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FAT D sucking harder now and drawing tiny

"Forget All That 10-12" {Pendragon} (MF rom wl lact)



FORGET ALL THAT

by Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE AGE OF 18, or otherwise forbidden by law to

read electronically transmitted erotic material, please go do

something else.

This material is Copyright, 1997, by Uther Pendragon. All

rights reserved. I specifically grant the right of downloading

and keeping ONE electronic copy for your personal reading so long

as this notice is included. Reposting requires previous

permission.

If you have any comments or requests, please E-mail them to

me at anon584c@nyx.net.

All persons here depicted, except public figures depicted as

public figures in the background, are figments of my imagination

and any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly

coincidental.

# # # #

FORGET ALL THAT

by Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net



Part Ten:

Continued from Part Nine.

"That was the best time that I've spent in that house since the

woman I love moved out," Bob said. We'd spent some awful times

before then, too. "It's a shame that I got the respite, and you

didn't."

"You're supposed to think of your daughter's welfare first."

"Would your going out to breast-feed her have been that much

worse? You could have used the cape." Which keeps anybody from

seeing anything at the cost of keeping The Kitten and me from

seeing one another. I used the cape on the train, but not in

church. On the other hand, most people in church were facing the

other way. Which reminded me of the boy.

"That poor kid in church," I said, "he'll be traumatized for

life."

"Damned voyeur, traumatization is the least of what he

deserved." But we both chuckled.

"I'm glad that that's over for another year," he said.

"Or forever."

"You don't mean that."

"I mean it," I said. "The question is whether I will mean it

next year. Dammit, we don't have the right to bring The Kitten

into that situation."

"Well, your mother seems more hostile towards the world

every year."

"Do you want me here, or away?" he asked when we got home.

The Kitten wanted only Maman just then.

"Go eat," I told him. "We'll lie here on the couch." Messy

diapers don't affect Bob's appetite at all, his fight with his

father didn't seem to touch it. Two things diminish it. Colds

reduce it to nil, and he eats very lightly at my parents' house.

So he joins his family at their late supper afterwards. Usually I

do too, though I don't eat much.

The Brennans were still at table when I put a sleeping

Kitten on her quilt. I wandered into the kitchen and came back

with a glass of milk. The family never seats more than four at

the kitchen table, and that crowds it. After the first year of

Bob's and my visits to my family, they moved the light supper

that the three of them eat into the dining room to let Bob and me

join them when we come back. "You know," I said, "I'll be

happier with that in the past than with it in the future. I'm

glad that our feast is after theirs. Discommodes you three,

though."

"Not particularly," Bob's father said. "You know that we

kept the schedule the year that you were stuck in Michigan."

"Sorry," I said, not for the first time.

"Don't be, dear," Katherine said, not for the first time.

"You know that we missed you, and it was horrible that the man

died, but you did your duty. You can't be sorry for that." I

don't think that it had ever occurred to any Brennan that Bob

could have come home without me.

"You know, dear," she continued, "The feast schedule is

written in stone the moment that the turkey goes in. It's

flexible now. I can't figure The Kitten's new schedule. Do you

have any hints as to what time we should start eating." I looked

at her for a minute and burst into tears. I ran for my room.

Up there, I bawled for an hour. My mother couldn't cuddle

her grandchild on the grandchild's schedule. Bob's mother would

schedule a day around The Kitten's schedule and mine. She didn't

think of it as a choice, even. It was just a technical problem.

Bob knocked and entered.

"Just remember that everybody in this house loves you," he

said. "That goes especially for me. Do you want hugs or

solitude?" Both really. I didn't answer. He came over to the bed

and knelt there. He hugged me around the shoulders. I enjoy

having him touch the sexy parts most of the time, but not

touching them at all means that the hug is a gift for me.

After a few minutes, I answered his question. "I think I

want solitude first." He kissed me on the temple, got up, and

went out.

When I came down, everybody was in the living room. "I

didn't mean...." Katherine started.

"All you did was express thoughtful concern," I said. "I

just couldn't stand thoughtful concern just then. I haven't the

foggiest idea what our schedule is right now. I don't know

whether I can pull off another jar-feeding tonight. All I can

tell you is that she will get cranky after four."

"We'll do it early, then. We can always turn off the oven

but leave it in, dear." Which would mean a dry turkey. There

wasn't one person in that room who wouldn't ruin the main dish of

a feast to have me with them.

"If you say one more kind thing, I'll start bawling again."

"Sit down and shut up!" said Bob.

Saying that I didn't want kind didn't mean that I wanted

nasty. He had broken the tension, though. I went over and plunked

myself in his lap. He hugged me. A while later, I sidled off his

lap and onto the couch. I leaned into his hug. When he wasn't

talking, he occasionally kissed me very gently on my head. I

unwound.

The conversation idled along. In the past year, the Senior

Brennans had acquired a CD player and a CD of "A child's

Christmas in Wales." Kathleen suggested that the first purchase

was only to facilitate the second. "Now, we do have other

recordings, dear. It's just that the old record was getting quite

scratchy."

Memories led to memories. "I'll miss Aunt Amy," Kathleen

said, "though not to the extent of wishing her back for a visit.

I'll bet that we still have a ton of her inevitable home-made

candles around the house."

"No, dear, Bob and Jeanette took most of them in their first

years of marriage."

"Sorry now that I took yours, Kathleen," I said. "Candles

provide a really romantic light for intimate meals and such."

Especially such.

"Not wanting to nag, dear; but I hope you are careful with

candles around The Kitten. I always worried about those candles.

You don't ever want to fall asleep with one burning, it could

start a fire." Damn! Was nothing secret?

Kathleen moved from the end of the sofa to another chair. I

stretched out and lay with my head in Bob's lap. Junior stirred

under me, and Bob played with my hair.

"Hello, dear," said Katherine. "I'll bet you're wet." Then

somewhat later, "My! Do you like Grandma Brennan's necklace?"

"'Brennan' is unnecessary," I said. The bitterness of my

tone shocked even me.

"Did I do something wrong. dear?"

"She only has one grandmother."

"Now, dear, that isn't correct. However you feel about the

other one. Do you mind if I use the term I choose?" Put that way,

how could I object.

"Use the term you choose."

Katherine's attention being mostly taken, the conversation

was reduced to three Brennans. This being two more than strictly

necessary, it rattled along. Junior was semi-hard under me, and I

knew what Bob was thinking, though we looked innocent as The

Kitten from anywhere in the room. I slowly rolled my head in

Bob's lap, and felt delightfully lewd.

"Do you want me to feed The Kitten her baby food, dear?"

Katherine asked. The rest of Bob stiffened under me. He didn't

want me to get up just then.

"Please do," I said. She would do a better job than I would.

More time passed. Bob softened. Katherine returned. The

conversation moved from Christmas to politics. "Weld and Lee may

come to nothing," Bob said. "But in two cases the Senate was

prevented from hearing material by fossil chairmen. I expect

Republican Senate candidates to have to carry that baggage. It's

one thing to vote no, it's another to not listen."

"Yes, dear, but will that fit inside a sound bite?"

"By not watching network news," his father said, "you have

really cut yourself off from the political arena. If it hasn't

happened on TV, it hasn't happened as far as political

consequences go. Now, real-world consequences are another

matter."

"Maybe, sir, but this is not my century, after all. tv is

all telling the audience, and I'm rather past the stage of taking

lecture courses. I *teach* seminars, now. Anyway, Jeanette has a

take on TV."

"I figure that The Kitten will want one in a few years. She

can ask for it and learn that it is a childish toy, not the

center of adult life." Bob's father thought that as funny an idea

as Bob had. I was perfectly serious.

"As both members of the firm have spoken," he said after he

stopped chuckling, "I take it that this is a firm decision."

There was a chorus of groans. "Let him who is without pun cast

the first groan."

"Oooh," said The Kitten, as if on cue. We broke up.

"Mais non, mon enfant, dis 'Decembre,'" said Bob, a little

late to claim any of the laughter as his.

