Niece's Passion
by Lubrican
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Chapter Eighteen
Erica's
initial EMT training was complete by the time Christmas break arrived. She was
nervous as she took the written test to get certified by the National
Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians. It
was not an easy test and all her classmates were also anxious about it. That
was followed by the skills test, which was even more nerve-wracking because
mistakes in those procedures meant an instructor might say, with a grave voice,
"Your patient just died."
Sixteen
percent of the class failed one or the other of those tests, and would have to
retake it later.
Erica,
happily, passed, and when she went home between that semester and the coming
one, in which she'd start her studies to become a paramedic, she was proud to
proclaim that she was officially an EMT.
"If you
have a heart attack while you're on top of me I know what to do," she
teased her Uncle.
It was a
season in which most people are happy and hopeful. The twins were home again,
too, and they were hopeful that they'd get to spend more time with their
dark-skinned lover.
Things, as
they say, went pear-shaped, however, and the season was almost ruined for two
families.
It would be
a white Christmas, with snow falling on Christmas Eve. Veronica's attitude
about her parents had changed significantly while she was at the Academy. She
had finished her basic training program and stood proudly at graduation, when
her badge was pinned onto her dress uniform. Her parents had been there and her
dad had been beaming with pride. She was slated for additional SWAT sniper
training, before she'd go to the field services division of the patrol. She had
not yet been assigned to a particular zone. That decision would be made after
she (successfully ... or not) completed her SWAT training.
Now, she
viewed herself as an adult, who could make her own decisions and who did not
need an excuse to go see her best friend on Christmas Eve. Her parents didn't
quite see it in the same vein. They were interested in where her first duty
station would be. She didn't know, she said. Her dad was ambivalent about SWAT
training, since that would put her in dangerous situations. By the same token,
he knew that most troopers were hurt or killed in normal, everyday enforcement situations.
Her mother was less informed, but still viewed her daughter as someone who
should still take orders from her parents.
When she
walked out of the house that morning, neither parent was happy. She had her own
car, though, and there was nothing they could do to stop her.
That might
have smoothed over, had things gone as she planned. Her plans for that day were
to spend some time with Erica and then the twins. She and Erica caught up
within an hour. They had kept up a stream of texts and phone calls as they
finished their initial training, so they were already mostly up to date.
Robby and
Randy kept walking by Erica's bedroom door, though, and after that hour, Erica
said, "Go. They'll wear out the carpet in the hallway if you don't."
It was
snowing heavily. A big storm was in progress and the weatherman on Channel 8,
KLKN in Lincoln, predicted the storm could last for two more days. Traffic was
already snarled and flights were being cancelled. Had Ronnie already been
stationed somewhere, she would likely have been too busy to celebrate Christmas
at all.
But she
wasn't, and her car had four wheel drive. Since Bob and Julie were both home
and not going anywhere, Veronica's only choice to spend time with her lovers
was in her car. It was an SUV, purchased used, and the back seat was relatively
roomy. They found that one of the boys could sprawl on that back seat while
Veronica sat on his lap, impaled. To be honest, they were just being intimate,
and not trying to achieve orgasm. She would get one of them in her and rock
slowly, while talking to both. She also called and texted them, regularly, but
they didn't get the detail about her training that their sister did. So there
was a lot of talk as she coupled with Robby and rocked gently on his lap. Randy
stayed in the front passenger's seat, watching and talking, and waiting his
turn.
The
windshield was covered with snow, and a thin coating of ice had built up on the
inside of the windows as moisture from their exhalations settled on the glass
and then froze. Veronica was predicting that, in a few short months, she'd have
her own place, and what they were doing would no longer be necessary to be
together.
A tap on the
driver's window interrupted them and all three faces turned to that area of the
car. The tap came again, stronger this time.
"Holden
Police!" came a muffled voice from outside. "Roll down the window,
please!"
"Fuck!"
whispered Randy, as both Ronnie and Robby tried to figure out what to do.
"What do I do?"
"Open
up!" came a more strident voice. "I know you're in there. The motor's
running and I saw the vehicle move."
"Get in
the driver's seat and talk to him," gasped Ronnie. "Just act like
you're the driver."
