ChrisGibson
JUB Addict
Russell loved his cousin Jimmy. Too much was happening today for him to remember exactly how they were related, but he thought that Jimmy grandmother was his grandfather’s sister. Jimmy smoked and drank and screwed a lot and never treated him like a kid. When he went hunting for Jimmy and the bride’s maid, another cousin, though not one he knew and not one related to Jimmy, he went looking everywhere he shouldn’t, always the right way to find his cousin.
If it has been any other day, Jimmy would have been at the very altar, but the church was filling up, and it was a wedding day, and so Russell found him fucking the bridesmaid in the basement. Jimmy was tall and wiry like a McLlarchlahn, with a long face, serious in its fucking, and a little soul patch and spiky hair and, his trousers about his knees, his jacket neatly hung on a folding chair in the darkened basement reception hall, he was plowing the bridesmaid against the bulletin board, her thighs wrapped about his waist.
“Yeah,” Jimmy encouraged the girl as she whimpered, “Yes, hat’s it, honey, let me hear it.”
As she cried out, he fucked her more, and the louder she was, the harder he fucked her until she began to make hard hit sounds and he slammed into her over and, at last, with a look like he’d been punched, came inside of her, staggering as he ejaculated and she clung to him, moaning.
“That’s a good girl,” Jimmy said, as he lowered her to the floor. “Howbout we both get cleaned up and attend a wedding?”
As she turned to go the women’s room, Jimmy was pulling himself back into his pants when he turned and saw Russell.
Russell had been waiting for the moment Jimmy went into the bathroom to go back up and he was so red now he felt it.
“Russ, you little fucking pervert,” Jimmy said.
“I—”
Jimmy put his finger to his lips.
“You’re that age. I would look too. We’re all perverts. Your time’s probably coming soon. They looking for me?”
Before Russell could answer, Jimmy went into the restroom. Russell, not knowing what else to do, followed him. He was pissing at the urinal, and he flushed and then went to the sink. He cranked the paper towel dispenser and with little care, opened his trousers, wiped himself, and then dried, and zipped himself back up. He was slapping water on his face and smoothing his hair and he said, “You got questions, right?”
“I got…” Russell’s mouth was dry.
“I have so many questions.”
“Great,” Jimmy turned to him. He took out two sticks of gum, one for Russell and one for himself.
“We’ll talk after the wedding. At the reception when all the dull shit is going on.”
When Jaclyn Dara Lewis was fourteen years old, she was the maid of honor at her brother’s wedding. They came down to Indiana, and though Jackie had never really been impressed by Notre Dame, not as much as some were, she was impressed that day. The Church of the Sacred Heart was splendid with flowers and crowded with Lewises, Nespreses, O’Donnells, Brennans, Mc.Llarchlahns and friends from all over the country. The swell of the organ shook the church. Patti had been so beautiful and virginal, all in white, the train of her veil going on forever it seemed, little cousins lifting it, flower girls scattering petals as she made her solemn procession down the aisle and up the steps past the main altar into the Lady Chapel. Chayne and Felice had been in the choir though, at the time, Jackie didn’t know them anymore than she knew Patti’s funny little brother. She knew only a few things. She knew that this was the day she’d fallen in love with Patti whom she still idolized a bit. She knew that she was obsessed with her own little part as maid of honor, she knew how handsome Thom had been—his hair was longer back then—and proud in his black tuxedo waiting for his wife. The choir had filed into the choir seats that faced each other and looked across the small chapel. Jackie had never known anything so wonderful, but she knew she wanted to have this one day, this walk down the aisle, the long walk down the long aisle, to be presented to someone, though back then she had no idea who the someone would be.
Then, years later, Jackie Lewis had sat in Saint Adjeanet’s church and watched John marry some local girl form Fort Atkins. It had been so beautiful and she had been so angry, and she’d wished she was that girl and it had made her angrier still. Now, over the anger, past the longing, Jackie realized that she’d thought that it was possible to have her wish. The beautful man and the beautiful wedding. She had thought, “Now it is possible.”
Now she knew she was wrong.
There was no way to play “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desire”, and so Bubba Goldstein threw back his head and chanted something in Hebrew, something very beautiful she had to admit, as Jackie came up the aisle.
“I suppose we’ll just have to make the best of the hand we’re dealt,” Jackie said after she’d been cried out and drugged out and Patti had told her, “After the dove and flowers and great music, that’s what you have to do every day for the rest of your life, Sister.”
With the exception of Bubba Goldstein, who had to remember to not don his ten gallon hat, the service was Catholic enough. The Eucharist came from the tabernacle, already blessed, Chayne murmured that if they ran out, “We’ll just have to give them bingo pieces. No one’ll tell the difference and those probably taste better anyway.”