"Dears," Katherine said, "are you really determined that we

take the two of you as a unit?" Bob raised his hand off my

forehead, and I opened my eyes to look. He was raising three

fingers. "Now *that* is hardly fair, dear. On average, the three

of you are incredibly cute and cuddly. I'm *not* going to change

your pants if you mess in them."

"Been there," said Bob's father. "Done that."

Later in the conversation, The Kitten got fussy. Katherine

tried changing her and enticing her with the necklace. Then she

handed her over to me. The Kitten settled down on my stomach.

Bob's stomach rumbled right next to my ear. They could have been

talking Greek above me, I didn't care.

Then Bob's father put *A Child's Christmas in Wales* in the

new CD player. Dylan Thomas's voice, marvelous on the old

scratchy record, sent chills through us on the new digitized

version. We listened to the silence for a few more minutes after

it was over, but it was approaching Network News time. Kathleen

stayed down to watch with her parents. I tore a sprig off the

mistletoe before we three went upstairs.

By now, both my breasts were feeling full. I would have to

express some -- not too much, throw it away, and feed The Kitten

off the other breast. That was all to facilitate a visit to a

woman who made less fuss over her grandchild than the strangers

on the train had.

The hell with all that. I had a husband who cared for me.

Bob would tolerate any experiment. "I'll go first," I said.

I came back from the bathroom clutching my robe around my

nightgown with one hand and carrying all my clothes the other.

"Your turn," I said. I found the sling in The Kitten's suitcase.

I hung it over the back of the rocking chair.

Bob came back shaved. I think he didn't want the prickles to

bother me that night. The Kitten was on her quilt, not looking

very hungry. That was fine. "None of this may work," I said.

"The lovely thing about marriage is that there's always

another chance." I had a philosopher in my bedroom. Not, however,

the marquis's.

He came over and kissed my hairline. Sated with non-sexual

comforting, I raised my face for a real kiss. Our mouths met in a

sweet, still comforting, kiss. Then our tongues met, and the real

kiss began. Bob kneaded my seat through robe and nightgown. I

finally broke the kiss to say, "Don't all those layers of cloth

impede your touch?"

He stepped back to remove my robe. "You've lost the belt

somewhere," he said. No I hadn't.

"I'll look tomorrow."

"The nightgown?" he asked.

"Please." I lifted my arms and he drew the nightgown over my

head until it was half off. At that point, he found the sash to

my robe. It was around my waist and knotted low in front. The

sprig of mistletoe was tied in the knot. Bob howled in laughter.

Farewell romance. I was standing there with a nightgown

tangled in my arms and covering my face. My husband was doubled

over laughing his fool head off. This roar of laughter filled the

house, and probably the block.

Nobody pounded on the door asking what was so funny. I

managed to untangle myself. A quick check on The Kitten showed

her to be interested but unworried. She had heard papa laugh

before.

She had seen maman naked before, as well. But the sight of

my breasts might persuade her that she was hungry. I hurried over

to the foot of the bed and dropped down. I flipped enough of the

spread over me to hide me from The Kitten, and waited for Bob to

quiet down. "Get the light when you're sober," I said.

He switched off the overhead light and dropped to the bed

beside me. "You are," he said between gasps, "indubitably, ...

the most lovely, ... luscious, ... lascivious, ... woman

in ... all North America.... Love you, ... love every

twist ... in your mind ... and every curve ... in your body.

Let's make love!" That last is Bob's version of "All roads lead

to Rome." His kiss was hot but brief. He still hadn't caught

his breath, hadn't stopped laughing, really.

"I don't want to do anything serious until it's time for The

Kitten to eat," I said.

"We can wait until after she's eaten," Bob said. He is

patient, if not particularly attentive. "What is 'serious?'"

"Anything involving Junior. And stay away from my breasts."

"The Firm is growing already," he said. "There are three new

members." It took me a minute to figure out that "The Firm" meant

our family in distinction from the larger Brennan clan. Just as

the "Senior Brennans" were his parents.

"The question isn't whether Junior is a member of The Firm,"

I said.

"But whether he is a firm member," Bob responded. "I love

your mood tonight. Were you trying to embarrass me in front of my

family?"

"Just returning a greeting from an old friend. If I were

interested in embarrassing you, I would have gotten up."

"It would have been worth it," he said, "to have you in this

bawdy mood. One more kiss above the mistletoe." We had that, and

a warm, wet kiss it was too. He ended by gently sucking my

tongue.

Then he clambered down and started on the inside of my right

knee. Most of our intercourse is "missionary," and I have never

understood the people who regard that as bland. A little more

than half the rest is rear entry from the "spoon" position. This

is also very satisfying from a physical perspective, but I think

the emotional connections are more important to Bob. A couple of

times a month (unless he's being assaulted by all the stored-up

adolescent libido of his old room), Bob likes to add a little

variety. He'll let me reject positions, and he makes a point of

making these sessions special to me; most of the time, though, I

would just as soon spend the time with my husband above me in the

bed. When I feel otherwise, as I did this night, Bob is always

eager to accommodate me.

Once upon a time, kissing me down there was one of the

occasional variations. Since The Kitten's displacement of ton

papa from my breasts, it has become more-or-less standard. Bob

seems to love it, and I certainly enjoy it. It does extend the

time of our love-making sessions, but I can afford the time as

long as I don't have to go to an outside job in the mornings.

That is something that Bob will never tell his father; we

don't watch tv because our family time is spent in love-play. I'm

happy about that. Bob is ecstatic about that. The Kitten is

around two very happy adults who have time for her. What we'll do

when she gets old enough to figure out what papa is doing to

maman is another question. Move to a two-bedroom apartment, we

hope.

Anyway, when Bob began kissing my thighs, he was trying to

put icing on a cake that we serve fairly frequently these days.

Which is not to suggest that he failed in that task.

Without the impediment of The Kitten on me, I writhed as his

ticklish tongue and lips crept upward on my thigh. When he

reached his goal, he returned to the inside of the left knee.

This trip seemed to take even longer. "This stage ends when The

Kitten gets hungry," I warned him.

"It doesn't have to," he said. I sometimes have The Kitten's

mouth on my top parts while Bob's is on my lower parts. She likes

this less than the quiet times in the rocker, but much more than

the times that I nurse her in the sling while doing the

vacuuming.

"Oh yes it does." I had plans for my family tonight.

Bob kissed upwards a little faster. I grabbed a pillow just

in case, but he slowed back down when he got the outer lips

apart. He licked over the outsides of both inner ones. This

teased me without getting me close to satisfaction. "Bob,

please," I whispered. I was afraid of my voice carrying outside.

"I thought that I was pleasing," he said. Then he licked me

open with one stroke of his tongue. This shot a thrill like an

electric current right through me. I moaned and pulled the pillow

over my mouth. He slowed again, taking what felt like five

minutes to stroke his tongue up the inside of one lip, then what

felt like ten minutes to stroke it down the other lip. He teased

me so much that the first stroke over my clitoris tightened me in

preparation. I let go of the pillow and grabbed his head.

As I pulled his mouth against me, he licked the entire

length of my valley several times very slowly. Each time he

reached the top, I stiffened further. "Bob," I called through the

pillow as the stiffness became pain. Then fire shot through me. I

writhed under his sweet mouth, threw my head from side to side,

and moaned aloud without benefit of the pillow's muffling. I

pulled him as tight against me as I could while I shook in

ecstasy.

Then it was over.

He came up on the bed beside me. "My darling, my love," he

said. "Oh wonderful girl, oh darling. I love you. You are so

luscious. You are so fine. Wonderful Jeanette." He trailed off

into a long string of "Love, love, love, ..." When I think about

it in the cold light of day, I sometimes wonder how *his*

tonguing me to ecstasy becomes an accomplishment on *my* part.

However, this was neither cold, light, nor day; and I luxuriated

in his praise and his love.

Finally, I asked, "How is The Kitten doing?"

He raised himself quietly and looked at her in the night

light. "I think that she has four toes in, but her whole foot

won't fit." The Kitten can get her foot up to her mouth, but it

doesn't quite fit inside. This leads to a certain amount of

discussion about which parent is more prone to put their foot in

their mouth. We weren't in the mood for that just then. I did

look. She can be *so* cute.

"Do you think that you could change her just before she gets

really hungry?"

