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Twirlies For Gramma
Ruby promised me an unforgettable Christmas if I would go
home with her for the weekend to see her family. I went. I
was young and horny and figured we'd be able to sneak some
time alone. She was my first lover, and besides -- she was
a redhead.
I'd seen enough movies to know how it was done. Her parents
would give me the guest room at the far end of the hall, well
away from Ruby's bedroom. Their bedroom, of course, would
be in between, and they would leave the door open just a crack.
After bedtime I would tiptoe down the hall to her room, we
would make love until the wee hours, fall asleep wearily in
each other's arms, and with the help of her alarm I'd sneak
back to my room at five a.m. I would get back just in the
nick of time before the family members started their morning
bathroom trips.
The moonlit night illuminated a farmhouse and the remnants
of a picket fence. It was after midnight. We dragged our suitcases
into the house, dropped them in the living room, and Ruby
led me to her bedroom, where we made love and fell asleep.
So much for my plan.
I was awakened by the cymbaling of two pot lids and peeked
my right eye from under the covers. "I'm Loretta, Ruby's mom.
Breakfast is ready. Are you going to spend all day in bed?"
I pulled the cover back over my head and felt for Ruby to
shake her awake. I was alone. I peeked out again. "If you
don't come out of there I'm coming in," said Loretta, as she
provocatively tried to lick her eyebrows. Then she snatched
the blanket, leaving me too startled to even try to cover
up my morning piss hard-on.
"Bring your friend," Ruby's mother laughed, throwing me my
jeans and winking. She left for the kitchen and I followed,
to a breakfast of venison, home fries, eggs and Scrapple.
My usual.
"How do you like your eggs?" she asked, and without waiting
for an answer put a plate down in front of me. "Well, tell
me, Ruby. Was he a good lay?"
"Pass the Scrapple," Ruby's father said, as I tried to wish
myself invisible.
Ruby, with her mouth full, said, "Damn good if you're looking
for speed and accuracy."
"Oh yeah -- like your father here." Ruby's mom cuffed her
husband on the back of his neck, spilling his coffee on the
newspaper. He just grinned a dummie's grin and wiped the mess.
Then he lit up another Chesterfield and turned to the sports
page.
"Gramma will be here this evening and she'll take your bedroom
Ruby. You two lovebirds can move to the camper in the yard--the
power's all hooked up--not that you need any power. Ha ha."
"You're right, Ruby," I said, lugging our gear into the camper.
"This is an unforgettable Christmas and we've only had breakfast."
"You ain't seen Christmas yet," she said, pulling her sweater
over her head. Unsnapping her bra and twirling it, Ruby shimmied
in front of me and said, "This afternoon when we decorate
the tree is really the start of Christmas for us. We sit around
tossing down shots of Jack and watch Daddy try to set the
tree up by his lonesome. When the tree is finally up he gets
his first drink, but not until."
"How come?"
"Tradition. We've been doing this since I was a little girl.
Once Daddy was really swacked when he tried to put up the
tree, and he kept falling and knocking it over. After that
Mom made him quit drinking and go to AA. Now he only drinks
on Christmas, and then, only after the tree is up."
"After the tree is up he has himself a drink?"
"After he gets the tree up and straight, he sits down and
drinks himself stupid while Momma and I decorate. You can
help, too."
"What about AA?"
"He goes back right after New Year's and stays sober until
the next Christmas."
"He can do that-just drink one week a year?"
"Yep. But he says he sure does look forward to the holidays.
Do you like tree decorating?"
"I never decorated a tree before; it should be fun."
"Never?"
"Nope. Never."
"How come? Would you rather sit and drink with my dad?"
"No, I'll do the tree. How come I never decorated a tree?
Because Jews don't have Christmas or Christmas trees."
"Go on. Really? What do you have?"
"What do you mean, what do we have?"
"Yeah. What do you have for Christmas?"
"Nothing. Jews don't celebrate Christmas. I thought you read
that library book about Jews."
"I read some of it, but I don't remember that part about Christmas.
I never knew a Jew before except Silverberg from the furniture
store."
"Silverberg?"
"Yeah."
"What about him?"
"Momma always said that Jews sure do know their furniture."
"She's right. What else did your momma tell you about us Jews?"
"Jump my bones," Ruby said, peeling off her Tuesday underwear,
"and maybe I'll tell you."
"Gramma, Ruby brought a boy home for Christmas," Loretta said,
as she stood behind Ruby. I was leaning on the porch next
to the open kitchen window, eavesdropping.
"She was always bringing something home. When she was little
it was stray cats and dogs. I saw the trailer light on and
figured she had company. Is he nice?"
"She
went and got herself a Jew, Gramma."
"Did you go and do that, child?" Gramma asked, shaking her
head.
"I sure did, Gramma, and he's a prize all right," said Ruby,
sucking her teeth.
Gramma
said, "How do you know he's a Jew, Ruby baby?"
"Told me."
"Shoot. If I told you I was a Martian, would that go and make
me one?" scoffed Gramma.
Loretta
stood up and walked over to her mother and put a hand on her
shoulder. "He's a Jew, alright, Gramma."
Gramma, shrugging off Loretta's hand, looked over at Ruby
and asked, "Did you feel his head?"