Randy
scrambled and, unknown to them, that caused the vehicle to rock even more as
officer George Stratton stood, hand on his pistol, warily looking at the
frosty, snow-covered car. It was parked in a far corner of the parking lot of a
business that was closed. He'd been on routine patrol when he saw it and
thought it odd. He drove quietly next to the car, where he saw the almost filled tire tracks, but no footprints in
the snow, and then detected slight movement as Ronnie moved her hips back and forth
on Robby's stiff prick. He was paid to be curious, so he parked his car and
called in the license tag before approaching the vehicle.
When he
announced himself and nothing happened, save urgent, muffled voices and
movement from within, he got suspicious. He was also paid to be suspicious. No
windows were cracked, so he couldn't smell anything, but his initial conjecture
was that kids were probably smoking dope in the car. His second rap on the
driver's window produced only more whispering voices from within. He couldn't
see through the frost, except to confirm there was movement inside, so he
stepped back. He was trying to decide whether to call for backup or not when
the driver's window went down a couple of inches.
"Yes?"
came a tremulous voice through the opening. The car rocked more violently and
now he saw movement in the back seat.
"What
are you doing here?" he asked, officiously.
"Um …
I'm just ... uh ... resting," came a male voice.
"Lower
your window and show me your hands," said Officer Stratton. He stepped
closer, carefully, and sniffed.
The window
slid down further, but only halfway.
"Is
there a problem, Officer?" asked a young man with a shock of brown hair.
"You're
parked on private property," said George. That was always good for
probable cause, particularly if the establishment was closed, as in this
situation. "Do you have any ID?"
"Uh …
sure," said Randy. "Hang on a sec. It's in my billfold."
"I also
want to see the registration and insurance for this vehicle," said George.
"Who else is in the car?"
"Just
my brother and a friend," said Randy, trying to get his license out.
"Is
this your car?"
"No. Um
… it belongs to my friend."
"Does
your friend know you have the car?"
"Yes!"
said Randy, finally able to answer a question without having to think.
"She's the friend who's in the car."
George
leaned over and peered through the eight inches of unobstructed glass.
"I
don't see your friend," he said.
"Uh,
she's in the back seat," he said.
"The
owner of the car is in the back seat of the car," said George, dryly.
Randy handed
out his license. George took it and stepped forward, to lean so he could see
into the back of the SUV. He saw another Caucasian male putting on a shirt, and
what appeared to be a black female zipping up a parka.
George's
first thought was, "Two guys with a hooker." But that couldn't be
right. Holden's population of African Americans was small, and George had never
heard of any black prostitutes. To be honest, the only prostitutes in Holden
were two women the police knew well, but most of the population didn't even
know existed. Both of those women were white.
"I need
ID from everybody in the vehicle," said George. His ball cap was covered
by snow, now, as were his shoulders.
He saw the
black woman reach up between the front seats and open the glove box.
"Slowly!"
he barked.
"There's
no problem here, Officer," she said in a mellow voice. "We were just
talking. The registration and insurance are in the glove compartment."
Documents
and two more driver licenses were passed through the window.
"I'll
be right back," said George.
Back in his
warm, dry car, George looked at the IDs curiously. The behavior of the people
in the car was peculiar. The store wasn't open. It was Christmas Eve. The car
was moving slightly, as if someone inside was climbing around. The passengers
were a male and female and he'd heard what might have been a muffled "Get
dressed!" before the window went down. He suspected that this was just
some kind of kinky sex thing. That wasn't illegal, but it was suspicious.
The last
names of the males were the same and the pictures made it clear that they were
probably twin brothers. The address was local. It was when he looked at the
last name of the female that his heart skipped a beat. Green. As in Sergeant
Green? He knew Terry had a daughter, but he'd never met her. There were
so few blacks in town, though, that this couldn't be a coincidence. He looked
at the address. It was on Elm Street. He knew Sergeant Green lived on Elm.
"Fuck!"
he said, softly. "What the fuck do I do, now?"
What Officer
Stratton did was what his recently promoted patrol sergeant had trained him to
do. He got on the radio and, once he got a response from the office, said,
"Hey, could you have Sergeant Green give me a call on my cell?"
"He's
off today," said the disembodied voice on his radio. "Is there a
problem?"
"Probably
not. I just need his advice on something."
"You
have a patrol supervisor," the radio operator reminded him.
"Just
have Sergeant Green call me, okay?" barked George.