"I can try." He tried after a while, and actually got her on

the table before she emitted a cry. I had a dry baby in the sling

and a willing husband in front of me. That was the easy part.

"Sit down in the rocker," I told him. "We are going to try

something."

"I love you." He'd said that earlier. On the other hand, he

certainly lusted after me. The fourth member of The Firm was a

firm member.

I straddled him and adjusted the sling. The Kitten wasn't

particularly happy, but she was in her first gluttonous phase.

"Warn me before opening your legs," I said while I perched on his

knees. He nodded. We weren't going to be able to kiss in this

position, I could tell that already. We weren't going to be able

to fit together, either. All my plans went for naught.

"Do you want to face the other way?" Bob asked.

"I thought that you might drain the right breast while she

drains the left. Not all the way, but it is too full to last

until her next feeding."

"Come sideways," Bob said. Well, that defeated one of my

purposes, but not the other. I got up and Bob moved back a

little. When I sat down on his legs, I could lie back on his left

arm. Then he could reach my right breast. "Talk to your child,"

Bob said. The Kitten had been a bit disturbed, but she went back

to her regular pattern of a few sucks and a pause. Bob's right

hand moved over my legs.

"Ta maman t'aime," I said. "Ton papa t'aime, ... et ta maman

aime ton papa...." When The Kitten paused, I spoke; when I

spoke, Bob paused. He was licking and kissing my nipple very

gently, not having yet drawn milk. I extended the love pairs to

"... et ton grand-pere t'aime, ... et ton grand-pere aime ton

papa." Bob made no sign of disagreement. My seat was pressed

against Bob's thigh. Every movement of the rocker brushed my

outer lips very gently against that warm support. Meanwhile,

Bob's hand was teasing my thighs apart.

I switched to English. "Your grandfather was patting you...

He recited a poem.... Maman thought that it was ... just like

papa.... Maman said so.... Grand-pere said that, ... maman

saying so ... was a great compliment, ... but that anyone saying

so ... was a compliment.... Maman hadn't meant ... a compliment

at all.... She thinks papa et grand-papa ... were both being

silly.... But she couldn't say so.... Now could she?"

With every cycle of the rocker, Bob was able to spread my

legs a little further. This gave him greater access, but it also

pressed my lips a little more firmly against his thigh. Bob was

sucking harder now, and drawing tiny sips of milk. He had also

got into The Kittens rhythm, anticipating her pauses.

"Ton papa veult ... recueillir les contes ... que ton

grand-pere ... raconte...." I went on to tell her how tapes of

those stories would give her access to his voice, and her

children and her children's children access to his stories.

I had problems keeping my voice level. Bob's hand was on my

mound, but the greater excitement was from the motion of my

sensitive lips against his thigh.

Bob paused in the rocking for a moment and straightened,

removing his mouth from my breast. He nearly lifted me with his

supporting left arm while he spread his legs. When he relaxed,

his hand was cupping me down there. "Je t'aime," he said before

resuming his sweet sucking. Soon The Kitten's sucking, and Bob's,

and the chair's motion, were all synchronized again.

His fingers began stroking me in the same rhythm, and the

only thing keeping this rhythm together was my speech. Now I like

to think that I am *good* at French, and nowise worse for

speaking it several hours a day to my daughter. I was reaching a

point, however, where even speaking coherent English was a

problem. I settled on one English phrase.

The Kitten and Bob stopped sucking, almost together. "Oh

love," I said, Bob's finger stroked down between my inner lips.

The chair rocked forward. Bob sucked more milk out. The chair

rocked back. The finger stroked slowly up my valley toward the

magic spot. The Kitten resumed her lip play with my nipples.

Bob's finger stopped a little too soon. The Kitten and Bob both

stopped sucking. "Oh love," I said.

Then The Kitten took a long breather. She was almost done,

but I wasn't. "Oh love," I said. I said it as Bob was still

sucking. The tempo picked up.

"Oh love," I said more quickly. The chair moved more

quickly, the finger moved more quickly, Bob sucked for shorter

periods but with more force. As the rhythm grew I had to breathe

when I should have been speaking. The chair rocked further

forward; Bob's finger, moving more rapidly, didn't stop. A thrill

shot through me. "Oh love!" I shouted.

I stiffened in his arms, and he kept up all the motions

without waiting for my speech. I shuddered then as my passion

flamed within me.

Then I sagged in the arms of my love. He had to remove his

hand and use it to support the sling. The Kitten, who had been

done a bit ago, decided that all that shaking was an attempt to

starve her and clamped on again.

Now it was Bob's turn to say "Oh love." He said it over and

over, very softly. The pillow was across the room; I suppose that

the whole house knew what we had been doing. I couldn't manage

much worry about that, I was mostly worried that I couldn't help

Bob hold me up, much less The Kitten. Then I could, and

straightened in his lap.

"Could you take The Kitten," I asked.

"If you can support yourself." The Kitten, having discovered

that her tummy was full after all, was finally finished. Bob got

his right hand on her through the cloth of the sling and his left

hand on her inside the sling and lifted. I removed the sling from

around me, and Bob extricated The Kitten. I even managed to get

up.

Bob put a spit-cloth on his shoulder and patted The Kitten

to a minor burp. "Do we want the next feeding as late as

possible?" Bob asked. When I nodded, he changed her again before

turning the Kitten-goes-to-sleep tape on. Extraordinarily tired

after *that* adventure, she dropped right off.

I looked at the rocker. We'd had enough adventures that

night too. It was time for bed. "Put a piece of paper over the

diaper in the wastebasket, will you?" I said.

"You know," Bob said. "It may simply have been that the

position made me more conscious of swallowing, but I don't think

I've ever had so much of your milk." I felt a little guilty. I

tell Bob that his nursing on my breasts evens out The Kitten's

demands. The truth is that sometimes I want the extra bit of love

play, sometimes I want Bob in an extra state of arousal. Most of

the time, my breasts are a little too sore for me to enjoy it.

This was the first time that the amount of milk that he took

mattered. Should I feel guilty for leading him on? I decided that

I shouldn't. It's like having him assigned to dishes all the

time. He would much rather be invited to suck my milk

occasionally than be told that this bit of love-play doesn't

interest me this night.

"You know," I said climbing into bed. "Your father missed

the whole point. I'm grateful for what Bob-my-husband has done

for me. He created an entire nurturing environment; he led me

into the realm of passion and fulfillment. He taught me oh so

much. He gave me a daughter. But it was Bob-my-boyfriend that

saved my life." How was that for a nonsequitur? I'll be a real

Brennan yet.

Bob climbed into bed after me. He cuddled me.

"I had a whole program," I continued, "of wild, passionate,

sex planned. It didn't work out, and now I'm tired. It will have

to wait."

"It can wait," said Bob, although Junior pressed hard and

hot against my seat. His voice showed disappointment but not the

slightest hint of resentment.

"Do you think that we could manage a little slow gentle love

while we're waiting?" I asked.

"I love you," he said. I reached for the three Kleenexes

that we would need. After what we had done that evening, I didn't

need much foreplay. Bob needed none.

When I thought that I would break if he kept teasing me, I

turned away from him. Our shoulders on opposite sides of the

narrow bed, our loins meeting in the middle, we lay still as he

made the necessary adjustments with his hand.

Then he slid into me slowly, sweetly, gently. He pressed

forward until he was nearly enclosed, then I pressed backward

until I was totally full. "Tell me!" I said while we rested that

way.

"There in the forest," he began. He meant on one night in

the middle of our camping-trip honeymoon. "I already loved you. I

was already committed to you. I believed that there was no

possible way that I could love you more. But, there in the

forest, you responded to me in a new way. There in the forest,

you gave me your passion while I was in you. There in the forest,

I discovered a new depth of love." That is the story. He began

moving.

I don't want to suggest that I lay there unmoving. I pushed

back as he pushed in; I reached back to feel the hard muscles in

his leg flex as they drove our connection. Still, most of the

action was his. His hand roved continually over my side; his hips

alternately pressed against me and receded, filling me with him

and then almost leaving me. He was stroking me inside and out.