They didn’t run out, though.
Bubba Goldstein had done several weddings before, and when he demanded, “Does anyone object to the union of these two?” Kim Bayle stood up, and roared, “I do.”
“Shit!” Jackie swore at the altar, clapping a hand to her mouth.
Then Kim Bayle threw back her head, laughed and said, “Just jokin’, guys!” and kept cackling as Bubba Goldstein concluded the wedding rite and said, “You guys should really be stepping on something. A bowl. Something. Wish I’d brought a bowl with me. Didn’t plan on doing a wedding today. You,” he told John, “may kiss the bride. In fact. I think you’d better.”
“Is this even legitimate?” Jackie whispered to John.
“As legitimate as it’s gonna get,” John told her, and as he kissed her, the choir began to sing overhead.
Love is the sunlight shaped by your splendor,
love is the starbright, born of your hand,
blessing of heaven, graciously given,
radiant with glory,
from your command!
As they were coming out of the church, Jackie and John heard revving engines and rifles popping off.
“What the!” started Jackie.
“Oooooooooooooooooway!”
Jackie looked down and Chip and Finn were at the head of about twenty five motorcycles.
“Had to find a way to say Happy Hitchin’ Day to the best girl I ever had!” Chip shouted up the steps. “This is your seventy-five—well, twenty five—motorcycle entourage!”
Kim came out with the boys and shoved the new bride and groom forward.
John smiled at Jackie and then ran down to the station wagon. John wheeled around to get in the driver’s seat and drove off with the motorcycles behind him.
“What the?” Jackie said, while young Russ cried, “Yay, Dad.”
The entourage headed down Kirkland, then the station wagon turned down Boise and a few seconds later the entourage was heard rumbling up More Street and then before the church again where the station wagon stopped.
“Sorry Jackie,” he said to his mystified wife who was standing eyes wide open beside his ex wife.
“See?” Kim said.
John ran around the station wagon, opened the door, let Jackie in and then ran back around and they took off again, guns shooting the air on Kirkland Street, the train of Jackie’s dress dragging along Kirkland until they disappeared and all that was left was the noise.
At the church doors, legs planted apart and hands folded before him, Rob Keyes was in wraparound shades looking, Russell felt, like a sexy FBI agent, but sniffling.
“Are you crying?” Chayne asked him.
Rob shrugged and squeaked, “Maybe a little.”
“Well,” Chayne sighed to Russell.
Russell Lewis grinned and crossed his arms over his chest.
“Well.”
If it has been any other day, Jimmy would have been at the very altar, but the church was filling up, and it was a wedding day, and so Russell found him fucking the bridesmaid in the basement. Jimmy was tall and wiry like a McLlarchlahn, with a long face, serious in its fucking, and a little soul patch and spiky hair and, his trousers about his knees, his jacket neatly hung on a folding chair in the darkened basement reception hall, he was plowing the bridesmaid against the bulletin board, her thighs wrapped about his waist.
“Yeah,” Jimmy encouraged the girl as she whimpered, “Yes, hat’s it, honey, let me hear it.”
As she cried out, he fucked her more, and the louder she was, the harder he fucked her until she began to make hard hit sounds and he slammed into her over and, at last, with a look like he’d been punched, came inside of her, staggering as he ejaculated and she clung to him, moaning.
“That’s a good girl,” Jimmy said, as he lowered her to the floor. “Howbout we both get cleaned up and attend a wedding?”
As she turned to go the women’s room, Jimmy was pulling himself back into his pants when he turned and saw Russell.
Russell had been waiting for the moment Jimmy went into the bathroom to go back up and he was so red now he felt it.
“Russ, you little fucking pervert,” Jimmy said.
“I—”
Jimmy put his finger to his lips.
“You’re that age. I would look too. We’re all perverts. Your time’s probably coming soon. They looking for me?”
Before Russell could answer, Jimmy went into the restroom. Russell, not knowing what else to do, followed him. He was pissing at the urinal, and he flushed and then went to the sink. He cranked the paper towel dispenser and with little care, opened his trousers, wiped himself, and then dried, and zipped himself back up. He was slapping water on his face and smoothing his hair and he said, “You got questions, right?”
“I got…” Russell’s mouth was dry.
“I have so many questions.”
“Great,” Jimmy turned to him. He took out two sticks of gum, one for Russell and one for himself.
“We’ll talk after the wedding. At the reception when all the dull shit is going on.”
