Orchard Flower (Version Bravo) - Cover

Orchard Flower (Version Bravo)

Copyright© 2009 by Lubrican

Chapter 1

Romantic Sex Story: Chapter 1 - Bob moved to South Dakota to get away from a painful situation. Then he fell in love with a slip of a girl who he knew he couldn't have, and found himself in pain again. You know that saying: No pain, no gain? It is a phrase that can be very true.

Caution: This Romantic Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Consensual   Reluctant   Heterosexual   Oral Sex   Petting   Pregnancy   Slow  

I got married at thirty-one, relatively late in life, after years of thinking I'd never meet that special woman. When she suddenly popped into my life I was astonished, and then delighted. Losing her was just as sudden, and the emotions involved in it were even stronger. I didn't even have the closure of being able to bury her because ... well ... there wasn't anything to put in the coffin. The counselor the airline supplied suggested I think of her as having been buried at sea. That didn't help.

I want you to know up front here that I'm not trying to get you to feel sorry for me. I took care of that, believe me. I just want you to understand the frame of mind I was in when things happened after that, or I made decisions; that's all.

I couldn't live in the house any more. I had a company auction off all the furniture and everything else we'd bought together. I sold the house too, because even seeing it from the outside made me want to fall down and cry. I didn't need a whole house any more anyway. I couldn't get up the interest to look for an apartment, and got a long-term room in a fleabag hotel because it was quick and easy. The room had a television, though I didn't watch it much. I read a lot of books, though it took a really good one to keep my mind off my loss.

I kept my job as an accountant, because it was somewhere to go during the day, and I could dull the pain by letting the numbers distract me. Tax season was the best, because I was busy extra hours of the day. I turned management of my own financial affairs over to Phil, a friend of mine who didn't know what to say about Vicky being dead, but wanted to do something to help.

I found that going for a run helped. I wasn't a physical kind of person before all this happened. I had never been a runner before this, but I'd heard that runners kind of zone out while they run and I desperately wanted to zone out, so I tried it. I didn't zone out, but there were lots of things to distract me, particularly if I ran during rush hour. That's when I started running to and from work, instead of driving my car. Rain or shine, cold or hot, it didn't matter to me. It was something to do that kept me from constantly thinking about my loss.

Three years later I was finally able to think about her without crying. I probably should have stayed in therapy a lot longer than I did. Maybe that would have limited my mourning time to a year.

Basically though, one day it finally occurred to me that I didn't have a life. I looked around and took stock. In the hotel room I had some clothes and three neatly organized accordion folders of my personal records. I had a few books. I swapped books at the local used book place, or got them from the library, so I didn't own that many. I still had a bunch of stuff in the self-storage place, but hadn't even been down there in over a year. I paid all my bills online from my computer at work, and didn't get paper bank statements. Whenever I paid a bill I saw a summary of account activity, and all I ever checked routinely was the balance in my checking account. They say mechanics drive broken down cars, and accountants never balance their checkbooks. It's true, I guess.

When I took the time to actually go talk to Phil and look at my own financial situation I was mildly astonished to find that the proceeds of the house, and my wife's life insurance, having been invested and rolled over a number of times, had made me a modestly wealthy man. Of course the Spartan lifestyle I lived had a lot to do with that too. I'd completely forgotten about the fact that I'd signed papers for Phil to have almost fifty percent of my salary diverted to an investment fund, and that I'd also elected to pay taxes on it up front. In short, if I wanted it, within six months I could have over two million dollars in liquid assets available to me.

When you have that much money it's easy to overcompensate for awakening from three years or so of lethargic non-involvement in the world. While before this I elected to do relatively nothing except feel sorry for myself, now I went a little crazy trying to change the feel of my life.

Things were slow one day, and I saw an ad in the paper about how the government auctions off land to settle tax debts. I'd heard of it before, but had never paid any attention to it. This time I went to the web site that was listed.

For some reason I got interested in a four hundred acre farm in South Dakota that had been seized by the government for back taxes. I had this stylized vision of being a gentleman farmer, which turned out to be a real hoot.

You can be an accountant anywhere. South Dakota needs them, just like everybody else. It turned out that four hundred acres in South Dakota is considered to be a garden plot by most ranchers. If it's not land that's contiguous with what you already own, it would be more of a pain in the ass to mess with than be of any benefit to a big rancher.

In short, I got the farm for a song. I felt bad about that later, when I realized how the former owners must have felt about losing it, but at the time I thought it was great that I still had plenty of money in my investment accounts when I got the deed to the place.

It was after that that I found out farming is hard work, whether you think you can hire somebody else to do it or not. It's risky too. Two days of bad weather at the wrong time can ruin an entire year's crop. After the first two years I ended up renting most of the tillable land out for shares of the crop, and turned the rest into pasture for horses. I usually board five or six these days, which kind of breaks even on the expenses. When I'm not taking care of horses I spend my time working on the house, which is sixty or seventy years old, and on a garden that turned out to be probably ten times larger than I really needed. During harvest season I spend a lot of time at the farmers' market and still end up donating truckloads of food to the food bank. I brought my Spartan lifestyle with me. I wash dishes by hand. I heat as much as possible with a wood stove. I don't have cable or a cell phone. When I'm not working (which is unusual) I still read lots of books. Somehow being closer to nature made me feel closer to Vicky too, and I was able to talk to her out there in the sun, wind and rain, and nobody would hear me.

Well almost nobody. I do have neighbors, though it took me years to get to know them. I first met Lynne the second day I'd lived there, when she brought over a casserole as a housewarming gift.

"Welcome to the neighborhood," she said brightly when I opened the door.

She said more than that, of course. She introduced herself, and I somewhat belatedly invited her in. There were still boxes lying around, unopened, and I had no furniture. She told me about the local auction barn, which had a public sale every Friday night. I judged her to be twenty-two or so and thought maybe she was the neighbor's daughter or something. I figured out that was an error when she said she and Paul, her husband, had a ten-year-old daughter. During the conversation she mentioned that the land I'd bought had originally been in their family. Their house was only a quarter mile away and had been built by her father. I was living in her grandfather's house.

That was about all I found out that day. I met the little girl, whose name was Jill, when I took the baking dish back. Jill was a bright, friendly talkative girl. Her mother was on the phone when I arrived, so Jill entertained me by asking at least three dozen questions about who I was and where I came from and why I had bought Great Grandpa Lucian's house and what was I going to grow and all manner of other things.

Once Lynne was off the phone she scolded Jill for being snoopy. The girl flashed me a smile and disappeared off somewhere. I ended up staying for dinner and met Paul when he came in from tending their cattle. I found out during supper that they'd wanted to get my land back, but because they were related to the owner who had let the taxes build up, they weren't elligible. There was no rancor about it. Paul just suggested that if farming didn't work out for me, he'd appreciate if I let him know if I was going to sell or not.

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