Mostly I was receiving him, welcoming him, basking in his loving

motions. And he, I could tell, enjoyed that welcome.

For a long while, his motions were slow. He would pause

after every dozen strokes or so and let his hands provide all the

stimulus. At first the motions were soothing sensuous pleasure.

Inevitably, however, the time came when I wanted more. When I

tightened his favorite muscle, he sped up. I grabbed his hand

from where it was smoothing a path from my elbow to my thigh; I

didn't even need to guide it. He caressed down my belly to my

mound and between my already-spread legs. There, his finger

ignited the fire that the slow loving had fueled. As he stroked

within me faster and faster, his gentle touch doubled the

sensation.

Our timing couldn't have been better. I felt him press

against me, raising me to new heights. He groaned somewhere far

behind me. I grabbed the pillow against my mouth. He drove in,

filling me. Then he pulsed and spurted, filling me more. That

spiraled me upward until I fell, quaking and moaning and glorying

in the release.

I landed in his arms, as I had so often. As soon as I

returned to my senses, I passed him one of the tissues. I held

another between my legs as he came out. Getting the tissues ready

beforehand isn't the most romantic preparation for sex; but we're

stodgy parents now, not romantic honeymooners.



Part Eleven:

I clutched my robe around me as I dashed across the hall to

the bathroom. Somehow I had lost the sash. Mostly I put on a

nightgown before leaving the room when I am visiting the Senior

Brennans and put on a robe over that. (Bob is horrified at the

idea of my actually wearing a nightgown to bed. By this time,

I'm not used to it either. My nightgowns and Bob's pajamas last

a long time.) This morning I was in a hurry. Bladder empty, I

decided that I might as well shower at that time. The Kitten

hadn't awakened before me, which gave me a nice long time before

she decided that she was famished.

Bob had put on his pajamas by the time I returned. The

Kitten was on his shoulder getting a few more minutes of sleep.

"There are now two diapers in the wastebasket above the paper,"

he said.

"Oh, do you remember changing her?"

"Just now. Do you?"

"Not in the least." This is a minor mystery. We know that

The Kitten wakes in the middle of the night and demands a meal.

We know that I feed her, and that one of us changes her.

Sometimes we remember doing that, and who did the change. More

often, neither of us remembers it. Occasionally, we check to

make sure that it actually happens; it does. Changing a baby is

a rather complex action to do in your sleep. Oh well.

"I like your outfit," Bob said, "but The Kitten will too."

I can't go topless around my daughter, not because she is a prude

at the tender age of seven months, but because she wants to suck

on my breast any time she sees it. This may be typical of

breast-fed babies, but it just might be hereditary.

"That's all right, we're almost on schedule. Have you seen

the sash to my robe?"

"It's over on the bookcase where I threw it." Bob pointed,

which was helpful since the walls of the room were mostly low

bookcases. I slipped it back through the loops and hunted up

clean clothes. By the time The Kitten had reconciled herself to

a new day's beginning, I was dressed below the waist. I nursed

The Kitten while Bob watched with his patented combination of

beam and leer. Which finally reminded me of why Bob would be

throwing around the sash to my robe.

"Did my father really say he was proud to be compared to

me?" he asked.

"Bob, you should have seen his face. Pure ecstasy. He

looked like you did the first time The Kitten clenched your

finger."

"You still should have approached us as adults."

"Somehow the concept didn't leap to mind," I said. Then I

ignored him to coo to my daughter and tell her that "Les hommes

sont fous." "Prends garde aux," I told her, "... hommes

empoisenne ... du testosterone." It's probably the same in

French; it's that sort of word. Bob wandered off to shower and

breakfast.

"I think I'll run a wash load today," he said when he came

back. We didn't pack enough for two weeks, and this was about

the midpoint of our visit. "Is The Kitten done?" I handed her

over. "Voyons ton grand-pere!" I went downstairs moments later.

I could have carried The Kitten, but it was better that his

father get this treat from Bob.

Dinner was already in preparation when I reached the

kitchen. Kathleen handed me my breakfast plate and I took it

into the dining room. Katherine stopped her story when I

returned. "Does two o'clock seem good enough, dear?" she asked.

I thought. "That should be fine. If I foist The Kitten off

with a meal from a jar, she'll probably be hungry well before

one. Two would be almost perfectly safe."

"Or would two-thirty be safer?"

"That would be more likely. The only danger would be that

I'd have to leave the table a little early."

"Two-thirty it is, dear. We'll have Bob bring down the

rocker; you won't have to leave the room. Or would you rather

talk to The Kitten than listen to us. I know that I would."

"The Kitten is getting a little less French this trip than

we're used to, but she's getting much more English. I have her

most of the time at home, so don't worry about that. The thing

is, we spilled something on the rocker and it didn't quite come

out." If "coming out" is how you describe cleaning a spill off

varnished wood.

"Nothing which hasn't been spilled on it before, dear.

Don't worry. After a while, the stain darkens and pretends it's

part of the pattern of the wood." If only she knew. Then I

thought.

She kept that rocking chair in her bedroom, their bedroom.

They moved it back and forth for us every visit, but it stayed in

their room fifty weeks a year. Bob and Kathleen had been nursed

in that rocker, but not recently. Katherine spent very little

waking time in that room. Maybe the Senior Brennans used the

rocker for the same purposes that Bob and I did. Katherine was

looking at me. "Nothing which hasn't been spilled on it before,

dear."

This proved nothing, but it did give me a more attractive

vision of my life when I get to my fifties than the discussion

around the table the night before had given me of my life in my

sixties.

"Do you think that I could bathe The Kitten once the

turkey's in?" I asked.

"There will be space for you, dear. Whether you can wrest

her from the hands of her grandfather is another question. Are

you available to peel potatoes?" I was, and she set me up across

from Kathleen.

Katherine started a story of her great-great-aunt Hazel and

her wonderful recipes. "And, you know dear, when the family had

almost gone to court over who would inherit her set of recipe

cards, almost all of it came down to 'a pinch of cinnamon,' or

whatever, or -- even worse -- 'season to taste.' That was before

the age of Xerox, dear. One person got that sort of

information." Kathleen and I sat with enthralled minds and busy

hands as that story led to another, then we looked at each other.

I don't know who had the idea first, but we both had it before

Katherine came to a stopping place. "Is Bob still opposed to

sweet potatoes dear?"

"He still is, and my mother foisted a double helping onto

him yesterday. But we have a question."

"Would you mind terribly," asked Kathleen, "if we taped

you?"

"I think that you shouldn't have done that to your father,

dear, whatever your motives. I don't know how I would have felt

if you had done it to me."

"No," I said. "We mean out in the open. We want tapes of

these stories. Who cares about the company politics of Ward

Tech? We want to have The Kitten's grandchildren hear about

great-great-aunt Hazel."

"It seems lots of people are interested in company politics,

dear. Whether you think they should be or not."

"By the time that it would be safe to publish those

stories," I said, "no-one will care about them. That's what

would make it safe. Look, we aren't asking you to invest in the

publication of some book. We are asking you to let us turn on a

tape-recorder while you tell those stories. *We* are interested.

Whether anyone else would be isn't relevant. When is The Kitten

going to hear this treasure trove?"

"Why sitting in the kitchen, dear, and peeling potatoes. Do

you think that I was involved in the struggle over great-great-

aunt Hazel's recipes?"

"Are you prepared to come to Michigan to tell her these

stories?" I asked. "Anyway, stories are muddled and lost."

"Dear," Katherine said, "if it will make you two happier, we

can make the tape. But I think that it would make the kitchen a

duller place for your next visit."

"Oh mother!" Kathleen said. "You have lots of stories that

I've heard dozens of times. I still enjoy them."

"Go get your tape, then." Kathleen left. I picked up

another potato.

"You know, dear," Katherine said, "the real shame is the

stories that are a bit too private to tell your children. My

great-grandmother came from Germany as the fiancee of a man in

Minnesota. Neither of them had seen the Atlantic before she

started that journey, if I'm not mistaken. They certainly hadn't

seen one another. I wonder what that wedding night was like.

She wouldn't have minded my knowing, but it isn't a story that

you tell in the kitchen to people who really know you.

