Miranda Cortez: Ditch Girl
To the reader:
All sexually active characters are at least 18 years of age.
This story is 11,000 words long (20 book pages)
The plot encompasses both polyamory and mixed ethnicity relationships.
I had liked the looks of Miranda Cortez ever since the first time I saw her. I didn't know then where she'd gotten those Latino genes, but they certainly were nice. She'd come to our college three years before me, she was a senior now, while I was a barely eighteen, mere freshman when I arrived on campus that fall.
Maybe it was all that equal opportunity, political correctness, anti-discrimination, hate-every-man-because-he's-a-White-male crap that made her that way. I don't know. What I did know was her manner toward me completely demolished any favorable effect her looks caused. What an obnoxious, stuck-up bitch!
I did my best to shrug all this off. In spite of how vicious and better-than-you she acted, I always tried to give her the benefit of my doubt. I always treated her well in hopes she might someday morph into a human being. But until that Saturday morning on
Project Road #246
, nothing changed.
In our area, the twenty-five miles in all directions surrounding our closest state university, most of the roads had whimsical names like
Project Road #246
, so unless you had a map or good memory, it was easy to get lost once you left the main roads. I'm not saying all the bureaucrats who laid them out suffered from cerebral-anal inversion, but most must have. The only consistency was the roads with numbers ran
pretty much
east and west, those with letters ran
more or less
north and south.
I was a displaced farmer boy from twenty miles out of town, and also a hunter, mostly birds: pheasants and later in the season, ducks. We don't hunt big game around here: i.e. deer or elk. We take a week or two off each fall and go up into the mountains for that.
So, that morning I was scouting the flat-lands of the irrigation project for promising bird hunting areas, hoping to find something interesting, then pray I managed to track down the owner and get permission to hunt. Mostly this area was alkali flat which during wet weather became mud and alkali, then dried up to become sage brush and rock-hard clay bottom with sparse grass all summer. No one tried to farm here, but a few owners ran cattle. Why the government ever tried making a farm irrigation project out of this land I'll never understand, but they did—probably to make-work for FDR's solution to Great Depression. Lots of birds made their homes there, though, which explained my interest that day.
In most places, the nearly unused and therefore mostly stagnant irrigation lateral ditches followed the roads, one side or the other. Such was the case for Project Road #246: Alkali flat on one side, irrigation lateral on the other. I guess
Lateral A
sounded more prestigious than
Medium Size Ditch A
.
I'd driven this road—and its lateral—ten miles from the paved road before finding anything interesting enough to follow up on. What I found was a car run off the road and submerged in the lateral up to an inch short of covering it entirely. Must have happened last night; the morning's rain-sprinkle in the road's soft dust obscured the tire tracks by which the little Ford import-look-alike had found its way into the ditch.
No one around, so might as well have a look, see if I should drive back twenty miles to a phone and call this in to the Sheriff's office. Usually when the joy-riders around here stole a car, they drove it to a place like this and ran it into a ditch or one of the larger canals so it took John Law longer to find it.
At first glance, nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Probably I had nothing more before me than a stolen car.
Second glance, though, was another story. Face down, half in the cold water, half out on my side of the ditch, lay a woman's body, not moving, with a ghastly skin color, and not much clothing on. Was I looking at an abduction? A rape victim? A murder? Or what?
Did I want to get mixed up in this? From my first glimpse, she looked obviously Latino. Yeah sure! Call the cops, then spend the rest of the month as
a person of interest
involved in whatever fate had befallen this woman? And me, White, and her Latino? I could just see that! The whole nine yards of political correctness and the rest of that liberal BS falling upon me? Me with my 12 gauge bird gun and .22 cal. plinking rifle in my truck? Can you imagine what our liberal news media would make of my
mobile firearms
cache?"
Several times I almost got in my truck and drove away.
But several times I didn't.
You remember those 1
st
Aid classes you suffered through in high school? Well, I needed one once I got close to this body. Not much blood, only a few scrapes and gashes on her head and exposed sides and legs, but what little I could see of her front was another case. Blood all over it. Not looking good, and if she was breathing at all, not by much.
I slogged around ankle deep in the ditch's waterline slop. But without falling into the ditch myself, managed to drag her onto the bank, clear of the cold water. That's when I got a good look at her face.
You guessed it: Miss Stuck-up Bitch!
Two more times I almost got into my truck and drove away.
And two more times, I didn't.
So, off came my coat to cover her, for some warmth maybe? Out of my truck came a blanket I kept there in event, with some extremely rare luck, I might need it on a date some night, and all the time, I tried to come up with a decision as to what to do next. And yes, I did have a flip-phone, but it had gone into the drink a week before on a hunting trip and had yet to recover.
There I was, with an almost dead woman who I just knew would throw me under the bus when it came time to discover what had actually happened to her. And there I was with a
firearms cache
in my vehicle—as the news media and John Law would make it into—not to mention
National Gun Association
stickers on my truck's front and back glass and an
NGA
Life Member
card in my wallet.
There I was with a woman who I certainly couldn't, with any conviction, say
I both
knew and
liked
. Hate wasn't the term I'd have used, but had she fallen under a bus, I'd have never endangered myself to rescue her. And there I was, twenty miles out in the boonies with a
why
explanation so thin as to hold no water at all with an interrogator who hated hunters.
Again, I almost got into my truck and drove away.
But just then, she coughed. Weak it was, but she coughed. She was alive—hopefully—and I couldn't just leave her there and hope John Law or an ambulance got there in time after I drove ten miles of dirt road then ten more of pavement to a phone to call them.
Well, I thought, better see what else I have to contend with. I walked to where she lay, picked my coat and blanket off her, and rolled her onto her belly. I got only a wheeze and moan for my effort. She rolled like a rag doll, a full sized, beat-up, worn out, rag doll. Took me several readjustments to get her flat on her belly.