Foreword
Pam Murray enjoyed being a housewife.
In addition to being married to a prosperous husband and living a luxurious life in suburbia, she was enormously proud of her teenage son Harold, who was making great strides as a high school basketball player.
Since her husband Charles is required to spend so much time away from home on business, Pam becomes even more devoted to Harold than she would otherwise have been.
She proves to be his most enthusiastic fan at high school basketball games, but then becomes disenchanted when she discovers he is dating Daisy, a highly attractive but rather loose schoolmate.
Pam warns Harold against seeing and dating young Daisy, to which he bluntly responds by telling her that he is old enough to make decisions for himself.
Then one afternoon she returns home unexpectedly early and looks out the window into the backyard. She discovers her son making love to Daisy in the nude in the swimming pool.
At first her blood boils, but then strange sensations start to come over Pam. She finds herself becoming excited looking at her son's trimly athletic form.
Pam eventually discovers how much trouble such a relationship can produce, but by that time it is too late to alter her course of action.
-The Publisher