"You'll either tell your daughter, 'A honeymoon in a tent is

the worst idea that we ever had,' or you'll tell her, 'If you

love the man, sharing a tent with him makes a marvelous

honeymoon.' You won't tell me either one, and I don't think you

should. And you won't tell *her* any details. Her

granddaughters, however, will hear only that you went hiking for

you honeymoon, and wonder. It's a pity that you can't tell

them."

"Why can't I?" I asked. "Your great-grandmother may have

lived in a verbal culture, but I use a word-processor on a daily

basis. I could print it up, and leave it with the instructions:

'To be opened a century after my death,' or whatever. What would

you write about?"

"Well, I could hardly tell you, dear. That's why we're

talking about privacy. And it wasn't entirely a verbal culture,

you know; they had become engaged via letters. I'll tell you

what, though. If you promise to write something about the

rocking chair, I'll promise to write something about it, too."

"You type, don't you? Uh!" I felt so stupid. "You send me

those marvelous letters, of course you type."

"We need to get back to cooking," she said, "but I feel that

I can't start another story until Kathleen gets back. You know,

dear, I can cook perfectly well in silence when I'm alone in the

kitchen."

"You don't have to wait," I said. "Tell me the one about

when Kathleen was a baby and your husband came home from the

trips. Anything which she doesn't capture on tape, she can fill

in from memory."

"Am I *that* bad, dear."

"Bad?" I was genuinely shocked. "She loves that story.

It's as much a part of these sessions as 'King John' is of

Christmas."

"Every bit of it is true, dear."

"I'm sure it is," I told her; and I am sure. "I just wish

that Bob had heard something similar."

"Am I really that transparent?" she asked. But then I saw a

motion in the doorway.

"Hurry," I told Kathleen. "She won't talk until it is set

up, and the dinner is on hold."

Soon the tape was running. Katherine had the natural

shyness that anyone develops when they are being recorded, but

she was -- after all -- both a school-teacher and a Brennan. She

was used to talking.

As she got into the story, she went back to cooking, which

made her less self-conscious. Soon, she was running along as she

had the year before. "... For the rest of the weekend, I got to

hold her while I was feeding her, period. I'd be talking to him

and he'd turn his back, not because he'd stopped listening, dear,

but so she could see what mommy was doing. Disconcerting all the

same...."

We peeled potatoes, cored apples, and occasionally checked

to see if the tape had run out. There was no reason to stop

Katherine for the tape changes. *All* the information would have

been lost if the machine hadn't been running.

I fed the Kitten while this was going on, staying in the

kitchen where she could hear Grandma Brennan recite the

accumulated wisdom. As for me, I want each individual's

personal, uninterrupted, version of Bob's ultimate package. But

that could wait for next year.

We got the turkey in, and the rest of the meal at a holding

stage, just before Bob walked in. "I'm going to run two loads.

I'll fill up the whites with sheets."

"That's kind of you, dear."

"Are there any other requests?"

"Thanks, Bob," said Kathleen, "but I don't think so."

"Wait ten minutes, won't you," I said. "I'm about to bathe

The Kitten, and I don't want to run out of hot. Indeed, could

you bring down the soap and shampoo? I'll go pry her away from

son grand-pere."

"My daughter doesn't want you rubbing sham-poo in her hair"

Bob said. "She wants to rub in real poo." That is dangerously

close to the truth.

Three of us managed to bathe The Kitten with only a little

more difficulty than it would have taken one. Kathleen carried

her away, while I washed out the sink. We dressed in relays, one

always in the kitchen. I wore a skirt and my Christmas-gift

shirt from Lands End.

Well into the meal, Katherine said, "Russ, you'll never know

what the girls have been doing with me."

"Those two are as likely as not to be taping you." Bob's

father seemed in a remarkably dour mood considering the

granddaughter time that he had received.

"Why, dear. How did you guess?"

"What?!"

"And," Katherine continued, "we are going to put all the

stories that I can remember on tape. For The Kitten if nobody

else. Kathleen hasn't decided yet whether she'll have any

daughters...."

"I've already decided against sons. Look what happened when

Mom had one."

"... And Jeanette, after all, won't have enough time in my

kitchen to learn them all to pass down to her daughter."

"Besides," I put in. "I mostly talk to The Kitten in

French, and some of these stories don't translate well."

"And, dear," Katherine said while I was still talking, "we

thought that Jeanette and Kathleen could add their own stories to

the cache, and later The Kitten and whoever. Their stories, and

stories from other families, and stories that they have heard

from others."

"Ann told some marvelous stories," I said. "Some you heard,

Bob, and many you didn't."

"When," Bob asked, "did this oral history project change

from the memories of one man to those of dozens of women?"

"Well," I pointed out, "there didn't seem to be a whole lot

of enthusiasm on the part of the subject for that one. And we

have hours of recordings already for our project. While the

assets offered were those of the firm, it was my typing; I should

get some vote. Anyway, at this time we're pushing the idea of

tape. Transcription would be in the future."

"And it isn't dozens of women, dear," Katherine said.

"Except for the ones that are filtered through my memories, there

are only four or five. And I doubt whether I know a story from

more than ten women all told."

"The Kitten and whoever," I said, "(and doesn't Kathleen

have original taste in children's names?) won't have *memories*

to contribute for an awfully long time. Anyway, that isn't the

problem.

"We got talking about saving some memories that might hurt

our contemporaries. Those would be put in writing, not tapes.

That could be kept for a century. 'My honeymoon on The

Appalachian Trail, to be delivered to any of Catherine

Angelique's granddaughters on their eighteenth birthday.' And we

didn't know how to handle that."

"You'd have to ask a real lawyer," Bob said. "There is the

so-called 'Law against perpetuities.'"

"Is that why the US doesn't issue consols?" his father

asked.

"No sir," Bob responded. "Different thing. Same name. A

lawyer's 'perpetuity' is like the English entailed estates. You

can't leave money to be shared by The Kitten's grandchildren. (I

mean now. You can wait until she has some.) I'm sure that you

*could* leave papers to be *publicly* available in one hundred

years. I'm sure that you could *not* leave property to be

divided among people not yet born. (I think that the limit on

private trusts is one person's lifetime. But don't quote me, I

*didn't* go to law school, remember.) Whether one can legally

bind someone to keep papers secret for a century and then

distribute them privately, I don't know.

"But that's legality. If you left me some papers to be

turned over to The Kitten, I might be able to open them with no

legal penalty. On the other hand, would I keep her respect after

she found out that I had done so?"

"You might find," said Bob's father, "that having the

respect of your child is an impossibility whatever your

behavior."

"Well," I said. "You have retained the respect of your

children. Bob is enough like you to make it a reasonable bet."

"I think, dear," Katherine said, "that the proper verb is

'regained' with a 'g,' not 'retained.' Children go through a

stage of rejecting everything before they reach a stage of

selection."

"All the more reason," I said, "to behave in a fashion that

would lead them to select respect. Besides, I knew Bob from

sixteen. He never talked of his father with disdain. Now, his

father's generation...."

"I can remember," his father said, "some comments about

never understanding him at all."

"Well," I said, "that's entirely different. When he told me

that I didn't understand him, I told him that nobody in the world

could possibly understand him." Kathleen's loud agreement helped

lighten the discussion.

"I suspect," said Bob, "that there are more intellects lofty

enough to recognize my genius than you four might think."

"There," Katherine said, "could hardly be fewer."

"They would have to be experts in abnormal psychology,"

Kathleen said, "and nobody is doing work on anything *that*

abnormal."

"The Kitten, at least, loves me."

"We all *love* you, dear," his mother told him. "We were

talking about understanding you."

"If she understood you," I pointed out, "she'd say

'Decembre.'"

"She doesn't know what month it is," he said. "*My*

daughter can speak French, but *your* daughter doesn't know what

month it is." Now I ask you, which parent is more likely to help

The Kitten's French, whether we are talking genes or environment?

"Tell me true, Kate," Bob's father said. "How much of this

is conspiracy?"

"Not on my part, dear. But the girls sprang the original

idea with suspicious speed and unanimity."

