****** It ****** Provided By: BDSM_Library www.bdsmlibrary.com Synopsis: A woman decides to live alone in a lighthouse. A supernatural visitor changes her life. It by Libertine "Why would you agree to live on an island for a year?  You won't find a suitable young man there, and you can't wait a lot longer to give me grandchildren" "Mom, I haven't met any suitable  man, young or old,  where I am.  The guys I meet are all married, gay, or pedophiles, sometimes all three.  Aunt Martha has given me a way to start a new life."  In college, she had had a brief friendship with a graduate teaching assistant, but for years she hadn't had a date.   She'd been propositioned, by truck drivers and such, but she had never said yes. Maud huddled in her bed, her breasts tingling and her vagina wet, wondering why she had ever agreed to the terms of Aunt Martha's  will.  The  will was strange but explicit.  Maud could have  an annuity for life and clear title to the lighthouse  if she would live in it for 365 consecutive nights.  Otherwise, it and the money would go to the Seashore Preservation Trust.  The monthly payments would be enough to live on, with no rent to pay, so in June Maud quit her job at Jefferson Elementary School and she moved to the lighthouse.  It was only about three  miles off shore, an easy run in the little outboard runabout, as long as the weather was good.  Maud used her savings to stock up on food and books and CDs and paints and canvasses and a whole list of things Aunt Martha had recommended, kerosene, lamp wicks, matches, plastic garbage bags, a spare can opener, a good first aid kit and medicines, the things one might need if isolated for months at a time.  There was no electrical service to the island, but Aunt Martha had put in solar panels and batteries. It wasn't much, but the batteries could power the radio/CD player or a weather radio or a tiny TV, though reception was very poor.  Otherwise, living was very rustic, with oil lamps for light  and a scrub board instead of a washing machine.  There was no proper running water, but there was a cistern to collect rain water and a solar collector to warm it for bathing.  Drinking water came from the mainland in plastic jugs.  The light, and the huge Fresnel lenses and the  clockwork to turn them had all been removed to a museum, so the actual light room was empty and was a perfect place for Maud to paint, with plenty of sunlight and an all around view. The summer months were fun and carefree, and Maud had even found a gift shop down the coast that took some of her paintings on consignment. She was free to travel, as long as she returned to the lighthouse by dusk, according to the provisions of the will.  All that changed with the first storm in September.  In the morning, she found her boat had disappeared, though she had moored it very carefully, and she realized that it was, perhaps, a false economy to forego a satellite phone as too expensive.  She did not even have a CB radio!  She was trapped, imprisoned, on the island.  First thing, she painted herself a sign: HELP.  Then she resigned herself to life as a recluse. That night was her first encounter with It.  She was sitting in the light room, at the top of the tower, staring at the blackness of the night, no stars or moon, just flickers of distant lightning.   There, beyond the glass, she saw an ephemeral light, a kind of shimmering something, luminescent with a bluish glow, quite faint and formless.   Ball lightning?  No.  Some light reflected off spray or mist?  No.  She could think of no explanation.  The thing, It, circled around the tower, came closer and retreated, disappeared from time to time, and finally, as Maud stared in confusion, it seemed to pass right through the glass and out the other side of the chamber. Maud went down the confined spiral stairs to the room below, once housing the clockwork, now her bedroom.  She grabbed a battery flashlight and went down another level to the kitchen, where, uncharacteristically, she poured herself a water glass of wine and drank half of it in one draft.  She lighted an oil lamp, topped off the wine glass, and went back to her bedroom.  She lay there, propped on pillows, and sipped her wine and thought about what she had seen.  Why was she frightened?  On the other hand, who wouldn't be?  She checked the weather radio   more of the same, winds from the northeast at 20 to 30 knots.  The regular broadcast band was mostly static and inane commercials.  She turned off the radio and began to undress, sitting on her bed and taking off her boots and socks.  Then she unbuttoned and removed her flannel shirt and peeled off her t-shirt, feeling the cool, damp ocean air on her skin.   