Date: Mon, 8 May 2017 16:28:47 -0400 From: Orson Cadell Subject: Off the Magic Carpet 10 Please see original story (www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/military/off-the-magic-carpet/) for warnings and copyright. Highlights: All fiction. All rights reserved. Includes sex between young-adult and adult men. Go away if any of that is against your local rules. Practice safer sex than my characters. Write if you like, but flamers end up in the nasty bits of future stories. Donate to Nifty **TODAY** at donate.nifty.org/donate.html to keep the cum coming. ***** Where we left Sgt Reilley: I considered for a while, looking at him. He was shorter than me, but not by much, and a lot stockier. He had the build of a sailor with huge legs and forearms and big shoulders, but the main thing that had caught my eye since I got home (and, truth be told, before I ever left) was a luscious, meaty ass and (as I knew from watching the shower) plenty of fur and a cock like a fireplug. "Well, Gunnery Sergeant, I was just wondering if they still sold Propert's..." ***** Off the Magic Carpet 10: Goodbyes and Hellos By Bear Pup I was reaching toward Gunny and his eyes were blazing with shared lust when the dinner bell rang. Both of us scowled a little. I wasn't near time for the evening meal. But the bell kept ringing, signaling danger. Both of us ran full-tilt to the Big House. As I approached, I saw Stu bending over the chair where Beth had been sewing. I gathered her into my arms and Stu stepped back and whispered to Gunny. "Sergeant, Stu found her, slumped in the rocker. He couldn't wake her up." I shushed him with gesture. "Beth, baby, can you hear me? Are you there? Oh, God, baby, please say something!" Her eyelids fluttered for a minute and she opened pain- and sleep-filled eyes. "Sam, I am so, so sorry. Sam, it wasn't supposed to {gasp}... be like this. Please Sam, PLEASE--!" and she slumped again. I lifted and she weighed no more than a child. I ran, Gunny beside me, to the jalopy. He leapt into the driver's seat and I cradled my wife's form in my lap on the passenger side. Gunny threw the truck into gear almost before we were settled. He sped toward Cedar Vale with its small hospital, our only hope. Twenty minutes later, Gunny pulled to the Emergency Room entrance, trailing no less than three sheriff's cars. I ran in while Gunny handled to the cops; there would be no trouble. They put Beth on a rolling bed and whisked her away and a pair of very large nurses (Brunhild and Hervor by attitude of not by name) prevented me from following. It would be easy to think, from the tone of this narrative, that I would be relived or even happy to lose the woman who might interfere with my man-on-man sexual desires. Nothing could be further from the truth. Beth was my first and only real love. I fell hard for her, and that feeling never left me. I had known since my return that I would lose her, and soon, but knowing something and having it happen are two very different things. Milt arrived an hour later. Apparently, Gunny had called him even as they were first examining my wife. I'd been staring a hole through the door to the hidden areas of the hospital into which Beth had vanished. He tapped me on the shoulder and I jumped, surprised. I turned and literally collapsed into Milt's strong arms. He dragged me over to a set of chairs as I bawled like a child. Mrs Milt was there as well. When I quieted, she forced a steel mug of thick black coffee-sludge into my hand and made me drink it. I sat up and started to apologize to Milt and his hand immediately covered my mouth. "Sam, we've had a year to grieve, son. She desperately wanted to keep it from you, and I'm glad she did. But we knew she was holding on just to touch you again, to kiss you home, to look at you. It is a brutal and unfair burden, Sam, but it's what she wanted more than anything. She l-l-l-loves you so much, Sam, as much as you love her." We were all three crying again at that and it took a long time to come back to the present. Gunny was gone, I never saw him leave, but Mrs Milt forced more of the now-lukewarm coffee into us. Eventually, a doctor came out, one who obviously knew Milt. He shook my father-in-law's hand and turned to me, "You must be Sgt Reilley?" We shook and he had us come back to his office and sat us down. I wanted to scream at him for news, but was mute with terror at what he might say if I