On the Lam

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Sequel to Jail Breaking. He is out but can he stay free?
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RichardGerald
RichardGerald
2,885 Followers

This is a sequel to the story Jail Breaking. When you disregard all the well justified criticism of my punctuation and spelling in that effort, the majority of the numerous and overly generous comments relate to the ending or lack thereof. Technically as a short story it is complete, but I admit not in an entirely satisfying way. I also notice in the comments that most readers did not see the various characters the way I do. Again my fault for not giving enough back story. I have great sympathy for the women in my story and less for my protagonist who in a very dishonest person. As the comments came in, I saw a sequel develop that would please some but not all readers. However, this story holds true to the one rule I try to keep. A character cannot step out of character no matter how absurd the situation. They must be true to themselves. Keep this rule in mind as you read the sequel.

You will notice the improvement in the grammar. You have Vickietern to thank. It is still not perfect, but she did a great job with what I gave her. I would also like to thank Jerry S who has been slaving away on my latest opus and for which I am stuck for an ending.

I was seated on the back porch, watching the sun set over the western Catskills. The cabin -- you could not call it a house -- was just one large room and the rather spacious screened-in back porch. That room contained a small kitchen and a sleeping loft, and a small bath with a shower stuck out the far side.

This part of the Catskills is in the main undeveloped. There is no industry, farming is near impossible, and there is nothing to mine. The tourist spots are all to the south and east. It's a good place to go if you want to be alone and close to nature.

"Ein cent for your thoughts," she says.

"Save your money, I don't have any," I reply.

She is Annette Malene Grafin von Kabchreuth. I met her in Montreux on Lake Geneva -- she more or less picked me up. I was eating in one of the overpriced café restaurants that seem to populate all of Switzerland.

"Is this chair taken?" she had said.

"No, feel free."

But she didn't take the chair to another table as I expected. She sat right down. To my quizzical look, she responded.

"I wish to practice my English."

"How did you know I spoke English?"

"Most Americans do," she said with the laugh that has become so familiar to me. It is a laugh that says all Americans are a bit simple, and, for this reason, quite amusing in their immature ways.

That was the start of it. She had no great difficulty seducing me -- why she wanted to at first falls somewhere between amusing and kinky. I am convinced she truly enjoys sex and plenty of it, but only on her terms. She is easily bored and perpetually in motion. Since we arrived in the Catskills, she has hiked every trail, gone swimming in every body of water, and found all sorts of amusements I never knew were there. The locals love her. Why not? She loves to spend my money, and she is beautiful.

She is not what I would call sexy. She is tall at five eleven, and thin. She has a beautiful oval face that has a mop of blond hair and clear blue eyes. She is as flat chested as a boy with a tiny waist and a cute little bottom. The boy-girls in Bangkok have more feminine curves than Annette, but her smile is to die for. I could easily love her but for her baggage.

Annette is thirty, married with three kids. The children all girls are in school. The Graf, that's a kind of Count, is usually off on a business trip with one of his mistresses. Annette plays while he is away, and is the authoress of many travel books. But she tells me it's all business when they are at home together. Apparently a lot of effort goes into being a German aristocrat.

She is a blood relative of her husband, a kind of cousin. It was a quasi-arranged marriage, though she tells me they are very much in love. I know after six weeks together that her idea of love and mine have little in common.

"You left your wife after nineteen years because she took a lover just once?" she asked, appalled at my shocking conduct.

"I didn't love her."

She burst into laughter. "You were married too long to use that excuse. It is more than that -- you are lying, mostly to yourself. Your anger is not sufficient to cover the pain you caused. It is hard to lose a husband, father, and son. The reasons must be greater than you give."

"I wasn't going to let them walk over me."

"Nonsense. That might bring on a separation or a divorce possibly, but a complete break with your entire family because of a little sex? No, I think you are one of those hopeless romantics. You seek what you will never find because it is only exists in films and books. In real life we take what we can get and are grateful."

"How could I live with what she did?" I asked.

