My wife has always been a creature of motion. She was a runner first—half marathons, 10Ks, a few medals. She was pretty competitive when we first started dating 15 years ago. About five years ago, she transitioned to cycling, I’ve always been into it. But now rides pretty regularly, 4-5 times a week. Maybe once a week or so our schedules align and we do it together.
But what always takes my breath is how she looks doing it. Especially in her kits—like the one she wore today. That black Lyrica bib with the colored trim is practically a second skin. High-compression fabric gripping every curve. The material stretches across her ass like it was molded in place—every contour visible. And the top? Sleek, often unzipped just enough to give a peek of the sports bra beneath. Her nipples, already firm from the morning chill, pressed faintly through the thin fabric. It wasn’t intentional. But I’ve seen enough men glance her way mid-ride to know it’s attention getting.
Some clips from yesterday -
https://i.postimg.cc/Rq5pWsLm/IMG-2263.jpg
https://i.postimg.cc/66RkXn0K/IMG-2262.jpg
Yesterday we were about 30 miles into a ride today when we pulled off at a small café just off the trail. Popular spot, lot of foot traffic with tables spilling onto the patio.
She offered to go in to order while I stayed with the bikes. I locked them up on the rack, then chose a table in the sun near the edge of the patio—partly for the warmth, partly because it gave me the best view of our bikes. They are pretty expensive.
From where I sat on the outdoor patio—half shaded by an umbrella—I had a clear angle through the café’s front window.
That’s when I saw them.
He looked maybe 22, 24 at most—one of those college guys. He had a light tan, possibly Latino or Mediterranean, with thick, dark curls. His black hoodie hung open over a white athletic-fit tee that clung to his chest in a way that suggested he’d recently discovered the gym. Lean, but not scrawny—there was definition in his shoulders, the kind of frame that came from soccer or swimming, not lifting heavy. He wore joggers, and one leg was bent up onto the patio chair, revealing toned calves and low-cut sneakers, no socks. His earbuds hung around his neck, his phone screen cracked, and a small, well-worn canvas bag sat on the table beside a half-drunk espresso.
His head was buried in his screen—until she walked past. And then it wasn’t.
He watched her step into line, his eyes tracking her in a way that wasn’t subtle. They dropped from her face to her chest—pausing briefly—then continued lower. He was scanning her, openly. I could see him take in her tight Asian frame like he was trying to memorize every curve beneath that cycling kit. The high, tight ass. The toned thighs. The shape of her hips, the zipper of her jersey riding low enough to tease but not quite reveal.
He said something. I couldn’t hear what, but I saw her glance sideways, give a faint smile and nod—polite, warm, restrained. Her usual deflection when she doesn’t mind the attention.
But then my attention became more focused. She tucked her hair behind her ear, unable, but trying, to hide a knowing smile. I know that move. It’s her tell. When she feels the gaze and leans into it, just a little. Her body shifted subtly—weight onto one leg, hips canted slightly, just enough to give him better angles. Then, with a flick of her eyes and a tilt of her head, she glanced back toward him—barely a second, but deliberate and noticeable. He responded. I saw it in the way his eyebrows lifted, his lips twitching into a smirk he tried to bury behind his coffee.
I sat there, coffee-less, cock already twitching in my own cycling bibs with a quiet jealousy. I wondered how many times she’s played out this quiet dance when I wasn’t around—how often she’s caught eyes and held them just long enough to make hearts skip. She never would’ve responded like that if I’d been right beside her. There’s something about distance, about having just enough space to flirt with the edge of things without falling over. I appreciated this now although I still find it very conflicting to accept.
And then I saw her do something that sent another jolt through me—she reached into the back pocket of her jersey and pulled out a lip balm, uncapping it slowly. With exaggerated care, she traced it over her lips, pausing just enough between strokes to make the act feel almost sensual. She wasn’t looking at him directly, but the move felt designed for him—casual on the surface, but loaded beneath. He noticed again. He leaned in slightly, his laptop was totally forgotten at this point, his eyes locked on her without even trying to be discrete, visibly swallowing. I felt my stomach tighten. It was so small, so innocuous, but unmistakably suggestive.
