Date: Sat, 31 Dec 2005 14:34:58 +0000
From: David Lee <dlee169@hotmail.com>
Subject: Tales from Bentonville, Ch. 19

Tales from Bentonville, Chapter 19
By David Lee

Warning:
This story contains scenes of love and sexual interaction.  Much of this
involves males with other males.  If the reading or possessing of such
material as this is illegal in your country, state, province, county,
municipality, etc., please leave this site immediately and do not proceed
further.  If you are under the legal age to read this, please do not do so.
It is not my intention to offend anyone or to get you in trouble.

The author retains all rights to this original story.  Please do not publish
without explicit authorization from me.

Disclaimer:
This story is completely fictional.  Most of the places mentioned, and none
of the characters exist in real life.  Some may possess physical or
personality characteristics of people I know or have known.  But if you see
yourself in this story, your imagination is better than mine!

"Tales from Bentonville" is a romantic story centering on the lives of high
school kids.  Lovers of other ages may appear, but not normally in a
cross-generational sense.  References to sex with under-age kids may be made
for the sake of the story line.  However, I feel that child molestation is a
crime and should not be glorified or tolerated.

This is my fifth attempt at writing fiction.  My other stories on Nifty
include: "Zeke" (August 29, 2005), "Always and Forever" (March 25, 2004)
under High School, "Brad and Alan's Canoe Trip" (April 23, 2004) under
Camping, and "Jacob and Jacques" (May 5, 2004) under High School.  Some
characters from previous stories may have cameo roles in this one.  However,
you need not read them first.


Our only reward for contributing to Nifty is your e-mails.  Please write if
you like the story.  Please include the name of the story in the title of
your e-mail.  I get a lot of spam!

Finally, thanks and hugs to Tim who edits for me so that there are fewer
typos!


dlee169@hotmail.com

Tales from Bentonville, Chapter 19

The in-service day on that Friday was eventful for other kids in Bentonville
too.  John Tracewell was off on a mission that he had kept secret from
everyone -- even his younger brother.  Dan would not approve of what he was
about to do.  While Dan was off at a basketball clinic, John was helping an
older guy that his dealer had hooked him up with.  The older guy had
promised John some good drugs in return for learning how to make meth.
Because of the cough medicine law that had been passed in Iowa, it was more
difficult to get supplies, but Nate Black was going to get a delivery in a
week or so from another state that hadn't enacted such legislation.  John
wasn't going to try meth because he had seen too many pictures of what it
did to people who were on it.  He didn't want to end up wizened up with no
teeth by the time he was 21.  But he was eager to have the marijuana he had
been promised.

The shed on the old farmstead was dirty and draughty, but it was a perfect
place for an illegal operation.  Since the weather was unseasonably warm,
the cracks in the wooden wall presented no problem that day.  The place was
pretty far from civilization and the road to it was not well maintained.

John spent part of the afternoon learning how to put the ingredients
together so that he could help when Nate got all of the supplies.  Nate
complimented him on being a fast learner.  At the end of the time, he gave
John a small bag of prime grass.  John rolled a joint to test its potency
before he left for Bentonville.  It was good shit!

--------------------------------

Dan was no Michael Jordon, but he was a fair basketball player.
Unfortunately his ribs were not healed enough for him to fully participate
in the sessions.  He had felt that he had to go because his parents had
already laid out the money, and he didn't want to have to explain about his
injury.  He did learn a lot by watching the other guys play and by seeing
the films and demonstrations.  He even practiced a few three-point shots
which he made with surprising ease despite the pain.

Best of all, participation in the clinic helped take his mind off of the
things he disliked about his life.  He felt guilty about harassing Jerry.
He knew that it was wrong to debase a kid who had never done anything to him
or his brother.  In a way he felt empathy with Jerry after the experience he
had had at the Adult Shop.  He hoped that John wouldn't want to go back
there anytime soon.  He didn't think that he could face that scene again.

