Description: Is it possible for a reformed Hollywood porn star to reclaim her life in small town America, and get a second chance? Possible, especially when it's the local sheriff, who has some issues from his past. After a chance meeting, their relationship nurtures and grows, hitting some bumps but moving forward to the inevitable climax. A true love story.
Tags: erotica, romance, middle America, love story, award-winner, consensual
Published: 2023-06-08
Size: ≈ 13,598 Words
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please go to Bookapy.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
June 2012, Afghanistan
The rocky shoreline of the Qargha Reservoir offered a picturesque backdrop for the wedding photos. Staff Sergeant Rob “Coop” Cooper was best man, his buddy Sgt. First Class Tommy “Ratatat” Gunn taking the plunge with Marine Gunnery Sergeant Mckenzie “Mickey” Walters on the warm Thursday evening.
There was a much larger wedding taking place on the other side of the resort hotel, with what looked to be several hundred in attendance. It wasn't until near midnight before the first sounds of gunfire erupted. Initially, Rob and the guests thought it was just some drunks at the other wedding, but when he looked through night vision goggles, he could clearly see armed men shooting and killing guards.
Leadership instincts took over as the groom and his men quickly got the lights doused and moved everyone to more secure quarters. Three of the groomsmen, including Rob, were Sniper School graduates. They retrieved their weapons from the lockbox in the Hummer and took positions atop the hotel. Because of the relatively short distance the projectiles would need to travel, silencers were affixed.
Slowly the intruders, later determined to be Taliban militants, were picked off by the sharpshooters. When the few remaining figured out what was happening, they fled the scene.
Three months later, for gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States, saving both civilian and military lives, Rob and four others were awarded the Silver Star.
A few months after that, it was an ambush that prematurely ended his military career. Caught in a crossfire, Rob caught a round in the knee, sending him stateside, and then discharged with disability pay and a Purple Heart.
With a few months of recovery in store for him, Rob moved back to his hometown of Spencerville, OH, population 2,223, where he settled into an apartment and finally started to work on his goatee, now that he was free of Army regulations.
Six months later, he was working as a Deputy Sheriff, and within a couple of years, was elected Sheriff.
“Hello, Sheriff Coop de Doop!”
Looking around, Rob saw that it was old man Goat. He smiled and waved, then responded with “Hey Billy Goat!” as he continued walking. His last name wasn't Goat, but, he had this straggly gray beard, and his first name was William, and while Rob couldn't quite pull all the pieces together, it had something to do with all of Goat's brothers and sisters that townsfolk got to calling him Uncle William...then it progressed to Uncle Billy, and before long he was Uncle Billy Goat. Old man Goat chuckled every time he heard someone call him that. Not his kids, though. Ellen and Levi simply called him Dad.
The day was coming to a close and Rob was happy about that. He'd dealt with a smashed mailbox out on 199 at the Jonesville farm and then got called to the high school about a suspicious gas smell. Turned out to be a couple of kids mixing liquids in the chemistry department without proper ventilation. Can you spell D-E-T-E-N-T-I-O-N chuckled Rob to himself as he watched Miss Crenshaw, the aged principal, tongue lash the two youths. From there it was a quick hop across the 2nd Street Bridge to the Fire Department for his mandatory lifesaving refresher course. Everyone in the department knew he could teach the course standing on one foot, but village bylaws were bylaws.
He had but one more scheduled stop, the short jaunt down Canal Street to St. Patrick's. In exchange for letting his veteran's group hold weekly meetings in the basement, he'd agreed to referee basketball early Friday evenings with boys from the parish.
Rob was glad that there was a second referee who liked nothing better than to run up and down the court all game long. He knew his knee would never stand up to that kinda punishment, so he was content with hovering around mid-court, toward one sideline, and making his calls from there.
Once in a while, he'd make a controversial call and one of the kids would get a little mouthy. Rob would take hold of his jacket and open it a bit, revealing his Sig Sauer weapon, and that would most often diffuse the tension into laughter. After the games, Rob would open his trunk and pull out an ice chest filled with soft drinks and a box full of snacks, all paid for by him, and he and the kids would sit around and talk about sports.
The group dispersed around 10 pm and after Rob cleaned up a bit, he opted to head over to Mollies for a drink or two and some conversation.
The bar had a fair amount of people in it for a small-town dive, but the music was good and Rob was looking forward to shooting a wild turkey or two. He checked his watch and saw that he had less than ten minutes until he was officially off the clock. He was a stickler about that, and paused, not going to the bar yet, but instead just leaning against the wall, ready to close his eyes for a moment.
Movement caught his attention. You can never let it rest, never leave Afghan, he thought to himself as he zeroed in on a chestnut brown-haired woman at the jukebox. She looked dowdy from a distance, with baggy clothes, almost a hobo look. But it wasn't her that got his trouble antenna raised. No, it was Levi, son of Billy Goat, a fellow Afghan soldier, though quite a bit younger. He looked drunk and looked like he was trying to converse, unsuccessfully, with the hobo. Then he saw Levi reach for her arm and that sprung him into motion.
Reaching around Levi's chest, he took hold of the younger and somewhat smaller man, pulling him back gently but firmly as he spoke to him.
“Hey there Levi!” He saw the young man turn, a scowl starting on his face until he recognized the Sheriff. “Looks like you have had a few too many tonight.” As he was talking, he moved gracefully, both his military and martial arts training spot on, positioning himself between the inebriated soldier and his female quarry. Gently, he told himself, divert and deflect, do not push.
“Coop! Hey man, how ya' doing'? Bro! This is Bobbie Soxx! I'm serious, right here!”
Coop briefly looked toward the woman, still keeping his body mostly positioned between the two, and keeping Levi in his peripheral vision. He was surprised. This was no hobo. This was an attractive woman dressing way, way down, almost in disguise. He nodded, then turned his attention back to Levi.