"Ruby done felt his everything, Gramma," laughed Loretta,
slapping her thigh.
"Well, Ruby," Gramma persisted, "did you?"
"Of course I felt his head."
"Did he have them?" Gramma asked, rising, "or didn't he have
them?"
"Not exactly."
"What do you mean, not exactly? He either had them or he didn't."
"Well, when he asked me what I was feeling his head for, and
I told him I was feeling for horns, he said that before he
left home the Rabbi removed them so no one would know he was
a Jew."
"I never heard about them doing that before."
Loretta said, "He's good for Ruby and she's happy and what's
more, he ain't got no call to say he's a Jew if he ain't."
I nodded and stifled a laugh.
"If he ain't got no horns, he ain't no Jew. What you got there,
Ruby, is one of them fake Jews."
"But Gramma. I went and got this book on Jews out from the
library and it didn't say nothing about no horns."
"Ptttoo!" Gramma spat on the floor. "Ruby, don't be stupid.
That book was probably wrote by one of them Jews and he ain't
gonna tell you about no horns. That's how we always have been
able to tell. I don't know what's up with your fake Jew, but
you best keep him away from me."
"Gramma, you're in a pissy mood, but you just wait and see
what I got you for Christmas. You'll forget all about my Jew."
Early Christmas afternoon, Ruby's
family began arriving laden with presents and bottled cheer.
By three in the afternoon, when Christmas dinner was served,
everyone was shit-faced. For dessert Loretta brought out the
pies, and Ruby's dad stumbled up from the basement with the
Mason jars of shine, which the men grabbed and took into the
living room.
Well into the second jar, the men started shouting for the
women to come and open their presents. I was "yahooing!" along
with the other guys but I didn't know why.
The ladies filed in. Loretta straddled my legs and pulled
my head down to her heavily perfumed bosom, and when I pulled
my head up she gave me a long liquor kiss while she rubbed
my head. Winking, she got up when Ruby's father yelled, "Presents,
girls, time for presents!"
He was sitting on the floor under the tree, calling out names
and passing out presents. I didn't get a gift and then I noticed
that none of the men did. One by one, the ladies ripped their
packages open and held their gifts up for everyone to see.
Ruby stood in front of me and held up bright red underpants.
"Look! Crotchless! Aren't they beautiful?" I nodded and grinned,
drunk but still embarrassed. Ruby opened the gift card. "Thanks,
Momma. I just love them! I had you figured for candy pants
again."
"You're welcome, honey. I knew they was you as soon as I saw
them."
As the ladies opened their presents and read the cards, they
thanked each other for the gifts. They were all vintage Frederick's
of Hollywood, only the cheaper and gaudier versions, each
one more suggestive and outrageous than the last. Only Gramma
didn't show her present. Ruby whispered in her ear, and Gramma
kept her present tight in her hands.
Ruby put "Don't Take Your Love To Town" on the hi-fi and ran
out of the room. The guys quieted down and then Ruby sashayed
in, wearing the red crotchless see-thru panties. She danced
around, smiling and joking, and finally she spun around twice
and sat on my lap. Then she introduced her mother.
Loretta wore all black. She had spiked high heels, fishnet
stockings, and a baby-doll nightgown. She was doing her best
bumps and grinds, but her ankles kept giving out from the
three-inch heels. She collapsed near a jug and forgot to introduce
the next exotic.
Cousin Betsy came out on her own, wearing a satiny purple
nightgown, very modest, but clinging to her body. She wore
a knit shawl over her shoulders and kept her arms folded as
she modeled. The guys were clearly disappointed but still
gave her some "OOH, OOHS." Betsy turned her back and bowed.
Her ass was hanging out from the cut-out in the nightgown.
She turned around, and hand over hand, pulled off the shawl
to show exposed boobs through the openings in the top.
I liked Christmas.
After Betsy, the rest of the ladies
modeled their latest and everybody had a good time. Finally
the big moment arrived--Gramma--introduced by Ruby.
Gramma came out wearing a robe, which earned her a solid round
of boos. She held up one hand, silencing the family, looked
my way and said, "I ain't showing nothing as long as that
fake Jew is sitting here in this room."
Ruby tried to talk her into ignoring me, but I saw the crowd
turning ugly. I got up and left the house. Gramma made them
pull all the shades so I couldn't peek in the window. I sat
on the porch drunk and dejected, but finally I got into the
basement and snuck back up the stairs.
I cracked the door a bit and there was Gramma only five feet
away dancing around in an orange G- string with two orange
twirlies pasted onto her nipples. She bounced up and down
trying to get them to twirl, but drink and gravity kept winning
out. To get the momentum going, she even tried a couple of
jumping jacks. Finally, clasping her hands behind her head,
she went around the room shaking her twirlies and laughing.
Without closing the door, I crept back downstairs and went
out to the camper, where I slept until morning. Ruby was still
sleeping when I left for the house, hoping to shower away
my hangover. I walked through the living room and as I passed
the kitchen I looked in and saw the ladies sitting around
the breakfast table drinking coffee and gabbing--still wearing
their Christmas presents.
Gramma saw me as I headed for the bathroom, and just before
I turned into the hallway she stood up, opened her robe, and
shook her twirlies at me.
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