My sister,my sex slave(29)
"I know you haven't done that with anyone else," he said. "I can tell."
"How can you tell?" she demanded. "There wasn't any blood."
"Tight as you were," he said, "it had to be the first time."
"You don't think that I am awful, do you?" she asked.
"I love you," he said, simply. "Nothing else much matters. Now, you'd better get back to your room in the big house and I'll get out of here."
"I wish you could take me with you," she said. "I wish that awful bad. I don't want to go back to the house."
He talked calmly and sensibly with her and when he left her, eventually, she was quite willing to go back to her bed and get some sleep. She walked in the night, looking up at the lights in Lily's room and she decided that she would have to say something to Lily about leaving her lights on all night. She smiled in the darkness as she realized that she was not paying the electric bill and it was none of her business what Lily did with her lights.
She crept into the quiet house and when she slid between the sheets of her bed she resolved that she was going to stay awake and think about Adam Wright and the things that she had done with him. She wanted to remember again and again the way he told her that he loved her.
She was sure that she enjoyed hearing those words most of all.
She wondered, too, if she was a bad girl now. The dreams that she could barely remember now were something new with her, and the things that she did with Adam were brand new.
She wondered what he would do or say if he knew that she was not yet sixteen. Would he keep right on loving her, or would he drop her like a hot potato? She was still thinking about these things when she fell sound asleep.
It seemed to her that she had barely blinked her eyes and it was morning and brilliant sunshine was in the room with her. She sat up and lit a cigarette and then she smelled the rich fragrances of bacon and coffee and she jumped out of bed and put on a robe. She went out into the hallway and she met Lily on her way downstairs, too.
Norma smiled at her baby sister and noticed that Lily looked a bit tired and slightly peaked but Norma didn't say anything to her about leaving her lights on all night. She remembered, at the last moment, that Lily might ask how she found out about the lights and she would be in trouble right away.
The others were already at the table and when Norma looked at Lennie she felt a sense of embarrassment. It disturbed her to have to accept the knowledge that Lennie was a thief. She had been very fond of Lennie, Carol and the twins. She hated to think of them in prison. She liked each and every one of them.
She helped Lennie and the boys load the truck with books and the other things that she and Carol had evaluated and she felt a bit forlorn and deserted when Lily climbed into the truck to go with Lennie and the twins. It disturbed her very much because Lily was really determined to go along with the boys and Lennie.
She actually seemed to be very happy about it.
CHAPTER SIX
Norma helped Carol with the work in the kitchen and she tried to think up things to say to the lovely young brunette, but, knowing what was going to happen to Carol and the others made her awkward when it came to small talk.
Carol did not seem to be particularly interested in talking about things, either. The day was warm and sunny and when their work in the kitchen was done, Carol suggested that they have one more cup of coffee on the terrace so that they could enjoy the sunshine and have a brief respite before they resumed their work in the library.
That idea delighted Norma because she would have some free time in which she could think about Adam Wright and how much she liked him and how many hours it would be until he met her again in the carriage house. She was eager to see him again and he had said that he would come to meet her again at the same time, the same place and Norma found herself counting the hours and the minutes until it would be time to see him again.
But, the day dragged horribly and she was very much relieved when Lennie and the twins and Lily all came home for lunch. Lennie announced that they had concluded their business deals quickly and they could now give their attention to other matters.
They all settled in the kitchen and Lily and the boys kept giggling and smiling at each other and it seemed to Norma that Lily and the twins had become much better acquainted than she had supposed. Lennie sat at the table, a cigarette in his fingers and he was watching her move around and do her work and that made Norma nervous, despite her seeing that he liked her very much. Carol was smiling happily and she finally told Norma to sit down and begin eating with the others.
Norma obeyed her and she actually enjoyed the sandwiches that she and Carol had fixed. She drank two full glasses of milk and, by the time the others left the table and went off to the living room, she was just too drowsy and too lazy to help Carol clean up.