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Subject: {ASSM} RP (Jack) <*>Sometimes Love is Not Enough (mf, rom, incest, violence)
Date: Thu,  7 Sep 2000 09:10:04 -0400
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(ASSM) (Jack) Sometimes Love is Not Enough (mf, rom, incest,
violence)


This work of fiction is for the entertainment of adults in
locations where it is legal.  If it is illegal in your location,
don't read it!  This work is copyrighted.  Reposting or any other
use is strictly prohibited without the express, written
permission of the copyright holder.  E-mail me, I'll probably
give you permission.  I just want to know and control where it is
posted.  This story may be posted as part of a review or to the
ASSM archive.

My thanks to Ruthie for her editing and suggestions.  Any errors
you find are my fault not hers.

Tell me what you liked, or didn't like.  Please!

E-mail address:  tradesjackofall@hotmail.com

My stories can be found at my website:
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/j/wwwoat or
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Jack_of_all_Trades/

Copyright 2000 by Jack of all Trades


I'm reposting this for two reasons.  First and foremost, Celeste
never got a chance to review it.  This is one I really wanted
reviewed.  Secondly, it has been nominated as best new story from
a new author for a Clittie.  I figured I'd make it easy on those
looking for it.  As always, Ruthie did her magic magnificently.




Sometimes Love Is Not Enough


Chapter 1

Mike Sanders bent over his horse's neck and gave him a well-
deserved pat. It was a glorious day. Not a cloud in the sky, the
temperature a comfortable 70 degrees, and 15-year-old Mike was
doing something he loved dearly, his best friend under him,
eating up the distance with long loping strides. It wasn't a full
gallop, his horse, Patrick, had one more gear if Mike needed it
but they weren't in a hurry, just having fun while they kicked up
their heels, raised a little dust.

They were on a long straight stretch of the path, the river lay
to their left, dark blue-gray water reflected the bright morning
sunshine and hadn't been fully warmed by the impending summer's
heat. Patrick tossed his head, gave off a whinny as if to say,
"You having fun?" Mike clicked his teeth and the horse responded
instantly, flat out they rode down the path, wind rushing by.
Patrick's breath came in snorts, his hooves pounded against the
ground. Mike laughed in sheer joy as they approached a bend. He
pulled lightly against the reins, and dropped into a canter as
they took the turn and came face to face with the girl.

Mike reined hard and they skidded to a stop. The horse tossed his
head and snorted at Mike's heavy-handedness. "Easy, fella," Mike
murmured. Patrick stomped his hoof and blew out a sigh. Mike
dismounted, flipping the reins over the horse's long neck. The
girl had jumped back in surprise and was picking herself up from
where she fell. Mike led Patrick over, "I'm sorry Miss, we didn't
mean to scare you." He was prepared for her to yell, tell him
what an irresponsible louse he was, instead she smiled at him.

"He's beautiful," she said. Patrick nickered, he knew when
someone was complimenting him. He was beautiful, a Palomino
quarter horse Mike jokingly referred to as "the blonde in my
life." He had gotten him for a song, his previous owner felt he
was too wild, couldn't be tamed. The two of them just clicked.
Patrick tested Mike and found he wouldn't be unseated. Mike
tested Patrick and found a friend. Others could ride him but
would never own him. He belonged to Mike and Mike to him, a once
in a lifetime horse.

Patrick rubbed his head against Mike's back, then flicked his
head up, sending Mike stumbling against the girl. His arm wrapped
around her to keep them from falling. "Ornery, too," Mike said
when he recovered his balance. He felt the softness of her body
pressed to his, looked into the purest blue eyes he had ever seen
and was lost. She squirmed in his arms, bringing him back. "Oh,
I'm sorry," he said as he let her go. She took a step back,
putting distance between them, her eyes appraising him.

"It's alright," she said, stepping past him toward the horse.
"Aren't you pretty?" she cooed. Mike was used to it by now. Every
woman he ever met while he was with Patrick ignored him and went
directly to the horse. It gave Mike a chance to study her while
she stroked Patrick's forehead and talked softly to him. She
wasn't tall, about 5' 2" if Mike had to guess. Her long blonde
hair was tied up in a ponytail that hung to the small of her
back. The t-shirt she wore was sheer enough that he could see the
straps of her bra through the material. She had on black shorts
and her legs were slender, a runner's legs. She was jogging when
they almost rode her down.

"His name is Pat, short for Patrick," Mike said.

"Hello, Pat, I'm Pat, too, short for Patience." The horse bobbed
his head up and down and was rewarded with the beginnings of a
smile from Patience. The damn horse is better with women than I
ever will be, thought Mike. Patrick nuzzled her neck. "He sure is
friendly," she said.

"He can be when he wants to. Can't you, fella?" he said, stroking
the horse's neck. "I'm Mike Sanders, my parents own a farm about
a mile back that way," Mike said pointing. He smiled his most
ingratiating smile, hoping to catch her interest. She smiled
back, not a full smile but pleasant enough. Something about it
tugged at Mike, an underlying sadness, if a smile could be sad.
"Would you like to ride him?" Mike asked. Her face brightened,
then turned sad again.

She appeared nervous, as if his invitation scared her. "Yes, that
would be nice, but I have to get home... I can't, I have to get
home," she turned and jogged off without a backward glance.

"Not very friendly, is she?" Mike said to the horse as he tossed
the reins over his head. They rode down the path at a more sedate
pace while Mike thought about Patience. She seemed almost
frightened of him and the way she had squirmed against him when
he held her, it was like she couldn't bear his touch. Mike shook
his head, clearing the thoughts, and rode back to the farm.

------

William Garvin closed the loan file he was reading. He glanced at
his watch. It was after five but he knew he had no reason to rush
home. Karen, his wife, had called earlier in the day and told him
she was going shopping with Patty. The bitch better be careful
how she spends my money, he thought. Even though his transfer
here had resulted in a pay increase he was under no illusions
about what it really meant. Any time you were transferred out of
the main office to a bumfuck town like Thomasville it was a death
sentence, even if it was the largest bank in the county. His
manager had buttered him up, told him how he would be in charge
of the entire lending department, waived the raise in front of
his face, but he knew it was what was unsaid that mattered. They
wanted him out of Conway and were even willing to pay to
accomplish it. He seethed inside at the thought that he had been
found wanting. He took off his glasses, rubbed his nose, and
thought, God I need a drink.

He locked the files away in the storage room, then locked up the
bank. On the way home he stopped at a liquor store and bought a
liter of Wild Turkey. He could almost taste it, and he rushed
home.

Without even changing his rumpled suit, he went to the kitchen to
fix his drink. He splashed a generous portion of bourbon on top
of a few ice cubes and recorked the bottle. His hand trembled as
he took a healthy swig. The bourbon quieted his nerves and he
felt himself relaxing. He snagged a half-eaten bag of chips and
the bottle of whiskey in one hand, carried them and his drink
into the den, and flipped on the TV, tuning into a baseball game.
Settling onto the ragged couch he sipped his whiskey and ate
chips while he watched the game and waited for them to come home.

By the time Karen and Patience walked into the house, the bottle
was half empty and Bill Garvin had worked himself into a lather
thinking about all the money his bitch wife and daughter had
spent. He heard the kitchen door shut, the sound of their voices.
He got up to give them a piece of his mind.

The two women were talking happily together until they saw Bill
standing in the kitchen doorway. Experience had taught them to be
silent around him when he was this way, they both could smell the
whiskey halfway across the room. "How mush you shpend this time,
bitch?" he slurred.

Karen kept her eyes down, not wanting to challenge him. "Not
much, just got a couple of blouses for Patience, they were on
sale."

"Let me see 'em." Patience pulled the blouses out of the bag she
was holding and held them up for her father. "Put 'em on."

Patience jumped at the chance to escape. "Sure, Daddy, I'll go
change."

"No, here!" he demanded loudly.

Patience felt tears welling up in her eyes. "Bill, let her
change..." Bill's hand flailed out, backhanded Karen across the
face, and sent her slumping against the kitchen cabinets. "I
wasn't talkin' to you, bitch!" he shouted. Karen cowered against
the cabinets, she could taste blood where he had split her lip.
"Do it," he screamed at Patience. Patience's fingers worked the
buttons of her blouse, tears streamed down her face. "Hurry up,"
he demanded. Patience shrugged the blouse off and put a new one
on. "It's pretty. The other one." She put on the other blouse. "I
like the first one better, take that one back." He turned around
and stomped back to the den. The terror had passed for now. Karen
got up sobbing softly and started to make dinner. Patience
grabbed her clothes and ran to her room.