"It occurred to the two of us at once, sir," I said. "It

really did. We were sitting there with Katherine's story pouring

over us. And we couldn't talk, but it occurred to us almost

simultaneously. *These* should be saved.

"Now let me delay speaking for the firm and even as a mother

of my daughter later. Because the idea occurred to me as

Jeanette. (Things don't always occur to you under all your hats,

you know.) My husband is a historian and thinks of the ages; I'm

a mother and think of my child.

"The Kitten would be interested in hearing your voice, as

Bob said. We'd be more interested in having her hear it,

assuming -- as your family seems morbidly to do -- that she won't

hear it from your mouth. But she'd be *fascinated* by

Katherine's stories. They are, as Katherine pointed out to us,

mostly intended as compensation for staying in the kitchen and

peeling potatoes.

"Transcription is another kettle of fish. These stories

should be transcribed someday. (And I just switched hats.) What

you did around the dinner table is try to educate your kids.

Those lectures would go down more smoothly for being transcribed.

I couldn't speak for the firm without consultation, but it's

possible that I might find some transcription time this year. I

mean this coming year.

"If I do, I'll only spend a little time. For the oral

history project, I listened and listened again. Instead, I'll

send you a rough draft, and *you* can put in the word that I

missed."

"You got one thing wrong," Bob said, "these are stories.

They just need a little understanding to (um) understand them.

They just need a little grounding to understand them."

"Well," I said, "of the women in that kitchen, only I

belonged in a kitchen. Katherine has what? an MAT?" She

nodded. "And Kathleen has an MD. They have both worlds. I want

my daughter to have both worlds. Your daughter does, and who can

swear that the stories around the table didn't help. But I think

that those stories, or at least the grounding, are best conveyed

on paper."

"You know," said Bob's father, "That's the longest speech

that I've heard from you since the wedding." The Kitten cried in

the other room. It was a hungry cry.

"It's the longest speech that you'll hear from me for a

while. I'm being summoned."

Bob got up. "Rocker?" he asked.

"Please," I said. A moment later, the cry was stifled in

the other room. I stuffed my mouth and started unbuttoning my

new shirt while I chewed. A sensible woman would have eaten

while she had the chance. I managed to get in a slice of turkey

and all the remains of my mashed potatoes (I love gravy, but I

hate *cold* gravy) before Bob called from the other room.

"Coming," he said.

Part Twelve, Conclusion:

"Coming," I replied. I moved to the rocker and adjusted my

bra. Bob handed me The Kitten and sat down. She began to feed,

but I paid more attention to the conversation than I normally do

while nursing. That was lucky, as my sister-in-law addressed her

next sentence to me.

"You know, Jeanette, you shouldn't put yourself down.

You're not a housewife locked in the kitchen. You're a

translator of scholarly works." I decided that there was no way

that The Kitten was going to get French during this meal.

"Y'know, Kaytoo," Bob said, "you *think* you're a feminist.

You're really an imperialist.

"You know, dear," Katherine said, "wrapping an insight in an

insult is hiding your light under a bushel."

"He means, Kathleen," I said, resisting the temptation to

start my sentence with "You know," "that you're projecting. You

don't want to be a housewife; you want to be a psychoanalyst. I

don't have dreams of a career in translation; I'm building a

family. If that means translating and I'm able to translate,

fine. I really enjoy it. If that means changing an enormous

pile of messy diapers, so be it. Though I *don't* really enjoy

that.

"You aren't in any position to talk, you know. Your present

job pays less than my first job paid for forty hours a week; and

you are on call thirty-six hours out of forty-eight. You're

building something, but so am I. For that matter, I had four

jobs over ten years, not counting a few second jobs. I left two

of them to follow my husband into another state and one to have a

baby. I have references from all four, and glowing references

from the last job where I was secretary to the president of a

small company. Ask your father if Brewster would hire me."

"Not Bob's wife, of course," he said. "And you may be

overqualified for any available position. But personnel would

drool over that sort of record."

"I'm not," I told her, "just-a-housewife. I wasn't just-a-

secretary, either. But I was a very good secretary, and I think

I'm a good wife and mother. I'm an adequate housekeeper."

"You're the finest wife a man could ask for," Bob said.

That wasn't what he'd said the night before. "I think that

you're a wonderful mother. You're a very good housekeeper, but

too compulsive." If Bob found that people could write their

names in the dust on a table, he would start an autograph

collection.

"Remember the three men on the same job," he said to his

sister. "One said that he was laying brick, one said that he was

earning a living, one said that he was building a cathedral."

"You Brennans don't know any more about families than a fish

knows about water," I said. "Bob says that he never gets any

support from his father; and he believes that he believes that.

But when push comes to shove, he says 'my parents will back me.'

And his parents, both parents, will back him. And back you. And

will back me because I married him." I broke down in tears then.

Bob looked over, decided that coming over would be a

mistake, went back to eating. I think that The Kitten's next

message, when she paused and looked up at me, was "Don't be sad,

Maman."

"Quelquefois on doit," I told her. Her next look wasn't any

happier; well, I didn't like the news either. "C'est-une partie

de la vie." That didn't persuade her. "Et la vie est tres

bonne." I glanced over at the table.

Katherine was speaking to me. "My children might be

ignorant of family, dear, but Russ and I built our own

cathedral." Bob was looking down at his plate. Odd. His father

was glaring at him. God, my husband loved me! He would walk

through fire for his father's approval; but he sat there under

his father's disapproval instead of coming over to me. And he

did it because that was slightly better for me.

How *dare* that bastard put his son through that, I thought.

I would have liked to tell him what I thought of him. Why not?

He had done that to me two days ago. Then the reason why not

came to me. It wouldn't build that family I was claiming as my

goal a minute ago. I needed a better approach. I thought;

indeed, I schemed.

"She built a cathedral, Jeanette," Bob's father said

blithely. "I mostly carried hod." And swung a wrecking ball. I

had thought of my lever, and he *was* addressing me.

"Well, sir," I started. "I don't know much about

management. And I know less about medicine. So this free advice

may be overpriced. But *I* would think that a man who has had a

bypass operation would ... learn to delegate." Bob sputtered. A

particle or two of food escaped, and I was glad that The Kitten

couldn't see.

"Now, Bob tells me what a great manager you are. It may be

simple hero worship, it may be true of the office. What I see

here at this table is a Dilbert cartoon."

He winced.

"The man who knew me better than you ever will fourteen

years ago, a man who has bent his considerable intelligence to

finding out what makes me happy for those fourteen years, checked

on me. He decided that I *didn't* need his presence. Then you

put him through agony because he followed his knowledge rather

than your guess.

"I appreciated your glare when you used it to protect my

modesty from the boy in church. I *don't* appreciate your glare

when you use it to punish my husband because he cares more for my

feelings than for your ephemeral opinions. I especially resent

it because I know how important those opinions are to him."

And *that* was now the longest speech he had heard from me

since the wedding.

"I'm sorry, Jeanette. I just worry about his making the

mistakes that I made."

"And you worry about his not having your virtues, especially

your prime virtue of loyalty. (I don't think that is the essence

of manhood, though Bob has tons of loyalty, especially to me. I

just think that it is the essence of Russell Brennan.) But don't

you see the catch twenty-two? You worry about his being like

you, and you worry about his being unlike you. That doesn't

leave him a whole lot of options." I needed to look to The

Kitten again, who hadn't appreciated the anger in my voice.

Bob leaped into the breach. "I'm not making your mistakes,

sir. I'm busy making my own." That brought the tension down a

little.

"As long as we have a little creativity, dear," Katherine

said, "we can pretend that we're making progress. You know, when

Kathleen came along, I had a whole list of the mistakes that I

had made with you. I wasn't going to repeat them. The problem

was that Kathleen wasn't Bob."

"Problem!" Kathleen was playing incensed. She was probably

actually incensed, as well.

"The mistakes that I made with Bob, dear, weren't at the

level of dropping him on his head, whatever you claimed later.

They were things that could be right for *a* child, but were dead

wrong for *that* child. They might have been okay for you. On

the other hand, some of the things that worked best for Bob

didn't work at all for you." The subtle Brennan had spoken. If

the others picked it up, well and good; if not, I could use it

later. "You know, dear, it is really unfair to sit there nursing

a child." What did she expect me to do? "It's like holding a

hostage. Nobody's going to zap Jeanette when it might disturb

The Kitten."

