Oh, how she wanted one! But somehow Robin resisted the temptation. Sitting in her car, she shivered thinking how close she came. It would have been four weeks of hell down the drain! For nothing. Because Robin knew that the first cigarette would have been followed by another, and then another, and then .... The evening proved she hadn't reached a turning point. The struggle was still real. Oh, God, Robin realized. I still want a cigarette! Right now. In the car. The temptation was irresistible. She thought about pulling into a gas station and buying a pack of Marlboros. To hell with it! She wanted to smoke, to suck smoke deep into her lungs, to feel nicotine's pleasures. She clicked her turn signal to pull into a convenience mart ahead on the left. Then she caught herself and instead continued driving straight ahead. She chewed her gum with all the nervous energy she could muster. She wasn't giving in. Not tonight. She'd have to be careful, not spend time with people who were smoking. The next time she sat next to someone who lit up a cigarette, Robin didn't know what she might do. For some reason she thought about Anne. She hoped Anne's meeting went better than her evening with the girls. What a disaster! She smiled. John Crawford was cute. I wonder if he and Anne are fooling around? Nah, Robin giggled. I can't imagine it. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- John Crawford sat in his basement. Smoking. His wife was in bed. So were his daughters. The basketball game ended with a victory for his oldest daughter's team. Everyone was happy. Everyone but John. Anne Sturges was propositioning him. That bullshit about her secretary wanting to sleep with him was obviously a ruse. John laughed as he lit a second cigarette. Robin probably couldn't pick him out of a crowd. He'd only met her a couple times. No, Anne was feeling him out. He laughed again. Bad choice of metaphors! She was trying to find out whether he wanted to sleep with her. John was attracted to Anne. She was the type of woman that Sherry, his wife, was not. Aggressive, blatantly sexual, exciting. And blond. John liked blonds. They seemed worldly, more sophisticated. Though his wife Sherry was a brunette, she was still attractive. At 38, she looked good. She worked out on the treadmill and the bicycle. Her stomach muscles were firm and her figure was a real asset. Her tits weren't as big as Anne's. But then, whose were? He sighed. Anne looked great in that tight, short dress. She was after him. The thought was flattering. So why did he refuse her by saying he was only interested in smoking women? Well, it was true. He loved watching women smoke. At times like this John regretted having married Sherry. He'd married her when he was much younger, when he thought he could control his smoking fetish. He knew better now. His fetish was part of him. It was not going away. He would always be attracted to women who smoke. It turned him on. But that was beside the point. He was a smoker. Period. He sighed as he thought about Laura James, the other blond in his life. She'd been everything he wanted in a lifetime partner. She was kind and considerate. She'd idolized him, pampered him, and she smoked. He'd taken her advice and come out of the closet as a smoker. He should have done it sooner. Years sooner. But Laura was gone and wasn't coming back. If she'd stayed around, his marriage would have ended. There was electricity between them. If Laura'd been willing, John would've walked out on Sherry. But John didn't feel the same way about Anne. Not yet. She was a good friend, and she'd be a real treat between the sheets. But he wasn't sure he'd leave his wife for her. Of course, that wasn't what Anne was asking. She was talking about an affair. That was all. And he wasn't opposed to considering it. Except that Anne didn't smoke. John had sworn to himself that he'd never get involved with another woman who wasn't a real smoker. He wanted to share his life with a woman who shared his love for smoking. Someone he could watch light a cigarette, see her take big drags and inhale. Someone who would make him hard. None of that seemed nearly so important when he was 22 when he married Sherry. But it was now. Even so, despite her failings, he didn't hate Sherry. In many ways he still loved her. She just couldn't accept him as a smoker. Oh, there were other problems, too. She resented the hours he worked, the fact that he brought in four times the income that she did as a librarian, and the fact that he didn't spend as much time with their girls as she thought he should. But John knew those other things could be worked out. His smoking was the difficult point. But he wasn't going to quit. He was through apologizing for his habit. He had to be true to himself. Even if his marriage died in the process. But he didn't want to hurt the girls. Beth was 15 and Grace was 13; they both adored him. He adored them, too. Sherry said his smoking was a "bad influence." Probably was. But so what? If they started smoking they'd join 50 million other Americans who do, too. Big deal. He didn't particularly want them to smoke, but neither did he care if they eventually decided to There was a more fundamental issue. John believed that Sherry's alienating him because of tobacco was more serious than his "bad influence." A divorce would devastate the girls. Sometimes, however, those things happen. He only hoped the girls would understand if and when it came to that point. John finished his cigarette. Time to go upstairs and lie down next to his beautiful, cold wife in their king size bed. He turned out the light as he walked up the stairs. |
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