She hated him. Hated what he had become, the things he made her
do. At times she even hated her mother for being too weak to
stand up to him, for not protecting her. Patience wanted him
dead. She prayed that he would have an accident, slam into a tree
when he was drunk, but so far none of her prayers had been
answered. She sobbed into her pillow until her mother called her
to dinner.

Bill drank through dinner and Patience hoped he would drink
enough to make him pass out. No words were spoken as they ate
quietly and the two women hoped he wouldn't explode again.
Patience retreated to her room as soon as she finished. She heard
angry words though her door, the sharp smack of a hand slapping
flesh, and her mother's sobs. She undressed hurriedly, put on a
nightgown, then turned off the lights and climbed into bed.

She heard his heavy footfalls coming down the hallway. "Not
tonight, please God, not tonight," she prayed. She heard him go
into the dingy bathroom next door, and through the thin walls the
sound of him urinating. Patience relaxed slightly but knew the
danger wasn't over yet. Keep him away, God, keep the monster
away, she thought. The toilet flushed, she heard the bathroom
door open, then light spilled into her room from the hallway.

"Hello, Patty," he said, walking to her bed. "How 'bout a good
night kiss for your Dad." He planted his lips against hers. His
tongue, bitter with whiskey, invaded her mouth. God, help me, she
pleaded silently. Bill sat on the bed, his fingers stroking her
hair. "Take it out," he hissed. Patience didn't move. His fingers
fisted her hair, jerked her head. Tears came to her eyes from the
pain. "Do it or I'll hurt you worse'n this." Her fingers fumbled
at his zipper, tugged it down. Her small hand reached inside and
pulled his flaccid cock out of his pants. "Tha's better, now play
with it." Patience's fingers fondled him, felt him growing in her
hand. She wished she could just rip it off his body. "Stroke it,"
he demanded. Her hand slid up and down his shaft. "That the best
you can do? Christ, yer worthless." He jerked her head into his
crotch. "Use your mouth," he said as his hand roughly mauled her
breast.

------

A couple of miles away, Mike was lying in his own bed, replaying
his meeting with Patience in his mind. Patience with the pure
blue eyes. I wonder what she's doing now, he thought as he
drifted off to sleep.



Chapter 2

Bill Garvin awoke to the buzzing of the alarm clock. His hand
reached out and slapped the top, activating the snooze setting.
He went into the bathroom and started his morning ritual. He was
in the shower when the clock went off again. Karen hurriedly
rolled over and shut it off. She got out of bed, her cheek
burning where Bill had struck her last night. She stopped in the
bathroom across the hall from Patience's room and looked in the
mirror. Her eye was black and her lip swollen. She had seen
worse, but that didn't make it hurt any less. She touched her lip
and winced at the pain.

Karen went into the kitchen and began fixing Bill's breakfast.
She fried some eggs and bacon and was just putting them on a
plate when Bill came into the room. "Morning," he grunted. He sat
down at the table and Karen put the plate in front of him. She
had gotten the morning paper off the porch while the eggs were
frying and Bill read the paper, ignoring her. He finished his
meal and put down the paper. "You look like shit, do something
about your face," he said, then got up and left.

Patience heard her father start the car and knew it was safe for
the time being. She dressed in a t- shirt and shorts, then went
into the kitchen. Her mother was seated at the table, her head in
her hands. "Mom, are you okay?" she asked. Karen looked up at her
daughter and nodded. Patience fixed some cereal and came over to
the table. She saw her mother's badly bruised face and lip. "He's
getting worse," Patience stated. Karen nodded silently, tears
welled up in her eyes. "Can't we just leave? Go someplace where
he'll never find us?"

Karen had thought about leaving him but where would she go? She
didn't have anything in her name, no money, and no family to go
home to. Her parents were gone - killed in a car crash years ago
-
and now the only thing she had left was her husband and Patience.
She didn't have any skills. Bill had insisted she not work, stay
home, keep his house, and raise their child. She was worthless.
Bill pointed that out to her constantly. The only friends she
ever had were also Bill's, she wouldn't feel safe going to them.
If they left, they would only get as far as a few tanks of gas
would take them. And then what? What would she do? How would they
survive? There may have been a time when she could have left but
he had beaten it out of her long ago.

"We can't," she said simply.

Patience banged her spoon in the bowl. "Fine, I'm going running."

She stomped off and soon Karen heard the front door slam shut.
Running was Patience's way of coping with her problems. Karen's
was under the sink and she could feel herself drawn to it. She
got up and fixed herself a drink from the bottle of vodka she
kept hidden there. The alcohol burned her throat and stung her
lip as she drank it. There was another option, she thought. One
that would end all this forever, but she couldn't do that to
Patience, wouldn't leave her to face her father alone.

------

Mike dumped the last load of silage into the trough, then put the
wheelbarrow away. The steers jostled for position and fought over
the food behind him. He left the feedlot and walked over to the
equipment shed, glad that the morning chores were done. "They're
all fed," he told his father when he got to the shed.

"Good. I need to go into town this morning and meet with the new
loan officer at the bank. I want you to start raking the hay at
eleven. I ought to be back around noon and I'll start baling as
soon as it's ready."

"Can I go for a ride until then?" Mike asked.

"I suppose so, but you make sure you're back here to start raking
at eleven. It's supposed to rain later this evening and I want
that hay in before it does."

"Thanks," Mike said and took off running for the paddock to get
his horse.

Jim Sanders grinned to himself as he walked to the house. He
washed up and collected Martha, his wife, for the trip into town.
They could see Mike riding down the lane as they came out of the
house. "That boy sure does love that horse," Jim commented to
Martha.

"I wonder where he got that from," she said smiling wistfully.
She remembered a boy about Mike's age who used to come visit her
on his horse. Eventually she had fallen in love and married him.
Jim remembered courting Martha too, and they both had smiles on
their faces as they drove off for town.

"I wonder why the bank wanted to meet with us?" he asked his
wife.

"Probably just wants to get to know the customers."

"Probably."

They gave their name to the receptionist at the bank and she told
them to take a seat. They waited, Jim fidgeted.

"Steve Walker never made us wait like this," Jim whispered to
Martha.

"Steve isn't here anymore, dear," Martha said calmly.

Jim glanced at his watch. They had been waiting for 45 minutes.
He fidgeted some more. Finally a man came out. "Mr. and Mrs.
Sanders," he said. They stood up and walked over to him. "I'm
Bill Garvin, if you'll follow me." He guided them back the hall
and into his office. Closing the door behind them, he gestured
toward chairs in front of his desk then sat down.

"Mr. and Mrs. Sanders, we're here because your loan is up for
renewal this year," he began. "I've been reviewing the
documentation in your file. I assume you're aware that your
payments in January and February were late."

"Yes, but we caught them up..." Jim began.

"Yes you did, but according to the loan terms, by being late the
bank has the right to demand payment on your loan."

"But Steve told us it would be okay to make the payments late."

"If he did, and I have no reason to doubt you, he didn't document
that in the file. I can see that you have been good customers
with us and we really don't want to call the loan. What we
propose is to renew the loan but because of the late payments it
will have to be at two and a half percent over prime instead of
the one percent you are paying now." He sat back and waited for
Jim Sanders to explode. He wasn't disappointed.

"Now wait a minute!" Jim said loudly. "You're telling me you're
gonna jack my loan rate up by one and a half points because Steve
forgot to put some damn document in the file? That's not right.
We called and told Steve it was going to be late, he told us it
wasn't a problem."

"Jim..." Martha said, trying to calm him.

"No, Martha! We've been banking here for twenty years. We've been
late before and never had a problem. Just what the hell is going
on here?"

Bill loved it, loved making them squirm. The goddamn bank played
hardball with him, well he would just pass it along. "Mr.
Sanders, I can't do a thing about what Mr. Walker did or said. I
was brought here to bring the lending department into compliance
with the bank's policies. The fact remains you were late with
your payments. Under the terms of the loan agreement we have the
right to call the loan. Now I'm offering you a renewal on the
loan at what is a fair price, given your payment history."

Jim was furious. "A fair price!" he shouted. "You jack the rate
up like that and call it a fair price! You're out of your mind.
We won't renew, I'll find another bank that's willing to work
with me instead of against me!"

"You certainly have that right, but I can't imagine there are
many banks willing to lend to a debtor in default. Your loan
agreement runs until the end of the year and the bank is willing
to honor it as long as your payments are on time. If you haven't
renewed by then or paid off your loan we will have to foreclose."
He watched Jim's face turn almost purple with rage.

