Wives with Benefits: Volume One
Page 1
Max Sebastian is a writer, author and occasional journalist who lives in London with his wife and child. He has been writing erotica for more than 10 years, with his first full length erotic novel, Anarchy of the Heart, coming along in 2012, and a second, Submitting to Her, a year later. His epic wife-watching romance The Madeleine Trilogy was published by KW Publishing in 2014.
Also by Max Sebastian
Available via MaxSebastian.net
Novels
Anarchy of the Heart
Submitting to Her
Madeleine Wakes
Madeleine Plays
Madeleine Strays
What’s Mine is Yours
What’s Yours is Mine
The New Adult Collection
(Coming-of-age short stories)
Waiting in Line for a New iPad
A Kiss is Just a Kiss
A Girl in the Library
In Her Service
Other Short stories
Two Anonymous Souls
Inside Source
Sexual Healing
She was a Good Girl
Wives with Benefits
Volume One
MAX SEBASTIAN
MaxSebastian.net
KW
PUBLISHING
Wives with Benefits: Volume One
Copyright © 2015 Max Sebastian
All rights reserved.
Cover images © refleXtions Fotografia / tomalu / conrado / iancucristi / Ammentorp | bigstockphoto.com
First digital edition electronically March 2015
This is a work of fiction, any similarity to actual persons, living or dead, or events, organizations or locations, is purely coincidental. Reproduction in whole or in part of this publication without written consent is strictly prohibited, other than limited quotes for purposes of review.
The author greatly appreciates you taking the time to read this book, please do consider leaving a review wherever you bought this title, to help others find this story.
Contents
Introduction
Retribution
Playback
The Other Guy is Paying
What Your Husband Really Thinks
A Wife’s Opportunity
Introduction
I’ve never quite understood western culture’s morbid terror of all things sexual allied to its acceptance — and even celebration of violence. I can imagine it is something to do with its lingering male bias, the associated and archaic glorification of war and the need for the ruling classes to find ways (stemming from religion) to control the teaming masses and their need for limited resources that should properly belong to the wealthy and powerful.
But such it is: and erotica has its reputation throughout our society as something inherently Bad, something to look down on, something to shun, while all manner of unspeakable violence and evil can be expressed with scarcely any call for similar controls and censorship.
In my view, however, erotica and explicit literature has so much value — artistically, educationally and as pure entertainment.
In a society embarassed to talk publicly about sex, it has proven invaluable to me over the years in opening my eyes to the beauty and variety of human sexuality — not to mention in helping to develop my own preferences, tastes and fantasies in the realms of all things erotic. The covert nature of this genre has not made it easy to find the stories that most illuminate and satisfy. In fact the often random way I’ve navigated it since my discovery of this kind of writing often makes me wonder that if things had been different in my exploration, perhaps my own writing preferences would be different, now, to what they have become.
For instance, I still suspect that it is pure chance that I happened to come across a story that made me question my inherent belief that a committed sexual partner should only have eyes for the one person they have committed to. Sure, I later discovered stories that further questioned my ingrained assumptions about monogamy, but if I hadn’t noticed my curious response to a story where a man actively allowed his partner to get involved with another man, perhaps I wouldn’t have looked for other stories to provoke that kind of response again.
Ever since discovering erotic writing when I was a heart-broken college student recovering from the injustice of early romantic tragedies, short stories have been a wonderful way for me to explore the range of subgenres and the huge variety of writers penning challenging, explicit explorations of passion and love. I know plenty of my readers prefer the longer form, and just like them I love to be able to bury myself in complex characters and follow their progress through to (I would hope) an eventual happy or at least satisfying ending. But shorts can give you such wonderful little tastes of the genre, it hardly compares. With short stories, you can try out little ideas and flash a light on certain key moments in a character’s life, and then move straight on to another.
There will always be readers who want to read only stories with a certain page count, but I would contend they are missing out.
The explosion of ebooks seems to have given fresh blood to the writing and availability of short stories, though I have my concerns about the developing trend in erotica — certainly on Amazon — for some to see this form as some kind of get rich quick scheme, charging readers over the odds for underwhelming quality in the hope that certain key words in titles or descriptions will drive sales, rather than the value of the writing itself. At the right price, however, it is now easier than ever for readers to dip into a short story they might get through in a single sitting, leaving them with a warm feeling or even a new author to follow. I choose to see this as a generally positive direction for the genre.
My own journey through this genre started, from what I can remember, with anthologies of short stories put out by the likes of Maxim Jakubowski. The early Internet brought with it websites featuring plenty of free erotic writing of various quality, but in Literotica.com some 15 years ago, I found plenty of good writing and thought-provoking material — not to mention a great platform in the initial development of my own writing before the trolls began to assert themselves a little too much.
