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A Vintage Erotic Novel Involving a Sexy and Seductive Girl, Full of Sexual Adventures, Surprises and Twists.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
Sinners Circle
CHAPTER ONEIt was definitely not the weather for a black-tie affair. It was only early April, yet the evening temperature was above seventy. The women, with their bared shoulders and half-hare bosoms, were far more comfortable than were the men. All a woman had to wear was a gown. Fresh air could circulate coolingly over her exposed breasts and beneath the hem of her floor-length gown. Men, on the other hand, wore stifling high-necked collars, stiffly starched shirts, ties, jackets, cummerbunds, trousers, and then, beneath all that, undershorts and undershirts.Casey Tompkins smiled sympathetically at a fellow sufferer, mopped his brow with a soggy handkerchief, and took another long pull at his tall glass. The cool, sweet concoction of liquor and flavoring slipped down his throat, gave briefly the impression of coolness, then exploded warmly in the pit of his stomach.Casey knew he was drinking too much, too He also knew he was bored. The music was good. The women were beautiful and friendly; and some of them were even available. The liquor was free and of high quality. Yet, he was bored, terribly bored.Casey was bored because he didn't belong. These people were neither his social nor his economic equals. He would have much preferred to be at home with his bride of less than two years. The only reason he'd accepted the invitation to this upper-echelon social bash was because Judy wouldn't be at home, anyway.Judy Tompkins was, Casey glanced at his watch, at that very moment on stage at the Durrenmatt Theater. It was almost time for the second-act curtain, and she was probably in the arms of her stage lover.Judy Tompkins -- actress, wife of Casey Tompkins -- rising young lawyer, had a good supporting role in Broadway's latest hit. Casey, having seen the damned play so often he could quote all the actors' lines in his sleep, had balked at continued attendance at the theater. He'd also balked at the idea of sitting at home alone in the apartment The invitation to the ball had seemed a good idea at the time. It might serve two purposes. First, Casey would not have to sit home alone all evening. Second, he might make some valuable contacts. These people were all wealthy. They were directors of corporations, big Wall Street investors, publishers of magazines and newspapers. Such people continually required the services of good lawyers. Casey thought it might be possible to cut himself a piece of the action.