"C'mon Martha," Jim spat, "we're done here." He yanked the door
open angrily and left, Martha trailing in his wake.

"I don't think he's a happy camper," Bill said to himself,
chuckling. He got up and shut the door. Returning to his desk, he
slid open the bottom drawer and pulled out a flask. He unscrewed
the cap, took a healthy swallow, then screwed the cap back on and
returned it to the desk. The Sanderses could, probably would,
take their money out of the bank. He wasn't worried about it,
what was in their accounts wasn't much. It had been fun to jerk
them around. He found himself looking forward to his afternoon
appointment with another farmer in similar straits.

------

Mike couldn't really explain why he decided to ride along the
river for a second day. Usually he rode different places each
time. Patrick had let him know he was breaking tradition when he
pointed the horse down the path toward the river. He balked at
first, and then gave in when Mike turned him back onto the path.
They rode along the river at a nice easy jog. Mike's eyes
searched ahead looking for something, he wasn't sure what, until
he spied the figure of a solitary runner, her long blonde hair
flapping behind her, jogging along the path. He sped the horse
into a trot to close the distance and shortly came alongside her.

"Hello, Patience," he called out. She ignored him, kept running.
He held the horse even with her, he could see she'd been crying.
Tears streaked her face. "Are you okay?" he asked, his voice
tinged with concern.

"Go away! Leave me alone!"

"What's wrong?"

"Nothing, now leave me..." He had distracted her and she didn't
see the rut until her foot landed awkwardly. She sprawled to the
ground and clutched her ankle in pain. Mike stopped and jumped
off the horse, flipping the reins over his neck. He rushed over
to her and squatted beside her. "Are you okay? Here let me see,"
he said as he reached for her ankle.

She slapped his hand away. "Keep your hands off me," she moaned.

"I'm just trying to see if it's broken."

"It's not!"

"Let me look."

"No, just go away."

"I can't just leave you here like this! Now let me look." His
hand reached out slowly, she pushed it away. "Damn it, Patty, let
me look at it."

"Don't call me that!" she screamed. "I hate it." She cringed,
slid herself back away from him on the ground.

"Okay, I won't!" he shouted, "but you hold still." She tried to
push his hand away again but this time he wouldn't let her. His
hand grasped her leg and she moaned. He could feel her shaking.
He untied her running shoe and slid it carefully off of her foot.

"Just leave me be," she whimpered.

"When I know you're alright," he replied. His fingers carefully
felt her ankle, it was already swollen and would get worse, but
he didn't think anything was broken and didn't see any blood. "I
think it's just a bad sprain," he sighed in relief. "Let me help
you up," he said as he stood up and offered her his hand.

She stared at him, not moving a muscle. "Look," he said in
exasperation, "I can't help you up without touching you. You'll
just have to trust me. I promise I won't hurt you." She stared at
him for a moment more, then reached out tentatively with her
hand. Mike grasped it and pulled her gently to her feet. She
winced as she placed weight on the ankle.

"Yeah, I didn't think you would be able to put any weight on it.
Let me put you on Patrick and we'll give you a ride back to your
house."

She shook her head. "No, I can manage."

"No you can't. Try to walk on it." She took a few steps, but all
she could do was hop. "You see you'll never get home like that.
Now let me put you on the horse, I promise he won't hurt you
either." He led Patrick beside her. "I have to touch you again,"
he said as he bent his legs and grasped her waist before she
could protest. He lifted her easily above his head and guided her
onto the saddle. "See, that wasn't so bad, was it?" She shook her
head no.

He talked to her as he led the horse down the path. She just
nodded or shook her head when he asked her something.
Occasionally she would say yes or no. As they approached the
town, though, she had to give him directions and abandon the
silent routine. He led the horse up to her house then helped her
down. "Thanks," she whispered, then hopped toward the house.

"You're welcome," he replied. He caught a feeble wave from her
before she went inside. Mike mounted the horse and looked at his
watch. Oh God, I'm going to be late, he thought. Instead of going
back to the path he cut through town to try to make up time. They
galloped alongside the road and up the lane to the house. He
looked at his watch as he dismounted. It was five after eleven.

Jim had watched his son gallop up the lane. Still in the throes
of anger, he took it out on Mike. "You're late, I thought I told
you to be raking at eleven!"

"But Dad, I was..."

"I don't want to hear it, boy! I told you eleven and it's after
that. Put the horse away and get on the tractor. You're grounded
for a week. No riding, no nothing, you understand me?"

Mike nodded and led Patrick to the paddock. He walked the horse
inside and quickly removed the tack. He couldn't understand why
his father would be so mad over a measly five minutes.



Chapter 3

Bill Garvin felt like celebrating. He had convinced two farmers
today that foreclosure on their loans was imminent if they didn't
agree to renew at the higher rate. The best part was that the
stupid clodhoppers actually thanked him for being so
understanding. Christ, they don't come much dumber than those
guys, he thought. Yes, he felt like celebrating and stomped on
the brakes of his Lincoln as he passed the sign for the Roadside
Bar.

He stepped inside, his eyes slowly adjusting to the darkness. He
took a seat at the bar and ordered Turkey on the rocks. He drank
quickly, and signaled the bartender for another. "Let me get this
one for you," a voice said. Bill turned and saw a man in faded
blue jeans and t-shirt, a dusty old Redman cap on his head. The
man held out his hand, and Bill took it.

"Dave Handelman," the man said.

"Bill Garvin."

Dave nodded. "You're the new loan officer at the bank, aren't
you?" Bill nodded. "Thought so." Dave knew who he was, his friend
Angus Caldwell had pointed Bill out one day. Dave figured it
couldn't hurt being drinking buddies with the bank's lending
officer - especially given the amount of debt he had outstanding
there. Bill drained his drink and waved for another. Dave pushed
some money at the bartender when he brought the drink back.

"Thanks," Bill said.

"Don't mention it. So how you like Thomasville so far?"

"It's okay, a little quiet though."

"You got that right," Dave laughed. "Too fuckin' quiet if you ask
me. There ain't nothin' to do in this town. This heah bar is the
only damn nightlife for miles."

"You're right," Bill agreed. They talked for a while, taking
turns buying each other drinks as the evening faded into night.
Bill told Dave stories about Conway and Dave regaled Bill with
tales about the titty bars in Madison, the closest small city.

"Ya know, I saw your daughter the other week, she's a pretty
little thing," Dave said.

Oh? Where was that?"

"She was ridin' a horse with Jim Sanders' boy. They were goin'
through town when I saw 'em." Bill slammed his drink to the bar
and got up. "Hey, what's wrong?" Dave asked.

"Nuthin', just remembered somethin' I gotta do." Bill walked
unsteadily to the door and left. He managed to get the Lincoln
home without hitting anything or anybody. He got out of the car,
a dangerous combination of anger and whiskey coursing through his
veins. He stumbled through the door and walked unsteadily back to
his bedroom. He ripped off his clothes and threw them in the
corner. The loud snoring of his wife told him she was passed out
in bed, something that was happening more and more. He seethed,
wanted to beat her for not knowing what their daughter was up to,
but he had something else to take care of first.

He stumbled down the hall and entered his daughter's room.
Patience awakened immediately. "No, no, no!" she pleaded
silently. Bill sat on the bed. "You know what I want, Patty,
don't make me hurt you." Her small hand reached out slowly and
wrapped around his flaccid cock. "Make it hard," he demanded. She
fondled him and felt it grow slowly in her hand. God, she hated
him. "Use yer mouth, suck it!" he demanded, grabbing her hair and
pulling her head to his cock. He felt her soft lips slide over it
and reveled in the sensations and the power he had over her.
"Tha's it slut, suck it good." Her eyes opened wide and she knew
it was going to happen again. The horror was going to happen
again.

"I think you got it wet and hard enough, slut." He yanked her
head off his cock and threw her onto her back. He climbed between
her legs. "Daddy, no!" she shouted. He slapped her hard across
the mouth. "Shut up, bitch." Her legs flailed under him. "Stop
kicking me or so help me God I'll beat you 'til you can't move."
Her legs still kicked, and he backhanded her hard across the
face. She gave up then and lay there sobbing as he placed his
cock against her opening and drove himself inside her. She always
screamed at the pain, he liked that. He clapped his large hand
over her mouth. "Shut up, whore, you think I don't know 'bout
your boyfriend? You spreadin' your legs for any boy you meet? Are
you, bitch?" he spat while sawing back and forth inside her.
"Here, whore, this is for you," he shouted and came inside her.