I continued to watch her interact with him—she was now waiting for our order and his table was maybe five feet away. She had positioned herself closely to his table. Her back was to him, but not entirely—angled just enough that he had a clear view of her profile, of the stretch of her hip and thigh through the bib’s sleek contour. She reached up to adjust her ponytail, lifting her arms in that slow, absentminded way that arched her back and subtly pulled her chest forward. He shifted in his seat. Then—boldly—he stood up, stood beside her leaning toward her as if to say something again. His hand moved briefly, a small gesture toward the ground. She turned toward him, stepping half a foot closer.
From my seat on the patio, the window framed everything—like a voyeur’s stage. She glanced down and saw the wrapper on the floor—dropped from her back jersey pocket when she’d pulled out the lip balm earlier. She turned around, bent at the waist slowly, almost theatrically, letting the bib stretch tight across her ass as she picked it up. When she stood, she didn’t walk away. Instead, she turned slightly toward him, pretending to examine the small piece of trash in her fingers, then looked up—eyes catching his. Her expression was soft, curious. Open. There was a softness in her expression—a fake innocence I knew too well after fifteen years at her side—now turned toward a stranger who looked to be about the same age I was when I started dating my wife.
And I found myself wondering: what did he think she was? A grad student on a weekend ride? A bored Korean housewife? A flirty stranger in tight lycra who just liked to flirt?
He said something else, and I saw her head tilt slightly—an automatic gesture she does when someone catches her off guard in a good way. Her response was soft, brief, but carried that distinctly warm tone she uses when she’s disarmed, when she’s letting her guard down without quite meaning to. They weren’t quite face to face—she kept a modest half-step of distance. But then she reached out—lightly, almost absently—and placed her hand on his forearm as she laughed at something he said. Not a long touch, not lingering, but unmistakable. The kind of physical contact that says: I’m comfortable. I’m letting you in, just a little.
The guy blinked—caught off guard. Like he hadn’t expected the brief touch. He said something I couldn’t hear, and she responded with just the tilt of her head, and a tiny nod.
She was still angled toward him when our order was called from the counter.
She turned, nodded politely, and stepped away to retrieve the tray. I watched her carry it back with effortless balance—two drinks, one for me, one for her. But instead of heading straight out the door, she circled back to him.
She set the tray down on the edge of his table. Said something with a faint smile, perhaps a thank you, perhaps something else. Then he did something bold, but not with his hands. As she set the tray down briefly on the edge of his table, he reached into his canvas bag and pulled out a pen—clicked it nervously—then flipped over a napkin and scribbled something quickly. His number, maybe. Or his name. He held it between two fingers and offered it to her like it was a dare.
She looked at it. Took it. Read it. Then handed it back.
But she didn’t walk away either.
Instead, she looked at him with that calm, unreadable gaze she reserves for people trying to impress her. Then, to my surprise, she reached into her jersey pocket and pulled out a hair tie. Without a word, she dropped it gently on the napkin, like a token in response.
It was quiet. Entirely ambiguous. But the look in his eyes said everything—he understood it wasn’t rejection. It was acknowledgment. Something to remember her by.
Then she picked up the tray and turned to leave, no hesitation in her step, but a new looseness in her shoulders.
He stood there, napkin and hair tie in hand, looking stunned. Like he'd just been given a puzzle he’d spend days trying to solve.
She stepped out into the sun, tray balanced in both hands, her expression calm and unreadable. When she reached the table, she passed me my cup without a word and settled into the chair across from me. The patio was lively, the late-morning buzz of cyclists and hikers swirling around us.
We sat quietly at first, sipping. The coffee was good—hot, the kind that forces you to slow down. She leaned back, lifting her chin toward the sun, sunglasses on so I couldn’t see her eyes. She looked relaxed, satisfied. At ease.
She was glowing a little. Her voice lighter. Her shoulders looser. She didn’t say anything about the exchange inside, and I didn’t ask. But it stayed in my mind—the subtle flirtation I’d witnessed, the quiet power she wielded without saying a word.
As we neared the end of our drinks, I set my cup down and said, gently, "He seemed... very taken with you."