As I progressed to the Kindle and took up the ebook instead of the web page, my progression through erotica took the form of short story anthologies, particularly those featuring multiple authors. Finding a good story in one collection might lead to another collection featuring another story by that same author. Or, a collection with particularly noticeable quality might suggest a discerning editor — and so other anthologies from that editor might similarly prove fruitful.
I’d particularly mention any collection edited by Violet Blue as providing a guarantee of quality, as well as offering a view on different kinds of erotic story and subgenre. If I was to try to pin down where I first discovered the strange appeal of partner-sharing stories, it could well have been from one of Violet Blue’s collections targeted at couples. Perhaps Portia da Costa’s story Silver Screen, in the Sweet Confessions anthology, where a woman follows her lover’s instructions to visit an adult theater, where she openly enjoys a dirty movie in the company of a man who might, or might not be her lover.
Authors or author-editors like Alison Tyler, Charlotte Stein, Kristina Wright, Jeremy Edwards, NT Morley and Rachel Bussel Kramer led to me realizing the interesting nature of power balances within relationships — dominant males, or more enticing to me, dominant females — as well as the challenge to society’s assumptions about monogamy and committed relationships.
In more recent years, the recommendation engine within the Amazon website has become more useful in helping navigate the genre, along with the likes of reader-driven databases like GoodReads.com — and thanks to the lessons learned fro
m the various anthologies I ploughed through during the dawn of the Kindle age, I was able to use these to find stories and authors that explored more fully the particular partner-sharing themes I was now interested in — authors like the wonderful Kirsten McCurran, Kenny Wright and most recently Ben Boswell, all of whom have produced some stunning shorts along with their fantastic longer stories in this sub-genre.
So when all is said and done, I’d like to pay tribute to the short story, and its value as a form within the erotica genre. Some readers, judging by their thoughts expressed in reviews, seem to take the attitude that a short story simply means the writer couldn’t be bothered to turn an idea into a full novel — but that is so often to miss the whole point and the whole benefit of short stories.
While I continue exploring my own thoughts in erotica through longer works, I would always hope to go on writing shorts that capture a brief idea that might pass my way without finding a long project in which to find a home. My own shorts tend to be on the long side for the genre, and two in this volume stretch almost to novella scale — Playback and What Your Husband Really Thinks, two stories where wives are trying to understand their husbands when it is revealed that they harbor wife-sharing fantasies.
The final story in this volume, A Wife’s Opportunity, starts out after the couple has discussed the new approach to their relationship, they both accept that they’d like this to happen — but at the same time, taking that final step to actually make it happen is not necessarily a straightforward thing.
Two stories in this particular collection I would describe as a little more experimental than the others — The Other Guy is Paying is a tale that attempts to look at a slightly more established wife-sharing arrangement, although it still highlights that the couple involved are still navigating a journey, with potential uncertainty ahead. Retribution, the first story in this collection, attempts to disrupt my usual tendency in these kind of stories to ensure an ironclad consent is given by the husband for the wife’s infidelity. It sets a slightly darker tone, perhaps, but I like to think highlights the possibilities of the short story form in taking an idea and simply seeing how it plays.
So, I hope you enjoy this first volume of my wife-sharing short stories, dear reader, and that even if you consider the short story inferior to the longer form, that you find some reward in these pages for picking up this book.
Max Sebastian,
London, February 2015
Retribution
Oh, it probably wasn’t the best motivation for sex, but it was what she needed at the time.
The perfect response to that stupid blank expression on Mark’s face when she’d presented him with the little pair of thong panties she’d fished out of his suit jacket following his return from the conference in Vegas.
“I don’t know what it’s doing there,” that expression had said, clear as day.
But he hadn’t denied anything, hadn’t told her that nothing had happened, that it was a practical joke pulled on him by a co-worker, or some other such explanation. And when she’d angrily booked herself into the hotel for the night — because God knew Mark wasn’t going to do anything like take responsibility for his actions and do the honorable thing and move out himself — he did nothing to stop her, nothing to persuade her to stay, talk about it.
She’d said: “I can’t be with you right now.”
He’d merely nodded, said: “Okay.”
“You can spend a little time, decide whether you want to tell me what happened.”
“Honey…”
She’d waited, his tone suggesting he was preparing to actually tell her what that stripper underwear was doing in his pocket. But then nothing came out of his mouth. His voice petered into nothing after.
Alice had turned on her heals, walked upstairs and packed a bag.
In the taxi she just about held it together, even when she’d called Jess and Sarah to demand an emergency Girls Night Out, explaining to them what she’d found in Mark’s jacket pocket. Neither of them were doing anything that couldn’t be rearranged in favor of last-minute heavy drinking and commiserating with Alice. Sarah’s husband could have his birthday dinner another day, another week.
