The following story is, in essence, a prequel to THE RECLUSE.
This story could have been fitted into a few different categories. It could have been in non-erotic, even romance perhaps, and, truthfully I am not sure that it even truly belongs in Literotica at all, as there is certainly no sex to be found here (sorry). It came about in response to a query I received from a reader to know more about Jerome's story. I decided to file it as a loving wives story because the effects of betrayal were so central to Jerome's life.
I enjoy your comments, whether you like the stories or not, and try to honestly evaluate each one, so thanks if you have a moment to give me a bit of feedback.
"Even Damnation is poisoned with Rainbows". -- Jerome's Story
Clearing Japanese airspace as they climbed to cruising altitude Jerome finally allowed himself to at last loosen the bonds that he kept so tightly wrapped around his emotions 24/7. For a man in his position there was no room for distractions, especially not the crushing emotional burdens that were going to alter his life and redefine his future. He had spent his last night in the orient sombrely listening to the growling voice of a Canadian singer, Leonard Cohen. He had played the song, "The Old Revolution" over and over as he got progressively inebriated. The haunting lyrics summed up his feelings about life to a tee. The furnace Cohen spoke of felt too familiar to the old soldier. Both his personal and professional life had been wrapped up in an idealism that was shredded.
"
Of course I was very young, and I thought that we were winning.
I can't pretend I still feel very much like singing
As they carry the bodies away.
Into this furnace I ask you now to venture
You, who I cannot betray."
As the Boeing 707 settled in at altitude for the roughly eight hours left in their next leg to Hickman Field in Honolulu, Colonel Willis found himself looking back over his life and chosen career, wondering how things might have turned out differently.
Growing up in an affluent sprawling family enclave in Baltimore, Jerome, the eldest of three children born to Victor and Francine Willis, had always known he would enter the army. His grandfather, Arthur Willis, was an army major, a military historian, and an instructor at West Point. His uncle Philip had been an aide to General Pershing in the Great War. His own father had served for four years then moved over to the State Department, which a young Jerome had felt was a betrayal.
With the sponsorship of his grandfather and uncle Philip, and, he always believed, some intervention from Senator Collins, a close friend of his father's, Jerome had been accepted into West Point at the age of seventeen, in the fall of 1940, when war was already in full swing in Europe. With the American entry into the war in December of '41, his class, which was nominally the graduating class of '44, was pushed forward, graduating in the summer of '43. Only six weeks later he was in England, assigned to the Third Army, he found himself thrust into action as Patton's force was tasked with spearheading the relief of the beleaguered 2
nd
infantry division in the Ardennes forest, in what would come to be known as the Battle of the Bulge. Being at the right place at the right time has been the making of many a career, and so it proved for the newly minted second lieutenant, huddled in the bushes along side a narrow road outside the town of Libramont, Belgium, on the 21
st
of December.
Accompanied by only a corporal and separated from the rest of his small detachment by half a mile of thick forest, Jerome counted the thirty-six German Panzer tanks of the 2
nd
Panzer Division as they rumbled by, less than thirty feet from his position. Troop carriers and armoured vehicles would no doubt follow, but it was time to bug out before being detected. As soon as he was clear enough the young lieutenant had radioed back to headquarters giving the disposition of the enemy column and identifying the units being of the 2
nd
Panzer Division of the XLVII Panzer Corps, which, at the time, was thought to still be south west of Bastogne. Luck is everything, and as luck would have it the Commanding General of the Third Army, George S Patton, happened to be in the communications tent, demanding intelligence on the location of German forces when a Lieutenant's hushed and breathless message was received.
Noting the detail of Jerome's report, including German unit numbers, the General had first fumed that his intel officers were wrong again about German locations, then had demanded that the lowly 2
nd
lieutenant report to HQ, Third Army, within 12 hours.
Thus, by accident of being in the right place at the right time, with the right people to recognize it, had young Jerome Willis's career in the army been directed in a manor he would never have imagined. Within a single week Jerome, promoted to 1
st
Lieutenant, was seconded from his unit into scouting duties for the Third Army, and then, after the Battle for Bastogne was won and the German army pushed back, he was permanently moved into the clandestine world of Army Intelligence.
By the spring of 1945 Jerome was back in the USA, taking courses in intelligence gathering while attending language school to learn Russian and German. Being back in familiar territory, Jerome found that a young officer of good family was in great demand for all sorts of social activities. Those activities brought an eager young Jerome into contact with more than a few pretty young women, among them one Carla Wagner, who literally took his breath away.
It seemed the attraction was mutual, and the two were married in the fall of '45. Jerome made sure Carla understood that he planned to remain in the army after the war and make it his career. It would mean periods of separation, and regular moves as he was transferred, but Carla had embraced his decision, coming, as she did, from a military background herself.
The first few years had been both delightful and challenging, as the young lovers got to know one another both physically and intellectually and adjust to married life. They had both been virgins on their wedding night and while those first few weeks had been an adjustment and learning curve for both young lovers, they had found their way with enthusiasm and the willingness for frank assessments of what enhanced both their experiences.
In 1946, when the Army's language school moved to the Presidio of Monterey, Jerome and Carla got to enjoy the warmth and relaxed atmosphere of California. Carla used the year in Monterey to finish her degree in education and get her teaching certificate. In 1948, having attained top fluency status in both German and Russian the young couple found themselves in Le Visinet, France, the headquarters of Military Intelligence Europe. Carla loved the French culture and language and eagerly set about conquering both.