She gave that infuriating laugh of hers. "Because you cannot live without her, nor without those other women from whom you also run. You can't even face them, so you hide. You are afraid that you will go back to them because you have no life without them."

She is unfortunately right, at least emotionally. I had been living a lonely and purposeless existence until Annette came along. It's surprising the things that you miss. The way your daughter's laughs. The kiss your wife gives you first thing in the morning. The once a week call from your mother with all the family news, knowing she is only calling to see how you are doing. It's all a trap. Give in to it and they will tie you up so tight you will never get free. Annette has it correct -- I didn't leave, I ran away. I can't go back, for I may never possess the will to leave again.

"I'm here with you -- this is my life," I said.

"I am on vacation. Soon I will return to life. My true life, and you will be no more than a pleasant memory," she said as she stroked my face with her hand.

"I guess that tells me where I stand."

"Stop being a spoiled little boy. Go back to your wife. You have punished her enough for her little sin."

We saw things so opposite. I could not blame her, we were from different worlds. Oddly I knew my mother would agree with her, but I had to keep searching. Even if I failed to find what I sought, I promised myself a good time trying. I left my wife and family last New Year's. I spent the first several months touring the Far East. I made my way across Asia, ending in Europe, Switzerland to be precise. During this time, I never suffered for female companionship, but every last one wanted something. Annette was different. Oh, she wanted something, but it was just a good time. She had managed to dampen the pain in my chest. It is hard to be alone and hard to shake feelings that have built over a lifetime. You don't choose your family, but you still love them.

"It is nice to watch the sunset. I am glad I came. The Swiss were so stuck up," she said as she seated herself on my lap.

She weighs almost nothing, but I knew where her being naked on my lap was going. When we were alone, she rarely wore clothing. I had no neighbors to see, and I was myself only in a pair of running shorts.

"Can we wait until the sun goes down?" I ask.

"You watch," she says pulling down my shorts.

My cock is hard and ready, and she slips in into her as easy as can be. She has small breasts but large nipples. They are very sensitive and she moans as I tweak them. She is not tight in the vagina, but she has developed her muscles there. She uses them to caress my dick. She always takes the top position, and she does all the work. It is a slow but intense ride. As light fades, she picks up the pace, her kisses become more forceful. Her tongue is fucking my mouth. One hand slips down to her clit. I work her nipples with my own hands.

I can feel her orgasm -- they come in a kind of wave. You can feel her rise into it, and then it crests, and she slides down the back side. There will be yet another wave and then another.

"Don't cum! Not yet. I think I have another," she says.

When I finally get there, she pinches my little nipples with her long nails. It's like sending an electric shock through me, and I send everything I have into her. She puts her forehead on mine and her eyes look right at me. It is all but dark -- only the dim light from the cabin's interior lights the porch.

"Now was that bad? Did it hurt my husband or your wife? And if it did don't they both deserve it?"

I have no comeback. She is right.

"How rich are you? I think very," she said.

"Does it matter?"

"Yes it does. You are very rich like my grandfather. He hid his wealth too, but then as with you grandfather made it dishonestly, trading western goods on the black market in East Germany with my father," she said.

"You think I am a crook," I said.

"But of course, and a smart one because you have not been caught."

"This doesn't bother you?"

"I am a woman who married a man because her father needed the respectability that came with her husband's title. How can I criticize you?"

"Yet you say you love your husband."

"Why not? He may have married me for Grand Papa's money, but it was a bargain we both made."

"What about love?"

"How silly you are. The love comes after, as you struggle together, sacrifice for each other, bring your children into the world and raise them together."

"You are here with me and he is somewhere else with another woman."

She shrugged and said, "Sometimes...you need to feel romantic with a silly American who is lost and lonely because he believes in fairytales." She leaned in, and the kiss was as soft and sweet as night in the mountains.

At that moment, my cell phone rang. It was the contractor on the 27 Division Street Building in Shamont.

"I have gone through this place, it's a mess," he said

"So clean it up and fix what's broken as we agreed," I said.

