Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2008 13:49:50 -0500 From: fireflywatcher_ford Subject: SHORT GRASS PRAIRIE, chapter ten - end The usual disclaimers apply. If youare under eighteen or sexual content is illegal where you live, read no further. I, theauthor, reserve all rights to this original fiction story. I am posting all my stories here: http://groups.google.com/group/Fireflywatchers-Stories Anyone can read or comment without joining. It is primarily storage for my writing. Please write with any comments or suggestion fireflyatcher@gmail.com I'd intended this to be a longer story, but after this point many characters would change. I'll let it rest for now and may continue it later. PLEASE DONATE TO NIFTY SHORT GRASS PRAIRIE Chapter Ten Adam tore into the barn and headed straight for the tack room. A steep stair led up to a trap door that opened into the loft. His guitar sat on the work bench where he'd left it the day before. He grabbed the guitar and ascended the steps to the higher level. He straightened the blanket that covered some bales of hay where he'd sat the previous day picking out some lonesome cowboy ballads he'd been writing. Adam felt sorry for himself. Nobody else would. He picked out the same tunes again. Through tear filled eyes his mournful cry of a broken heart echoed the words, sustaining the pitch with a vibrato from some distant musical style at the end of each line. Empty now but for a few bales because it was early summer and haying hadn't started, his song carried through the expanse of stone walls and timbered ceiling, adding to the strength of the emotions in his voice. A creaking from the trap door signaled that he had company, but he didn't look up from his guitar. When he finished the first song, he went into the second without pause, and then the third in turn. "Things didn't turn out like you wanted, did they son?" Jake asked him. "Life doesn't work that way. We make the best of what we get. Some times what we get is better than we expect and other times it's worse, it never is the same. That's for fairy tales. You damn sure got better on that guitar since I heard you last, I'll give you that." Jake wrapped an arm around Adam's shoulder and wiped the tears from his eyes with his other hand. Adam didn't say a word in reply. He started another ballad. When he finished that song, Adam asked, "Did you ever feel lonely in a crowded room, Jake? Everyone always thinks I'm confident because I'm cocky and pretty damn smart, and I know I ain't hard to look at. I never let anyone close enough to find out I'm not. The one time I let someone take my heart he crushes it in his hand." "You got to get beat up a few times to learn how to fight and you have to get your heart broke a few times to learn how to love," Jake answered. The trap door creaked again and first Chance, then Tom, climbed up through the opening. "Damn but don't you sound good. You been writing some new songs, Adam?" Chance asked. "Me and Tom listened for a bit down below the hay shuttle. You'll have to teach me a few of those songs." Adam slumped over his guitar. He didn't say a word. Tom got as far away as he could and sat on a bale. He rested his elbows on his knees and his chin in his hands, staring wide eyed up at the ceiling. Jake noticed that Tom scratched at his legs where the hay touched them. He was still in cut off denim shorts and barefoot. Jake wondered what Tom's reaction would be if his feet landed in a poorly placed cow patty, and he smiled. Adam strummed out another song and as it ended Jake and Chance left the two men alone in the loft. As Jake passed by Bill and David, he gave them a word of caution, saying, "Watch your mouths. If you mess with my boy again, you can spend your visit with the hens at Nate and Amy's. Being polite only goes so far." Adam and Tom didn't make it to supper that night. They missed the big spread the ladies put on the next day and didn't show up again for three more days. I was at the barn when they rode up. Tom was standing in his stirrups. He dismounted and went directly to the house, leaving Adam to put the horses away. "Where you been?" I asked. "We stayed at my mom and dad's old house. I've kept it up and go there sometimes when I want to be alone," Adam answered. "We got better acquainted and it was more comfortable without everyone around. I think Tom will need to rest up a day or two. I wore his ass out. I took him for a hell of a ride. This is big country. Everything out here is big. Once he gets that through his head, I'll get him broke in good and proper." "Just what will learning to be a cowboy do for a doctor?" I queried. I knew his words meant they'd ridden the surrounding countryside, but they held that double meaning as plain as day. "I'm a lawyer now, and it don't hurt me none to know how to cowboy," Adam responded. "There might be a spell of good health around here. He delivers babies when the woman has a problem the midwife can't handle. He does regular doctoring, too, but just delivers babies in the big city." "I guess it can't hurt," I commented. "Even without the midwives, I don't think we have enough babies born here to keep him busy. I take it he's not going back east, then?" "No, and I won't be going to school in Austin for now either. I'll keep working with Sam and help out here when there's nothing to do," Adam answered. "I hope Jake ain't too disappointed. I know he wanted me to get my law degree, even if I did pass the bar." "Jake would be happy if you decided to cowboy full time and hang the paper on the wall for decoration," I explained. "Some folks need their education to get by or make a decent living, but none of you kids need a damn thing. You've got land and cattle, and money set aside. If you went crazy spending