Her eyes met mine, steady. She didn’t flinch. Just held my gaze and lifted one brow, her lips twitching at the corners.
"Hmm?" she said, feigning innocence—but there was a glimmer behind her eyes.
I smiled and leaned in slightly. "It was fascinating to watch. And honestly? Kind of... provocative."
She didn’t answer. Just sipped her coffee, her sunglasses staring back at me, then glanced away with a soft, knowing smirk.
That was all I needed.
I let a few more quiet minutes pass before I said, casually, "So... did you find him cute?" I nodded toward the window. The guy was back at his laptop, the napkin still sat on the table, her hair tie resting on top like a strange little monument.
She didn’t look right away. Just stirred the last of her coffee, the spoon clinking softly against the ceramic. Then, finally, she glanced through the window, her expression unreadable behind the sunglasses.
She inhaled softly through her nose, the faintest smile forming at the corners of her lips. "He was... bold," she said, her tone even but warm. "And kind of sweet. It was kinda fun to chat.”
That was as much of an admission as I was going to get at that moment. But the way she said it—it lingered.
I leaned forward a little. "And the note?" I kept my voice light, playful, but I couldn’t quite mask the heat behind the question.
She smiled then, fully, the kind she gives when she knows I know more than she’s letting on. She tilted her head slightly. "The note just said, 'This’ll make your next ride harder to concentrate on. I’ll be thinking about how that bib hugged your behind'—then his number."
She chuckled and added, “Then he said, ‘I know some climbs that’ll make your legs burn and your heart race. Would love to ride with someone who clearly knows how to move. I usually like to ride out front... but I’m okay following your wheel.’”
She paused, then looked down at the table. "It was kind of cute. And confident. He knew what he was doing."
I raised an eyebrow. She went on, slowly now.
"He told me he rides too. I asked if he raced. He said yes. He rides for a domestic pro team. Road and gravel. That explained the calves. The tan. The confidence talking about cycling."
I felt my stomach clench faintly. Not from anger.
"So why didn’t you take the napkin?" I asked.
She hesitated, then smiled again, a different kind of smile. Almost shy. "He was barely older than the students I used to TA. Maybe 22? And honestly, with the way he rides—pro, fast, fearless—I wouldn’t last one mile trying to keep up."
She gave a small chuckle and added, "Besides, I already have two bulls who know what to do with me. And I’ve got you. This was just... a little spark on a sunny patio. I’ll take the compliment—especially after the other day," she added, referring to her friend’s comment and the way it had lingered in her mood.
She stirred the coffee again, slower now.
I grinned. "But you left your hair tie."
She shrugged, lips curving. "The first thing he said to me was that with my loose hair I was losing watts but gaining attention in my shorts." She paused, then added, “That line stuck.”
"And I figured, why not? He called out the hair, so I left him the thing that was supposed to tame it. But it also said, ‘You noticed. So did I.’”
She leaned back and smiled—soft but unmistakably satisfied.
I chuckled at her boldness, but before I could stop myself, my mouth moved faster than my brain. "You know... maybe you should go back and take the number." It came out softer than I expected, but there was heat under it—equal parts arousal, curiosity, and something darker I couldn’t name.
She lowered her cup slowly and turned her head toward me, lips parted just slightly in surprise. Then, that sly glint returned to her eyes—mischievous, measured.
"Are you saying that as my husband?" she asked, voice low, teasing. "Or as a man turned on by the idea of his wife being wanted by a guy 15 years younger?"
She took another sip, slow and deliberate, then set the cup down with a soft clink.
“If I went back,” she said, almost musing, “what exactly would I be going back for?” Her tone was casual, but I saw the spark behind her sunglasses. “A ride I can’t keep up with? A boy with good legs and no filter?”
She tilted her head. “Or… would I be going back because you want to see what someone that young would do with a woman like me? With a wife like me?”
I opened my mouth, but before I could speak, she laughed—soft and knowing—adding, “Careful,” eyes still on her cup, contemplative. “You remember what happened the last time you encouraged me to flirt online, right?”
She didn’t wait for an answer. Just smiled faintly and added, “And then I met him. And the other one. And what started as play... became something else.”