"Shall
I dispatch the patrol supervisor to your location?"
That was a
ridiculous question, since Jerry Hopkins, who had seniority over George by the whopping
figure of six months, could hear everything that was being said.
Unless he was out of his vehicle for some reason. But George hadn't heard him
call out on anything. It had been a very quiet day thus far. Most people were
snug in their homes.
"What's
going on, George?" came Jerry's voice.
"I'm
handling it," said George into the radio. "I've got a car full of
kids parked in the Perkins Farm and Home parking lot. I don't think there's a
problem."
"Then
why are you bothering Terry on Christmas Eve?" asked Jerry.
"Fuck,
fuck, fuck," whispered George. If the girl in the car really was Terry
Green's daughter, he didn't want the whole fucking world to know it. If she was
smoking dope or ... whatever she was doing in that back seat ... he wanted
her father to handle it, not him.
"George?"
came Jerry's voice of the radio. "I'll be over there in ten minutes. I'm
just leaving Pop's right now. "Pop's" was a local diner that everyone
on the force patronized. They had homemade donuts and good coffee.
"I don't
need you here," said George into the radio. "Control, just get me
Terry on the phone."
"Roger,"
came the voice of Shelly Zimmerman. She'd been unhappy that she had to work on
Christmas Eve. Now, maybe something interesting was going on.
She picked
up the phone and hit the speed dial number for Sergeant Terrance Green.
"What's
going on?" asked Sergeant Green on his cell phone.
"This
is George," said Officer Stratton, needlessly.
"I know
that," said Terry. "I called you."
"Is
your daughter named Veronica?"
"Yes."
The hackles rose on the back of Terry's neck. His daughter was away from the
house, and if someone on the force was inquiring about her, it couldn't be good
news. "Have you had contact with her? Is she okay?"
"Yes,
to both questions," said George. "I did a routine check on an SUV I
saw parked in the extreme northwest corner of the Perkins parking lot. It was
running. I saw the exhaust. They're closed today and I wondered why a car had
parked there. I saw tire tracks but no footprints. The windows were frosted
over but there was movement so I looked into it. I think your daughter might be
in the car."
"Okay,"
said Terry. "Have you spoken to her?"
"Not
exactly," said George. "There are two white males in the car with
her. One of them is in the driver seat. She and the other one are in the back.
I ... uh ... thought they might be smoking dope at first, but I haven't smelled
anything through the open window. I thought if it's your daughter you might
want to come over and talk to her."
Terry was
silent. What the fuck was going on? Was she out with Robby? But who was the
other one and what the fuck were they doing parked in that location, on this
particular day?
"I'll
be right over. Who else knows about this?"
"Jerry's
on his way over here. I told him he didn't need to come, but he'll show up
anyway. I gave Shelly the tag number and she knows I wanted to talk to you, but
not why."
"Give
me ten minutes," said Terry. "Don't let them leave."
"Got
it. Thanks, Sarge."
Shelly chose
that time to call George and relay the information on the owner of the vehicle,
which was registered to an address she also recognized. She didn't mention who
also lived there over the radio. There were six or seven folks around town who
had police scanners and who loved to gossip. But she looked forward to
something interesting on this otherwise boring day.
When
Veronica's father got there, both of the other patrol cars active on this
particular day were also there. Jerry's overheads were on. Jerry and George
were huddled together at the front of George's car, just staring at the SUV
Terry recognized immediately. He ignored the two officers and approached the
SUV directly. The driver's window was still down eight inches. When he leaned
over, he saw his daughter in the passenger's seat, looking anxious. The boy
she'd been dating was in the driver's seat. Another boy, who also looked like
the boy she'd been dating was in the back seat, trying to look innocent. He
also sniffed at the open window of the car. When he detected no hint of
Marijuana, he felt relief.
"What's
going on?" he asked his daughter.
"We
were just parked here, talking, and your guys got all worked up about it,"
said Veronica. "We weren't doing anything wrong."
"And
you chose this particular location to ... talk?" said Terry. "Why
didn't you invite them to the house?"
"We
weren't doing anything wrong, Dad!" she said, insistently.
"Stay
put," said Sergeant Green.
He walked
over to where his two patrolmen were.
"Tell
me again why you took an interest in them," he said to George.