He climbed off her, but not without a final swat at her small,
heaving breasts. "You stay away from that boy, you hear?" She
nodded, her face streaked with tears. "Good," he said as he
stormed out of the room. She lay there sobbing into her pillow
until she fell asleep exhausted.

------

Mike finished up his morning chores and walked to the equipment
shed. His father was working on the tractor, changing the oil.
"The chores are done," he told him.

"Thanks." Jim straightened up, wiped his greasy hands on a rag.

"Can I..., am I done being grounded?" Mike asked plaintively.

It tugged at Jim and he remembered the angry words he had spoken
to his son last week. "Mike, I shouldn't of... I mean last week I
was mad about something else, something that had nothing to do
with you being late, and well, I shouldn't of taken it out on
you. I'm sorry, son."

"It's okay," Mike said, his mood noticeably brighter. "Does that
mean I can go riding?"

Jim laughed. "Yeah, I don't need you for the rest of the day, go
have fun."

"Thanks, Dad," he shouted as he ran to get the tack. Patrick was
at the far end of the paddock and Mike whistled to get his
attention. The horse's head came up and seeing his friend at the
fence he took off at a gallop to meet him. Mike laughed while the
horse nuzzled him. "I know, I've missed you too, fella." He
saddled him up, put on the bridle, and mounted the horse. "We
have all day," Mike told Patrick as they jogged through the
trees.

He guided the horse down the path that led to the river. They
rode for hours while Mike searched for a glimpse of Patience. He
could feel Patrick getting antsy under him. He wasn't used to
riding the same path over and over again. "I know, fella, be
patient," he said. Something wasn't quite right and he worried
about her. Maybe her ankle hadn't healed yet and she couldn't
run. Heck, he had all day. He would just ride over to her house
and see how she was doing. He turned onto the path toward town
and the horse tossed his head in agreement, as if saying "About
time."

Mike guided Patrick through town, struggling to remember the way
to Patience's house. He sighed in relief when he found it and
slid out of the saddle to the ground. He tied the horse to a
tree, then walked to the front door and knocked. He heard
footsteps and a woman answered the door. "Yes?" she asked.

"Hi, I'm Mike Sanders, is Patience home?"

The woman turned inside. "Patience! There's someone at the door
for you."

Mike saw her coming out of the kitchen and noticed she wasn't
limping.

Patience was shaking her head at him as she came to the door.
Panic raced through her. "Go away," she hissed. Mike saw bruises
on her face, her swollen lip.

"Oh my God, what happened?" he asked in alarm.

"Nothing! Now go away, don't ever come back here."

"Patience, what's wrong?"

"I told you, nothing! Go away, I don't ever want to see you
again," she shouted and slammed the door in his face. He could
hear her sobs on the other side of the door. He felt crushed, as
if the whole world had come crashing down on top of him. He
plodded back to Patrick, untied him and mounted up. He turned the
horse back toward town and rode slowly back to the farm.

Jim saw them coming up the lane and noted the lack of spirit in
both the boy and horse. He watched Mike unsaddle Patrick slowly
then turn him out in the paddock. Mike brought the tack back into
the shed and put it away. "Is everything alright?" Jim asked.

"Huh? Yeah... no... it's something I need to work out on my own."
Mike replied.

"You aren't in any trouble, are you?"

"No."

"Okay then, sometimes it helps to talk things out, if you want to
talk about it, I'm willing to listen."

"Thanks.... Dad, I met this girl..."

Jim laughed. "I'm sorry, son, if it's about a woman, well there
ain't enough talking in the world that's going to help you figure
them out. I ain't got your mama figured out yet and I've known
her over twenty-five years..." He saw a big car speeding up the
lane, dust billowing behind it. "Now who the hell is that?" he
said out loud. The car skidded to a stop in front of the shed.
Bill Garvin got out, slamming the door shut.

"What the hell do you want?" Jim spat angrily.

"I want you to keep that snot-nosed brat from sniffing around my
daughter, that's what the hell I want!" Bill shouted. "You keep
him away from her or I'll start the filings to foreclose on this
farm, you understand me?"

"Get off my property!"

Bill smiled wickedly, "The bank has the right to inspect the
property anytime it wants, it's in the loan agreement."

"You're not inspecting, you're threatening, now get off my
property."

"You can forget about the bank renewing the loan. You keep that
punk away from my daughter or I swear to God I'll have the papers
filed so fast it'll make your head spin."

"The boy has his own mind, he'll do what he wants and you can't
stop it. Now get off my goddamn property before I call the
sheriff."

Bill retreated to the car. "I mean it, keep the fuck away from my
daughter," he shouted at Mike as he got in the car and drove
away.

Jim gazed fondly at his son. "This girl you met, is it his
daughter?"

"I guess so," Mike replied.

Jim shook his head, "Well now, I guess this just made it a hell
of a lot more complicated, didn't it?"

"Yeah," Mike sighed.



Chapter 4

Despite his best efforts Mike didn't see Patience for the rest of
the summer. He rode the path beside the river daily, abandoning
his other riding trails. He changed up times but it didn't
matter, it was as if Patience had dropped off the face of the
earth, or at least never set foot outside. He considered going to
her house, but given his last visit and the threats from her
father, he felt it best not to antagonize him.

The only bright spot in the summer as far as Mike was concerned
was his sixteenth birthday. With it came the opportunity to get
his driver's license. He had been driving vehicles on the farm
since he could reach the pedals, so he passed the exam easily and
now had the freedom to go anywhere. His Dad told him to keep as
his own an old pickup truck they used to haul stuff around on the
farm. Mike spent a lot of the remaining summer vacation fixing
the truck and cleaning it up.

------

Jim belonged to the Grange, an organization that promoted
agricultural activities and legislation to protect rural
heritage. His chapter met once a month and Jim made it a habit to
attend all the meetings. The speaker at this month's meeting was
Leonard Miles, the soil conservation director for the county. His
speech featured the latest planting techniques to minimize soil
loss. Most of the farmers in the county belonged to the Grange
and tonight had a good turnout. When his speech was over, the
farmers milled about and talked to each other. It was apparent
early on why turnout was so high. Everyone was discussing Bill
Garvin and not a single farmer had anything good to say.
Practically everyone had been called into his office and
threatened with foreclosure if they didn't renew their loans at
above-market rates. The more Jim heard the angrier he got. He
decided to take action.

Jim walked to the lectern and tapped the microphone. The loud
thump told him it was still on. "Gentlemen, can I have your
attention?" he announced. Farmers, friends for the most part,
turned toward him, the conversation in the room died down.
"Thanks. It appears most of us have had the opportunity to meet
with Bill Garvin, the new loan director at the bank. Those of you
that haven't can consider yourselves lucky." Angry laughter
responded to the statement. "In most cases, Mr. Garvin has
threatened us with foreclosure on our loans unless we renew at
inflated rates. In my case his excuse was I made a couple of
payments late. I haven't heard what he told all of you, but I can
guess it was pretty much the same. We all know farming is a tough
business, and cash flow is a constant problem. For years Farmers
First has been the best bank to deal with. Steve Walker
understood the farm business better'n most. If you were going to
be late, as long as you called him, he understood and was
patient. When Steve retired I expected some changes, but nothing
like this. So the question is what are we going to do about it?"

"Kill him!" somebody shouted.

"I don't think that's a viable option," Jim chuckled, "although
it would be satisfying. Anybody have any other ideas?"

"Why don't we start our own bank?" Bill Chalmers yelled. Murmurs
of "good idea" rippled through the crowd.

"It is a good idea, but the problem I see is we all need to
borrow, none of us has more in the bank than what we owe, so
where would we get the capital?" Jim pointed out.

"Has anyone talked to Steve Walker?" Lane Birdsong asked.

"I know I haven't, have any of you?" Jim asked. Nobody said
anything. "I know Steve about as well as anyone here, I guess.
How about I ask him to speak to all of us?" There were shouts of
assent amongst the gathering. "Okay, I'll do that. One idea I
thought of was all of us banding together to take our loans to a
single lender, I think we'd get some attention from some banks
with that large of a package." Again the gathering agreed it was
a good idea. "I'll talk to Steve about that, too. Anybody have
anything else? No response. "Okay, thanks for your attention, I
feel better knowing we're doing something." Jim walked away from
the lectern and rejoined his friends. People came up to him and
thanked him for taking the lead. He felt a sense of
accomplishment as he drove home from the meeting.

The next morning he called Steve. He explained what was happening
at the bank and how upset the farmers were at the Grange meeting.
Steve expressed shock at the way Bill Garvin was operating. Jim
said the farmers would like to meet with him to see if he had any
ideas on how to proceed. He warned Steve everyone was pretty
upset and he would have to be at his diplomatic best. Steve
laughed and thanked him for the warning.

