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A mother’s desire for her son is a subject as old as the world of literature, and its theme can be traced in the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and Lot’s scheme to repopulate a supposedly desolate earth by sleeping with his daughters. The subject has been probed by Sophocles and Freud defined the problem. Eugene O’Neill, a great playwright, encompassed the theme in one of his most important works.
According to some psychologists, this desire is normal, healthy, and to be expected, but should this need on the part of a woman to physically possess her son remain unchecked, the possible catastrophe which could follow might be of such dimension that none involved will recover.
INC#ST TEACHER is the story of a relationship between a widowed teacher and her son. It is a startling novel with an important message for society.
It was Saturday morning, and Laura Mason was wearing nothing but a dressing gown as she sat in her kitchen sipping coffee. She was in her mid-thirties, and had a sensational figure and beautiful face. She had soft full lips, smoky-gray eyes and lustrous dark hair that she wore in a page-boy style.
A widow, Laura Mason was a history teacher at the local high school. She had two children, Jerry and Gail. Jerry was a big muscular youth who played on the football teem, and Gail was a quiet, but beautiful young girl with long blonde hair.
Sipping her coffee, Laura wondered if Jerry was awake yet. He usually slept late on Saturdays, and the woman couldn’t hear him stirring around upstairs. Gail had gone to play tennis with a friend, and Laura felt a bit restless in the quietness of the house.
Finally, getting up from the table, she walked upstairs to her son’s room. He was lying on his back, sound asleep, with nothing but a sheet over him.
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.