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Martine |
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It is the last quarter of the nineteenth
century. Her Most Excellent Majesty, Victoria, by the grace of God of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British dominions beyond
the sea, queen, defender of the faith, Empress of India, reigns. The Whig Prime
Minister, the Duke of Cocksparton, known to his intimates as Cocky, is in the
Prime Minister's room in the House of Lords with Lady Titania Harddon, a
beautiful woman, and wife of Sir Richard Harddon, the Chancellor of the
Exchequer. The door is locked, and Sir Timothy sits in a reclining
chair with his trousers and his underclothes down around his ankles. Lady
Harddon is kneeling between his legs, with his member in her right hand. Her
left hand cups his scrotum, whilst she masturbates his manhood gently. The Duke
is a gentleman of sixty seven years and, his physical prowess not being what it
was, Lady Harddon has been at her work for some considerable time.
Sir Timothy's head is now thrown back, as his climax is imminent. He tells her
that he is about to shoot his seed and she brings her head down and takes his
member into her mouth, into which it erupts. Lady Harddon - but let
us call her Titty, the diminutive by which she has been known since she was at
school with The Duchess of Cocksparton, wife of our PM - Titty is not
undressed, as this tryst was hastily arranged, and was intended only for Sir
Timothy's immediate relief. She cleans Sir Timothy's member and restores his
clothing to its proper arrangement, he unlocks the door, and Titty leaves his
company. This is an oft repeated ritual, dating back to the time when
Sir Richard Harddon - let us call him Dickie, as he is known to his inner
circle - was being considered for elevation to the Chancellorship, and he had
asked his wife to see what she could arrange with the Prime Minister, they
having been friends since before he and she had wed. This had led to the Prime
Minister offering the post to Dickie, with a certain condition attached. Titty
had considered it correct, not to say prudent - and, she knew, quite safe - to
advise Dickie of the condition of his being elevated. When he knew that he
could have his dream, he readily agreed to share his wife's charms with the
elderly Duke. He, after all, still had them whenever he wanted them.
This account is given to explain to the reader why Dickie had some advantage
over the Duke when it came to that great man needing some favour. The Duke had
been accused of making an indiscreet payment to a land developer, which was
about to be revealed in a scandal sheet called The People's Enquirer. The Duke
knew that a question was to be asked in the Lower House following the
Enquirer's revelation, and he needed a friendly voice to answer on his behalf -
he, as a peer, being barred from the Commons. The lack of a sponsor could lead
to his forced resignation. He had no other friend in the Commons to whom he
could turn than Dickie - who had heard rumours of the affair - but, rather than
risk a rebuff, and, perhaps, a worsening of his affairs, the Duke had enlisted
the help of his wife, the delicious Lady Francis, Duchess of Cocksparton, known
to her closest as Fanny. In the days before the Duke had been
widowed, and had later married Fanny, she and Dickie and Titty had shared a
liking for physical pleasures between the three of them, but it was thought
that this should come to and end when Fanny had married the Duke, although his
availing himself of Titty's charms had often prompted Dickie and Fanny and
Titty to discuss what might be done to restore their past pleasures, and now,
seemingly, there was a chance to recapture some of that past. But would the
Duke join them ?
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