Jessica Bensen
Stories (2/0)
Dare To Run
During a dark and dry night, Kevin sat in a tree, flashes of his broken childhood invading his senses as he sat there. Even so, he couldn't complain too much since he had such an amazing view. Despite being at the perfect distance from her house, he was close enough to see every inch of her through his binoculars, but far away enough that she wouldn't be able to see him through the windows. He tracked her movements throughout the house as he held the binoculars to his eyes. Throughout the house, she bounced and flowed, and Kevin realized that there was not a single window obstructed by a blind or curtain. It was like she was performing. Nobody lives like that unless they want to be seen. Kevin had worked on dozens of cases where girls just like him believed themselves above such precautions. The girls believed they did not need to be worried. There, through clear, well-lit windows, they danced, just like she did, taunting the world, taunting him. While he remembered his beautiful Mother dancing in his childhood home before she left, Kevin took a deep breath as he recalled the last time he saw her. In comparison to his mother, those two beautiful girls were so focused on themselves, just as she was, oblivious to the impact they had on others, content to go about their own business while leaving permanent scars in the hearts they loved. Ashley would not be an exception to this rule, as they always got what they deserved. They would put on their little show and disappear before the encore. As he sat in her audience, he studied her closely. When she was getting ready for bed, she put on a baby blue pajama bottom and a flimsy tank top. In fact, she might as well have been wearing nothing at all. As soon as she was dressed, she started dancing to whatever music filled her life, and her tank top did not restrict her breasts in any way. She was practically inviting men like Kevin to stare at her body, stare and yearn for her, just so she could reject them.
By Jessica Bensen3 years ago in Fiction