"But nothing is standard and nothing makes sense. All these hidden spaces and an underground exit into the carriage lane. What good is this space? You can't rent it, and only a fool would buy it."

"That's my business. I am paying you to restore the building. I don't care that it has no modern purpose, it's not meant to," I said and hung up on the idiot. My anger had gotten the best of me. I am so annoyed by ignorance!

"What?" I said as she gave me a knowing look.

"You are just like my grandfather, always chasing the gelt."

"I happen to like the building! My grandfather used to walk me past it when we went for ice cream. He had an interesting story about it," I said.

"He had a story and now you have a scheme. It is always so with men like you. Never play fair, always cheat," She said and pressed her lips to mine once again, but nothing soft this time. Annette had a habit of taking what she wanted.

___________________________________________

Elizabeth Parker looked the exact opposite of her boss, State Senator Maria Consuela Ruis. The first-term Democrat from the Bronx was a short, plump woman with dark brown skin reflecting her Hispanic and African ancestry. Maria wore her black hair short, and her dresses long, as befit a forty-seven year old good Catholic mother of three.

At five feet eleven inches, the twenty-seven-year old Liz Parker towered above her boss. The younger woman was a white Anglo-Saxon Protestant. At first glance, they were an unlikely team. But in the view of the political bosses "they went together like white rice and beans."

Their bodies and backgrounds were different, but they shared a common set of beliefs. As a team, they were a one-two punch. Maria was not a pretty woman by any standard, but she had a personality that could win over the coldest fish and a talent for saying things that others could never get away with. Somehow coming from Maria the cruelest insult sounded almost a compliment.

Liz was the opposite -- she grated on people, especially men, but she had good looks that could not be denied. She could easily have carried another ten pounds and still be called slim. Maria could lose forty and still be plump. These women burned with ambition and their life experiences complemented each other.

Maria had grown up in a political clubhouse in the Bronx, the Daughter of a ward captain father and the female Democratic club leader. Married at twenty-two straight from City College, to Salvatore Ruis, an established business man of forty. She then expected to live a quiet life.

She'd had two children before she became convinced that Sally, as he was known, would never be able to keep it in his pants. His infidelities only increased through the course of their marriage. Her third pregnancy was an accident resulting from the combined families' insistence that she give him just one more chance. Divorced at thirty and estranged technically from her church, she was forced somehow to make a new life for herself.

Sally paid Maria alimony in addition to child support. She used that and a scholarship to get a law degree from Columbia. Her political resume describes her as a practicing attorney, but she never had a law office or a paying client. She worked in the family Court as a law guardian and an assigned counsel, and her election to the State Senate was a fortuitous accident. The former holder of the office was thought unbeatable. Her primary challenge was a mere formally meant to help force her appointment to a Family Court Judge's chair. If you don't give me the nod, I will conduct an expensive, time-consuming primary. Who could have known at the time that the Federal Prosecutor had already prepared a grand jury indictment of the incumbent, and an unbeatable case. So there was no primary. Then she had no opponent, and no opposition in the general election.

Maria came to Albany, a shrewd and capable politician in need of the skills required of a good legislator. Liz on the other hand had worked in the State Senate as a legislative assistant to the majority all through her college years at Russell Sage College. She continued to work full time while in Law School. She made her one false step on graduating by taking a position at the State Attorney General's office. After six months, she quit to work for a senior Republican legislator. Liz met Maria by accident in the Legislative dining room -- the two literally ran into each other. When they had recovered their spilled salad plates, Maria invited the younger woman to dine with her. Forty-five minutes later a coalition was born. Liz became the Senior Aide to Senator Ruis.

"What you got for me?" Maria asked Liz.

"Well, David P. Landon, Jr.," Liz said.

"Now who is he?"

"I believe he is the key to Stuyvesant, Ltd," Liz said grinning like the cat that swallowed the canary.

Maria had to smile in spite of herself. When she had been growing up in the Bronx, the borough was largely a slum. A man named Robert Moses had used an instrument known as Eminent Domain to slice the Bronx into pieces with interstate highways. Whole neighbors were obliterated. Those that remained were bisected by impassable roadways. Stores were on one side and homes on the other of the limited access roads. What had been a series of middle-class neighborhoods was rendered New York's worst slum overnight.

