Can Carol find faithful love?
Please read the previous parts in order.
Thank you for the honest and encouraging comments on the previous parts. For those who are anonymous bullies, I ignore you.
I found the one commenter who found discussing religion on Literotica to be offensive. I am mystified that if someone has deep religious beliefs that they would read a sex site. This story is about the contradictory impact of the three branches of the Abrahamic religious tradition and how the underlying scriptures we can interpret in ways to justify almost any activity and destroy natural love and bonding. That is really what this story is about. If we cannot be good without the carrot or the stick, then perhaps we are not good at all.
While this is a cartoonish enhancement for a story's purpose, it is based on my life's experience that often, when one partner embraces extreme religiosity, or even political ideology and other beliefs after the marriage begins, it is harmful and even destroys relationships. Most times, the non-believing partner seems to have suffered through it and stayed in the marriage for either family (children) or economic reasons, but it almost always leads to a sad life experience. If both have the same beliefs going into the partnership or later, it usually causes no issues. In this story, I try to find a middle path for Frank and Carol
I identify with my sceptical characters, Mom and Dad Connor, and although a sceptic, I think the approach of the Roman church of ritualizing forgiveness for the sin of being human is better than the narrow Protestant approach that often believes that adherents should live a life of anguish for being human. Most religious systems seem to advocate that suffering is our lot on earth and we should accept it but pay tithes to the religion to earn our nirvana.
Enough! On with the story.
***
Frank eased the RV to the Canadian check point at the Blue Water Bridge. The drive from Texas had been interesting but uneventful. Now that they were off of I-94l, he felt tense. He glanced at Carol in the passenger seat. Laurie and Pat sat behind in the living area.
"Carol, are you okay?" Frank asked.
Frank feared Carol would scream kidnapping, and it would fuck them all.
Carol said nothing, smiled happily, and the bored border guard hardly bothered with them. Their passports all checked out, and the story of Frank returning home with his wife for Canadian Thanksgiving satisfied him.
Frank pointed the RV down Highway 402. He had to keep a watch for the cut-off and did not want to miss it and hit the fucking 401. He loved the back roads. The Familiar parade of farms inter-spaced with the green-house marijuana grow ops and vegetable producers did not diminish the feeling of warmth and home. As a farm boy, he felt comfort, and in this horror he had lived for over two years, that healed. Daylight faded and soon the countryside became an impenetrable black night, broken by farmyard lights. He had intentionally crossed the border at dinner time so they would arrive in Grandview later at night.
Frank looked at Carol, sitting beside him with her eyes closed and lips moving.
"Praying," Frank thought, "but she looks happy. Even if our relationship goes to shit, I'll always feel good that I helped someone I love. Even if she isn't mine, she won't be in the cult either. Carol and I may never be together again with her loving me more than her god, but I'll feel better about myself. I don't want to spend the rest of my life thinking I'm an asshole."
"Carol," Frank said, "you look tired. Why don't you go to the back and lie down?"
Frank glanced over his shoulder at Laurie and nodded. She guided Carol to the bedroom with their arms around each other's waists. Pat took the passenger seat and smiled.
"You know what is going to happen back there," she said. "How do you feel about that?"
"Are you asking as a friend, or do you have your therapist's hat on?"
"Both," Pat said. "You know I care about you and Carol. As a friend, I want it to work out. As a professional, I want to help that happen."
"I'm not optimistic," Frank fought a tear. Pat noticed. She reached over and laid her hand on his arm.
"You love her," Pat said. "Can you forgive her?"
Frank stared beyond the headlights. He responded to a turn command from bionic Betty on his cell map. It gave him time to consider.
"The religious bullshit doesn't need forgiving, and I would never call it crap to her face. It's a problem to be resolved. I need to have a way to get Carol off the distortion about sex that her pastor used to trap her. More importantly, I want her to stop trying to save me and simply love me here on earth. Fuck heaven."