--------------------------------

Jerry Sucksdorf was out running some errands.  He had been stuck in the
house most of the day because he had to watch his younger siblings.
Sometimes he wished that his mother didn't have to work because he felt
trapped by his babysitting responsibilities.  Yet, he loved his younger
brother and sister and the family benefited greatly from his mother's
income.

Since his father had come home early, he was able to take the moped out for
a spin with the excuse of going to the hardware store for some glue for a
project.  He was riding along near a large old Victorian house at the edge
of town when he felt the impact a split second before the blackness closed
in.

--------------------------------

Lottie Webber was enjoying the afternoon sun that streamed through the
windows of the "widow's watch" tower of her ancient home.  She loved that
room.  It was where she did her best artwork.  She had it equipped with a
"dorm fridge" and a microwave so that she didn't need to go downstairs at
all on some days if she didn't want to.

Some of the town's people thought that Miss Charlotte was eccentric.  Others
thought she might have some mystical powers.  If they had dwelt on the
subject, they might have pondered whether she would have been considered a
witch if she had lived in colonial Salem, Massachusetts.

Her daughter had fussed for years about her living all alone in the huge
house, but for Lottie the house was too much a part of her for her to
abandon it.  She had laughed, calling her offspring an old worry-wart.  Her
daughter WAS getting old; she was nearing 70.  That made Lottie smile when
she thought of it.  She didn't feel like she was 90.  The same young woman
who had spent her career as an emergency room nurse was still alive and well
somewhere deep inside.

The elevator she had had installed at great expense made it possible for her
to get around without too much difficulty.  She still had her mind and her
sight.  She could still drive her small car well enough to pass the road
test.  There was no need for her to be in some assisted living situation!

Besides spending her time on her art in this room, she was able to exercise
another hobby -- that of checking on everything that happened in the
neighborhood.  It wasn't that she gossiped about what she observed; it was
that she liked to know what was going on.  The position of the tower gave
her a commanding view for several blocks.  Aided by binoculars, she had
witnessed a number of interesting scenes.  She had even watched two boys
kissing behind some bushes where they thought they were safe from the eyes
of the world.  She had silently wished them well knowing that small towns
aren't usually as open to people who don't fit the "norm" like poor Robby.

Today, Lottie felt restless.  She couldn't settle down to work.  Something
was drawing her to look out of the window.  She had experienced those
feelings many times over the years.  Somehow there was always a reason for
them.  She had to obey the "call" as she thought of it.  She didn't usually
discuss this with anyone lest it add to the rumors about her.

It was a good thing that Lottie did respond to the feeling that day.  Soon
after she settled herself on the stool by the window, she saw an older black
sedan speeding by.  To her horror, it struck a red moped sending the bike
and its rider flying into the ditch.  Lottie's mind shifted into the nurse
mode.  Without any panic, she quickly wrote down the few letters of the
license plate that she had managed to see while the car was stopped - before
it sped away.  Next, she called the rescue squad number on her cordless
phone as she was descending in the elevator.  From the hall closet, she
grabbed the first-aid kit and made her way toward the boy in the ditch.

When she got to the ditch, it occurred to her that she wasn't going to be
able to go down its steep slope without falling.  So, she threw the kit to
the bottom, lay on her side, and rolled down.  Brushing her clothes off a
bit, she proceeded to the boy.

His leg was bleeding profusely and he was obviously in shock.  Lottie used
his belt to tie around the upper part of his leg to stem the flow of blood.
She took off her sweatshirt and covered his upper body with it.  Then she
stroked his hair and talked to him comfortingly telling him that he would be
okay and that more help was on the way.  The only thing in her kit that was
of use to her was the smelling-salts.

At one point, Jerry's eyelids fluttered open to see the kind old face
surrounded by a wreath of white hair.  He wondered if he were dying.  He had
seen scenes in movies like this when people were passing to the other side.
It wasn't scary at all.  It didn't even hurt that much.  Maybe God was
taking him to a place where he wouldn't be hurt anymore.  Then things went
dark again.