Her fingers brushed the rim of her coffee cup. “So if you're saying it again—about this guy—you should know... when you give me permission, I tend to take it seriously.”
She paused, letting the silence settle between us.
“Not saying I will,” she said softly, “but last time you handed me the key, I really liked what I found on the other side of the door.”
She took a slow sip finishing her coffee, still not looking away. And in that moment, I wasn’t sure if my cock or my heart was beating faster.
Before either of us could say more, I saw a shadow stretch across the patio. The college guy had stepped out of the café, slinging his canvas bag over one shoulder. He looked around briefly, then walked straight toward our table.
My wife didn’t turn to look at him immediately, but I saw her posture shift. Her back straightened. Her chin tilted up ever so slightly. By the time he reached us, her smile was already forming.
“Hey,” he said casually, holding the hair tie and folded napkin in one hand. “You forgot these.”
She laughed lightly, as if surprised. “Did I?” she said, reaching out slowly to take them. “Or did you just want another excuse to come say hi?”
He grinned, eyes flicking to me for the first time. “And you are?”
She didn’t miss a beat. “This is Caleb (an alias she gave),” she said smoothly. “He’s from my cycling club.”
I nodded, offering a polite smile. “Nice to meet you.”
The guy turned back to her. “A cycling club, huh?”
She nodded. “Yeah, we do long rides most weekends. Gravel and road. Caleb likes the excuse to get out of the house and away from his wife. His legs keep me honest.”
The words hit me like a low punch cloaked in banter. It was clever, seamless, a perfect fit for the role she was playing—but something about it stung. I knew it wasn’t personal. I knew it was part of the dance. But hearing her refer to me that way—to reduce me to a fabricated domestic detail in front of this young, flirty stranger—sent a ripple through my gut. My wife has always been honest about my existence and how she was married with both the firefighter and business man.
Part jealousy, part arousal, part something harder to name grinder inside me. It reminded me of how good she was at this. How quickly she slipped into another version of herself— I wasn’t entirely sure where the line was anymore between her performance and her truth. Was he too young? Was she always honest? Why the fabrication?
He laughed, brushing his hand through his curls, then extended the folded napkin again. “In case you change your mind. Text me this week if you want to set something up. I know a few routes I bet you haven’t seen.”
She took it this time, tucking it into her jersey pocket like it was the most natural thing in the world.
“Thanks,” she said. “I’m... Jennie (the alias she uses with her bulls) by the way.”
“Andre,” he replied. “Hope to see you out there, Jennie.”
He gave me one last glance at my wife, ignoring me entirely, then with a small wave, he turned and headed down the sidewalk, earbuds slipping back into his ears.
My wife waited until he was a good twenty yards away before she looked at me again. Her expression was mixed. Amused. Curious. Proud. A little charged.
“Well,” she said softly, “I guess that escalated.”
There was a flicker in her eyes—something tender beneath the playfulness. “You know… when you told me to go back, part of me almost did. I might have if he didn’t come up here.”
She paused, then smiled faintly. “But it’s never just about you giving me permission. That’s not how it works anymore. Not really.”
She shifted in her chair, “If I ever go back to something like that… it’ll be for both of us. Your desire, and mine. That’s what makes it real for me. That’s what makes it right. That’s why I took the note now. Not earlier.”
I didn’t answer right away. Just watched her as the wind stirred a loose strand of hair across her cheek. She didn’t brush it away.
The ride back would be quiet, I knew that. But not empty.
It would be full of tension. Of potential. Of questions left suspended between us—unresolved, but electric.
And somewhere on the other side of town, a young man with dark curls and a cracked phone would be wondering if the woman in the bib shorts and tight jersey was really just a local rider... or something else entirely.
She didn’t answer right away. Just traced her finger along the folded edge of the napkin tucked into her jersey pocket.
Then she said, quietly but clearly, “Because with him… I wanted to be a different kind of girl.”
“Why?” I replied without even thinking.
Her voice dropped, eyes not on me now, but on the space where he had stood just moments ago. “Not the wife. Not the hotwife. Not the woman who has two regular bulls and a husband watching from across the patio. Just... a girl on a ride. A little flirty. Maybe in a situationship but nothing too complicated. Someone his age could fantasize about without doing the math.”