"I just
saw the car there, and the windows were frosted over. When I pulled in I saw
tire tracks, but no footprints and the car was ... uh ... moving. So I thought I'd
check it out."
"Moving,"
said Terry. He saw George's face turn pinker than the weather would account
for.
"Yeah."
"Moving
how?"
"It was
… rocking a little," said George. "It could have been because they
were climbing around in the back seat."
"Climbing
around in the back seat," Terry repeated.
"Yeah …
maybe," said George.
Jerry stood
there, mute. He'd already talked to George and came to the same conclusion all
three of them were coming to.
"They
were cooperative," said George, hopefully. "I just thought you might
want to keep this ... unofficial."
"You called
it in?"
"Of
course," said George.
"Then
it's pretty fucking official, isn't it," Terry growled.
"I'm
sorry, Sarge. I didn't know who was in the car," groaned George.
"Call
Shelly back," said Terry. "Tell her the situation is resolved. You
can both go back on patrol."
"Got
it," said George, eagerly, who was quite happy to vacate the situation.
"Thanks,"
said Terry. "I think you did the right thing."
"No
problem," said George.
Both he and
Jerry went back to their cars. Terry waited until they left the parking lot
before he went back to the SUV. The driver's window was now all the way down.
He leaned over and looked in to see something he'd seen hundreds of times
before: three young people trying to look innocent, but who looked very, very
guilty.
"Why don't
we talk about this elsewhere," he suggested.
"Where?"
asked Veronica, as visions of being taken to the police station filled her with
dread.
"The
pancake house is open," he said.
"What
about Mom?" asked Veronica.
"All
she knows is that I got called out," sighed Terry. "Let's talk and
then I'll figure out what to tell her."
They
sat in a booth at the rear of the pancake house. The place was practically
deserted, which suited all of them just fine.
"Which
one of you is dating my daughter?" asked Terry in his opening question.
"Both,"
said Veronica.
"I
was talking to them," growled her father. "You'll get your
turn."
"Both
of us have taken her out," said Robby. "We're twins."
"I
can see that," said Terry. "What I can't see is why you'd both be in
the car with her at the same time."
"We're
friends," said Randy. "We like spending time together."
"I
love them," said Veronica, impulsively.
"Both
of them?" Terry's eyebrows rose. "One white boy isn't enough for
you?"
"They
proposed!" blurted Ronnie.
The
waitress arrived to take their order. When she left, Terry looked at the twins.
"If
you two would be so kind as to take a seat over there somewhere, I'd like to
talk to my daughter in private." He waved a big hand at other booths
nearby.
Both
boys stood. They looked reluctant to leave, but they drifted away. Terry fixed
his eyes on his daughter.
"Which
one proposed?" he asked.
She
looked uncomfortable, but then her face hardened.
"Both,"
she said.
"My
officer said the car was rocking when he got there and you and one of them were
in the back. What were you doing? Auditioning them?" His voice was soft,
but harsh.
"Actually,
yes," she said, setting her jaw. "I'm a big girl, Daddy. I'm an
actual state trooper, now!"
"This
is crazy, Ronnie," he said.
He
sounded confused, but not angry and she relaxed a little.
"I
know, but I like them both. I think I could be happy with one of them."
"And
your mother?"
"My
mother will get used to the idea when I present her with a little milk chocolate
grandbaby. You know how she is about babies."
"Black
babies, yes," said her father. "Milk chocolate ones? I don't know
about that. And isn't it a little early to be talking about babies?"
"Of
course," she said. "But that will happen down the road, in three or
four years."
"So
you decide to have sex with them on Christmas Eve? Please tell me they used
condoms."
"That's
personal," said Ronnie, stiffly. "I'll tell you, though, that I'm on
birth control pills."
"Thank
goodness for that, I guess," he said. "I do not like having this
discussion, Ronnie."
"I
am a grown woman, Daddy," she said. "Mom has always wanted me
to be black. You've always wanted me to be happy. I will be happy with
one of them. I'll be okay if you're okay," she said.
"That's
not fair. Your mother loves you."
"I
know that, but it's more important to her that I be black than happy. I'm not
willing to do that. Racism is causing enough problems as it is without us
adding to that pile of shit."
"That's
not fair, either. You haven't been through what she's been through. She doesn't
want you to go through that."