Jerry missed the scene that followed.  He didn't get to experience the men
slipping his limp body onto a stretcher or the medics swearing when one of
them lost his footing on the way out of the ditch.  He didn't hear the siren
screaming as the ambulance rushed him to Cosgrove General Hospital.

--------------------------------

As the vehicle left, one paramedic stayed behind to tend to Lottie and help
her from the ditch to her house.

"Nonsense!" she had uttered.  "I'm fine.  I can crawl up this bank and get
home without help."

The young man stood behind her and allowed her to make the climb without
aid.  He knew that she was a proud lady and he was going to let her preserve
her dignity if at all possible.  He stayed a few steps behind so that he
could catch her if she slipped.  But he made no attempt to assist her other
than by carrying the first-aid kit.

Once inside her kitchen, Lottie insisted on making tea for the both of them.
  She pulled a couple of muffins out of the freezer and popped them into the
toaster oven.  A few minutes later as they conversed, Darrin Holmes felt
like he was having high tea with the Queen.

"Miss Charlotte, you saved a life today.  If you hadn't found that boy and
applied a tourniquet, I have no doubt that he would have bled to death."

Lottie smiled.

"I'm sure you're exaggerating, young man.  But I thank you for making me
feel like I still have a purpose in life."

"No, Ma'am, I'm not stretching the truth at all.  I've seen enough of this
kind of thing to know and I suspect that you've seen a lot more than I have.
  You know he likely would have died."

"Yes, I suppose you are right.  Could you call me and let me know his name
and his condition when you find out?  I want to pray for him by name.  I
suppose that God doesn't care, but it helps me concentrate."

"Of course I will!"

"I guess that I should pray for the person who hit him as well.  I can't
imagine how anyone could leave a precious boy like that dying and offer no
help!"

--------------------------------

In his room, John Tracewell felt cold.  He was shaking and he couldn't stop.
  Lots of thoughts were chasing each other through his head:  The day had
gone so well up to the point of hitting that moped.  Why hadn't he seen it?
Maybe the kid would be okay.  Maybe he was only scratched up.  Hopefully no
one saw it happen.

But what if the kid wasn't okay?  What could John do to keep from going to
jail?  Shit!  He'd better call someone to tell them, but how?  He couldn't
use the phone at home because the sheriff probably had caller-ID.  He
finally remembered a payphone in the middle of town.  He could drive to it.
As he was sitting in his car making up his mind, an ambulance sped by on the
next block.  So, instead of heading for the center of town, John drove past
the site of the accident.  Only the moped was there.  Well, at least the kid
wasn't dying, he hoped.

He thought that the kid looked like that Sucksdorf boy.  God, if it was,
everyone would think that John tried to kill him.  He really hadn't.  That
stuff he had scored from Nate was stronger than any he had ever smoked.
Maybe he'd better have another one to calm his nerves.

John had barely finished smoking his second joint of the day when he saw a
patrol car pull into the drive behind his car.  The deputy got out and
walked around to the passenger side.  He was looking at the right front
fender.  He squatted down to examine it more closely.  Then, he took out a
camera and began to take pictures.

Inside the house, John was cowering in the living room.  The doorbell rang.
He didn't want to answer the door.  He would hide and pretend that he wasn't
home.

"Open up, John, I know you're in there," Deputy Anders called.

John didn't move.  The deputy went back to his car and was evidently calling
someone.  John felt like his plan to stay out of sight had worked.  No one
could arrest him if they couldn't find him.  Then, it occurred to John that
the deputy was alone.  Obviously the man couldn't watch the front and back
of the house at the same time.  John could make a run for it.

In its numbed condition, his brain couldn't compute that someone might see
him fleeing or possibly anticipate that he would make a break for it.  As he
stumbled out of the back door, the sheriff grabbed him.  John had remained
indecisive long enough for the back-up help to arrive.

John's first words were: "I didn't do it!"

"Do what?" Sheriff Larkin asked.

"Hit that kid." John replied before the rational part of his brain kicked
in.