asked. It was as if his silence made it possible that... "Sergeant, Mr and Mrs Schwartz already know this," it took a moment for me to recognize the name, as they'd always been Milt and Mrs Milt to me, "and of course your wife has known since the beginning. Beth has cancer and it had already spread before we understood what the problem was. That she has lasted this long is nothing short of a miracle. Sergeant, that miracle, well, that miracle was you. I am not betraying her confidence to tell you that she refused to allow the sickness to win until, her words, she saw you and your son together again." I started to bawl and he let me cry it out as Milt and Mrs Milt patted one shoulder apiece. "But there is only so much that willpower alone can do, son, and your wife will leave us shortly." The door banged open and JoJo was there, panting and fending off the two Valkyries that had defeated me earlier. It was readily apparent that they were utterly unused to being bested, and certainly not by a boy! It was equally obvious that JoJo would have given the entire heavenly host a run for their money if they came between him and this office. I lunged for him -- we lunged for each other; it was unclear who was trying to comfort whom -- and the doctor apparently used a special incantation to dispel the warrior-nurses. I went back to my chair and curled the adult-sized frame of my son onto my knee. "Are you sure you want me to..." I was shocked and proud of the way JoJo's scowl silenced the doctor instantly. He coughed and continued. "Alright, then. As I was saying, Beth will leave us soon. I've given her something for the pain, but there is no treatment gentlemen, Mrs Schwartz." My voice was a cracked and brutalized thing. "What is 'soon', doctor? How long do we have?" He looked surprised and glanced to Beth's parents, "Uh, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to be unclear. I thought you understood. She is going now, Sergeant, certainly before the day is through." I sat, stunned speechless. JoJo leant to my ear, "It's okay, Daddy. Mama and I knew this. She just w-w-wanted..." he sobbed once, "w-w-wanted us to be tog-t-t-together when she..." I looked to the doctor and he could see the rage building. "Sgt Reilly, I kept you here so the medication could take effect. B-- Your wife begged me to, son. She wanted to be peaceful when you came to s--" He probably said more. I wasn't there to hear. I was in the hall instantly with JoJo fiercely held beside me. Apparently, this turn of events was not completely unexpected. Brunhild was pointing down a side hall and, as I rounded the corner at speed, Hervor was holding open a door to a hospital room. Beth was there, an angel swathed in white clouds of sheets, smiling serenely. In an instant, I was kneeling, clutching her hand in mine and weeping inconsolably onto her arm. Her other hand petted and soothed me. "Shh, Sam. Hush, darling." I looked up to see JoJo standing over her, tears streaming but utterly composed. "Sam, dear, it's what has to happen. I got everything I wanted in this life, everything any woman could ever want. The love of the perfect man -- a brave, tender, loving hero --, the privilege of watching our precious baby boy become a strong and wonderful man, and now the joy of seeing you together again. "Sam, God granted every prayer I ever had." She reached over and took JoJo's hand while her other gripped my own. "Sam and Sammy, instead of mourning me, just grant my one last wish: Take care of each other for me, please? Because then I will be the happiest woman in Heaven. God has smiled, has, has..." Her eyes were locked to mine, piercing straight to my soul, as she sighed deeply and... was gone. JoJo turned and collapsed against the bed, still clutching her hand and weeping silently, shoulders wracked with his quiet sobs. I just started at her peaceful, smiling face. "Beth? Beth! No, Beth! BETH!" I woke slowly to a world of cloud and sunlight that resolved into voluminous white sheets and yellowish walls, apparently a different room from the one... the one... I woke slowly to a world of cloud and sunlight, desperately trying to prevent it from resolving into anything at all. If the room was real, so was... I felt a hand grab mine, "Daddy? Daddy, please wake up. I'm s-s-s-so worried." I was instantly awake and dragged JoJo onto the bed with me, wrapping him in a ferocious hug. "Oh, God, JoJo. Oh, Sammy. Oh, son, I'm