Cum_Inside
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2017
- Posts
- 3,384
She wiggled even closer at the touch of his hands on her face, dropping her forehead to rest on the firm muscle of his thigh just below his softened penis. She rested there for a few moments before drawing her eyes up to meet his again. Any anger at him melted away at the deeply anguished expression she could see him trying to hard to hide.
They were both at fault for allowing their marriage to fail. Yes: Bryson had failed to meet her needs. Realistically, Brie had stopped bothering to meet him halfway or put in her own effort. It had been so long since she’d felt that spark of attraction or desire to please him.
Now she wanted to please another man.
“I do love you, Bryson. I do. There have just been some things lately that we don’t agree on. I know that I haven’t been putting in the effort and that you’ve been just as unhappy as I am, but at the core of us, the man I love is still in there. Is it selfish of me to want you both? Now that I have it... well. I don’t want to go back. I’ve heard of polyamorous couples more and more lately but that doesn’t even begin to describe what we are.
“I just think it’s unfair of me to limit you to a life of celibacy if you can’t give me what I need and I find it elsewhere while expecting you to be faithful to me. That’s stupid and I know it. What I didn’t understand was just what I was getting myself into the night in the bar that I met Jack. I expected it to only be a one-night thing, and I know that doesn’t excuse my behaviour at all, but Jack apparently doesn’t agree on that.
I’m so, so sorry Bryson. I couldn’t be the wife you needed me to be. I understand if...”
Brie’s words failed her. She didn’t want to say the terrible word that would forever haunt her as demonstration of her failure in the years to come - divorce was still considered by her family to be a despicable, dishonourable thing that just wasn’t done. Her parents would only say ‘I told you so’ and move on with their lives but Brie could picture several who would turn their nose up at her if they found out that not only had she gotten a divorce, but that it was all on account of her being a nasty trollop.
They were both at fault for allowing their marriage to fail. Yes: Bryson had failed to meet her needs. Realistically, Brie had stopped bothering to meet him halfway or put in her own effort. It had been so long since she’d felt that spark of attraction or desire to please him.
Now she wanted to please another man.
“I do love you, Bryson. I do. There have just been some things lately that we don’t agree on. I know that I haven’t been putting in the effort and that you’ve been just as unhappy as I am, but at the core of us, the man I love is still in there. Is it selfish of me to want you both? Now that I have it... well. I don’t want to go back. I’ve heard of polyamorous couples more and more lately but that doesn’t even begin to describe what we are.
“I just think it’s unfair of me to limit you to a life of celibacy if you can’t give me what I need and I find it elsewhere while expecting you to be faithful to me. That’s stupid and I know it. What I didn’t understand was just what I was getting myself into the night in the bar that I met Jack. I expected it to only be a one-night thing, and I know that doesn’t excuse my behaviour at all, but Jack apparently doesn’t agree on that.
I’m so, so sorry Bryson. I couldn’t be the wife you needed me to be. I understand if...”
Brie’s words failed her. She didn’t want to say the terrible word that would forever haunt her as demonstration of her failure in the years to come - divorce was still considered by her family to be a despicable, dishonourable thing that just wasn’t done. Her parents would only say ‘I told you so’ and move on with their lives but Brie could picture several who would turn their nose up at her if they found out that not only had she gotten a divorce, but that it was all on account of her being a nasty trollop.