money, you'd be broke pretty quick, but you can do as you like within reason. Your greatest possession is your common sense. Put it to good use." "Oh, I'm doing that right now," Adam insisted. "Our guests from up north will be going home in six weeks. If Tom decides he had fun for the summer but has to go home, I can still go to school in the fall. If he stays, well, I guess I got him all broke in, huh?" "That, or he's got you broke in," I answered. "You know, you can get a medical license by being an apprentice, too. It's harder that way and takes longer. I bet Tom, along with Nate and Amy, could teach you, though." "I never gave that a thought," Adam replied. "I wouldn't mind being a Comanche medicine man, shaking rattles and blowing smoke to chase the demon sickness away. It might be just as good as modern medicine. There wouldn't be much call for shaking rattles or blowing smoke, though. If Tom stays here when the rest go back to Boston, I'll think about it." Adam got the tack and saddles put away, reserving a saddle bag and a satchel to carry to the house. He brushed both horses down and got them in a stall where he put out rations for both animals and took off their bridles. Charlie and Henry came bounding into the barn with Mark close on their heels. Questions of "Where you been? What you been doing? Did you get hungry?" and more can at him too fast to answer. The three pestered him trying to find out more about Tom and how they were getting along, but Adam was tight lipped. Any sign of melancholy had disappeared. He seemed even more confident than his usual self. His disappointment in his first sexual experiences had been overcome as he adventured further with Tom. "I hope there's something to eat around here," Adam told us, "Beans and cornbread for a few days leaves you with a hollow spot inside. Some meat and potatoes would fill that up right quick." "I can fix you something," Henry volunteered. "Rich and Matt have been cooking a big pot of stew all morning and the stove is ready to go. Do you want some ham and eggs with fried potatoes?" "Sure, that would be great. If there's stew, can I have some of it?" Adam asked. "It's not ready yet," Mark replied. "There are pies and cakes Amy gave us the other day, though." "Come on. We'll fix you up," Charlie insisted, dragging Adam by the arm toward the house. Swift greeted Adam in passing. It was one of my favorite times of the year. The blackberries were getting ripe. I'd gathered some baskets and we were going picking down along the river bank. We had planted bushes near the orchard, but the wild berries had better flavor. Swift had a blanket, fishing poles, and a bait box, in his arms. "I think Old Jack can manage these things with no trouble," he remarked. "He needs to get out some. All he does is bray all day cooped up in the lot." Swift grabbed a pack frame, blanket, and bridle. Jack stood there without complaint as he got outfitted. If a mule could smile, he was smiling. I had our horses saddled and several baskets gathered up, but hadn't thought about fishing. My method of berry picking was the same I'd used as a kid; one for the basket, one for me. Swift always ate his fill first and got serious picking for the basket afterward. We rode North-West along the bank to an area thick with the brambles covered in ripening fruit. Mexican plums were ripening at the same time in a thicket up the bank from the berries. I spread the blanket in the shade of a big old pecan tree while Swift tethered the horses and relieved Jack of his pack frame. Jack sat back on his haunches and twitched his ears to chase the flies away, looking around contentedly. "Rich killed some chickens to go in the stew they're cooking and I brought the livers for catfish bait," Swift said. "There ain't a lot, but catfish are dumb. You can rub it on the hook and they'll bite just because it smells like liver." He cut off small pieces and baited the hooks anyway. Then he set the cane poles, pushing the handle into the dirt. He'd cut some forked branches to prop them against for support and set them in place, too. "We'll be lucky if the poles don't get dragged off while we're picking berries." Any other year, picking berries would be done one or two berries at a time and often leave thorns in your fingers. This year the production was so lush, you got handfuls and the berries stood high above the brambles. "I only brought four baskets," I told Swift. The stacked together with the lids inside and he wouldn't have known. "Hell, we'll fill those up in no time, "he answered. The held about two gallons each and true to his prediction, we had them full in half an hour. We filled two flour sacks with plums and settled back on the blanket watching the poles. The bank below us on this side of the river was a pebble beach, full of bead size stones. Some were jasper or agate. The other side had a deep cut bank and the brush had washed away in the last high flow. Our side was still lined with brush. The river bottom was about seventy feet wide and lined with large flat rocks except where a channel flowed near that far shore. It was like all the other shallow water crossings and we fished above the rocks in deep water that went from bank to bank. I'd stretched the blanket against a rise to give us something to lean against. A break in the brush let us watch the poles from there. Jack had wandered out on the flat rocks in the river bed. He might have been thirsty. There wasn't anything green near him. Jack sat there on his haunches looking around as if he was the guardian of the river. Jack would turn his head to look at us from time to time. I knew that if he couldn't see us, he'd start braying and trot back up the bank to look for us. Swift checked the lines and pulled one cat in, looping the