so sorry." "For what?" "For, you know, for going away like that." I could feel him smile into my chest, "Well, the only reason I didn't faint is that you haven't taught me how, yet." I barked a laugh-sob and pulled him closer. Milt's deep voice floated over to us, "You gave us quite a scare, son. You okay?" I thought about it. "No, Milt, no. Not really." I let myself cry as I spoke, "I'll never be okay, but as long as I have J--Sammy, we'll be fine. I am so sorry, Milt; you lost a daughter today, too. It just... It just hurt so much and so quickly." Mrs Milt answers, "We know, child, we know. We've -- Beth and Milt and me -- we've been talking about it for months and got a lot of the crying and shock out of the way early. And Beth, well, don't worry yourself. Everything is arranged and taken care of, Sam. You... you and Sammy just give yourselves time to grieve, son. You deserve it and Beth, well, Beth said she needed us to help the two of you move on. She, sh-sh-she really l-l-loved you both so m-m--" my mother-in-law dissolved in a crying jag as her husband held her. Mrs Milt was right. Beth had planned everything to the nth detail. Every new revelation about the funeral plan was like an icy wound, reminding me not only of Beth herself, but the treasure that we'd lost. The funeral was at St Mary's in Moline, and the graveside service in the consecrated section of the Moline Cemetery. It was the only consecrated ground between the store in Howard and our ranch, and was about halfway between us and her parents. We were not the only family to face tragedy. The McClellan-Argus ranch, widely called the 501, shared in it as well. The house had caught fire two nights before, no one knows why. Jack McClellan, his wife Bobbi, all three daughters and one son died, as did the foreman and all four ranch-hands. Only the third son, Kent, survived; he'd been camping at their west fence-line that night. The boy, just turned 16, saw smoke in the morning and returned to find the ruins still burning. The chief of the VFD (Volunteer Fire Department) said it looked as if smoke had taken them all in their sleep before they even knew a fire existed. Kent, devastated and alone, was staying with Father Dawe while his brother was being shipped home from Guam. The young man, around 22 if I recalled correctly and named Glen or Glenn, was serving with what was about to become (if the news could be believed) a brand-new branch of the service. The Army Air Forces were going to be the United States Air Force sometime this year. He was expected within a week and the funeral would be held then. There were, sadly, few remains to inter, really. Sammy -- I could suddenly really think of him as such, for reasons I could not begin to fathom -- went from the graveside service with Father Dawe to try and comfort his overwhelmed friend, and I nearly burst with pride. My son was a man. The ranch was quiet in mourning. The hands had adored Beth and her suffering had hurt them all deeply. Stu seemed most effected, his usually-stoic face often wet with unprecedented tears. Baxter was gone off to the 501. Each of the surrounding ranches (except "Mister" Harrier, long called Heartless Harrier for his greed and voracious acquisition of land during the Depression) sent a hand to keep the 501 running. I nearly sickened with rage when I heard Harrier had the unmitigated gall to send a letter of "condolence" to Kent with (according to Sammy who read it after it turned his friend into a sobbing ball) a single line about the death of the boy's family and the rest of the page devoted to pressuring the kid to sell him the ranch. Tragedies famously comes in threes, and that week was no exception. A Townie family in Moline lost father and son to an accident and the distraught wife and two daughters had to be cared for by Father Dawes. We immediately took Kent into our home and added his mourning to our own. It was a not a happy place, the ranch, but it was overflowing with love and support from all of us, to all of us. Staff Sergeant Glen McClellan arrived by courier-car from Strother Field (an air base between Ark City and Winfield), an exhausted, rumpled heap of a man. He lunged to grab Kent into a hug that could have crushed the boy. Glen was a big guy bordering on huge with thick, powerful arms and a barrel chest. The AAF is not where you'd expect such an ox; he looked like he'd be more at home on a tank... or *as* a tank. But the insignia on his uniform made Gunny and I pause. He was a Flight Engineer as well as a Staff Sgt, meaning he had more brains than even his self-evident brawn. We left them to a private grief and sat on the porch, smoking in silence. Sammy was petting and comforting Kent's shaggy mutt known, adorably, as Flibbit. Kent had named him King as a pup, but Jack and Glen had always called him Flea-Bite. Eventually, it was the only name he answered to and it morphed to Flibbit. There was something almost spooky about the dog's intelligent, mismatched eyes, the bright one seeming to see a hidden world and the brown eye appraising the visible one. We heard some coughing and then murmuring, followed by footsteps and Kent and Glen came out. The big Staff Sergeant's face was soaked, eyes sunken in dark pits but still bright and alive. "Thank you, sir, for..." I cut him off. "Don't thank us, son. It's the least we could do. We are in mourning as well and Kent is more than welcome here." Glen nodded brusquely and sat heavily on the stoop. Kent followed and Flibbit was at his side immediately. Staring out at the summer heat, Glen said with a tight, husky voice, "Kent tells me that bast-- 'Mister' Harrier is already on about the ranch." "The word you didn't finish was more apt, son, and everyone here knows that." "Anyway, the problem is that the bastard is right. Even if I could come back, Kent and I can't run the 501 alone. Dad had trouble managing with two sons and five hands! But I swear to God, I'll raze every building to the ground and give the cattle to Chilocco [Chilocco Indian School] to feed the kids before I let that man have anything. But I just don't know how to keep the land from him." Gunny coughed and looked at me. My eyebrows went up in surprise but I nodded. Gunny said, "I have a thought about that, Staff Sergeant. If Sam is agreeable and you are, too, we share a quarter-mile of fence at our northeast and your southwest corners. We've got the room to add some hands and we could run both ranches from here." "The important thing, Glen," I added, "is that unlike that bastard, we don't want to take your ranch. We want you and Kent to keep it. We'll help you run it, and every penny of profit over the expenses will be yours. Kent can move in to the other boy's room next to Sammy." Sammy was staring at me and smiled softly; I could tell he was more than pleased at what I was offering his friend. Kent stared at me and Glen just sputtered, 'B-b-b-but WHY?" "I'd like to say Christian Charity and doing right but another member of the parish, and it really is a little bit about that. But truth told, I'd do a hell of a lot more just to spit in that wicked old bastard's eye. And Kent is a good kid; thinking of him in a school someplace would kill me, Glen." Kent started to leak tears as he snuggled closer to his older brother. Glen turned to look down as his brother, "Kent?" The boy, a miniature version of the massive man, looked up and locked eyes for the longest time, then nodded. Glen turned to me, then Sammy, then back to me. "Okay, I'm amenable and with a big load of thanks. But you're going to take money for Kent's staying here. No, don't argue. The kid eats like a starved wolf and school things cost real money. Consider it part of the 501 expenses." It was as we shook hands that the mountain of an airman crumpled and began to sob. I held him as I'd held any number of war buddies when news of loss and pain and tragedy came, knowing that soothing words would make it worse. A man like SSgt McClellan just needed someone to prop him up as the grief flowed out; after years of war, we both know that nothing, ever, would 'make it right'. So we buried eleven caskets, four of them empty except for effects as no trace of remains could be found, not far from Beth's final resting place. We said all the right words over the bodies and cried all the right tears and held the two surviving -- barely surviving -- sons, one a cub-like man-child and the other a bear of a man. In a strange way, I knew Beth was more than just at peace; she was pleased that we were doing this at least partly in her memory. Gunny and I left the next day, first to Ark City and Winfield, then Wichita and finally Newton. A long talk with Mr Voight yielded a half-dozen names, four of whom we found needed work. With the four that we found elsewhere, that gave us eight hands. We promised them