She put the big flannel shirt she slept in beside her and removed her bra.   She felt a sudden moment of embarrassment, as if she had exposed her breasts to a stranger, but, of course, there wasn't another human being for at least three miles.  She put on the night shirt and then reached under it to remove her jeans and panties.  Again, she felt strangely embarrassed, for no reason at all. She wasn't possessed of undue modesty.  Just to prove to herself, she took off the night shirt and stood, stark bark, in front of the full length mirror. "Maud," she said out loud, "you are not a bad looking woman for a 28-year old spinster."  Her breasts, B-cups, did not sag excessively, and her tummy, while slightly convex, was nothing to be ashamed of.  Her legs, as a result of hiking and stair climbing, were shapely and muscular, with no cellulite, yet.  Her face was undistinguished, but not ugly, and her hair, now that she wasn't teaching, might be improved with a bit of color.  Blonde or red head?  She should let it grow out some, also. More than once, she thought, people seeing her in shirt and jeans and short hair had supposed she was a lesbian.  Well, she'd have a year to work on her hair.  She raised her arms, watching how her breasts lifted in her reflected image, and that strange feeling of being watched returned.  Quickly, she put on the night shirt again and got into bed. She was reaching for the oil lamp, a bit out of reach, when, unbelievably, it went out on its own, leaving her in total darkness.  She crawled under the covers and closed her eyes, but she couldn't seem to sleep.  She opened her eyes, now dark adapted, and saw, to her amazement, a glow in the room, It.  It seemed about the size of a door, that is, bigger than herself but not monstrous, and its shape was indefinite, shifting, like smoke.  It seemed to move along the curving wall of the tower room, until it arrived next to her bed.  She reached out a hand and tried to touch it, but it was like reaching for smoke.  She felt nothing.  It settled on the quilt which covered her legs as she sat up and stared. Maud felt a subtle sort of touching of her breast, almost tickling.  Her hand went to the heavy flannel over her breast, but the sensation continued.  She grasped her breast in her fingers, as one might squeeze a dinner roll, but the sensation simply increased, and now the other breast felt it too.  She sat bolt upright, holding each breast, but the strange sensations continued, tingling, not unpleasant, and, she could tell her nipples were erect.  She stared at the ephemeral glow, down by her knees, and it seemed to shimmer and shift.  Suddenly, she felt something between her legs, something disturbing her pubic hair.  She slipped one hand under the covers and felt for whatever it was, some animal perhaps?  She found nothing.  She began to be really fearful.  Intellectually, she knew she could not afford to be afraid, and there was nothing, really, to be afraid of.  She closed her eyes, rolled over onto her front, and pulled the covers up over her head.  There, breathing her own exhaled air, in total blackness, she tried to relax, but the strange sensations continued.  It felt like insects crawling over her skin, over her buttocks, between her thighs, over and between her labia, and, simultaneously, over her breasts, which were pressed hard against the sheet.  She tried rubbing them away with her hands, though she knew there were no insects.   The sensations grew stronger, and whatever it was seemed to intrude deeper, touching her pink membranes, even though she crossed her legs and squeezed her thighs together, which would have squashed even ants.  She threw off the covers and desperately groped for whatever was invading her private places.  Her heart pounded.  She gasped for air.  And then, for the first time in her life, she felt the fluttering, shuddering, insanely intense gut- shaking waves of orgasmic release. Maud huddled in her bed, her breasts tingling and her vagina wet, wondering why she had ever agreed to the terms of Aunt Martha's will.  It, the glow, now hovered at the other side of the bedroom, as if watching and waiting.  "Go away!" she yelled.  "Let me sleep."  The glow disappeared, as if through the solid masonry of  the tower, and, almost instantly, Maud fell asleep. She awoke refreshed, feeling great, and, first thing, she climbed the stairs to the light room, barefoot and in her night shirt.  The sky had cleared overnight, and the sun warmed the glass-enclosed space.  No boats were in sight, just wisps of cloud, whitecaps, and gulls.  