"Laurie is working on that," Pat said, but she could not suppress a giggle.
"What about the sex? She fucked a lot of men and women." Pat squeezed Frank's arm.
"You know," Frank said, "the sex doesn't bother me. The deceit, abandonment and betrayal around it is the hard part. At least she didn't give me any STD. I got to fuck that Fran woman, and she is nice but another liar. I just want to be sexually exclusive if we reconcile, and I'm not into group shit or orgies."
Pat withdrew her hand. She did not want what she said next to be taken as a seduction.
"She seemed to enjoy doing women," Pat observed Frank. "What if she decides she needs that, too?"
Frank frowned, but then smiled. The low light of the dash softened his face.
"Laurie and you have both fucked Carol all week," Frank said. Pat noticed his tone was matter-of-fact and not angry or disappointed. "That doesn't bother me. Maybe it's because I have fucked Laurie as well. I'm not a hypocrite. Maybe that explains why I am not religious."
Frank slowed the RV and gave Pat a hard look.
"If I was ever to get into any group thing, it would involve you two sex maniacs." He laughed. "If it ever happened, and I'm not saying yes or no right now, it would have to be in the open, and only if we agree to whatever is involved, no sneaking, no ulterior motives like saving my soul or whatever."
"I would like that, and so would Laurie. We both are in the bringing happiness business, not soul saving. What if we decide it's the key to getting Carol onto some less judgemental ground and not to threaten her faith?"
"That would be a fucking miracle."
"Miracles are Laurie's business, at least they were. She thinks she is close to replacing the cult pastor as Carol's religious mentor. Somehow, sex between them is part of it."
"Just like with that fucking idiot in El Paso," Frank said.
"She doesn't want Carol to fall in love with her. Neither do I," Pat laughed, "but I'm selfish. I'll share Laurie's body, but not her commitment, and she has mine, unconditionally."
"I know sex has always been important to Carol, and she ties it into expressing love. She was wild before we met, and we fucked the first night we met, but as far as I know she was faithful all of our marriage until god seduced her. Maybe I'm just an idiot and missed everything before, and I don't think she ever used fucking as a sales tactic for her business."
"I don't think so," Pat said. "Carol confessed a lot to Laurie, every titillating detail about the church stuff and her young life. She declared on a stack of Bibles, as she put it, that you and she were exclusive, as you think."
Frank laughed, but in happiness, not sarcasm.
"Thank you," he said.
Pat eyed Frank. Her pussy actually was wet, but lust did not govern her. Her training and professionalism could keep that at bay, but it seemed like some tantric torture. Pat considered her words, a repeat of what Laurie often told her in the afterglow of sex.
"Frank, love is not a fixed amount we are issued at birth. It grows to include more and more people whom we come to love: parents, siblings, close friends, lovers, and mates. It is truly infinite. That's why an exclusive deity is so limiting as it demands a narrow, fixed and rationed love. Laurie grew beyond that in her faith, and it has likely negated all of her childhood beliefs and religious training. That great, all powerful god became too limiting and she and I feel it is unnatural. I have observed that in you, even if you don't see it. Your love expanded from your family and Carol to include Laurie, and I hope for me."
Pat watched Frank's reaction. He smiled, so encouraged she continued.
"I confess I have been watching you as a professional shrink," Pat said, "and I saw your love for both Trish in the office and Fran from the church. Your fatherly love for Trish is as I saw it with your parents. Fran is complicated because you fucked her, but I saw love in your eyes, even as we watched her in that last orgy video. I saw love and disappointment. I think I saw you seeing her as a sister whom you wished you could protect."
Again, Pat paused and considered.
"Carol sees you like you think of Fran. She thinks she is saving your soul, protecting you, and that is what drives her. Unfortunately, her approach, misled by that narcissistic pastor, was to use a butcher's knife when she needed a scalpel."
"It felt like a fucking axe." Frank said.
"You're right; I care for you all," Frank said. "That doesn't mean I want to fuck you all."