a month's run after which we'd keep four, privately hoping to keep six. All but one were recently off the Magic Carpet like I'd been. The most interesting pair were oddities in many ways. First, Archie and Ollie were identical twins, but stranger still they had been assigned together to the USS North Carolina just before the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Two brothers, much less two twins, serving on the same ship was unheard-of. They joined on their 18th birthdays. One had been a Seaman and the other a Fireman. They were thin and rangy, but their arms and thighs (and ash-blonde hair) screamed 'sailor-boy'. They'd been demobilized when the NC was decommissioned in June. They were in Ark City looking for work when we found them, but they were from Rosalia originally, from a farm that no longer existed. In Winfield, we found Wayne Wright, a large Marine Corporal with broad shoulders and a booming voice. That and his (we found later) penchant for Biblical pronouncements had earned him the nickname Preacher. We also found Army Corporal Ray Smith. Luckily, since we already had a Ray, he'd gone by Smitty his entire life. He looked barely old enough to ride a bike! He was maybe 5' 7" in thick boots with unblemished skin and honest-to-God dimples that were often on display -- Smitty smiled as much as Wayne frowned. The four we tracked down thanks to Mr Voight started with Doug York, a painfully-shy Army Corporal from Sedan. We found him seeking work in Wichita even though he was born and raised less than a dozen miles from the ranch. Gunny and I wracked our brains but neither could remember him or his family. Next was Doug's polar opposite, a rowdy, rambunctious, randy teen who'd joined the effort just months before VJ Day -- Pvt Gordon Eueing had used an eraser to make '1928' look like '1926'. He'd not even been deployed when peace came but he was damned sure not going back to his family's Grouse Creek dirt-farm! He was down to his last dime when we recruited him. Two more guys rounded out the new troop, one of which we had extremely high hopes for. Army First Sergeant Slim Fawbush (real name Otis) had gotten his nickname out of meanness. He was and apparently always had been pudgy with a big, round, doughy and always-grinning face. He was, at a guess, close to Gunny's age. Had we used military discipline, he would have outranked everyone on the ranch! We were hoping he could become a second Gunny and help lead the group. Lastly was a Wichita native that I actually knew the name of before. He'd been a minor rodeo star before the war, a couple years younger than me. Since his last name was Nichols and he rode rodeo, it was inevitable his nickname would be Buffalo. He went by Buff. Rumor had it, all the way back then, that the only thing keeping him out of the national circuit were a pair of enormous balls that got in the way. But he could ride and rope with the best. We got back on a Friday before midday dinner. We rode up in the jalopy pulling a borrowed horse trailer (Buff and Doug had their own horses). Stu poked his head out, eyeing the eight new hands clambering out of the truck bed and just sighed. Luckily, dinner was something that didn't need a lot of pre-work. Steaks and creamed corn with fried potatoes. Another four slabs of beef onto the grill and a bit of stretching with the corn and potatoes and we were ready. Kent had settled himself well into the second boy's room and Glen had returned to Guam. I moved Gunny, against his protests, into what had been meant as the guest room. This gave him clear window-views of the bunkhouse, washhouse and New Barn, He grumbled but agreed it was right. The bunkhouse was meant for eight and we had eleven hands. Stu was also moved to the Big House, into what had been built as a housekeeper's room next to the kitchen. Since he slept there as often as the bunkhouse anyway, he didn't mind. We gave it a week for the men to settle in. The new hands quickly adapted. Some better than others. Archie and Ollie were next to useless individually, but put them together, especially herding, and it was like you got four guys for the price of two. They moved and acted as one mind with two bodies. Smitty soon proved himself the master mechanic, something we sorely needed as we planned to increase the mechanization of the ranch. It turned out that Doug and Smitty shared that same birthday in the same year, so they became