Foreword

Betty Stevens was married to a prominent physician who, because of a constantly busy schedule, never seemed to give her enough time.

It was bad enough that Dr. Phillip Stevens was gone most of the time, but what made matters doubly frustrating for his wife was that Betty was a woman with strong sexual desires, and when Phillip failed to provide for them, she felt driven to achieve release from other sources.

As a beautiful blonde of thirty-five who kept her figure in excellent shape, Betty was the kind of woman who could draw attention from the opposite sex without even soliciting it.

Gil Ames, a successful married jeweler from the area, entices Betty into a rendezvous at a motel on the outskirts of town one afternoon while his wife is away on a trip.

For the first time in a long spell, Betty is delighted to find out what it is like to receive genuine satisfaction under the sheets. It disappoints her shortly thereafter to discover the inevitable fact that Gil cannot run the same risk twice. His wife returns home and Betty is forced to revert back to her shell.

One evening while Betty's husband is performing late surgery at the hospital, Betty falls into a bad case of the blues. It so happens that her young son Ken is in the house alone with her.

When fifteen-year-old Ken announces that he has suffered the tragedy of his girl breaking up with him, his mother seeks to console him. Pretty soon, however, consolation gives form to greater intimacies.

Once that Betty finds out how much fun she can have letting herself go with her handsome young son, her entire life changes.

-The Publisher