Would You Take My Son

The following is a work of fiction. It is not based on any real events or people. Please, consider donating to Nifty, to keep erotic literature free http://donate.nifty.org/donate.html.

This story is about the day to day activities of two adults and two children that form a family. It includes bisexual, cross generational, and young friends sexual exploits. If it were published as a paperback, it would have around 500 pages. If you are just entering this story, you may want to start at chapter 1: www.nifty.org/nifty/bisexual/adult-youth/would-you-take-my-son/would-you-take-my-son-1.html

The number of characters has grown, so I've added a link to the Cast of Characters.

This story is written and copyrighted by The_Curmudgeon@Yahoo.com

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Chapter 36, Epilogue

It's been ten years since Donny changed my life and a lot has happened in those years. It's 1992 now and is time to bring everything up to date.

Aaron McKinney

I'm still working full time at Million Dollar Homes, well, full time for me now is about 25 hours a week.

Jenifer McKinney

She became an interior decorator in her own right. She started her own company Million Dollar Homes Interior Design. She still enjoys using Fredo to bounce ideas off, but she really no longer needs him. She does more work for individual home owners than she does for Million Dollar Homes. She has regular clients that are constantly redecorating by engaging her services.

Aaron & Jenifer McKinney

We decided that at 35 and 33 we weren't that old. So in 1984, we had a baby together. The day Jenifer and the baby came home from the hospital, I got Jenifer pregnant again, and now we have two beautiful children, Michael Aaron and Ashley Jenifer. Sean is like their big brother.

Donald McKinney

A little past his 14th birthday, Donny started growing. Within 6 months he went from 4'-6 to 5'-7 and added 60 pounds evenly across his frame. His boy part added another 1" in length but nothing in diameter, so our dicks are no longer twins. When he got his driver's license it said he was 6', and 155 pounds.

Oxford Hall Academy determined Donald was ready to graduate with honors when he was about 16 ½, he skipped the equivalent of two years of traditional high school. He could go to any college anywhere in the world tuition free. He chose Stanford because it was in California and while not the highest rated, it was still one of the very best. He started in the fall of 1985. He did his undergraduate degree program in 3 years, and 4 years in medical school, he's now in his residency program, and he's specializing in Urology, Gynecology, and Internal Medicine. When he completes residency he is going to open his own medical group, McKinney Medical Center, with several doctors.

Karen McKinney

She graduated from high school in June 1986, and started at Stanford that fall in the school of nursing, a year in, she changed her career path. She completed her undergraduate degree program in the normal 4 years, and is currently in medical school, and is pursuing a medical degree in Pediatrics. She intends to be the Pediatrician at the McKinney Medical Center.

Donny and Karen

They were apart for a year while Karen finished high school after Donny had moved on to Stanford. They figured out that the love they felt for each other wasn't a brother/sister kind of love. When Karen left for Stanford we bought them a house in Portola Valley, CA. and she and Donny moved in together. It is a short commute to Stanford Hospital and Stanford University where Karen attends. When Donny completed his undergraduate studies in 1988, they married at Natural Arches. Similar attire at the wedding, but this time it was a more formal affair. We had giant tents erected and seating for all the guests. Michael and Ashley were ring bearer and flower girl. I got to walk Karen down the aisle and give the bride away, Pastor Jim presided, and Elliott was the photographer.

Michael Aaron and Ashley Jenifer McKinney

Like Sean, once they were out of diapers, they never wore clothing around the house. We held Mikey back a year so they could go through school together. Most people think they are twins. When they were 5 and 4 we moved them out of our room into Donny's old room.

In preparation for Kindergarten, we tried to train them to wear clothing the whole time they were in school. Apparently we didn't do a very good job and their teachers complained to us that it was challenging to keep them in their clothes all day. We made a deal with them that if we got word from a teacher that they took their clothes off at school, they would have to keep their clothes on that whole evening at home. A couple of times doing that put an end to nudity at inappropriate times. They are 8 and 7 now. They share Donny's old room although frequently one or the other or both will sneak down to Sean's apartment and sleep with him or he will come up to their room and sleep with them.