------

Mike was sitting in homeroom talking to Eric Bellows about his
summer when Patience walked in. He hadn't seen her since the day
she slammed the door in his face. She sat down next to Eric. She
still hadn't seen Mike or if she had, she didn't show any signs
of recognition. Mike motioned to Eric to lean closer, then asked
in a whisper if he would change seats with him. Eric agreed and
they switched seats.

"Hello, Patience." She looked at him and he could see surprise in
her pure blue eyes, those same eyes he had fallen into when
Patrick pushed him against her on the path by the river. "Come
on, the least you can do is say hi back," he cajoled her. She sat
there silent while the teacher called the roll. Mike tried to get
her to talk, to say anything, but she remained silent. The bell
rang for the first class and Mike lost her in the shuffle to
change classrooms. He didn't see her for the rest of the morning.
At lunchtime he got his tray from the cafeteria and was looking
for a place to sit when he saw her sitting by herself. He made
his way over to her and sat down beside her.

"Hello again." He waited for a response. Patience looked around
for someplace to get away from him. "Patience, I'm not going to
bite, I haven't ever hurt you, why won't you talk to me?" She
looked down at her tray and said nothing. "Patty, I'm not..."

"I told you never to call me that," she hissed. He could see
tears welling up in her eyes. She stood up and Mike stood up with
her.

"Well at least you're talking." She looked at him in surprise, he
had a small smile on his face. "I thought maybe you had been
struck mute," he joked. "Why won't you talk to me? Why'd you slam
the door in my face?"

"You wouldn't understand." She sat back down and Mike sat beside
her.

"Probably not, but it would have to be better than not knowing."
She was talking for the moment and he planned on drawing her out.
"I looked for you everyday after that, but you never were out
running."

"I wasn't allowed."

"Why not?"

"Because of you."

"Me? What did I do?"

"Nothing, but my father found out from someone that you took me
home when I sprained my ankle, and I wasn't allowed to run
anymore."

"Still, what did I do?"

"Nothing, you didn't have to, my father doesn't want me seeing
boys."

"He needs to get you blinders then. The world's lousy with them,
it's kind of hard not to see them." Patience cracked a smile.
"Was that a smile," Mike asked in feigned amazement.

"No," she said looking away.

"It was too, I know a smile when I see it."

"Then why'd you ask?"

"To see if I could get another." He didn't.

"Why won't you leave me be?"

"I can't. Since the first day I met you I've been thinking about
you every day, wondering about what you are doing. I don't know
why, but I do. I want to know everything about you, Patience."

"No you don't," she insisted, getting up and leaving hurriedly.

Mike sighed in exasperation and ate his lunch.

Mike didn't give up easily. He managed to talk to her every
homeroom before the bell rang to start classes. He'd tell her
about the new tricks he was teaching Patrick, how the horse
missed her. Mainly she ignored him, but occasionally something he
said would strike her funny and a hint of a smile would appear on
her face.

He'd find her at lunchtime and sit beside her. The fact that she
let him encouraged him. It wasn't much different than homeroom
but sometimes she would talk to him. She never talked about her
family. Mike told her all about his, how his Dad had inherited
the farm from his father and gradually built it up to the size it
was now, how his father and mother had fallen in love, or at
least the version they told him.

He was running out of topics and worried about what he would do
when that happened. They were seated in the cafeteria and he was
telling her about a trail he liked to ride when she interrupted
him.

"Don't you ever stop talking?"

"I would if you talked to me."

"How am I supposed to talk to you when you're talking all the
time?"

"Good point. Okay, I'm listening."

She didn't say anything at first, then took a deep breath and
began. She told him safe things about herself, things she liked
and hated. Then she told him about Conway and the high school
there. He listened and looked, fascinated with the way she moved
her hands when she talked and the sound of her voice. The bell
rang and it was time to go back to class but the wall had been
breached and he was elated.

The next morning she didn't ignore him in homeroom, and they
talked about classes and things happening at school. At lunch
they continued their conversations. Before they knew it they were
friends and Patience was amazed to realize that she looked
forward to their talks together.

------

The meeting with Steve Walker and the farmers went well. After
hearing the complaints the farmers had about Bill Garvin he was
convinced something was very wrong at the bank. He thought the
idea to package all their loans together had merit, but he felt
the best method would be to take their complaints to Conway and
the bank's main office. Steve called a friend who was a vice-
president at the bank and asked to be put on the agenda for the
next directors meeting. The friend agreed, and Steve and Jim
drove up for the meeting.

Steve addressed the board first and explained how things had
operated at the bank while he was in charge of loans. He then
asked Jim to address the directors and tell them what happened
after Bill Garvin took over. Jim explained how Garvin called him
to ostensibly go over their loan and get familiar with bank
customers. When they got to the bank he not only made them wait
45 minutes before meeting, but then threatened foreclosure unless
they renewed the loan at a rate he could never pay.

"The thing that struck me," Jim concluded, "was Mr. Garvin
telling me the bank hired him to clean up the lending department
at Farmers First and he had to comply with bank policies. It
wasn't the bank's policy when Steve was our loan officer, and
hasn't been the policy for the last twenty-some years I've been
banking there. So I wonder, is Mr. Garvin speaking for the bank?
If so, then we need to look for a bank that understands farming
like Farmers First used to."

On the ride back Steve and Jim talked. Steve felt Jim's speech
had impressed the board and told him so. Jim didn't think it had
and went over with Steve the steps they could take to solicit
other banks with the packaged loan portfolio.

------

After Steve and Jim left, the directors discussed what they
heard. While some of the directors felt it was good policy for
the bank to force the farmers into strict compliance with loan
policies, most had an agricultural background and knew the bank
had been built on lending to farmers. By a vote of 6-3 they
decided to start an internal investigation into the lending
department at Farmers First bank in Thomasville.



Chapter 5

Bill took a drink from his flask and put it back in his desk.
Christ what a day! His wife had gotten so goddamn drunk the night
before she passed out on the bed and hadn't moved since. He had
showered and gone through his morning ritual. When he came out of
the bathroom, the damn alarm was buzzing loudly and she just
slept through the damn thing. Well he had given her a wake up
call she wouldn't forget soon. Christ, the only responsibility
she had was to take care of him and their daughter and she
couldn't even do that right.

Then he had arrived at the bank to find a team of auditors
waiting for him. They were conducting a surprise inspection of
the bank's loan portfolio. Bill called Victor King at the main
office to confirm that the auditors should be there. King was the
vice president in charge of Garvin's bank. King wasn't there but
his assistant told Bill it was strictly routine. The bank was
instituting new procedures in response to regulatory changes with
which they had to comply.

As the day wore on and he answered questions from the auditors,
he began to wonder. It appeared they were concentrating on the
farm loans, and their questions seemed anything but routine. He
struggled all day to keep his anger in check while he answered
question after question. They had finished just a short time ago
and Bill had heaved a sigh of relief as he showed them out of the
bank and locked up behind them.

He stopped at the Roadside Bar on his way home. He had become a
regular patron of the establishment over the past few months.
Dave Handelman was there and they sat on adjacent stools. The two
talked and drank and as Bill's tongue loosened, he told Dave
about the audit he had just gone through. Dave commiserated with
him until Bill left to go home. Bill thought about the audit as
he drove home and the more he thought about it the angrier he
got. He was in a drunken frenzy as he walked through the front
door.

Karen was sprawled on a chair, still dressed in the same
nightgown she wore when he left that morning, a half-empty glass
in her hand. Rage coursed through him as he walked over to her
and slapped the glass against the wall where it exploded in a
shower of fragments and liquor. She looked up at him bleary-
eyed, her mind not registering the danger she was in. "You
fucking cunt," Bill shouted as he slapped her across the face.
"Goddamn you, you're shupposed to be takin' care of this house
and our daughter. Instead you lay around all day drunk out of
your mind. I thought I straightened you out this morning," he
shouted, then backhanded her across the face. Karen fell out of
the chair against a table, tipping it over and sending the lamp
crashing to the floor. She lay there sobbing, blood dripping from
her nose onto the dirty floor.

Patience heard the shouting and cowered on her bed. She heard the
crash of the lamp and despite her fear she got off the bed and
cracked open the door to see what had happened. Her father was
standing over her mother, kicking at her and screaming. Her
mother was lying on the floor, a puddle of blood in front of her
face. Patience ran over and grabbed her father. "Daddy, stop,
you're killing her!" she screamed.