"I didn't choose when he would glare at Bob." Nor did I

care about fighting fair. I was protecting my family.

"I'm sorry, Jeanette," Bob's father said. "Will you forgive

me?"

"Why Mr. Brennan," I said in my *very* sweetest voice. Bob

looked up. He knew that voice. "You already know the answer to

that. Since you ask me in that way, of course the answer is ...

no!"

"What?" Aside from the way he handled his son, the man was

no fool. He was Bob's father, after all.

"You weren't glaring at me. It wouldn't have hurt if you

had. You were glaring at Bob. I can forgive the *past*, but I

can't make peace with you while you are at war with my husband.

Ask his forgiveness first."

"Of course I forgive you," said Bob.

"Not even your omnipotent God can forgive the unrepentant,

Bob."

"Son, her theology may be shaky, but her take on people is

correct. I most humbly beg your pardon."

"You have it," said Bob. He sincerely meant it.

"And you have mine," I said, not particularly sincerely.

For thirty seconds, I thought that we would witness the millionth

hug in the Brennan household and the first between two men. They

went back to their plates, but they had *looked* like a hug was

possible. Bob, in particular, looked extremely huggable.

"It ain't The Firm," said his father. "It's damn-well La

Compania." That wasn't good French if it were intended for

French.

"Anyway, dears," said Katherine, "does this idea of

collection of tapes look viable?"

"I don't see why not," said Bob. "It's just as I was saying

about Father's tapes. Only your list goes deeper. It is

important social history. Try to guess at a date for those

stories. For your own memories, of course, you don't have to

guess.

"On the other hand, I might become a real historian, after

all, if I can keep sucking off my family. The rise and fall of

the Hamiltonian system in Ward Tech would be a nice piece of

institutional history. It couldn't be told today; it wouldn't be

acceptable if it were based only on your memoirs, sir. It could,

however, be pasted together over time, and told in twenty years."

Have I mentioned that Bob thinks in the long term?

"Not your century is it?" his father asked.

"Not my century, but I sat at a dinner table for five or ten

years hearing nightly lectures on the strengths and weaknesses of

the twentieth century American corporate system. I think I

could navigate those waters without too many blunders. Indeed,

with your guidance and a few letters of introduction, I might be

able to write the story without quoting you at all. I would

dedicate the book to Grand-pere Gorge Profonde."

"That's deep throat," I put in.

"Sounds wonderful," said his father, "Meet me in the garage

Monday."

"Give me a slice of white, please," Bob said. "and a bit

more dressing too." He passed his plate down.

"Wonders will never cease," said Kathleen. She sounded more

shocked at that request from her brother than at anything else

which had been said at the table that day. I was sorry to

disappoint her, but I knew what was coming. Bob cut the turkey

up into small pieces, mixed a little gravy in with the stuffing,

and brought the plate over to me.

"Nod when," he said. Then he held out a small piece of

turkey on the fork. I nodded. "Your daddy loves you, Kitten,"

he said. "Your mommy loves you.... And your daddy loves your

mommy...." I ate, the table conversation finally resumed, The

Kitten got her food and her message.

Much later, Katherine got her granddaughter while the rest

of us got our dessert. The Kitten played with the beads. When

Bob's father had finished his pie, Katherine said, "Want her,

Russ? I warn you she needs a change."

"Better a wet Kitten than a lonely chair. Before I go,

though, I want to say something to Jeanette. I don't withdraw

one word of what I said about your *actions* of taping Bob. I

did over-react, though, when I talked about *who* you are. You

still have my deepest admiration."

"That's terribly kind, sir," I said as he hauled The Kitten

off towards the changing table. "And, in return, I really want

to express my respect for the way that you handle the tax

accounting at Brewster."

"Really, dear," Katherine said after he walked away.

"Neither of us is a fool you know. Where do you think Bob got

his genes? I don't say sarcastic things about your husband."

"Between your husband and your son, you have to maintain

some degree of neutrality. Between my husband and my father-in-

law I don't."

"I think," Katherine said, "that you have delivered more

than Russ is capable of hearing right now, dear. Why don't you

let that sink in this trip. See what happens through this next

year. He has heard you, but he'll turn defensive if you say

more. I say this as a person who loves them both very much."

"I only have two more messages, anyway," I told her. Well,

two that I'd thought of yet. But ignoring Katherine's advice

about her husband would be idiotic. "I'll give them to you and

you can deliver them in a few months."

"I certainly can, dear. Perhaps I will."

"Bob's father has to be an expert on budgeting," I said.

"He does it for a whole damn company. When the two of us were on

a tight budget, he never asked to see what we were spending money

on. He trusts Bob's judgment on everything that he trusts *his*

judgment on."

"I'll think about that dear," Katherine promised. "You

think about who needs to hear that message. And the other?"

"Would it really be so wonderful," I asked her, "if Bob was

precisely the husband that his father wants him to be, and I was

precisely the wife that Bob's father wants him to have. Would

that be so wonderful if we then got divorced because we weren't

meeting the deepest needs of *each other*?"

"Thank you, dear. Now I believe that I should have a little

quality time with *my* daughter while we do the dishes. Will you

excuse us, dear."

"Mom!" Kathleen said. "I spent the day in the kitchen."

"You haven't done the dishes this whole visit, dear. Get

all your work out of the way in one swell foop. Besides they are

my grandmother's dishes and I can trust them neither to the

dishwasher nor to Bob."

"I notice," Bob said to me when they had taken out the first

load, "that you didn't try to defend me from *that* accusation."

"You're an excellent husband, mon mari. You are a bull in

the china dishwater. Let's go upstairs."

"Now you're talking!"

"Keep your libido under control," I told him. "I just had a

heavy meal, and your mother's right. We have to talk."

Upstairs, I dropped down on the stripped bed, my head on the

foot end. Bob put the pillows in new cases and passed me one.

He lay down on the floor with the other pillow, lying in the

opposite direction from me so that our right hands could meet

easily.

"I just wish that I could defend you from your family as

well as you defend me from my father," he said.

"My family did its worst damage before I even met you," I

pointed out. "You can't defend me from that, you can only heal

me. You've done a marvelous job of that."

"Thank you."

"Thank *you*. I love you."

"I love you, too," he said. "Even if you have just had a

heavy meal."

"Your mother was right, as always."

"About what? I've known her to be wrong."

"Your father doesn't distrust your judgment in family

matters."

"He gives a damn good imitation."

"He sees what everybody else sees. That you are so much

alike."

"I think of us as opposites."

"That's right," I told him.

"What did Whitman say about 'I contain contradictions'?"

"*You* are asking *me* about poetry? Anyway, that doesn't

matter. What your father sees is someone who looks spookily like

Russell Brennan. He thinks Russell Brennan fouled up royally in

the family department, now your mother thinks differently...."

"My mother," Bob said, "says differently."

"But what she says, or what she thinks, or what the reality

is.... Is there any reality in such situations?" I was getting

lost.

"That is the 'absolute truth' question," he said. "The

people who say that there is no absolute truth have a point, even

if their certainty is a logical contradiction and their tactics

border on the fascistic."

"Can we leave faculty wars 'til next week."

"You asked."

"Anyway," I went on, "no one else's opinions on that subject

matter to what your father sees. He sees someone who looks

spookily like Russell Brennan, and whom he loves. He sees

Russell Brennan as a horrible failure in the family department.

*Thus*, he sees the person he loves in imminent danger of being a

horrible failure in the family department. The particular thing

that you do doesn't matter in the least. You might try plastic

surgery on your chin."

Bob laughed at that. The Brennan chin was a family trait.

It looked good, and almost identical, on the two of them.

Kathleen could have done without it, although she was pretty even

with it.

"No way," he said. "The Kitten has it already." He is,

unfortunately, right.

"Anyway. Bob Brennan looks like a disastrous husband and

father to him because Bob Brennan looks like Russell Brennan to

him. Now I get the impression that he was a fine father when he

was there."