instant friends, the painfully-shy Doug and the boyish Smitty made an odd and satisfying pair. Buff, as expected, was the cowboy's cowboy, quiet and efficient, always willing to lend a hand. He also had what we'd always called The Look. For some reasons, cows *wanted* to do what he told them. A stern look and a head-flick and half the time he never needed to use his rope. Eueing and Wayne, though, were oil and water. The kid was a pistol, always with a joke and with more energy than sense. Wayne was such a tightass we wondered how he shit. You could bet that if you saw Eueing haring off someplace, a ferocious scowl from Wayne would follow him. It came to a head, so to speak, not two weeks in. Supper long cleared, about half of us were smoking on the porch while Kent and Sammy tossed a baseball around. School would start in a couple weeks and they deserved a little summer fun. Suddenly a ruckus erupted from the Old Barn, full-out shouting (Wayne) and swearing (Eueing). We all stood speechless (Sammy getting a baseball in the crotch for his sudden inattention) as Wayne dragged a half-nekkid Eueing from the barn. The boy was frantically trying to get his pants closed, an effort hampered by the shaking he was getting from the older man. "Filth, Mister Reilley! FILTH! I caught this disgusting sinner abusing himself -- ABUSING HIMSELF -- in the barn. I demand that you dismiss this sickening creature immediately!" He went on in this vein for a couple minutes, complete with chapter and verse, Eueing mortified beyond belief and leaking shamed tears. I saw Gunny and Slim share a raised eyebrow and Gunny nodded. Slim spoke in his slow, kindly voice. "Wayne, first off, you'll be so kind as to unhand that boy." Wayne did more than let go, he shoved the teen away from him. "Now, lower your voice and without invective tell us what you saw." "I saw this--" A stern warning look and finger from Slim brought him up short. "I saw Eueing go into the Old Barn and went to see what he was up to. He had his pants open and was touching himself in a disgusting and ungodly way, SINNING right there for the world to see! And he's got a tiny little pecker, too, the pervert!" Wayne practically crowed in triumph as the teen tried to shrink into the hard-baked ground. Slim's voice never changed, still kindly and inquisitive. "Son, is that true?" Eueing nodded miserably, terrified to look up and see our faces. I glanced around and noted that the only looks he was getting were either brief flashes of pity or small smiles. Wayne, though, was getting everything from glares to scowls, not a hint of agreement on a single face. "Son, Gordon," I'd almost forgotten the kid's given name, "Look at me son." The boy's tear-stained face came up. As it cleared the brim of his hat you could see the humiliation and fear there. "Just talk to me son. Did Wayne find you in the barn?" "Y-y-y-yessir." "Did you ask him to come with you?" "N-no!" I noticed that Wayne's triumphant face was showing a crack of doubt. "All your chores done? All your kit put away proper?" A befuddled Eueing just nodded and stared. "Okay, son, just a few more questions. Were there any livestock involved? Did you ruin any tack? Anything like that?" "GOD NO!" the boy almost fainted. Slim turned to Wayne. "Did that boy invite you in to the very dark and private barn?" "No! I followed the monster, knowing that he was planning on some filthy sin!" "Okay then. Wayne, please be so kind as to gather your kit and meet me at the Jalopy in five minutes." Wayne started to splutter. "One more word outta you, Preacher, and you walk off this ranch. That young man was using his free time, in the presumed privacy of a darkened barn, to do what every man since Adam's sons had done. "He's done twice the work you have, mainly cuz you spend day in and day out trying to catch other folks out in something or preaching at them instead doing your own work. And you had the gall to creep up and spy on him? I'd'a thrown you out for that, but making a ruckus and humiliating this boy? You are a viper and no mistake. Now GIT!" Wayne, red with fury, spun to me, "You condone--!" "No, Wayne, I don't. I don't like what Slim said at all." I cut across him, cold and harsh with absolute menace in my low and level voice. "I'll bow to this man's expertise as a leader of men, but if it had been me, you'd be leaving with a bloody lip and my boot so far up your ass you wouldn't walk right