Saint Patrick's Day
Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 3:51 am
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I think she just forgot how much of a sting Haigh's little hand could deliver. The good news is that between the leprechaun spankings she gets on Saint Patrick's Day, and all the birthday spankings she usually gets, she must be the luckiest woman on earth... except when it comes to avoiding spankings. She has no luck with that!
True.
I'm glad you enjoyed the story. I like to celebrate Saint Patrick's Day with a spanking for Katie, because of my own Irish heritage and because of two women who inspired the character. Maureen O'Hara was born in Ireland and later in life applied for U.S. citizenship. Lucille Ball was a several-generation American who had some partial Irish ancestry. I use the orange side of the Irish Republic's flag for Katie's hair color too. I haven't delved into Marie's ancestry in any of my stories, but I think of her as being African and French Creole on her father's side and maybe Irish and Rom (also known as Gypsy) on her mother's side,web-ed wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 11:17 am A very nice way to celebrate St. Patrick's Day, B00m, and certainly more fun than watching local politicians dying the Chicago River green (a Chicago tradition). So Katie and Marie both got spanked, which is fine and dandy, but where should the Haigh/Marie romance go from here?
I'm having a bit of trouble thinking of a follow-up story with Haigh and Marie's relationship. But the good news it that they aren't central characters. When I have a good idea for a story with the two of them. I'll draw it.web-ed wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 11:17 am The essential problem is to find recurring (spanking) humor in their relationship, and it's not an easy one to solve. Part of the problem is that Marie, unlike Katie, really wants to be spanked, which opens the possibility of the humorous frustration of her spanking desires - but that makes it hard to work Haigh into the plot, and also frustrates us the readers as much as it does Marie unless the plotline concludes with Marie getting spanked at the end (resolving the problem of her frustration). Notice that it's much easier to devise plots for Katie, who often schemes to avoid getting spanked, with of course the exact opposite results each time.
It's difficult, but not impossible. For example, Haigh could mischievously (he is a leprechaun, after all) give Marie an obstacle-strewn path to getting the spanking she craves, such as setting her the traditional task of reach the end of the rainbow. After having trouble doing so (the complication), Marie finally solves the problem and reaches the end of the rainbow, where she finds a figurative pot of gold in Haigh (or some magical construct) waiting for her and ready to turn her OTK.
I'm glad you liked it.
Yes, you're right. Spring has traditionally been associated with romance. I think that part of it is that the plants that have been dormant in the winter are putting out leaves and flowers again. A lot of seasonal animals do their mating in the spring. And, of course, for us humans, the ladies who have been bundled up in their winter coats are ready to shed them in favor of more revealing clothes!