Ep. 05
I Want to Be an Airborne Ranger...
Written by
Donald Mallord
Copyright by DMallord, 2021, USA., Revised 2022. All rights reserved.
9,370 MS Words,
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Kenjisato, a Literotica editor, continues his wonderful editing of this multi-part story. Thanks to his keen attention to grammar and vocabulary, my work reads much better.
Thank you, Kenjisato!
INTRODUCTION
Jim Rawlings' undercover encounter escalates with new revelations in the mounting fraud case. The Colonel calls upon his fellow comrades answering the call to arms, erupting in a showdown between former Green Berets and Texas Grifters. The twins reappear in the bedroom with a twist in the tale as the adventure continues.
Rescuing a Snow Angel Ep. 05
Getting poked in the eye, by a sliver of light penetrating through a crack in the blinds, is an annoying way to start the day. I squinted and turned toward the clock to ward off the offending glare. "Holy shit!" I practically shouted, as I realized I'd made it through the early morning hours without awaking to any of my past demons. "Fuck'n A," I croaked out to myself, as a reward for escaping my haunting memories of warrior days. Last night was one of a very few, peaceful, restful sleeps in my life; a night that would be normal for most everyone else. Except those, like me, who are carrying lots of ghostly baggage. My thoughts, the few I could recall, were the good ones evaporating from my dream state. These were the feelings of Gabby's warmth, her softness, and the slight scent of stale sex as she lay cradled, asleep between my legs. In that dream state, I was basking in the pleasure of her petite, bronzed body, bathed in perspiration. Or, as someone had once written, 'bathed in a radiant glow of pleasure,' since girls don't perspire.
They shimmer; I've been told. In my morning dream, she was blistering hot, and wet, and tight, and hell-bent on riding me until her body groaned like an old Chevy running dry on oil and seized-up tight—enjoying her sexual resolution. That sliver of morning light had interrupted my romp with her, leaving me with a stiff flagpole, and in need of relief. Horvath would have, and often did describe it as, "I woke up with a piss hard-on so tight—it pulled the skin off my eyeballs!" I groaned, rolled out of bed, and lumbered off to the bathroom to drain my own piss hard-on.
By now, Worthington and I had formed a mutual pack of raising the flags in front of his building; punctually at 8:00 AM. Immediately after, he and I met to review my surveillance documents and the numbers from Dick Hardon's files at the warehouse. I had crunched those numbers, gathered on New Year's Day, and had them ready for Monday morning. In just the few documents I'd photographed, the potential loss to Mortenson's company was well in excess of $95,000; perhaps just the tip of the iceberg. Worthington was livid as I rolled rapidly through the pages and tallies of what and how many returned items were listed in Dick Hardon's document's log. He placed a call to Mortenson—by the time I returned with three cups of coffee—Mortenson quickly showed up as pissed as a junkyard dog.
As I kept adding evidence in my review, over and over Mortenson kept cursing the son-of-a-bitch, the son-of-a-bitch's fuck'n mother, and his horse-ass-ugly mother-fuck'n wife as well as the mother-fuck'n day he met him. To say Mortenson was pissed would be putting it mildly. It took a sharp command voice from Worthington to temper his anger; although still not down to the level of a simmering caldron of hate. It was more like — shoot-the-mother-fuck'n-bastard-in-the-head-until-he-was-dead, boiling type of fucking caldron. Mortenson was on a rant that was bound for disaster; if Worthington hadn't dressed him down. His tone and demeanor cut through Mortenson's cursing. It was the voice of reason, honed by years of Army experience, that helped bridle some of Mortenson's anger. The most calming statement came when Worthington barked, "Patience, lieutenant! You have the resources to deal with this! My old, rusty pipes are still at my place, if we need them!"
I had witnessed this level of anger before. When command-level officers lost men in combat situations that were fraught with fucked-up scenarios. Still, I was surprised at how Worthington's remark about rusty pipes had the most calming effect on Mortenson. Although, I had no clue as to what the statement meant between them. It would be two months down the road before the meaning became chillingly clear.
Worthington made it crystal clear to Mortenson that we couldn't tip our hand by making changes to the operational procedures at this point. Not until we were sure the foreman was the lone operator, or that we could connect him to others in the scheme to defraud Mortenson. Chris was fuming at realizing he had to expect further losses for the sake of spreading a broader net to catch any others. Reaching in his suit pocket for a small notebook, Worthington searched for and dialed a number on speaker. "State Office, Fraud Division," the distant voice answered, half grunt and half wheeze. I envisioned some old, fat fart, with a cigar chunked in his stained lips, answering the line.
"Fish, that you?" Worthington queried.
"Worthington? I thought you was dead, you old dog!" came a more jovial response from the other end of the call.