stringer line through its lip. He added another small piece of liver to the treble hook and flipped out to the same spot. There was no bobber on the line. The weight carried the hook to the bottom and only a twitch of the pole signaled a bite. "I guess that one didn't have much fight in him," he observed. "Maybe he hadn't figured out he was hooked yet." He'd had the foresight to bring along a jug and after taking a sip, he passed it to me. I gulped down a sip and chased it with a drink of spring water from my canteen. "It's the heat," I replied. "They would lie on the bottom all day doing nothing if they didn't smell that liver. We always have better luck fishing at night in hot weather." I pulled my knees up and leaned forward to look the length of Swift's body. His belly was still as flat and rippled with muscle as it was when we met. His hair was all dark and cut short as he'd kept it for years. The only wrinkles on his face were at few lines at the corners of his eyes. My hair had a lot of white in it, but that was hidden by being mixed in with the blonde. I had more wrinkles. My forehead was creased in several lines and I had the eye wrinkles. White skin showed the time it spent in the sun more than the creamy brown Swift had. "To hell with fishing," Swift declared, "I see that frisky look you're giving me." He pushed his shorts off and tugged mine down my legs, too. We leaned into each other and kissed for a while. Swift had his arm around my waist and I curled a leg over his. We scooted down from our back rest against the bank and were prone on the blanket, now. I climbed on his chest, continuing to kiss him as we ground our crotches together. "You taste good today, white boy," Swift commented. "Use that term loosely, warrior. Boy hasn't been the right word to describe me for a long time." Both our tools were stiff. I snaked my hand between our bellies and held them together. It was a wonderful feeling, sliding up and down against Swift's prick. We stretched beyond the edges of the blanket as we twisted around. "I want to nurse on you a while," Swift told me. I turned and engulfed his as he swallowed me down. Our play wasn't hurried. I was tuned to his body and he was tuned to mine as only long practiced lovers can be. We hadn't come to the river prepared for making love. When I came, he held my jism in his mouth and sucked his own from my lips after he'd given it up to me. He used both loads to slick himself and my ass up. He lifted my legs over his shoulders and we joined. His pace was measured. He'd stayed hard. I took some time to reach my fullness again. I was on my knees then, pressing back into each of his thrusts. When I couldn't hold off any longer, Jack started raising hell. I ignored him. Swift found his release as I finished. "Damn!" I heard Adam say, "I made a mess all over myself watching you two go at it. That was a hell of a sight!" "You want to join in or are you just watching, today?" Swift asked him. "I shouldn't be horney," Adam confided, "I fucked Tom again after we ate. He wanted to nap, so I followed your trail down here. I think I'm turning into some kind of sex fiend." He shed his clothes and jumped on the blanket with us. We went a few rounds and Adam asked, "I'd like to know what it feels like to get fucked. Tom won't do it. Can you two take it easy on a beginner and show me the ropes?" I went first since I was a little smaller and Swift had cum last. Adam had a tin of teat cream with him and that made it easier. Pretty quick he was asking me to ride him harder, and I did. When Swift took my spot we gave it to him from both ends. He wasn't a beginner anymore. We had to take a swim and rinse off after that. Both poles had a cat on them when we checked the lines. I baited the hooks and Swift tossed out the lines. The three of us sat there on the blanket passing the jug for a long time. "I came looking for you both because the boys were pestering the shit out of me. I had to get away from the house," Adam revealed. "They wanted to know about me and Tom. I'm still figuring that out." "You got over your disappointment. I can tell," Swift commented. "I could have been a lot like Tom. I had chances if I wanted to play around. You guys set a better example for me. You found someone to love and stayed with them." Adam paused a moment, looked down, and continued, "He thinks liking guys is bad, that he's doing something dirty. I think it's just my nature. He tries to make up for his lack of self esteem by giving himself to all takers that come along. It's like getting one more fuck will make everything better. I showed him one man can give him more than he can handle. It's wearing me out, but if he changes his attitude, it's worth it." "You didn't act worn out a few minutes ago," I observed. "His needs slowed down and mine went up," He replied. "I had to put my mind in that place where you're being tickled until you're ready to piss your pants and hold it off with all your willpower. I may have turned into a sex fiend but I have some wasted time to make up for." We passed the jug and watched the poles for bites. We brought in more fish since we were paying attention. All the while we continued to talk. Adam said that whether he and Tom together worked out or not, he knew he wanted to do just as we had done and adopt children. He was convinced that raising a child right could change the world more than anything else he could do with his life. Adam was the first child from the ranch that chose to share his life with another man. Others may have played around or even preferred sex with men as he did. Adam was honest about it. Time would tell. All the children had a leg up on life. That was the best we could offer. (end- may continue at some point in a later time frame) DONATE TO NIFTY