If you are looking for a story filled with sex, then you are probably in the wrong place. I don't write sex stories. I (hopefully) write interesting stories that contain sex. It has been said that women need a reason to have sex, while men just need a place. Like most generalities, that is generally wrong. I think that most people actually need to have a reason to have sex and if they care for each other, if they love each other, then the sex will be even better. All the participants are at least 18.
I would also like to thank BeachBaby179 for her suggestions, insight and numerous contributions to this story. I think she is the premier editor on this website.
Perhaps some explanations are needed before you begin reading. First, there is no romance, nor any sex, in the first chapter. There will be in chapter two, but if you are only interested in reading about sex . . . be forewarned.
Because of the nature of Chapter One, you might question its inclusion under the category of "Romance." I hope you hold off on that until you read all the chapters.
There are a total of five chapters in this, Part 1, of the series. Chapters 1 and 2 have been edited and submitted for publication on Literotica, chapters three through five are being edited and hopefully will be submitted in the next few days. Part 2 of the series has been written, but still needs to be edited.
East Meets West, Part 1, Chapter 1
I have never felt such a helpless feeling of rage and despair. My hands clenched and unclenched in frustration.
I again looked at my watch, for probably the 500
th
time in the past 90 minutes.
That was how long she had been in emergency surgery.
They told me they would do everything they could, but I had to prepare myself for the worst. She had died twice in the ambulance, but both times they had managed to get her heart beating again.
She had lost so much blood, her blood pressure was almost negligible when she was brought in.
I knew she had compound fractures in both legs, meaning the bones were sticking out, had a collapsed lung, several broken ribs, a ruptured spleen, a broken arm, a fractured skull, a concussion, and swelling of the brain. Her right knee had also been shattered by the impact, and they weren't sure if she would ever be able to walk again . . . assuming she even lived.
I looked at my watch again. Only a minute had passed since the last time.
I got up and started walking, and again my fists were clenching and unclenching. I am used to DOING . . . not WAITING!
This should have been among the happiest days of her life.
She had been accepted into MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) at age 16, and last month earned a degree in nuclear physics at age 19. A four-year degree in nuclear physics in only three years.
Now she had been enjoying her first real break in three years.
As a family we had spent a month at the beach, before returning to our summer home in the North Carolina Mountains.
In just a few more weeks she was to start her job at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
After graduating number one in her class she literally had her choice of any job she wanted, but she wanted Oak Ridge, where her mother worked.
Earlier today, she wanted to drive into town to buy some clothes for her new job.
I offered to drive her, but she knew how much I hated shopping and told me she would be fine.
And I knew she would. She was a very careful driver.
What I had not expected was that a drunk driver would cross over into her lane, and hit her head-on. If only . . . If only . . . If only I had insisted on driving her, I kept torturing myself with the thought that with my experience I could have avoided the wreck.
The other driver was dead, and she almost was.
They had told me that the surgery would take at least four hours, possibly as many as six or eight, so I knew I had a long time to wait. God, I felt so USELESS!
While waiting, I started thinking back.
Now -- since she was a "grown-up," -- she usually called me Jack. That is how most people know me, even though it wasn't actually my real name.
But there was a time when she would call me Daddy Jack, and sometimes she would forget and still call me that.
There had been other times in the past -- during especially playful or tender moments -- when she would simply call me Daddy.
And again, there were times when she would forget she was now a "grown-up," and still call me simply Daddy. Is there a more glorious word in the world than simply, "Daddy?"
This was despite the fact we weren't actually related. But no man has ever loved a step-daughter more than I loved this incredible young lady. And I knew she loved me as well.
I continued to reflect back on the past seven years.
Every story has to have an ending. Some endings haven't been written yet, but nevertheless, every story has to have an eventual ending. I just prayed her ending wasn't here yet.
Every story has to have a middle.
And, most importantly, every story has to have a beginning.
But where do you begin?
Do you begin with the first time I saw her seven years ago?
The first time I saw her she was only 12, and looked more like an eight-year-old based on her size. She was also very shy and bashful, not unusual when considering all that she had gone through at such an early age.
All I could see was one beautiful, jade-green eye, hiding behind her mother's waist, and rather short, jet black hair.
She stole my heart that very first day, especially when she started giggling as I performed a stupid little magic trick.
When I pulled a silver dollar out of her ear, she laughed out loud and then threw her arms around my neck and gave me a kiss on the cheek. And I was a goner!
I suppose the story could begin there, or it could begin about three months before that.
On the day I had been ordered to kill her mother.
Technically the orders were "Extract or Eliminate." Meaning if I could extract, or get her out of the situation she was in, without any risk to myself, then I was free to do so, but if there was the slightest risk, then my orders were quite specific: Eliminate the target!
I would soon find out there were significant, almost overwhelming risks, so my orders left no room for doubt.
That day, her mother was the target. My job was to follow orders, and . . . well there is no other word for it . . . kill.
Those were orders I had performed many, many times before.
When I first saw her mother, I was looking through the scope of my sniper rifle. I already had the cross-hairs lined up on her face, and had started applying even steady pressure to the trigger.
From my position only a few hundred feet away, this would have been one of the easiest shots I had ever taken.
At this point in my life, I already had over 200 confirmed kills, so one more shouldn't have bothered me at all.
But I couldn't pull the trigger!
So, do I explain why I couldn't kill her mother, as the beginning of this story?
Or do I go back even further?
You should always begin a story at the beginning, but which beginning?
I have already told you most people, including my wife and my step-daughter, call me Jack. But that isn't the name I was born with, just the one I use most often.
I had been born in the backwoods of western North Carolina, deep in the mountains. My name, then, was Jonathan Wilson. But it has been so many years since I have considered myself by that name, it is actually easier for me to talk about "him" in the third person.