When Maria was still in City College, a professor had encouraged her to read Robert Caro's biography of Moses titled, The Power Broker. If Maria could accomplish one thing as a legislator she, intended that to be a reform of the State's Eminent Domain practices. She had in her first weeks in office stumbled onto a rumor about some entity called Stuyvesant that was somehow gaming the system. It had all the makings of a scandal that could in turn cause real reform.

Liz slid Landon's file across the table to Maria.

"He's forty-six, married twenty years, the father of twin daughters both at Wesley—" Liz said.

"Expensive that."

"Wife comes from money. He has what appears to be a small Eminent Domain practice in a minor firm. But of the condemnations that Stuyvesant limited has exploited he was the lead attorney for the landowners at least ninety percent of the time. "

"Could it be a coincidence?" Maria asked.

"Rather a consistent coincidence, and if you look at all the Stuyvesant purchase and sales agreements, you can see that no attorney representing Stuyvesant ever appears. An agent out of Wyoming does all the signing. Now how could they operate without a New York attorney?"

"So what we think is that attorney Landon is connected to Stuyvesant."

"They somehow get advance notice and then they buy surrounding properties. While the proceedings pend, Landon is privy to everything that is happening. They can't lose."

"You think this Landon will talk?" Maria asked.

"Why not. He's a lawyer. If we call him before the committee he knows we will give him immunity -- then he is forced to talk or go to jail. He has nothing to gain by shielding his accomplices."

"But he may have a problem with the United States Attorney," Maria said.

"So he does a few years in minimum security at club fed. He's earned it." __________________________________________

Doris Landon was cuddled next to her lover. Mark was a tall, well-built man. As a lover, Mark was aggressive and dominant. He knew women were attracted to him, and he enjoyed pleasing them. All in all, Doris thought him a very satisfactory lover, and their affair was exceeding stimulating. If only her husband David had been more understanding.

Things had gone very bad with David since he walked out on her at New Year's some eight months ago. He apparently had discovered the affair, and despite everyone in the family trying to reassure him it was nothing to be concerned about, he had stormed off to parts unknown.

Doris was terribly worried. She loved the big jerk. He was the man she had married and the one she intended to grow old with. All she was after with Mark was a bit of romance, some harmless fun, and those feelings you get when you are young and in love. David should be able to see that, but of course he didn't. To put it bluntly, David was dull, always was and always would be. He was an attorney for God's sakes, and as if that was not bad enough he did only condemnation work. Doris had no idea what his work involved, but knew it was immensely boring.

Mark was exciting, different, and well hung. He was everything she had given up for a good home and family. She did not love him, of course. Did not believe that she ever could. He was an interlude, as in a British movie where the wife meets the handsome guy in the train station they have a torrid affair, and then she goes home to her dull as dirt husband. But in the movies the husband understands. They're together in the end, the man and wife.

David was gone, and frankly she did not believe he could take care of himself. He had left his law practice. He had taken no money, just his clothes and his beat-up old Honda Civic. She was worried. David had never actually been on his own. Doris had married him while they were at school together, and in the early years she'd supplemented his income with her family money. David never made much. His best year he brought in $90,000, the same year she had earned $130,000 plus benefits as a full professor. She had their health insurance -- on his own David could not even afford to get sick. Where was he and what was he doing? She was overwhelmed with guilt and worry.

Everyone in the family said he would be back. He would cool down and come back -- after all what else could he do? As his own mother said, he had no life that didn't involve the family. He loved his daughters so much, and now he was not speaking to them for taking their mother's side. Her mother had been right when she said Doris had waited too long to take a lover. David would never have left her if the girls were still in need of him. With the girls in college he could leave. He was the kind of man who would always put his duty as a father first. He must come back and be a good husband. But it had been eight months without a word.

RichardGerald
RichardGerald
2,885 Followers