D.X. Machina’s GTS-o-Rama

November 10, 2008

Less than Nothing, Chapter Five

Filed under: Aphrodite Stories, Less Than Nothing — D.X. Machina @ 12:55 am

Chapter Five

They were one day shy of their one month anniversary. She was having her period, or she would have done much more with Paul, but she’d at least sent him home happy, and she’d told him encouragingly that the next night she’d be ready for no-holds-barred action again. Paul, for his part, would have been fine going that night, but Kari was sensitive about it, and he wasn’t going to belabor it, not when he was at least getting himself jerked off by a beautiful girl with a deft touch. Besides, he had just the faintest tickle in his cock afterward, one that felt pleasant. He wasn’t sure exactly what Kari had done, but it was nice.

Paul drifted off to sleep pleasantly relaxed, and awoke the next day and headed off to the gym no less cheerful. (more…)

September 16, 2008

Less Than Nothing: Chapter Four

Filed under: Aphrodite Stories, Less Than Nothing — D.X. Machina @ 10:44 pm

It had been an agonizing night.   It had taken him hours simply to get out of the wicker waste basket, and he wasn’t sure why he’d bothered, once he got out. After all, the night had brought the incursion of more condoms into the basin, proof that Kari was truly enjoying the giant’s company.

When he finally emerged, he was standing on the floor of the bathroom, cold and alone, and bitterly depressed. Still, he wasn’t giving up. Not yet. He wished he’d met the beauty a month earlier, or a month later. But nevertheless, he had to try to get Kari’s attention. Surely she wouldn’t torment him so if she knew he was here, what he’d given to be with her.

*  *  *

There is something about new love that isn’t replicable in any other way. Oh, people in deep, long-term relationships will point out that new love is facile, that a deeper relationship is more meaningful — and they’re absolutely right.

But new love is something else entirely, like being simultaneously drunker and more sober than you’ve ever been. It’s transitory, and you know it’s transitory; if you’re lucky, you can hold just a piece of it, and let it mellow into the deeper, more meaningful long-term relationship. If you’re unlucky, it burns too brightly, and burns itself out. But while it burns, there are few human experiences that can compare.

Kari and Paul were in the midst of new love. Neither knew if it was going to be the kind that flamed out or the kind that deepened and grew. And like anyone newly in love, neither of them were worried about that right now. They were far more interested in finding the sweet spots in each other’s psyches, and the sweet spots on each other’s bodies. There would be time to think long-term. For the moment, their most important task was figuring out what to do that afternoon.

“We could just stay in and have sex,” said Kari. “That’s been fun so far.”

“Oh, I know,” said Paul, “and I’m all for more sex. But you know, I do have to recuperate for a while. I can’t keep up this pace forever. I figure a nice lunch, maybe do something fun, then come back, and I should be ready to go until bedtime.”

“You know,” said Kari, smiling, “it was pretty smart of you to pack for the weekend.”

“Well,” he said, “I thought it was unlikely you were inviting me to your house just for spaghetti — not that it wasn’t good.”

“Hm. You’re just after my body.”

“Well, it’s a pretty nice body, you’ve got to admit.”

Kari chuckled. “All right, tell you what — you have any interest in art?”

“I don’t know,” said Paul. “I know it can be pretty.”

“I was an art history minor; not useful, I know, but would you be interested in going to a museum? The Art Institution’s got a nice collection from the Romantic period.”

“A museum?” said Paul. “Huh. I don’t know as I’ve ever been to an art museum, except in school.”

“In that case, we can do something else….”

“No, actually, it sounds interesting, kind of. Hey, learning new stuff’s part of the fun, isn’t it? Just promise that if I try to drag you out on a hike sometime, you’ll give it a try, at least once.”

“I like hiking,” said Kari, “but I’m sure there’s something you like that I don’t, and I’ll try it, at least once.”

“Well, you did last night…”

“And I liked it! See, that’s how it works.”

“Good deal. All right, you want to shower first, or should I?”

“You think we need a shower? I mean, we’re just full of sweat and sex.”

“Okay, I’ll take the first one. It’ll give us a chance to get full of sex and sweat again.”

“Deal,” said Kari, smiling quietly. (more…)

July 7, 2008

Less Than Nothing, Chapter Three

Filed under: Aphrodite Stories, Less Than Nothing — D.X. Machina @ 1:45 am

Chapter Three

Seth clung to Kari’s lip, hoping against hope that she wouldn’t lick it and swallow him. And then, alternately hoping she’d just be done with it, as they came to the door of the bedroom in which they’d spent so many good times.

“Please, don’t,” he begged Kari. “This guy isn’t good enough for you,” he opined, which was a silly thing to say, as Seth knew nothing of the giant other than that he and Kari were both monolithic titans, and the guy wasn’t Seth.