Debbie & Sean Baylor

Debbie is still indispensable, Sean is in high school. His first day of class, we dropped him off right in front of the school making him walk the gauntlet. He proudly stepped out of our 1924 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost Pall Mall Touring Car to oohs and aahs. After Karen graduated from high school and moved to Portola Valley, Debbie moved up into Karen's bedroom and Sean the adjacent guest room. We kept Donny's room as a guest room so we could share the magnificent views with our visitors. Sean only stayed in the driveway-facing room a week, he moved back to the apartment. He preferred the ocean view and the sound of the surf.

Steve, Susan, Tom & Tim

Steve continues to run the day-to-day operations of Million Dollar Homes, Inc. He visits every construction site nearly every day, but has been able to cut his hours back to around 30 a week. After graduating trade school, Tom and Tim have joined the company they are currently crew members, but will one day, become leads.

The Washington Clan

We don't see them in town that often but we see them regularly at Natural Arches. Martha enjoys Sean, Michael, and Ashley as much as she enjoyed Donny.

Million Dollar Homes

We completed the Dana Point project. I again hired the aerial photographer to fly by again and take an `after' panorama picture. Donny heard me making the arrangements and rode his bike to the property and stood in the middle of the beach as the photographer flew by. That photo now hangs on my office wall below the `Before' picture and if you look carefully, you can see Donny, standing there naked, waving at the plane. Steve and I split a profit of around $14 million. I'm still the Business Manager and Steve is still the Operations Manager. We've done many other homes all over Orange and San Diego Counties. We've never laid-off an employee for lack of work. We have several projects in process and many lined up for the near future. We closed the $5 million investment account returning that money to me and Jenifer. MDH didn't need it, their account was well funded by profits.

The Seaside Land Deal

Frank and Ruth donated the million dollars to CHOC. The wing on the hospital was built. They lived in their house on Seaside till 1985 then moved to a retirement community in Arkansas in a lake-front property to live out their years. Steve had MDH built the home of his dreams on the cliff above the secret cove. MDH did a land swap deal, his old house for the new one, and they moved into it in 1986. MDH sold his old house. There was a significant financial loss on that land swap, but we didn't care. He's considering adding a stairway from his lower patio to the beach.

MDH also took ownership of Frank and Ruth's house. But with the close proximity to both of our homes, we didn't put it on the market, we found a buyer that we both knew and liked. We sold it to Jimmy Patterson, now MDH's lawyer. We gave him a small discount in exchange for free legal services as long as he was in business. He earned a real estate license and acts as our agent. He's joined the board of the Laguna Niguel YMCA and is trying to get me to begin volunteering again.

We use the Seaside land as fill-in work between large projects to keep our crews busy. After 10 years there are still empty lots.

The Doc Parker Collection

The museum finally decided which pieces to sell and I withdrew 9 pieces from that list. One each for Karen and Donny because it was breakfast with them that we found the house, and five for my office bookshelves and one each for Felicia and Felix. The museum made lighted display boxes to protect each one for us. They did sell all the Aztec pieces to a museum in Mexico City. A few pieces were sold discretely to individuals known to the museum as friends of the Asian art community who were willing to double the estimate to have first shot.

One of the two very similar soup tureens was sold at public auction through Christie's. Its presale estimate was 3.5 million and it sold for $5.73 million to an obviously wealthy, Chinese businessman in Beijing. When that money came in physical work on the collection room began.

They let other pieces trickle out through Christies Auction House, one or two at a time to not oversaturate the market. They hit their fundraising goal well before they exhausted the planned sale items. They asked for my permission to sell the rest of the planned sale items and use the funds for general support of the museum. My family would be listed on the wall of honor as benefactors of the museum. In all, the sale items raised $27 million more than twice the estimated value. My understanding is that the same wealthy Chinese businessman purchased almost all of the pieces offered.

In 1986 the museum held a $1,000 per plate dinner celebrating the grand opening of the collection. I provided Felicia and Felix airfare, accommodations and transportation to attend the opening. They were confused as to why they were being invited, but I promised that all would be revealed if they would just attend. Donny flew home from college for the opening.

We arrived at the museum in style. I drove the Rolls with Felicia, Felix, Karen and Donny. Jenifer followed behind in the Chevrolet Bel Air with Debbie and Sean. As we pulled in, it seemed to me that there was a lot of security for a museum. We parked the cars near the entrance and proceeded to the banquet hall. I knew what the entrance to the room looked like, but instead there was a floor to ceiling banner hiding the entrance that read `The Treasures of the Orient'.

