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In this era of sexual sophistication, innocence can be a refreshing thing. In a time when sex manuals are sold in nearly every drugstore, most school girls are on the pill, and a book about a hooker becomes a national best-seller, the girl who is sexually innocent and trusting can be a refreshing novelty.
But this innocence can also be a dangerous thing, for there are people waiting to take advantage of it. Indeed, it is the innocent who are most often exploited. It is the girl who lacks sophistication who frequently finds herself in trouble.
This is the story of one such girl, Judy Prince, a beautiful and innocent young woman whose naivete, and blind trust in the father she really does not know, lead her into a nightmare of depravity and shame. And meanwhile, she must maintain the outward appearance of normalcy, she must pretend that nothing has happened in order to maintain her sanity. But she must also face her young fiance, who has always trusted her and treated her with respect and consideration. She is forced to face the biggest test of her young life.
DADDY’S BAD GIRL — a shocking novel to some, certainly, but a story with a message for many of us in today’s permissive society.
Snow fell all around. The bus labored its way through the starkly beautiful mountain wilderness, but Judy Prince saw nothing. She could think only of Rick. The way he had fucked her last night — driving her to a shameless frenzy of pleasure — was something she could not easily forget. She remembered the inexpressibly beautiful feeling of having his big cock buried deep in her creaming, welcoming cunt, then blushed and looked around furtively at the other passengers, as if they had read her mind. No one returned her look, however, and Judy forced herself to gaze out the window at the snowy landscape, to think of something else. Shape up, she lectured herself, it’ll only be three weeks, then you’ll see Rick again. My God, surely you can go without sex for three weeks?
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.
Note: This story is the same as catalog number GE-1052 in the original publications (a duplicate).