69 Barrow Street

69 Barrow Street Read Free

Book: 69 Barrow Street Read Free
Author: Lawrence Block
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers, Espionage
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for them to bury me.”
    Frank had been the first, and there had been so many after him that she had lost count. She couldn’t even recall what some of them looked like or what their names were. Old men, young men, boys even—she thought fleetingly of a delivery boy, just a freshman in high school, who couldn’t have been more than fourteen or fifteen. What a sweet, funny, excited little thing he had been! He brought her an order from the grocery once—God, it had been two or three years ago!—and she came to the door in a kimono.
    From there on it had been easy. She let the kimono slip open persistently and each time she took longer to close it again. The poor kid, he couldn’t help staring at her. And then she took him by the hand and led him inside and helped him off with his clothes. And she lay down beside him on her bed and showed him what to do…
    Old men, young men and boys. And girls as well, of course. Sex was such a spectacularly wonderful thing that there was no point in drawing the line anywhere. It was as nice one way as the other.
    She hesitated at her door, remembering the girl she had passed on the steps that morning. The girl was gay; there was no doubt about it. And the girl was interested in a roll in the hay as well. There was no doubt about that either.
    Stella was interested herself. It had been almost a month since she had had a girl and she wanted one, wanted this one in particular. And it would be damned convenient having her living in the same building.
    Almost reluctantly she turned her key in the door and stepped inside. There would be plenty of time for the girl later. Right now she wanted Ralph. She wanted to make him grovel at her feet and then have him possess her, harshly, violently.
    She alternately liked and despised Ralph. All in all she thought him a pretty despicable individual, weak and spineless and totally dependent on her. Not many men would be willing or able to take what she dished out.
    But at the same time he was a marvelous lover, and easily as virile a man as she had ever met. And he had an incredible imagination.
    Besides, she needed a man like Ralph, a man she could push around whatever way she felt like. In his own way he loved her, and in her own way she supposed she loved him. Hardly the storybook kind of love with a picket fence and children, but love just the same. They were in the same boat.
    He was sitting on the couch in the living room. When she walked in he looked up at her but said nothing. She smiled.
    “Well?”
    “What do you want me to say?”
    Her smile widened. “You might tell me how nice I look.”
    He shrugged. “You look fine.”
    She did, and she knew it. She was wearing a lemon-colored sack dress just a shade deeper than her hair, and she had the sort of figure that kept a sack dress from looking like a sack. Her breasts and hips rubbed against the yellow material as she walked and accentuated all the sensuous lines of her full body.
    “You look fine,” he repeated. “Is that all you want?”
    “Do you think it is?”
    He shrugged again, feigning boredom.
    “I want to talk to you,” she said. “Why else would I come in here? I just want to have a nice, pleasant conversation with my lover.”
    He just looked at her.
    She sat down next to him and slipped one arm around him so that her breast pressed into his shoulder. He tried to ignore her but she could sense how she was exciting him, how he wanted her. This was going to be good.
    “I met a girl today,” she said. “She just moved into this building.”
    “Oh?”
    “She’s very pretty,” she went on. “Young, small—a lesbian, of course.”
    He laughed. “You make it sound as though every girl in the Village is a lesbian.”
    “Most of them are.”
    “And I suppose you intend to have her?”
    “Of course.”
    “Suppose she doesn’t want to be had?”
    “She’ll want to,” Stella said. “I can tell.”
    “Stella,” he demanded, “what in hell is the matter with you?

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