"I
know that. And I hope I never have to go through that, either. I hope nobody else
has to go through that. But holding on to the hatreds of the past won't move
anybody forward. I'm not so naive as to believe that everything will be hunky
dory if I'm with a white man, but I don't have to be racist, myself, to fight
racism."
"You
also don't have to date twin brothers at the same time or marry a white guy to
fight racism," he sighed.
"I know this seems strange to you, but it's working for us right now. I know you
love me," she said. "Do you also trust me?"
"Of
course I do."
"Then
talk to them. Tell them they're not in any trouble."
"I've already talked with at least one of them," said Sgt Green. "How do you tell
them apart?"
"Oh,
it's easy," she said, becoming animated.
He
held up a hand to stop her.
"Never
mind. I don't want to know," he sighed.
An
hour later, during which he forbade his daughter to speak, Terry Green felt a
little better about Veronica's ... dating choices. One was going to be an
Electrical Engineer and the other a Registered Nurse. At least both were
serious about contributing to society, and both would have good jobs one day.
He chose to believe that the reasons she hadn't chosen one over the other
already was because she was being judicious ... careful. She wasn't jumping into
something based just on estrogen. He tried not to think about the fact that the
SUV had been "rocking" with her and one of them in the back seat, while
the other was in the car with them.
Eventually,
he told Veronica to take her car back home. He said he'd deliver the twins to
their house.
"I
can take them," said Ronnie.
"I
know you can, but I need to talk to their parents."
"Why?"
she wailed. "This isn't fair, Daddy! We didn't break any laws and we
didn't do anything wrong. We're all adults and you have no right to butt into
our personal business!"
"That's
all true. But I have a wife who happens to be your mother, and she's eventually
going to find out about all ... this. Until then, I don't want my officers
finding you necking with two white boys in a car like some high school
teenager!"
"You
can't keep us apart!" said Ronnie, stridently.
"I'm
not trying to keep you apart!" snapped her father. "I'm trying
to see if there's some way you can be together at someone's house! Do you want
to ask your mother if you can entertain two white boys at our house? Be
sure to tell her they both proposed to you, and you need to be with both of
them in private, so you can decide which one to break your mother's
heart with?"
"Oh,"
said Ronnie, as the wind left her sails.
"So
let me take them home and see if you might be welcome in their house
until you go back to the academy," he said.
"That
won't be a problem," she said, eagerly. "Erica's my best
friend."
"And
yet, she introduced you to her brothers," he said, dryly.
"Oh,
we knew her ever since she got here," said Robby. "She came over all
the time for sleepovers."
"Sleepovers,"
said Terry Green, as a dangerous tone entered his voice.
"It
wasn't like that!" said Randy. "We never even talked to her back
then. She was just around. That's how we found out how interesting she
is."
"Without
talking to her," said her father. His dry voice was back.
"Nothing
happened until she was out of high school," said Robby. "I swear
it."
Veronica
kicked him under the table. Getting her tender nipples sucked and being
fingerfucked to orgasm while she was a senior in high school would not be
viewed as "nothing" by her police Sergeant father.
He
passed that by, though. That ship had long past sailed off into the dark. What
he was worried about now was how he'd manage this with his wife. She was not
tolerant in any sense of the word. The only reason she was relatively happy
with him working in Holden was because he'd been promoted to sergeant over two
white candidates. If he could defer this situation into the future, that was
fine with him. He wanted Veronica to get some active duty time under her
trooper belt before she announced to her mother that she had a boyfriend. Or
two boyfriends. Or whatever this was.
As
for him, he felt like she could have chosen much worse. He didn't really know
the boys, yet, but he felt better about them. That was enough for him. Right
now, he just wanted to get through Christmas without a major family meltdown.
"Tomorrow
you need to spend the day with your mother and me," said Terry to his
daughter.
"I
will," she said.
"Maybe
you can visit them at their house," he said.
"Okay,"
she said, as relief flooded through her. She was suddenly horny. She ignored
that.
"Go
buy something so your mother thinks that's why you were gone."
"A
present? For who?" she asked. "I already put your presents under the
tree."
"A
second present for your loving father, who saves you from embarrassment and
maybe even a ticket for illegal parking."
"Yes!"
she said. "What should I get?"
"Something
expensive," he said. "Something very expensive."
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