Impulsively, Maud pulled off her nightshirt and stood, gloriously naked, absorbing the sun.  Then she opened the little glass door and stepped out onto the narrow walk which encircled the light room, to enable the keeper to clean the glass.  The fresh winds frisked across her untanned skin, and she shivered in delight at the unfamiliar but exciting feelings.  Down the stairs she went, humming a few bars from Beethoven's 9th, and, still naked, she cooked up some bacon and eggs.  Eggs, she had discovered, will stay fresh a long time without refrigeration, if you scald the shells and paint them with an airtight covering.  She had used her artists colors, and the eggs, before she broke them, looked like Easter eggs.  God!  Life was good on the island.  She read, listened to music, and, when the sun had warmed the water, she bathed, a delicious bath.  Taking advantage of the opportunity, she shaved her legs, though no one would ever see them, and then, impulsively, she shaved her pubic hair for the first time in her life. She couldn't think why she did that.  It was, she mused, as if a new personality was invading her body.  Still naked, but for shoes, she explored her little island, hardly bigger than a football field.  She lay on the rocks and watched the waves breaking in the tide pools.  She only went inside when she realized she was getting too much sun.  Her breasts and bottom, which had never been exposed to the sun, were turning pink and tender.  Her dinner, out of cans, tasted especially good and, after watching the sunset from the light room, she went, still naked to her bed. Perhaps it was the mild sunburn, but, as she lay there, she was intensely aware of  her sexuality, of her newly exposed labia and her pinkened breasts. She touched her upstanding nipples and, when she ran a finger over her sensitized, hairless outer lips she discovered, for the first time, a swelling, pushing out between her labia, her clitoris.  In the darkness, It appeared, ever so faintly glowing, and it came to her and ravished her.  She writhed and moaned and called out, "Don't stop!  Oh, please, more!  Yes, yes," until the juddering jack-hammer- like shaking in her pelvis drove her into a dreamlike post-orgasmic trance, followed by delicious sleep. The weather stayed warm and sunny for two weeks, and Maud enjoyed her solitude, talking to the gulls and the crabs and the creatures of the tide pools and, at night, to It.  Each night he came to her, and each night she reached levels of ecstacy she could not have dreamed of when she lived among humankind. Then, one afternoon, she saw a lobster boat approaching.  She ran down to the dock, totally nude but for her shoes and an all-over tan.  She had forgotten about normal people.  "Maud," screamed her mother, "you put some clothes on this instant!" Maud ignored that and reached to catch a mooring line thrown by the captain of the boat.  As she wove the line over the cleat on the dock, her mother swept up to her and threw her coat over her daughter.  "What has got into you, behaving like that?" Maud just smiled.  It had got into her.  Back in the lighthouse, properly covered with a robe, Maud was introduced to the owner of the boat, Harold Carlson.  Her mother explained that she hadn't heard from Maud for weeks, and she had finally hired   Captain Carlson to bring her out to check up on Maud.  "Good thing I did.  You've lost your mind, girl!" "No, Mother, I've found the real me.   I've never been more sane." "Rubbish, you come with me back to the mainland, back to civilization.  You need a medical evaluation." Maud just smiled and said, "No, Mother, I'm going to stay here until this place is mine."  She smiled again at her mother and then, unmistakably, at Harry Carlson.  "Are you married, Mr. Carlson?" "Not yet." "Maud," said her mother, oblivious to the electricity between the sailor and her daughter, "you can't stay here all alone, without a boat or  a phone or any way of getting help." "Perhaps, Ma'am, I could help by stopping by from time to time, to check on her, and I can give her a spare radio, so she can call for help, or just to pass the time." "I'd like that, Mr. Carlson," said Maud, letting her robe loosen and display a bit of bosom. "I could bring you fresh lobsters," he said with a foolish grin "Oh, yes, please.  I'll be happy to cook them, for the two of us." Captain Carlson spent a lot of nights at the lighthouse, to protect Maud from It, though he never saw It.  The following summer he and Maud were married, and Mother got her grandchild not long after.           [End]            Review_This_Story || Email Author: Abe ****** MORE_BDSM_STORIES_@_SEX_STORIES_POST ******