"Get off me, bitch," he yelled. His arm flailed out and caught
Patience across the face, sending her into a crumpled heap on the
floor. Bill kicked at Karen again, then his anger spent, he
shuffled to the bedroom and passed out on the bed.

------

Dave Handelman told a friend about his conversation with Bill in
the bar, who told a friend, who told another friend. It didn't
take long for the word to get back to Jim and the other farmers
that the bank was starting to act on the information they had
given to the board of directors.

------

When Patience walked late into homeroom the next day, Mike's eyes
widened in surprise. She sat down beside him.

"What happened to you?" he whispered as the teacher called the
roll.

"Nothing," she replied curtly.

"That doesn't look like nothing."

"Just drop it, please," she asked plaintively.

Mike didn't want to let it drop, but the bell rang, cutting off
his next question.

At lunch he found her sitting at a table staring out the window.
"Come on," he said holding his hand out to her.

"Where to?"

"To talk."

"I don't want to talk."

"I know, but we have to."

She didn't want to go, but something compelled her to take his
hand. He led her outside, away from the crowds milling around the
entrance to the school, taking advantage of the Indian summer
day. He sat down on the grass, his back against the building. He
patted the ground beside him. "Sit down." She sat beside him.
Mike sighed. "Patience, how did you get the bruises?" She shook
her head. "Please, I'm your friend, I want to help you." She
started to sob and Mike wrapped her in his arms and held her to
his shoulder while she cried against him. He thought he knew the
answer but he needed to hear it from her, so he patiently waited
until she got herself back under control.

"Was it your father?" he asked softly. He heard a little gasp,
then felt her head nodding against his shoulder. "Your father did
this to you?" he asked, his voice rising in surprise. She nodded,
then started crying again. Mike heard the bell ring for the end
of lunch. He kissed the top of her head. "Patience, we need to
leave, classes are starting and someone will be out looking for
us." She looked up at him. "I know a place we can go where no one
will find us." He stood up and offered his hand. "Trust me," he
said. Patience put her hand in his and he helped her to her feet.
He led her to the truck and drove to his home. He parked the
truck beside the equipment shed. "Wait here for a second." He
walked inside the shed. His father was there, working on the
tractor.

"You're supposed to be in school," he said.

"I know, but something important came up, don't ask me any
questions, I'll explain tonight."

"Son, I can't..."

"Please."

"It better be a good reason. Go on."

Mike grabbed the tack for Patrick and carried it to the paddock.
He whistled and the horse came running. He saddled and bridled
the horse, then led him over to the truck. "Come on," he said to
Patience. She got out of the truck and he helped her onto the
saddle. He climbed on behind her and clicked his teeth to the
horse. They rode across the fields to a small stream. Trees grew
along it and Mike turned to follow the stream.

"Where are we going?" Patience asked.

"You'll see," Mike replied.

They trotted alongside the stream, sometimes through it. Water
splashed up in small tiny drops that glistened in the bright
sunlight. Mike stopped the horse beside a dense stand of trees.
He dismounted and helped Patience down. He led them through the
trees into a secluded clearing.

Mike loosened Patrick's saddle, replaced the bridle with a
halter, snapped a lead to the halter, and tied it to a tree. He
took a soft woolen blanket out of the saddlebag and spread it on
the ground, motioning for Patience to join him. "Now tell me all
about it," he said simply.

She did. In a tremulous voice she told him everything, the
drinking, how her father abused her mother, the awful things he
would call her. She broke down in tears as she spoke and Mike
held her close to comfort her. Then she told him about how her
father started abusing her years before, at first physically, and
then sexually. It shocked Mike that a man could do those kinds of
things to his family, and especially to his daughter. She sobbed
as she described the scene last night when her father was kicking
at her mother as she lay passed out on the floor.

"I thought he was going to kill her!" she wailed. "And when I
tried to get him to stop, he hit me. That's how I got the
bruises." She turned into his shoulder and sobbed some more. Mike
stroked her hair while holding her and whispered, "It will be
okay," over and over to her. He wasn't sure whether it was to
comfort her or convince himself.

He thought about what he could do. Patience couldn't go home, not
to that. He warred with his anger over a solution to the problem.
Anger wanted him to kill the man who hurt and violated the girl
in his arms. Rational thought told him there had to be another
solution. He kissed Patience's head and realized she had fallen
asleep in his arms. What about her, what would be best for her?
Getting her out of her home was the first thing, but then what?
She needed more than he could give her, more than Thomasville had
to offer. Madison probably had something, but he wouldn't know
where to go. He needed to talk to his parents. Would they help?
Yes, they would be as shocked as he was, when he'd tell them what
was happening. They couldn't not help, it wasn't in their blood
to turn away someone who needed help. Mike felt Patience stirring
in his arms.

Patience looked up at him, her eyes red and puffy. "Thanks for
the shoulder," she said as she kissed his cheek.

"You're welcome."

"Mike... I'm sorry you're caught up in this mess."

"Don't be."

She sighed deeply. "Do you hate me?"

"God, no, Patience, I love you." It just came out, but the moment
he said it, he knew it was true. He loved her and wanted to
protect her.

She had a look of shock on her face. "You love me? After all I
just told you, you love me? Why?"

"Because I do," he said simply. "I don't know why, or how, or
exactly when, but I do." He was certain of it then, and awed by
it.

Her hand reached up and stroked his face. He kissed her palm.
"You're amazing," she whispered. "Nobody's ever loved me."

"I'm sure your parents did, or at least your mother."

"Maybe, but if they did, I don't remember it. They certainly
never said it."

"I love you," he said again. She laughed, it felt so good to hear
the words, to know someone loved her. She hugged herself tightly
to him, felt him stroking her hair and back. It felt good to be
held and stroked. To be loved.

"Mike... would you kiss me?" He bent his head to hers, their lips
pressed lightly together. Neither was prepared for the
sensations, the thrills that pressing their lips together
generated. Patience gasped in wonderment and Mike broke the kiss.
She had never felt anything like it, and was curious whether she
could feel it again. He stared into her soft blue eyes then
Patience pressed her lips to his again.

The feelings were still there, still ran through her, excitement
and pleasure and love. She pressed her lips harder against him
and felt something else, a longing to touch him, hold him, love
him. She pressed tighter against him and Mike lost his balance,
falling to his back. She followed him, her chest pressed against
his, their lips moving against each other's. It was so different
with love, it felt so good, so pure. There was no panic, no
feeling of being forced. They broke their kiss and sighed. "So
different," she murmured. Mike's hand stroked her side, her back,
her hip. She caught his hand and brought it to her lips, kissing
it softly.

She felt safe here, with him, and she wanted more, to feel more,
to feel the difference between being loved and being used, to
erase the pain and humiliation with gentleness and love. What
else would be different? she thought. She placed his hand on her
breast and watched his eyes widen in surprise. "Please," she
whispered. His touch was so light, almost like a feather, as his
fingers traced over her breast. She felt her nipple harden when
his finger brushed over it and gasped in delight at the
sensation. She had known only rough mauling that brought only
pain. His touch brought only pleasure and an empty, aching
feeling in the pit of her stomach that demanded more.

She sat up abruptly and pulled her shirt over her head. She
reached behind and unfastened her bra, sliding it off her arms
and displaying her breasts to Mike. She lay back down beside him,
and Mike's fingers explored them. They were beautiful, so soft
and silky, her nipples hard pink buds. He bent his head to her
breast and kissed them. Patience gasped at the hot liquid warmth
of his mouth on her breast. His tongue teased gently at her
nipple, sending jolts of pleasure streaking through her. It was
heaven and she never wanted to leave. She cupped his head to her
breast, her fingers softly stroking his hair, relishing the
silkiness. Each stroke of his tongue took her higher, made her
crave more. She pulled his head from her breast and kissed his
lips hard. She felt his tongue press against her lips. She
hesitated for a moment and then opened her mouth to receive it.
Even that was different, no taste of whiskey, no feeling of
slime, only passion and pleasure, and a need to feel everything.

She broke the kiss. "Make love to me."

"Are you sure?" Mike asked, but she was already removing her
jeans, kicking off her shoes. He hurriedly undressed beside her.
She lay back on the blanket, her arms open, waiting for him. He
had never done this before, but he knew what to do. He knelt
between her legs, guided himself to her opening, and slid slowly
inside her.

She expected pain, it hurt terribly when her father did it to
her, what she got was pure pleasure, a sense of fullness and
completeness. Her hands reached up and locked behind his head,
pulling him tight to her chest, her lips pressed against him. He
slid out and she moaned her displeasure, then he slid back in and
she groaned in pleasure. He made love to her slowly, gently,
filling her with love until they couldn't contain it anymore and
they burst into orgasm. They held each other tightly, not wanting
to move, to let go of what they had found.