A couple hundred guests arrived including the governor of California, the Mayors of several prominent cities and dinner was served. There were several speeches scheduled. I lead off, giving away the reason Felicia and Felix were there as I told the story of how the collection was discovered and saved from the wrecking ball. I embarrassed them telling how as children they used to play catch in the living room with priceless works of art. When the speeches were over the banner was pulled aside revealing "The Doc Parker Collection: In Lieu Of Payment" above a closed set of double hand-carved wooden Chinese doors which I found in the garage rafters. David Chang threw the doors open declaring the Doc Parker Collection was open. Felicia and Felix were the first to enter followed by my family and the museum staff. Behind us an older Chinese man and his aide were allowed in. The security team then blocked the entrance, but stayed in the hall. I figured he must be someone important. He appeared to me to be watching Donny almost as much as he looked at the collection. Just inside the door were a bronze bust of Doc Parker and the whole story of his service to the immigrant community's medical needs and how he accepted chickens, eggs, pigs and trinkets as payment for those services. There was even a photo of Doc, Felicia and Felix waving from the Rolls Royce during a parade. Near the center of the room, our guide whispered in my ear that one of the richest men in the world and the reason for all the security wanted to meet us.

I was introduced to the older man. His name was Mr. Chen, and only described as a Chinese businessman, who had an interest in the collection. He did not speak or understand English, but he managed to say words he had practiced: "Thank you for saving this collection." I told him that he honored me by attending the opening. His interrupter translated and he smiled and shook my hand. I introduced my family, he shook then held Donny's hand for a long time. I asked if he had a daughter who attended UCLA 17 years ago. When his translator stopped speaking, a big grin came to his lips and a sparkle to his eye. His reply through the translator was, "No that woman was not my granddaughter, my granddaughter lives with me in China." He had corrected me, not his daughter, his granddaughter. I thought that was most interesting. I do believe that Donny just met his great grandfather.

When we arrived back at our table there were two large wrapped boxes waiting for Felicia and Felix, inside each was a piece of the collection in a display box prepared by the museum, accompanied by a booklet explaining the significance of the item, where, and when the piece originated. The museum also prepared the pieces for shipment after the dinner. I told them that their pieces were each estimated to be worth $500,000, but that I was hoping they would hold on to them as a part of their family's legacy, and to remove the incentive to sell these vases, I gave them each a check from the museum for $1 million.

When we got home from the opening that night, we found an envelope on the floor, just inside the front door. In block letters on the front was printed Donald James McKinney.

I handed it to Donny and he opened it. He looked at it a moment and handed it to me. "What's this?" It looked like a bank account statement. It was from a bank in the Cayman Islands. The account holder was Donald James McKinney and the balance was $20,000,000.00.

There was a post-it attached to the back with the same block lettering: Password: This will help you set up your practice.

This had the fingerprints of his great grandfather all over it.

I checked the tapes of our upgraded security system. The envelope had been delivered about the same time we were talking with Mr. Chen in the exhibit room by someone dressed head to foot in black. He never faced a camera.

Alex Turner (kid who trashed the Hang-Out)

Alex graduated from the trade school and Million Dollar homes hired him. I got my $700 back, he gave me $100 cash every week from his first 7 paychecks. He worked both the plumbing crew and the HVAC crew. When the lead of the plumbing crew opened, it was offered to him and he's been the lead for 3 years. He's an excellent lead and instructor.

Donny's mother

We never did hear from her again after she left the United States giving me Donny.

MDH Advanced Technologies

Mike and Julian are still a couple and are still located on Pacific Coast Highway. A year after they opened I helped them purchase the entire building and they expanded in to the other two store fronts. One is the computer center, one the security equipment and the original section is still the high end entertainment systems. They combined two of the upstairs apartments into one large one. They now have a little boy and are in the process of adopting another child. They don't know if it will be a boy or a girl. When I stepped away completely from helping the boys, I signed over all but 20% ownership. When they expanded they modified the tag line of the business to: Leading Edge Security, Computers and Entertainment Systems. The checks from my 20% ownership are still rolling in.

1924 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost Pall Mall Touring Car

Still runs and I drive it every year in the Dana Point 4th of July parade and show it and my 1956 Chevrolet Bel Air in the Dana Point Concours d'Elegance.

 

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