for a month. If I hear ONE MORE WORD, or you're not off my land in 10 minutes, I'm shooting your worthless, heartless, priggish, snobbish, sanctimonious ASS as a trespasser. Now: Get. Off. My. Land." His mouth gawped soundlessly and he looked around. Doug and Smitty had nearly-identical looks of the deepest loathing and revulsion that anyone would do what Wayne had done to their young friend. Buff was openly fondling his ever-present rope with a keen eye at Wayne's neck. And those were the NICE looks. The twins looked for the world like they wanted to rip him to shreds and burn the pieces. Kent was literally hanging onto my son's belt and dragging backwards to keep him off the creep. The man spun and ran to the bunkhouse and was out minutes later. Slim told him to ride in the back, "I'm not sharing a cab with something like you. Get in back or walk." The horrified and stunned cowhand climbed into the bed and Slim sped off. I walked down and grabbed the shaking boy by the shoulder. "Walk with me, son." He did for a dozen paces until he started crying like a child half his age. "You sending me off, boss? I'm sorry, I'm real, real sorry!" "Shut up, son. Just hush. What that man did was unforgivable. What you did was as normal as rain, Gordon." He fell into me and sobbed for a minute. I smacked the side of his head. "Stop that! You're a man! Act like it. He didn't hurt ya; he didn't scar ya; he didn't maim ya. He embarrassed you, and in the worst possible way. But buck up, son. "Right now, there are fourteen men and boys on my ranch. If there's a one of them that hasn't yanked out a load in the last two weeks it cuz he's found somebody to do it for him! And, yeah, that includes me." He gaped at me in astonishment. "Now, here's what happens next, your choice. You can go around bawling like a kid and get no sympathy or respect from the other men, or you take a few minutes," we'd reached the door to the Old Barn, "in here where it started and pull yourself together. If you want bonus points with the guys, you'll finish what that bastard interrupted and come out with a post-jerk smile on your face." He stared at me slowly shaking his head in confusion. "Now, you're gonna get razzed by the guys for about a week cuz we're guys and you got busted and it's funny. Sorry, that's the truth. But if you act ashamed and childish, that's how they'll treat you. If you take it in stride, son, then you're not a boy but a stud, and man they can joke with and every guy wants to be around somebody like that. Now, you make your choice. I'm going back to my interrupted smoke." I walked back just as Slim pulled back into the yard. Apparently, he'd spotted a truck headed toward Sedan and negotiated a ride for 'the useless fuck in the back a the truck' and came right back. I was thanking him with a couple of back-slaps when I heard it. I might have mentioned that Eueing was loud, rambunctious and never one to pass up on a joke. From the barn erupted a bellow like an oversexed bull complete with the uhn-uhn-uhn rhythm beloved by every man past puberty, ending in a YEEE-OWW! that probably scared the livestock. A couple minutes later, Eueing swaggered back out, literally tipped his hat to the stunned Kent and Sammy, and got a full round of applause from the rest of us. I thought he'd burst with pride when Gunny laughed, "Come on, Bull, have a smoke. On me, stud." A dozen cowboys were rolling around in laughter a minute later as a very green Bull tried desperately not to puke his guts out after a long, ill-advised pull on one of Gunny's vile cheroots. Yeah, this was a crew we could work with. As I normally ask after posting a chapter 10, please let me know if you still like and are following this storyline: orson.cadell@gmail.com ***** If you want to get mail notifying you of new postings, e-mail me at orson.cadell@gmail.com Active storelines, all at www.nifty.org/nifty/gay... Canvas Hell: 23 chapters .../camping/canvas-hell/ Beaux Thibodaux: 15 chapters .../adult-youth/beaux-thibodaux/ The Heathens: 16 chapters .../historical/the-heathens/ Off the Magic Carpet: 10 chapters .../military/off-the-magic-carpet/ Lake Desolation: 8 chapters .../rural/lake-desolation/ Dear John Letter: 3 chapter .../military/dear-john-letter/ Brother Bear: 2 chapter .../incest/brother-bear/ Shark Reef: 2 chapters .../adult-youth/shark-reef/ Special collaboration with Brad Borris: In God's Love .../incest/in-gods-love/