Author's note; This story is a Romance, and the sex occurs towards the ending. Some might not like it for its lack of vicarious luridness from the beginning to the very end. The poem John shares with Rachel; "Autumn" belongs to Emily Elizabeth Dickenson, (December 10, 1830 - May 15, 1886). She was an American poet. I chose it because it is my favorite poem of Autumn and my favorite time of year.
Bread and Butter
Beagle9690
September 2019
He served Twenty-seven years in the Marines, retiring as a Colonel at forty-five. The Marines tempered John as hard and tough as forged iron. He was respectfully known by most as Iron McCord and not so fondly by other major malfunction individuals with less complimentary names because he despises liars, cowards, and braggarts having spent most of his career in combat zones.
John is a minimalist and frugal with himself. He planned, saved, and invested well to live comfortably for the rest of his life on his pension and dividends from his substantial investments.
During his days in the Corps, and always a gentleman, he considered most single women in social settings as trouble to be avoided whenever possible, aside to satisfy a man's hard-wired needs.
He was content with this arrangement and enjoyed the freedom of being a bachelor. He had many amicable trysts; with shall we say "good time gals" and avoided the long-term relationship with the marrying types of women.
Upon retirement, John moved back home to the family farm to repair, remodel, and upgrade the building on the old homestead. The most labor-intensive was striping and sanding, staining and varnishing the wide-wood floors, woodwork, and trim inside the farmhouse. The remodeling was almost complete except for minor wiring and painting in three of the four upstairs bedrooms.
The sparsely furnished rooms he was using were the kitchen, bathroom, and his bedroom; the rest were empty. In his bedroom was a king-size bed, and to John, it was a decadent, although a much-appreciated luxury. The new oak bed, matching dressers; Hudson Bay wool blankets, plus a thick and plush down comforter were a housewarming gift from his sister. There was also a mint garage-sale oak and red canvas director's chair he picked up for a song. He had a second-hand reading lamp beside a state-of-the-art shortwave radio on a perfectly good bedside maple table someone left at the curb. There was an old wicker laundry basket by the radiator.
His grandmother's maple Colonial kitchen table and chairs were in the kitchen. Most of what he owned, which isn't much, was in storage in the small barn.
Unfortunately, the new hot water tank's heating element was defective, necessitating cold showers and boiling water on the stove for doing the dishes. John decided to return the tank, still under warranty, and install hot water on demand.
John was restless that March, and he didn't know why. He was finally home and back to his roots. He reconnected with many of his old classmates, friends, and neighbors who still lived in the area.
John decided he needed a woman. His last was a month ago in Erie, PA, with a hot, buxom, redhead real estate agent, in her early thirties; Janet Stone, recently divorced. Janet was prime real estate to plow. He plowed Janet that the entire weekend. Janet was also one hell of a cook and discreet. They both got what they wanted. I don't tell; you don't tell, and no strings attached. They had a mutual agreement. "Call me when you are in town, John," and he did, he called her on Tuesday, confirmed their tryst, and planned to drive there for a weekend of carnal delight.
Unfortunately, the County roads closed Thursday due to an intense lake effect snowstorm blowing in from Lake Ontario. It was colder than the proverbial witch's' womb, and visibility at times was down to inches due to white-outs. According to the NOAA weather radar, there would be three feet or more of blowing and drifting snow over the next three days.
The locals are accustomed to these storms. They tried to outdo each other with exaggerations such as, "It was snowing and blowing so hard I could barely see the speedometer on the way to work."
It was around 1:00 AM. John was sound asleep when he awoke to his doorbell, ringing over and over. He jumped up from his bed cursing out the insane, idiot, who was out on a night like this, let alone waking him up and getting him out of his warm bed. He threw on a pair of blue jeans and hurried down the stairs turning on the lights as he went and called out loudly, "I hear you shit-head. Lay off the god damn doorbell," and it didn't stop ringing until he opened his door and she stumbled into his arms.
The young woman was shivering and mumbling something about driving into a ditch and appeared confused and disoriented. He noticed her breathing was a bit shallow, and she showed signs of hypothermia.
There is no mystery here. This young woman has no business being out on a night like this driving in near-zero visibility, in conjunction with unplowed roads. Given these clues, it was easy to conclude she drove into a roadside drainage ditch or culvert full of water partially frozen with a thin film of ice covered by snow.