He heard Kari and the guy talking — mostly Kari, her distorted voice bellowing out a discussion of numbers of some sort. And then the man’s rough lips came into contact with Kari’s, squashing Seth over and over, until in a final indignity, the lips pulled him back away, leaving him stuck to the man’s lips. And then the world went topsy-turvy as the giants fell, slamming into the ground and bouncing.

Well, not the ground.

*  *  * (more…)

July 5, 2008

Less Than Nothing: Chapter Two

Filed under: Aphrodite Stories, Less Than Nothing — D.X. Machina @ 6:37 pm

Chapter Two

BAM. BAM. BAM.

He endured each blast with grimaced joy.

BAM. BAM. BAM.

He had discovered that he was invulnerable quite by accident two days ago, when she had come back to bed and sat down directly atop him, forcing him down into the mattress with such force that he could not possibly have survived it. He felt like his whole body would break. And yet as he waited, terrified, afraid of impending death, he soon found that despite the fact that he could neither move nor breathe, he was not dying. He was in pain. But he was not dying.

BAM. BAM. BAM.

When she finally rose, he felt magnificent, as the absence of pain always does. And he felt very happy about what had happened. Because while it had been painful, it had showed him that there was no part of his goddess that he needed to fear. She could not kill him.

BAM. BAM. BAM.

Which is why he had been unafraid to be standing on her foot when she pulled on that sock. He had always loved her feet, and he had worked himself onto the webbing between her second and third toes as she walked around her house, doing the normal Saturday chores, turning on a vacuum that sounded rather like a Boeing 757 three inches away from his eardrum and dusting and straightening, putting her house to rights. He had planned to jump off when she took her morning shower, but instead, she’d put on the sock.

BAM. BAM. BAM.

He wasn’t sure where they were now. He had lost his grip and fallen under the ball of her foot, taking the full weight of her body with each step. There were times when there had been breaks in the action, when her foot merely pushed him into the ground, rather than rising and falling and crushing him mercilessly. But now the footfalls came rapidly, as if she was running. He wasn’t sure if it was his imagination or not — maybe it was. He didn’t worry about it. Though he was in agony, he was also in ecstasy, as the sweat of her feet soaked the sock and himself, baptizing him in her perspiration. He breathed it in, drank it in. He sacrificed his pain to her, in payment for his pleasure.

BAM. BAM. BAM. 

*  *  * (more…)

July 3, 2008

Less Than Nothing, Part One

Filed under: Aphrodite Stories, Less Than Nothing — D.X. Machina @ 1:04 am

Less Than Nothing, Part One

By D.X. Machina

Seth wasn’t sure why he was pouring his heart out to the beautiful woman at the bar.

Oh, she was beautiful, and paying attention to him; that would probably be enough explanation for most. But Seth wasn’t chatting her up, he was unburdening himself. Unless the olive-skinned beauty smiling sympathetically at him was a sucker for hard-luck stories, this wasn’t going to lead to anything.

Seth didn’t want it to lead to anything.

He wanted Kari back, wanted her back with a desperate ache that nothing could fill. Four months had gone by since they’d broken their engagement – she’d broken their engagement. And it only got more raw and sensitive with each passing minute alone. He needed her, like he needed food, like he needed water, like he needed air.

“I’m nothing without her,” he said to the beauty at the bar. “She’s a…she’s like my goddess. There’s no meaning for me in a world without her.”

“But Kari isn’t gone from this world,” said Aphrodite, evenly. “She’s still in it. It’s just your life that she’s gone from. And there could be another who would fill that nameless gnawing.”

But Seth wasn’t listening to her. “I’d give anything to be with her. She could treat me like anything, like dirt. She could ignore me completely. Just as long as I could be with her.”

“You don’t mean that,” said Aphrodite, sipping her retsina and frowning. “You might be able to endure her cruelty. But her neglect would drive you mad.”

“I’m mad already.”

Aphrodite smiled sadly, and asked the bartender for a glass of water. She then reached into her purse, and took out a small flask, and dribbled in about three drops of liquid. She slid the glass over to Seth, and said, “Drink.”

“What’s this?” he asked, looking carefully at the glass.

“One month of her benign neglect. One month of being in her presence, and her not noting your existence one way or another. One month of heaven, or one month of hell.”

Seth looked at the glass quizzically. “What kind of game is this?”

“At the end, if it is more heaven than hell, I will give you the rest of this – enough for a lifetime of her benign neglect. If it is more hell than heaven, I will do you the mercy of not giving it to you. Of course, there will be a price for that, but we can discuss that when the time comes.”
Seth stared at the glass. “You’re saying if I drink this, Kari will take me back?”

“No,” said Aphrodite. “I’m saying if you drink that, you will be with her, and she will not send you away. But that is not the same thing.”

“It’s close enough,” said Seth, grabbing the glass and throwing it back. It tasted vaguely of anise. He closed his eyes, and felt the warmth spread through his body. “I don’t know why I did that,” he said. “I mean, I just met you. And what you’re saying is impossible. But I believe…”

He didn’t complete his sentence. Instead, he toppled over, and fell fast asleep. (more…)

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