The Entry
Patricia feels the nerves rising in her chest as she approaches her husbandâs office.
She knows she shouldnât be here.
Checking up on him.
But itâs late - again.
Itâs always late on a Friday.
And sheâll be here too.
She just wants to kill the thought in her head.
Theyâre busy, thatâs all.
She rehearses her excuse:
I was passing by⌠thought Iâd ask if you picked up the paint from B&Q - or do you want me to?
Her hand hesitates on the front door handle.
Her breath catches.
Before she sees them -she hears them.
Low voices.
And Catherineâs laugh.
Not loud.
Not nervous.
Soft.
Confident.
Patriciaâs stomach drops.
She pushes the door open.
John looks pale - like heâs been caught in a lie he hadnât prepared for.
Catherine sits perched on the edge of his desk, stilettoed feet planted either side of him, claiming the space, claiming him, like sheâs been doing it for months.
Catherine turns, meets Patriciaâs eyes, and doesnât even pretend to be startled.
âOh. You.â
John stammers, âWâwhat are you doing here? We were just tidying up beforeââ
Catherine laughs. A low, amused exhale.
âGive her some credit, John. Weâre all adults here.â
She never breaks eye contact with Patricia as she slides down from the desk.
Slowly.
Deliberately.
Then she moves closer to John - too close - her body brushing his, her perfume filling the room.
Patriciaâs breath snags.
Catherine sinks into Johnâs chair, one leg draped carelessly over his lap, skirt sliding indecently high.
Her fingers trace his jaw⌠then lower⌠chest⌠stomach⌠belt⌠the involuntary bulge beneath the fabric.
Patricia is frozen.
Horrified.
Because Johnâs body reacts.
Not with fear.
Not with resistance.
With want.
Catherine curls her fingers into his shirt and whispers something against his neck, lips grazing skin.
Johnâs eyes close - just for a second - but long enough.
Then Catherine turns her head toward Patricia.
A quiet smile.
Beautiful.
Cruel.
âYouâre here to check up on us, arenât you? To see what we do every Friday⌠when the rest of the factoryâs gone home?â
Patricia tries to speak, but nothing comes.
Catherine rises and gestures for John to lean back - their little ritual, polished by repetition.
His desire is no longer a secret.
She hooks a thumb under her panties, slides them down her legs with slow, practiced elegance, and steps out of them.
Black.
Skimpy.
Dropped on the office floor like a gauntlet.
Then she lifts her skirt, climbs onto him, and straddles him.
No hesitation.
No shame.
Only inevitability.
Patricia watches her sink down slowly - tight, deep, claiming him inch by inch.
A choked sound escapes Johnâs throat - part breath, part surrender.
Catherine gasps too, a sound she tries to swallow, and then her hips begin to move.
A slow, devastating rhythm.
Patricia canât move.
She stands just inside the door, cold all the way to her bones.
John doesnât push Catherine away.
He holds her.
Fingers digging into her thighs.
Needing her to keep going.
Patricia watches her husbandâs face change.
The guilt dissolves.
The shock fades.
Hunger takes its place.
Catherine leans close to his ear, whispers something meant only for him.
His whole body responds - jaw tightening, breath shuddering, hips rising.
She unbuttons her blouse.
Opens it.
Johnâs mouth finds her breast like a man whoâs done it a hundred times - eager, greedy, practiced.
Patricia feels something break.
Catherine tilts her head back, lips parted, breath catching in those soft, involuntary noises that reveal everything.
Her pace slows - deeper, slower - imprinting herself on his body, on his memory, on Patricia.
John grips her hips, pulling her down hard, needing all of her.
That is the worst part.
Not that Catherine is riding him.
But that he is meeting her.
Rhythm for rhythm.
Breath for breath.
As if his body knows hers better than it knows his wifeâs.
Catherineâs eyes open and find Patricia.
No taunt.
No smirk.
Just calm possession.
Patricia finally whispers, âStop.â
John hears her.
He just canât obey.
Catherine turns her head, voice soft, almost helpful:
âIf you want him to stop, tell him.
Youâre his wife, after all.
If he asks me to, I will.â
A pause.
Patricia opens her mouth -
but nothing comes.
Because she sees the truth:
heâs already too far gone.
Catherine leans to Johnâs ear, lips clear enough for Patricia to read:
âLook at your wife.â
John forces his eyes open - broken, aroused, trapped -
and looks straight at Patricia
while Catherine keeps moving on him, slow and relentless.
He doesnât last.
He canât.
Not when she whispers, low and final:
âNow look at me.
And cum for me.
-In front of her.â
Patricia sees the moment it hits -
his jaw tight, breath ripped from him, hips jerking helplessly.
Catherine slams down one last time and holds him there, deep, taking every shudder of his climax with a soft, satisfied exhale.
Engineered.
Executed.
Perfect.
When itâs over, Catherine doesnât move from his lap.
She rests her cheek against his, stroking the back of his neckâalmost tender.
Patricia turns away, hand to her mouth, tears hot and sudden.
Behind her, Catherineâs voice - gentle, lethal:
âThat was even better than usual.
Your wife should visit more often.â
ââââââââââ-
Catherine finally lifts herself off him, slow, unhurried.
John slumps back in the chair, chest heaving, eyes glassy.
She stands, smooths her skirt over her hips, retrieves her panties, and steps into them with elegant ease.
Patricia watches, shaking.
Catherine fixes her blouse, one slow button at a time.
âIf itâs any consolation, darling,â she says softly,
âyou didnât lose him tonight...â
A pause hangs between them.
âYou lost him in Bath.â
Patricia freezes.
âBath? The conference?â
Her voice cracks.
She looks at John - begging for a denial.
He has none.
Catherine finishes the last button, voice even:
âHe begged for me that night.
I let him finish in my mouth.
His body shook so muchâŚI thought he might pass out.â
Patricia gasps in horror, a tear runs down her left cheek.
Johnâs eyes shut - shame too late.
Catherine slips her bag over her shoulder.
âGo home,â she says.
âHeâll follow once he can stand.â
She starts toward the door.
Pauses.
Turns back.
âOh - almost forgot.â
She returns to the desk.
Opens the drawer.
Takes out Johnâs diary.
Patriciaâs breath catches.
She doesnât look at John.
She looks at Patricia.
She flips to todayâs date.
âYou like reading this, donât you?â
Her voice is soft, despite the barbed comment. Almost fond.
âYou search it for reasons. For clues. For reassurance.â
She picks up Johnâs pen and lets the moment stretch.
âYou wonât have to anymore.â
And then, as Patricia watches,
Catherine writes her name:
Catherine.
Neat.
Elegant.
Unmistakable.
Beneath it:
Third time this week.
Then a single, small x.
A loverâs mark.
A signature.
A truth Patricia cannot un-know.
Catherine closes the diary gently.
âThere,â she says, a fragile pause for effect.
âNow next time you go leafing through his lifeâŚ
youâll know exactly what my name means.â
Then she walks out, heels clicking against the office floor,
leaving John and Patricia in the wreckage.
There are betrayals you argue about.
And there are the ones you witness.
The ones you canât un-see.
The ones that were already happening long before you walked into the room.
The ones youâll never forget.