She glanced over, the edge of a smirk tugging at her lips. “I didn’t want to be intimidating. I wanted to be interesting. Accessible. The kind of girl who might say yes on impulse. A girl who plays coy but leaves behind something to wonder about.”
“And let’s be honest,” she added, eyes flicking to mine, “he didn’t want a woman with a husband in tow. Not really. The kind of girl who rides hard and breathes harder. That’s who I was for him.
Her words landed with a quiet force—no drama, no flourish. Just truth. And it hit me squarely in the chest.
I looked at her then—really looked at her. The way the jersey clung to her ribs as she breathed. The faint sheen of sweat still visible in the hollow of her throat. Her sunglasses hiding her eyes, but not the smirk at the edge of her mouth. She was radiant. Composed. In control. And I realized, sitting there on that patio table, that she wasn’t just telling me a story—she was letting me see the version of herself she gave him. And it wasn’t entirely pretend.
That stung. And it thrilled me.
There was a part of me that wanted to stand up, toss the napkin aside, say something possessive and final. But that part was outnumbered by something else. Something deeper. Older. That quiet ache I’d come to know ever since I first encouraged her to install those apps. The same ache I felt when she dressed up for them, came home from them, whispered things in my ear that no longer belonged entirely to me.
And now? I could feel it rising again. That low, helpless arousal that came not from owning her—but from witnessing her. The tightness in my bibs hadn’t gone away. It had only sharpened.
I shifted in my seat, legs pressed slightly together, body warm, tight. My voice felt distant when I finally spoke.
“So what now?” I asked, not trying to hide the tension in my tone. “You took the note. You have his number. You gave him a version of yourself he might chase. What… are you going to do?”
She tilted her head just slightly, then pulled off her sunglasses.
Her eyes met mine—steady, open, knowing. There was no gloating in them. Just clarity.
“I don’t know yet,” she said softly. “I liked how it felt. How you looked watching me. How he looked watching me.”
She reached across the table and laid her fingers lightly over my hand. “But if anything happens… it’ll be because we want it. Both of us. That’s how it works now.”
She squeezed my hand once, then pulled away and stood slowly, stretching slightly, her bib shorts tightening over every curve.
“Come on,” she said, her voice light again, “let’s ride.”
And just like that, she clipped in, swung her leg over the saddle, and pushed off—leaving me sitting there, heart hammering, hard as hell, watching the woman I married pedal away like she hadn’t just turned my world upside down with a smile and a folded napkin in her pocket.
And I followed. Like I always do. Submissive not in posture, but in energy. In want.
Today all I can think about now is her—on that bike, playing the part of someone else. Not my wife. Not the hotwife with two older, married bulls. But a younger version of herself. The single, flirty cyclist chatting with a 22-year-old pro rider who she didn’t just flirt with—but admired.
That’s what’s getting to me.
This isn’t just about sex. It’s not some older guy with a different body or energy. This one? She respected him. She listened to him talk cycling. She probably liked that he could ride harder, longer. That he spoke her athletic language. It wasn’t just attraction—it was admiration. And that stings in a new way.
It feels like she’s chasing something more this time. Not just pleasure. But youth. Rewind from her mid 30s. A second chance at something she missed in her early 20s—being that bold, flirty girl she never let herself become.
And I feel… left behind.
What won’t leave me is the image: her in some spartan rental apartment, the kind with a floor fan humming in the corner and his gear tossed carelessly in the entryway. She’s still in her kit, sweaty and glowing, when he grabs her by the hips and lifts her onto the bed—no foreplay, no questions, just that raw hunger between two athletic bodies that know exactly what they want. Her lean frame coiling against his, legs wrapped tight around his waist, her cycling shoes still on, cleats tapping rhythm against the sheets as he fucks her hard—fast, like he rides. Her breathless moans echoing off the bare walls, as she’s becoming someone else, blending her real identity with that carefree cyclist Jennie who she invented.
And I’m sitting here, in the afterglow of something that hasn’t even happened yet, already aching.
Advice or insights are welcome.
Thanks for reading.