Sheriff Larkin quickly called Judge Gerick to ask for a search warrant to
cover John's car and the house.  He stressed the need to expedite the matter
because of the possibility of having evidence destroyed.  Gerick said that
he would get on it immediately.

By the time John's parents were reached, John's car and room had been
searched.  If there was enough marijuana in the bag that they found, John
could be charged with possession with the intent to deliver.  That was in
addition to a pending charge for hit and run.  John was sobering up from the
realization of what he was facing.

John's parents had to post a moderate bond to spring him from the county
lock-up.  It could have been higher, but the judge thought it unlikely that
John would run since his car had been impounded and he was probably too
young to have much in the way of financial resources of his own.

His parents were pissed at John and the authorities all at the same time.
They weren't sure who deserved the most blame -- everyone but themselves!

--------------------------------

On Saturday morning, Lottie Webber got the call she had been waiting for.
Darrin Holmes, the young paramedic was on the line telling her that the boy
she had saved was named "Jerry" and that he was doing well, but would be in
the hospital until Monday morning.  He asked if Lottie would like to
accompany him to Cosgrove to visit the kid.  Of course she assured him that
she would be ready whenever he was.

Mrs. Webber was surprised and appreciative to find that she was welcomed
like a family member when she entered Jerry's hospital room.  His parents,
Don and Judy Sucksdorf both hugged her.  Jerry's face lit up when she came
near to his bed.  He looked at her with love in his eyes.

"You are my angel," he announced.  "At first, I thought that you were the
angel of death, but you turned out to be the angel of life.  The doctors
here told Mom and Dad that I wouldn't have made it if you hadn't been there.
  Something on my bike or in the ditch severed a major artery.  I was going
out fast!  Thanks for being there."

He could hardly finish because of the lump in his throat when he thought of
how close he had come to making that "final journey" that he had, at one
time, contemplated embarking on intentionally.

The older woman smiled back at Jerry with mist in her pale blue eyes.  She
wondered what would have happened if she had taken her daughter's advice and
gone to live in a condo in Cosgrove.  This precious young life might have
been lost.  She had had the feeling at the time that she was supposed to
stay in that house.  Now, the feeling that she must remain there was
weakening, but not gone altogether.

"You are the angel, son," she replied.  "I think that you and I were
destined to meet.  I hope that you will come to see me sometimes when you
are well and active again."

"I WILL come to see you.  I could go home tomorrow, but there won't be a
doctor around to release me on Sunday.  I think it's a dumb rule!"

"Don't be in such a hurry.  Enjoy the rest and the wonderful hospital
cuisine," she laughed.

Jerry enjoyed her sense of humor.  He felt like there was a bond between
them.  Perhaps it had to do with his gratitude for her saving his life, but
he suspected that it was more -- something intangible that hovered at the
edge of his consciousness.  He knew that he had to make good on his promise
to visit her.

Lottie didn't want to monopolize his time.  She introduced Darrin to him and
the two hit it off immediately.  Jerry was delighted to have a
twenty-something male treat him as an equal.  Lottie spent most of the rest
of the time getting acquainted with Judy and Don.

--------------------------------

By Sunday morning, most of Bentonville knew that Jerry had nearly been
killed in a hit and run accident and that John Tracewell had been arrested.
When Dane and Colt got home from their days at the lake, Greta told them to
call Trent immediately.  Colt got a hold of Trent who had all of the details
and a plan in mind.

"Sara's mom has offered to drive all of us to Cosgrove in her minivan to see
Jerry this afternoon.  Carrie, Sara, and I are going.  If you and Dane go
with us, that will make a carload.  We're going to get him some Mylar
balloons from the hospital gift shop instead of flowers.  I think flowers
for a guy are gay."

"Watch it, with the `gay' slurs," Colt snickered.

"Oops, I'm sorry," Trent responded with sincerity.

A couple of hours later, Jerry's cafeteria tablemates were heading into his
room.  He already had visitors when they arrived.  Dane stiffened when he
saw Joel there.  What the Hell was this kid doing here?