"Anybody could be a fine father as often as he was there,"

he said, a bit unfairly. Bob's father had a remarkably intense

job; he *could* have come home expecting his wife to neglect the

children briefly so she could soothe his aches and needs. But

Bob's impression of that past is just another impression. I

wanted to deal with the present and future.

"And you are trying to be as fine a father on a three-

hundred-sixty-five day basis."

"Not yet."

"Goofus!" I said, and he is a goofus. "Three-sixty-five a

year, every year. You are a fine husband and a fine father.

Just remember that your father doesn't worry about your fouling

up in the family department because of anything you do, and he

won't be persuaded that you are a good husband and father by

anything you could do. He looks at you and sees his younger

self. It's his younger self that he sees failing."

"I love you."

"And I love you too. Will you think about it?"

"Loving you?" he asked. "I think about it all the time. I

used to lie for hours in this room and think about nothing else.

Of course, in those days, *I* got to lie on the bed." I decided

to let him have his diversion. Bob can't *not* think about an

idea once it's raised.

"I could always go downstairs and lie on the couch," I said,

knowing that he would never take me up on it.

"I fail to see the advantage," he said. "In the first

place, it's much narrower and we'd be even more crowded. In the

second place, we'd have an audience."

"Can't you think of love apart from lust?" I asked him.

"Easily. I just can't think of Jeanette apart from lust."

I suspect that he can't breathe, let alone think, apart from

lust.

He took my hand and kissed each finger. I took it back

after a while and said, "Can you find the volume with the article

about Gide?" He groaned theatrically, but handed it to me.

After a bit, he got out the print-out and went through it some

more. Working side-by-side is awfully companionable. Too bad we

never could get in the hang before we were married. I actually

got the next volume for myself. I wasn't going to get to Verne

before returning to Michigan.

The book was closed beside me on the bed when Bob woke me.

He said, "Dad's calling. Here? down in the rocker? or should I

bring the rocker up?"

"None of the above. Do we have a clean bib?"

The Kitten, once deposited in the highchair, settled down

for the game. She even opened her mouth one time without my

making the face. She still tried to grab the spoon, but I have

the reaction-time in our family.

I remembered to stop when she was half full. We played a

little "This little piggy." When she was done, I washed her off.

She was half an hour from her cranky time, but nobody was around

to notice that. I snuck up the stairs, and we lay down on the

quilt together. When Bob came back, he took the rocker. "We

only want Mommy, eh," he said.

"Bob could we have another name?"

"Other than Brennan? other than The Kitten? other than?"

"Mommy and Daddy," I explained, "are what I still call my

parents most of the time."

"How about 'Dad,' did you ever use that?" he asked. "Or I

could be 'Pops.' Unless we move back to Boston. We could just

use 'Maman' all the time, but it is going to sound a lot like

'mommy' to a lot of people."

"Let me think about it. You are a sweet, accommodating,

husband."

"Darling, if it's important to you, and not to me....

Actually, I want to be 'Dad.' I just felt we should wait.

Terminal consonants are going to take a while."

He wandered over to the bed, and made it with the newly-

washed sheets. He lay down on top with the print-out. After The

Kitten fell asleep, I joined him. I decided to read the Verne

article and actually stayed awake straight through it.

Just before dinner, we tried out the baby monitor. Bob

stayed upstairs. When I was in the dining room I could hear his

voice saying, "This is Deforest's prime evil," quite clearly.

His father shouted for him to come down. The Kitten didn't wake

until the table was being cleared.

Rested, dry, and fed, The Kitten went to Katherine and from

her to Kathleen. Bob carried the rocker back upstairs. The

Kitten really doesn't get *cranky* at night, she just is very

possessive of Maman. Which is fine; Maman, although she tries

not to show it, feels very possessive of The Kitten. Indeed, I

was tempted to call our friends and cancel the party on Sunday.

I reconsidered. We would be back in Michigan in a week. I

would have The Kitten to myself for most of the time, (and her

best times) most days. I lay with The Kitten on my belly and my

head in Bob's lap. The conversation above me solved the problems

of the world. Bob explained why strict censorship of any

pictorial or voice media, combined with absolute freedom of the

printed word, would reverse the decline in literacy. "Are we

boring you, dear?" Katherine asked. I shook my head. I wasn't

paying enough attention to be bored. My daughter was barely

stirring on my lap, and Junior was barely stirring under my head.

We went upstairs early. The Kitten was tired of Maman, too.

She played on the quilt, if throwing all ones toys away and

crying because there is nothing to play with can be called

playing.

Soon, I was nursing her in the rocker. I talked to her

disjointedly. Bob lay on the bed going further into the printout

until The Kitten was quite done. "You know," I said, "with the

door locked, there is no rule that you have to change all her

diapers."

"I think this business of giving you a break is a good

thing. Besides, I would rather have you lie there and think lewd

thoughts." There is a grain of truth in that. Bob changes his

share of diapers, but much more than half the ones just before we

lay The Kitten down to sleep and begin our own bed-time ritual.

That was a fair trade. He changed The Kitten; I thought of

all the ways that we had made love this trip. I remembered

straddling him in the rocker, and of his hand playing with me in

that same rocker while he tasted my milk. I remembered my moving

above him on the bed, and of his moving behind me on two separate

occasions. I remembered all the times that he had tongued or

kissed me to a climax. Those sort of merged together, as I

remembered one climb to glory after another. (I can never

remember the actual climaxes more than moments after they

happen.) I remembered lying between the end of the bed and his

lap. I remembered him moving above me and within me and against

me. I thought that this was the sweetest time of all.

"Thinking any lewd thoughts?" he asked, after The Kitten was

safely ensconced in her crib.

"Nothing lewd," I answered, "only licit, unexceptionable,

practices with my lawful wedded husband."

"You make it sound so bland," he said while just touching

one nipple, "but look so enticing." My nipples were standing up,

and a nursing mother's nipples stand rather tall.

"Kiss me first," I said, meaning my mouth before my nipples.

He pecked my mouth, pecked a nipple, and came back for a real

kiss. His tongue was exciting of itself, but more exciting as a

promise. His hands passed over me as our tongues played tag.

My thighs spread as he stroked them. "Oh, how I do love

you," he said as he took the invitation. Then he pressed his

mouth more firmly to mine. My hips rose to press against his

clasping hand. He parted the lips and touched me within. "Oh,

how I love you!" he said as he felt my slickness.

"Both together tonight," I asked, "Please!" He could easily

have pushed me over into my climax, but I wanted him along with

me.

He kissed me with love and petted me with lust. I thought

that he had forgotten my request when I stiffened under his hand.

He had remembered; he just enjoyed my readiness. Leaving the

most sensitive area, he urged my legs farther apart as he climbed

between them. Then the strokes up and down my valley were not

from his fingers. Soon, he placed himself.

His entrance was slow, and steady, and filled me, and then

pressed me down. "Oh!" he said. "I love you!"

I think half his weight was supported on that pivot for a

minute. Then his strokes followed one regular beat. The

sliding, the filling, the pressing excited me until the

individual sensations were lost in the blissful warmth. I was

just aware of his hand sliding between us. Then the warmth

burned to fire, and the fire consumed me. "Oh! Love *you*," I

heard through my own moans as a writhed beneath him and flared

around him.

Then his motions sped, sped again, and ended in a driving

thrust. "Oh love," he said, in time to each spurt. "Oh love, oh

love. *Oh* love!" He lay on me, in me, coming out of me, for

minutes afterward. Then he moved over and we cleaned ourselves

off.

We turned onto our sides and nestled into a spoon. He

hugged me as our breaths eased towards sleep

"Love," he said.

And so it was.

The End

FORGET ALL THAT

Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net

1998/01/01

1999/12/30

2000/11/12

This is the last story (so far) in a series of stories about the

Brennans.

The first segment of this story is:

fat_a.txt

Parts 1-3

The first story in the series is:

forever.txt

"Forever"

The list of the entire series is:

brennan.txt

Brennan stories Directory

The list of all my stories can be found at:

index.txt

Index to Uther Pendragon's Website

Another story with another perspective on another three-

generation family is:

gully.txt

"Gully Washer"



End of File