Mike broke the silence. "I love you," he whispered. "Don't go
home, stay at our house until we can find someplace safe."

"I love you, too. I can't, if I don't come home, he'll come
searching for me. If I go home he'll never know."

"Let me take you to Madison. There must be someplace there where
you could go and be protected from him."

"What sort of place?"

"I don't know, I need to find out, just please don't go home."

"Do you... if I can get my mother to come will you take her too?"

"Of course."

"Then I need to go home, I need to talk to her. Tuesday we'll go.
Daddy always has meetings on Tuesday and he doesn't get home
until late. You find someplace for us to go and let me know about
it in school, okay?"

"God, Patience, Tuesday's four days away, he could hurt you,
you'll be around him all that time."

"I know, but I have to try and help Mom. I'll be careful, I
promise." She started to get dressed.

"I don't like it," he stated.

She bent down and kissed him. "I know, but it will work out,
you'll see."

He tried to change her mind as they rode back to the farm, but
she wouldn't budge. He picked up his truck and drove her home,
stopping a block from her house so her mom wouldn't see him
dropping her off. She kissed him softly. They whispered, "I love
you," to each other, then she got out of the truck and Mike left.

------

That afternoon the lead auditor presented his findings to the
board of directors. The pattern was obvious to everyone in the
room. All but one of the farm loans renewed at the bank had been
done at substantially higher interest rates. Interviews conducted
with the farmers who had renewed told the same story. They didn't
have a choice. Bill Garvin had threatened foreclosure unless they
renewed at the rate he specified. Legal counsel informed the
directors his actions exposed the bank to lawsuits from the
borrowers. The board voted to demand Bill Garvin's resignation.
They called in their vice-president, Victor King, and told him
their decision. Victor said he was going to Thomasville for
meetings on Tuesday and would demand the resignation then. The
board agreed doing it that way made sense.



Chapter 6

Mike drove home after dropping Patience off. His father stood at
the door of the shed, waiting for him. "Well?" he asked.

"I need to talk to Mom, too. Let's go in the house." They found
Martha in the kitchen. "I love her... my friend Patience... she's
a wonderful girl," Mike blurted out. "I don't know how to tell
you this, but here goes." He took a deep breath. "Her father is
abusing her physically and... sexually. He abuses her mother,
too. They're in real danger every day. I've gotta do something."

"Jesus," Jim and Martha gasped together.

"Son, why'd you take her home, you should have kept her here,"
Jim said.

"I know, I tried to get her to stay, but she wanted to go home to
talk to her mother. I told her I'd take them to Madison to get
them away from him."

"Mike, you saw Garvin when he was mad, I don't think it's wise
for you to get in the middle of this," Jim said.

"They should have a shelter for abused women in Madison," Martha
said. "That's where they need to go. I can find out, I'll look it
up in the library tomorrow."

"Thanks, Mom. I'm taking them away on Tuesday."  He looked at his
Dad, Jim was shaking his head no.

"Good God, son! Why Tuesday? They need to get out now! I agree
with your Dad, you shouldn't be in the middle of this."

"Patience says he has meetings all day Tuesday. She feels they'll
be safe enough until then as long as they act normal. Since he'll
be away all day, I'll never see him, nothing will happen to me. I
really need to do this for her, by myself, please?"

"It makes sense," Jim said. "I don't like them being around him
any longer than absolutely necessary, but if he's tied up in
meetings, he won't know anything is up until you're long gone."

His parents grudgingly gave permission for him to take Patience
and Karen to Madison on his own.

The next day Martha went to the library. She found a shelter in
Madison that took care of abused women and copied the information
for Mike. She gave it to him, saying "Make sure you get them
settled good, and then get yourself back here."

------

Patience waited until she heard her father drive off. She found
her mother in the kitchen, sitting at the table with a drink in
her hand. God, she's gone downhill fast, Patience thought. "Mom,
I need to talk about something important." Karen looked up at her
daughter. "Mike Sanders is going to take me someplace in Madison
where I'll be safe from Daddy. Mom, he said he'd take you too, if
you want to come. Please come, Mom! Daddy's going to kill you if
you stay!"

Tears welled in Karen's eyes. She knew her daughter was right.
Bill was getting more violent and it was only a matter of time
before he killed her. She nodded her head.

Patience hugged her mother tightly. "Oh, thank you," she said
joyfully. "We're going to get away from him, he won't ever be
able to hurt us again. I told Mike we'd leave on Tuesday. We'll
have time to pack and get to Madison before Daddy even knows
we're gone."

"Tuesday," Karen thought, "all we need to do is hold on until
Tuesday." She sat the drink on the table and pushed it away from
her. "Thank you, baby," she whispered and hugged her daughter
back. "I love you." Patience gasped and hugged her mother harder.

During the next few days, Karen cut back her drinking. She
couldn't stop totally - she got the shakes when she tried - but
she managed to limit herself to only a few glasses of vodka each
day. Bill noticed the improvement and felt he had finally found a
way to solve the problem. There was nothing like a good beating
to bring a woman in line. He had little to be angry about at
home, and the weekend passed peacefully.

Patience told Mike the good news in homeroom on Monday. At lunch
he told her about the women's shelter. They ate quickly then took
a walk outside. The Indian summer days had passed and the weather
was turning colder. They walked around the corner of the school
to get away from prying eyes. She pressed herself tightly against
him and they kissed, softly at first then with increased passion.
"I love you," Mike told her. It was still thrilling to hear the
words, and to say them. "I love you, too," she replied.

Mike held her against him and shielded her from the cold. "I want
to leave as soon as we can tomorrow."

"Daddy leaves for the bank a little after eight, then Mom and I
need to pack our stuff. Is eleven alright?"

"You can't be ready any sooner?"

"Not and pack our stuff. Don't worry, Daddy will be in meetings
all day, we'll be out in plenty of time." The bell rang and they
hurried back into the school.

------

Tuesday morning started like any other day. Bill awoke at the
sound of the alarm and shuffled into the bathroom for his morning
ritual. Karen shut the alarm off and made his breakfast, setting
it before him when he came in the kitchen. He read the paper
while he ate, skipped the usual caustic comments, then left for
work. Karen sighed, relief washed over her. Patience was already
up and showering. Karen tapped on the bathroom door, yelled a
cheerful, "Mornin', Baby," and went to the attic to get their
suitcases. She dropped one off in Patience's room, carried the
other to her bedroom, and began to pack. It was going to be a
beautiful day.

------

Bill saw the bottle of Wild Turkey in the back of the car and
remembered he needed to refill his flask at lunchtime. He hoped
he would have time to do it then, the flask was almost empty. He
drove to the bank in what was a pleasant mood for him, and
thought about the things he wanted to discuss at today's meeting.
Victor King was already there, waiting for him. Something was
up, he knew it, Victor usually didn't arrive until well after
nine-thirty, yet here he stood, waiting for him at eight-thirty.

"Hello Victor, you're early."

"I made good time on the drive down. I hope you don't mind, but
this way we can get an early start."

Bill unlocked the door, and let Victor inside. "No I don't mind,
maybe we can take a long lunch."

"We'll see."

"Let me get some stuff off my desk and I'll join you in the
conference room."

"Okay."

Bill walked to his office. He slid open the drawer of his desk
and took out the flask, taking a quick nip before replacing it.
He gathered some papers and a few files and carried them to the
conference room. He sat down across from Victor. "So what do you
want to talk about first?"

Victor had thought about this moment the entire three-hour ride
to Thomasville, and hadn't come up with a gentle way to break the
news. How do you tell a man he's been fired without just saying
it?

"Bill, the board of directors has gotten some disturbing reports
about your bank. They have requested that you resign."

"What?" Bill shouted.

"The board has requested you resign," he repeated. He took a
letter from his briefcase and handed it to Bill.

Bill glanced at the letter. He saw the word resignation and it
was signed by the Chairman. "You, you can't do this to me," he
shouted. "On what grounds?"

"The audit of your loans uncovered that almost all of them have
been renewed at rates higher than is customary for these types of
loans. The auditors interviewed the borrowers and to a man they
reported that you threatened them with foreclosure if they didn't
renew at the inflated rate."

"But they were all late, the increased rate was perfectly
justified."