When Jaclyn Dara Lewis was fourteen years old, she was the maid of honor at her brother’s wedding. They came down to Indiana, and though Jackie had never really been impressed by Notre Dame, not as much as some were, she was impressed that day. The Church of the Sacred Heart was splendid with flowers and crowded with Lewises, Nespreses, O’Donnells, Brennans, Mc.Llarchlahns and friends from all over the country. The swell of the organ shook the church. Patti had been so beautiful and virginal, all in white, the train of her veil going on forever it seemed, little cousins lifting it, flower girls scattering petals as she made her solemn procession down the aisle and up the steps past the main altar into the Lady Chapel. Chayne and Felice had been in the choir though, at the time, Jackie didn’t know them anymore than she knew Patti’s funny little brother. She knew only a few things. She knew that this was the day she’d fallen in love with Patti whom she still idolized a bit. She knew that she was obsessed with her own little part as maid of honor, she knew how handsome Thom had been—his hair was longer back then—and proud in his black tuxedo waiting for his wife. The choir had filed into the choir seats that faced each other and looked across the small chapel. Jackie had never known anything so wonderful, but she knew she wanted to have this one day, this walk down the aisle, the long walk down the long aisle, to be presented to someone, though back then she had no idea who the someone would be.
Then, years later, Jackie Lewis had sat in Saint Adjeanet’s church and watched John marry some local girl form Fort Atkins. It had been so beautiful and she had been so angry, and she’d wished she was that girl and it had made her angrier still. Now, over the anger, past the longing, Jackie realized that she’d thought that it was possible to have her wish. The beautful man and the beautiful wedding. She had thought, “Now it is possible.”
Now she knew she was wrong.
There was no way to play “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desire”, and so Bubba Goldstein threw back his head and chanted something in Hebrew, something very beautiful she had to admit, as Jackie came up the aisle.
“I suppose we’ll just have to make the best of the hand we’re dealt,” Jackie said after she’d been cried out and drugged out and Patti had told her, “After the dove and flowers and great music, that’s what you have to do every day for the rest of your life, Sister.”
With the exception of Bubba Goldstein, who had to remember to not don his ten gallon hat, the service was Catholic enough. The Eucharist came from the tabernacle, already blessed, Chayne murmured that if they ran out, “We’ll just have to give them bingo pieces. No one’ll tell the difference and those probably taste better anyway.”
They didn’t run out, though.
Bubba Goldstein had done several weddings before, and when he demanded, “Does anyone object to the union of these two?” Kim Bayle stood up, and roared, “I do.”
“Shit!” Jackie swore at the altar, clapping a hand to her mouth.
Then Kim Bayle threw back her head, laughed and said, “Just jokin’, guys!” and kept cackling as Bubba Goldstein concluded the wedding rite and said, “You guys should really be stepping on something. A bowl. Something. Wish I’d brought a bowl with me. Didn’t plan on doing a wedding today. You,” he told John, “may kiss the bride. In fact. I think you’d better.”
“Is this even legitimate?” Jackie whispered to John.
“As legitimate as it’s gonna get,” John told her, and as he kissed her, the choir began to sing overhead.
Love is the sunlight shaped by your splendor,
love is the starbright, born of your hand,
blessing of heaven, graciously given,
radiant with glory,
from your command!
As they were coming out of the church, Jackie and John heard revving engines and rifles popping off.
“What the!” started Jackie.
“Oooooooooooooooooway!”
Jackie looked down and Chip and Finn were at the head of about twenty five motorcycles.
“Had to find a way to say Happy Hitchin’ Day to the best girl I ever had!” Chip shouted up the steps. “This is your seventy-five—well, twenty five—motorcycle entourage!”
Kim came out with the boys and shoved the new bride and groom forward.
John smiled at Jackie and then ran down to the station wagon. John wheeled around to get in the driver’s seat and drove off with the motorcycles behind him.
“What the?” Jackie said, while young Russ cried, “Yay, Dad.”
The entourage headed down Kirkland, then the station wagon turned down Boise and a few seconds later the entourage was heard rumbling up More Street and then before the church again where the station wagon stopped.
“Sorry Jackie,” he said to his mystified wife who was standing eyes wide open beside his ex wife.
“See?” Kim said.
John ran around the station wagon, opened the door, let Jackie in and then ran back around and they took off again, guns shooting the air on Kirkland Street, the train of Jackie’s dress dragging along Kirkland until they disappeared and all that was left was the noise.
At the church doors, legs planted apart and hands folded before him, Rob Keyes was in wraparound shades looking, Russell felt, like a sexy FBI agent, but sniffling.
“Are you crying?” Chayne asked him.
Rob shrugged and squeaked, “Maybe a little.”
“Well,” Chayne sighed to Russell.
Russell Lewis grinned and crossed his arms over his chest.
“Well.”

