She’d checked into the hotel, changed into the going-out clothes, the only things she’d really shoved in that overnight bag — a ridiculously short dress made of sequins that could not be creased no matter what you did to it.
Jess and Sarah had been there within the hour, ready to start a To-Hell-With-Men tour of the bars downtown. They knew what she needed — some strong liquor and reassurance that all men were crap, marriage sucked balls.
“On a long enough time line, the survival rate for any man’s commitment drops to zero,” Jess had said, paraphrasing some smart line from a movie.
They’d cursed all men, toasted the possibility that one day the whole gender would get their comeuppance, preferably in some tar pit in the depths of Hell.
Then as the alcohol had continued flowing, they’d ended up in some club somewhere, and some of the men in there actually didn’t seem so bad. They were pretty, they had nice sparkly eyes, their rippling muscles made a girl wonder what they might be packing down below.
It had felt faintly naughty that she had an anonymous hotel room to go back to. Almost an obligation to take advantage of it.
Sarah was joking that one of the blonde college guys they’d been twirling with had his eyes on her, thinking about snapping her up, married or not.
“So? Are you married or not?” she’d asked Alice, her voice slurring like a bad actress trying to affect a Southern drawl.
Alice had looked across the dance floor at the blonde guy in question, and quietly removed her wedding band from that middle finger, tucking it inside her purse.
“Well, I warned him what would happen if I ever even thought he was cheating on me,” she said with a wry grin.
That had provoked a wild hollering from the girls.
Alice had actually been disappointed when all was said and done to end up in a taxi alone on the way back to her lonely hotel room. It was three in the morning when Jess and Sarah had gone their separate ways, and they did have some wild adventures to add to the anecdote pile.
But not Alice had the reality to cope with again, after that cab ride back had such a horrific sobering effect on her. The reality of Mark caught red handed with a tiny piece of buttfloss he’d no doubt peeled from some floozy’s hips.
Sarah’s half-joking question popped back in her head: “So, are you married, or not?”
Alice found herself irritated that the general assumption — at least, as far as the expressions on her friends’ faces, and that stupidly neutral expression on Mark’s features — was probably that she had no other option but to forgive and forget. Go home, accept that men would be men, husbands would occasionally be wayward.
Jesus. Did she want to be married? Their sex lives hadn’t exactly been on fire for a while. They seemed to argue every other time they were together.
But it was so daunting to think of declaring independence from a life she’d led for seven years. Maybe she just needed a break.
The hotel concierge tipped his hat at her as she headed into the lobby. She received a nice smile from a young dark-haired guy rolling out of the hotel bar — another late-night reveler.
He was going her way, it seemed. Held open the elevator door for her once she’d finally decided to go straight up to her room, and not find a seat somewhere to delay her journey back to that desolate room of hers, the room that stank of broken dreams.
She offered him a warm smile now, reward for his minor gallantry in holding the elevator for her. She also saw how his eyes subtly took in her little dress, and the way she squeezed into it, a glimmer of something there that suggested lust.
It surprised her — not only his barely-concealed desire, something she hadn’t seen much of in seven years of marriage, but also the tickle of wicked arousal that he now sparked deep within her.
Jesus, now she was beginning to think her dress had been a little daring.
And God, she had no wedding ring on. He probably thought she was some single girl on the way back from a night out…
Alice felt a little self-conscious waiting in the elevator with him, occasionally catching him looking at her, if not directly then via the mirrored walls. She found that she was trying to hide her own wandering gaze as she checked out his pleasantly masculine frame — he was slightly taller than she was, with broad shoulders and an understated athleticism. He looked friendly, somehow, his slight tan easy on the eye, but his dark eyes held a glint of the devilish in there that made her feel slightly fizzy inside.
Once their eyes connected, and they were both forced to smile.
She noticed that he did not select a floor — was he staying on the same floor as she was?
“Looks that way,” he said with another of those melting smiles, and she realized she’d blurted the question out loud.
Then the elevator was opening, and she felt slightly unsteady on her high heels as she pitched forward into the hallway, eyes meandering around the walls to look for that little sign pointing out the direction to her room.
Her elevator companion followed her, but as she worked out in which direction she ought to be going, she saw to her disappointment that he was venturing the opposite direction.
“You’re going that way?” she asked, feeling her voice slurring, surprised that there was still alcohol in her system to affect her.
Embracing the hint of confidence that the booze was now lending her again.
“You’d prefer me to go that way?” he asked, clearly a little surprised to receive some kind of proposition at this time of night in the middle of the week.