"On the face, yes it was, but these are farm loans, and the bank
has never forced penalty rates on farmers who are late with a
payment now and then. If that were it, you probably would have
gotten off with a reprimand, but there was more. The one loan
that should have been foreclosed on you let be, you haven't even
attempted collection. Dave Handelman hasn't made a payment on his
loan for months. When the auditors asked around about him they
were told the two of you were drinking buddies. What you've done
is open the bank up to all kinds of lawsuits from the borrowers.
For that, they've requested your resignation."

Bill was livid, "I won't do it. I demand to meet with the board."

"I was told to tell you if you didn't tender your resignation
immediately, you would be fired for cause. There would be no
severance pay, no continuation of benefits, and any reference
provided by the bank would specify the reason for your
termination. Be smart, resign." He took another paper out of his
briefcase and pushed it over to him.

Bill snatched up the paper and read it. The bastards had even
typed up his resignation for him. "You fuckers have been looking
for an excuse to get rid of me. You don't think I know that? You
waived this job under my nose, told me what a great opportunity
it was, all the time you were just waiting for a chance to screw
me." He grabbed his pen, scribbled his signature, and tossed the
paper to Victor. "You tell the goddamn board that if they were
worried about borrower lawsuits the one I'm going to bring
against them will make those look like peanuts. The whole bank
conspired against me, and it will come out in the trial."

"You need to clean out your desk."

"Don't you tell me what to do, you fucking toady! I'll clean it
out when I'm good and ready. You tell those pansies on the board
that I was cleaning up the mess Steve Walker stuck me with. The
only thing I ever did for this goddamn bank is make money. I was
completely within my rights as loan officer to call those loans.
Fifteen years, for fifteen fucking years, I've worked for this
bank, and this is the way you treat me. I'm going to have the
fucking chairman's head on a platter after I'm done, you just
watch." He slammed his fist to the table and stormed out.

He got some boxes from the file room, returned to his office, and
started packing. Fifteen fucking years. He had worked his way up
from teller, to junior officer, to loan officer. Fifteen years of
kissing ass, for what? Goddamn them! In the bottom drawer he saw
the flask. He drank what little remained, then tossed the bottle
into the box and continued packing. By nine- thirty he was done
cleaning out his office and he marched back to the conference
room. Victor King was standing there looking uncomfortable. Bill
slammed the key ring on the table hard enough to leave a mark.
"Here's the goddamn keys," he shouted then stormed back out. He
put the box in the trunk of his car and drove off, squealing his
tires.

At first he drove around aimlessly, anger coursing through him
while he tried to come up with a plan of action. Then he spied
the bottle of Wild Turkey on the floor in the back seat. He drove
to the river and parked the car, taking long pulls at the bottle,
while he contemplated his life and what he was going to do now.
Goddamn them, his life was wasted, he knew that. The bank had
ruined him. He opened the glove compartment. The metal of the
Colt 45 gleamed at him in the morning sunshine. His hand reached
out and grasped it. He took another pull at the bottle to get his
courage up. Those motherfuckers had just thrown him away. He'd be
lucky to get a job as a janitor after the hatchet job they would
do on him. Well he'd show them. He glanced at the digital clock
on the dash, "10:35, as good a time as any," he said to himself.
He brought the gun up, pressed it to the side of his head. His
hand shook...

NO! Goddamn it, no! Why should he die first? The sonofabitchs
that did this are the ones that need to die! He remembered Dave
Handelman telling him that Jim Sanders had gotten the farmers at
the Grange up in arms over his renew-or-else policy. That's who
started this mess. He sat the gun on the passenger seat and
started the car. He'd start at the beginning, then he would kill
himself. He drove toward the Sanders farm, filling the car with
chilling laughter. Jim Sanders was about to have his loan
collected in a big way. That's it; he would start at the
beginning, and make every one of the bastards that ruined him
pay. Then the thought struck him and he whipped the wheel around.
The big Lincoln fishtailed through the U-turn and he sped back
toward town

He had to do this right. If he was to start at the beginning it
had to be Karen. His life had been shit ever since he married
her. The fucking cunt had to die first, then his whore of a
daughter.

------

Karen and Patience finished packing at ten-thirty. Karen was
pleased at Patience's happy, joyful mood. It was something she
hadn't seen in a long time. They talked about Madison and what it
would be like when they got there. Their suitcases waited in the
living room for when Mike would get there at eleven.

------

Mike stood beside the pickup truck, mentally going through a
checklist to make sure he hadn't forgotten anything. Martha came
outside with a basket. "Something for them to eat along the way,"
she said smiling. Her hand caressed his cheek. "I'm proud of you,
son."

"Thanks, Mom."

Jim came over from the shed. "You be careful, you hear? There's
no telling what that man is capable of."

"He won't even be there, he's in meetings at the bank."

"Still, be careful." He tousled Mike's hair. "You call us once
you get them settled."

Mike climbed into the truck. "I will," he said as he closed the
door. "See you tonight." He started the truck and drove down the
lane.

------

The women heard the car pull into the driveway. Patience squealed
with excitement. It was finally going to happen, she was going to
be free of the monster. Their mouths hung open, their eyes wide
in terror as Bill Garvin burst through the door.

He took it all in with a sweep of his eyes. Their bags were
packed and they were dressed to go out. Patty should have been in
school. They were leaving him, the bitches were leaving him! "Bad
news travels fass, I see," he slurred, waiving the gun at them.
"Sit down," he ordered. The women sat quickly. He walked over to
Karen and backhanded her across the face as hard as he could.
"Yer gonna leave me!" he thundered. "You fucking cunt, after all
the things I've given you, yer gonna leave me! I don't think so!"
He brought the gun up and leveled it at her head.

Mike had just turned onto the street where the Garvins lived. He
saw the Lincoln sitting in the driveway. "Oh, God, no," he
moaned. His foot jammed the accelerator to the floor, then he
slammed on the brakes as he stopped in front of the house. He
jumped out of the truck and heard ear-splitting voices.

"Daddy, no!" Patience screamed. Bill wheeled around, "Shut up,
you stupid bitch!"

"Patience, run," Karen shrieked as she jumped at Bill. He wheeled
back around, pulled the trigger. The barrel of the gun was inches
from Karen's forehead when it went off. She slumped to the floor
surrounded by splattered blood and tissue. Patience jumped out of
the chair and ran toward the door. Bill saw her and before
another thought came into his head he pointed the gun and shot.
The bullet slammed into her back, sending her crashing against
the wall. Take that, bitch, he thought. He laughed and brought
the gun to his mouth. He opened his lips and pulled the trigger.
It was all over in less than a minute.

Mike was running for the door when he heard the first shot,
followed almost immediately by the second. "Oh my God," he
moaned. He burst though the door, no heed to the danger, when the
last shot went off. He saw Bill Garvin's head explode and looked
to the floor where he saw Patience lying in a pool of blood. He
dropped to his knees beside her, wrapped his arms around her.
"Patience, oh God, Patience," he moaned. Her eyelids fluttered
open. Her pale blue eyes looked up at him, they were almost
cloudy. She smiled a small sad half smile. "I love you," she
gasped. Her hand squeezed his wrist softly and went limp.

------

Epilogue

He had dialed 911 immediately. The ambulance crew got there
quickly but it didn't matter. They were all dead. He held
Patience until the last minute, then the crew pushed him away
while they tried to save her life. The bullet that ripped through
her back had taken a piece of her heart. She didn't have a
chance.

The sheriff asked him questions and he answered to the best of
his ability, his voice a dull monotone, devoid of emotion. His
parents arrived and took him home. He went to his room, wanting
to cry but the tears wouldn't come.

He went to the funeral and stood by her grave as they buried her,
buried his love. Still the tears wouldn't come. He went home and
changed his clothes. He grabbed the tack from the shed and
whistled for Patrick.

He saddled the horse and rode him down the path to the river.
When they got to the open stretch he clicked his teeth and
Patrick took off in a gallop. He clicked again, and they were
flat out. He tried to ride away from the pain, the ache in his
gut that was tearing him apart. They approached the bend where he
first saw her and he eased into a canter. They rounded the turn,
and the path was empty. The tears came then, great racking sobs,
as he mourned the loss of his love.

------

"If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not
love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have
the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all
knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but
have not love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor
and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain
nothing.

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not
boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking,
it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does
not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always
protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love
never fails."

1 Corinthians 13

.... But sometimes love isn't enough.

--
Jack of all Trades

E-mail:  jackofalltrades@post.com

My stories can be found at:
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/j/wwwoat
or
http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Jack_of_all_Trades/

-- 
Pursuant to the Berne Convention, this work is copyright with all rights
reserved by its author unless explicitly indicated.
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