He gently picked her up and closed the door, ignoring the micro drifts of fluffy powder snow that blew in with her. He then carried her to his bedroom to remove all her cold, wet clothes.
The zipper was stuck on her coat, and he had to destroy it to get it off, his years of survival training and experience mandated her modesty was secondary to getting her warm.
Not understanding his intentions, Rachel clumsily fought him and landed a glancing blow to his groin. John ignored the minor pain and her struggling and undressed her, being careful not to hurt her. He pinned her on the bed, realizing she had some familiarity with the martial arts from her attempted strikes and kicks.
He then pulled the blanket and down comforter over them and held her close, sharing his body heat while holding and blocking her arms and legs. He talked quietly and soothingly, reassuring she was safe. As she became warm, Rachel's breathing became deep and regular. She relaxed, gathering her thoughts, resigned to her unusual situation and said firmly, "I'm fine; you can let go of me now."
John picked up her wet clothes and sneakers and left her alone for a time to get accustomed to her surroundings while she lay quietly on the bed wrapped in the blanket and cozy down comforter, realizing he was much stronger than her. Rachel also smiled as she contemplated how he talked to her as she struggled as if he was comforting a frightened patient.
Her thoughts were interrupted by two bright green eyes staring up at her from the wicker basket on the floor. She sat up and pulled the blanket and comforter closer to her for protection until she realized the green eyes belonged to a large blue-tabby.
"Oh, hello," she softly, "What a cute kitty you are," and the tabby jumped up on the bed next to her, sitting on John's side of the bed flicking his tail in curiosity. When she reached over to pet him, he purred and rubbed up against her.
John returned with a mug of piping hot chocolate and vanilla almond energy bars and gave them to her. He picked up his devoted cat, sat in the director's chair, closely observing Rachel as he petted the tabby, while his cat affectionately rubbed his face against him. She quietly drank her hot beverage and munched on the protein-rich energy bars, intently watching him with his feline companion.
John observed Rachel is an attractive woman with a clear complexion and hazel eyes; twin opals of shifting brown-green and gold. Her round face and button nose, compliment her full, generous lips to give her a youthful appearance making it hard to guess her age accurately.
Rachel is 5' 7" and has a nice trim figure. She has pert breasts with turned up nipples. Her ass is well-rounded and firm. Her thick dark red auburn hair was in a short classic blunt chin level bob, parted off-center.
He was the first to break the silence. "My name is John McCord, young lady, and you showed clear symptoms of hypothermia. "You were confused and disoriented. What I did was in your best interest," he asserted. "I won't apologize for it, although I admire your tenacity in trying to fight me off.
I don't have hot water. It was my only reasonable course of action, and it worked. It appears we're snowed in with each other for the next few days until the roads open again." John put his cat Buddy on the floor, stood up, and walked to a dresser. Rachel watched as Buddy jumped into his wicker laundry basket and snuggled into his surplus olive drab wool blankets watching them.
"I'm Rachel Buchanan." She said, smiling at the cat, "I."
"John interrupted, in a quiet, commanding tone, warning no insubordination, "I get up five sharp and need to get some sleep to finish the wiring. You need to be quiet and keep warm until morning. Here is a tee shirt you may wear, although it might be a bit large, and this flannel shirt will serve as a nightgown. Oh yes, wool socks," and he took those out of his dresser and tossed it on the bed. "There's only one bed, no couch, and we'll need to share the down comforter and blanket.
You may choose between the two. Most of my stuff is in storage in the small barn. We're both adults, and I give you my word, I won't touch you.
"I'm sorry I tried to hurt you." Rachel apologized. "I've experienced patients coming out of anesthesia who are confused and strike out violently. Turn around please," and when he did, Rachael started dressing. "You promise Mr. McCord?"
"Yes, I already said I would, and your clothes and sneakers are drying near the radiators. It was necessary to break the zipper on your coat. You did not dress appropriately for the weather." And looking away, John got into bed, wearing his jeans, "Oh yes, I'll pay for a new coat or have the zipper replaced. The bathroom is the door at the end of the hall unless you'd prefer to use the outhouse," and in no time at all, John was fast asleep.
Rachael was still a bit chilled from her experience as she lay there next to him, contemplating all that happened to her, and she was thinking. 'I remember little about walking here as cold as a Popsicle except for falling face-first into the cold water and slush in the ditch where I left my Mini-Van. I should have stopped earlier in the day and not pushed on.