The answer was soon evident.  Alex and Allen had asked him to come with them
since Alex insisted that he had to see his little buddy.  Initially, Joel
had been jealous of Jerry, but he began to figure out that Jerry was like a
little brother to both of the Albers boys.  Once Carrie was by his bedside,
Jerry had eyes for no one else.  Joel smiled inwardly.  At least he didn't
have any competition from this kid -- if indeed Alex WAS interested in boys.

Meeting Joel at close range was uncomfortable for both Dane and Colt, but
more so for Dane.  However, it might have been for the best.  Since they
were all in a public place and couldn't raise a fuss, it forced them to be
polite.  Joel didn't seem to be the monster that Dane had mentally pictured
him to be.  He might have become a friend if he hadn't hit on Colt.

Colt noticed the looks that Joel was giving Alex and the looks that were
being returned.  He suspected that there was some mutual attraction.  He
felt like his gadar was beginning to develop.  He would have to check with
Dane later to see if he got the same readings.  Of course, Dane might be
feeling too hostile to be that observant.

Joel and the twins left about 15 minutes after the rest arrived.  They
didn't want to overstay their welcome and they wanted to check out a couple
of the stores at the mall before going back to "Hicksville" as they liked to
call it.

The other kids stayed for about an hour.  Sara's mother hated to break up
the group, but she had some things to take care of before Monday.  She was
pleased to get to know the Sucksdorf family better.  She wished it had been
under happier circumstances, but still it was pleasant.

Before they left, Carrie went to the kitchenette down the hall to get more
ice and a can of Sprite for Jerry.  Of course, his mother or a nurse could
have performed that duty, but Carrie wanted to do something for him.  It was
very sweet and didn't go unnoticed by Jerry or his parents.  He was bound to
get some teasing later.

Despite the joy that Jerry felt in the attention he had received from his
schoolmates, he was very tired by the time his supper arrived on Sunday
night.  His parents left shortly after he had eaten and he napped for about
an hour.

When he awakened, he felt refreshed although he was still weak from the
trauma and loss of blood.  His doctor had teased him about being a quart low
on the dipstick, but that didn't seem to be enough to keep HIS dipstick from
rising.  In his relaxed state, he daydreamed about Carrie.  Their hands had
brushed "accidentally" when she had brought him the soda.  He had felt an
electrical charge when they did.  Now that buzz was making its way to his
groin.  He couldn't ignore the urges he was feeling.  His hand found its way
under the hospital gown.  He wondered if he would dare to pleasure himself
in this non-private place.

He dared!  With visions of the pretty sophomore playing in his mind, he
stroked like a man on a mission.  In the nick of time, he grabbed some
tissues from the nightstand to cover his spewing tool.  It was so good that
he passed out for a moment.  That may have partially been caused by his loss
of blood, but whatever the reason, he felt like he had died and gone to
heaven.  Now he had to get up the nerve to ask her out!

Half an hour later, the night duty nurse came in to check on Jerry.  She
found a boy sleeping with a smile on his face and Kleenex clutched in his
hand.  Since she had raised a couple of sons of her own, she had an idea of
why he looked so relaxed.  She grinned as she extricated the sticky tissues
and threw them into the wastebasket.

Jerry slept peacefully through the whole night.  He was unaware of sounds of
sirens and the movements in the hall outside of his room.  He would awaken
in the morning chomping at the bit to be released so that he could return to
school.

--------------------------------

Author's note:  Happy New Year to all.  For those who don't like a
complicated plot, I apologize.  It's getting thicker!  Hope you can follow
all of the characters without becoming too frustrated.

Thanks to the following who have written recently: Rad, Colton, Paul, Paul
B., Richard, Alastair, Joe, Phillip, Andrew, Tom H., Carroll, Don, Jim C.,
and John T.  I also heard from Richard who is writing "In Pain."  I
recommend it!  Have you read "From Behind Those Eyes"?  It is a great love
story.  Also, several people have recommended "Joel" in the Adult/Youth
section.  It is NOT cross-generational despite its location.  It has no sex
at all to this point.

David