The Grim ReaperChapter 51: A Funeral free porn video

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December 24, 2007 - December 28, 2007

I was at the station at 0800 Monday morning as usual. It might have been Christmas Eve, but I was a regular working stiff, and didn’t have any vacation time built up. I was practically the only person in Services. Almost immediately after I arrived, I was summoned to Lieutenant Brownell’s office. It didn’t seem as if Jerry Wolinski had told anybody I was too screwed up to become a cop, but somebody must have told Brownell that I had gotten into it with Briggsby. He chewed me out royally and then sent me on my way. Five minutes later, he called me back into his office. He had just received a phone call.

Mike Gorsky was dead.

The call had been from the County Sheriff’s office, which ran the Matucket County Jail. Mikey’s body had been found that morning. He had stripped off his coveralls and used them to hang himself in his cell sometime during the night. He was found when the guards had done their morning rounds.

I just shook my head dejectedly. Some things you just can’t fix.

“When was the last time you talked to Gorsky, Reaper?” asked Brownell.

“Friday, when they were processing him in. I stuck with him until his lawyer showed up, and then I took off. I spent the weekend with my fiancée.”

“Nothing since then? He didn’t call you? You didn’t go see him?”

“No, sir,” I replied.

“Did he give you any indication he planned something like this?” Brownell asked.

“No, sir. I’d’ve mentioned it if he had.”

The Lieutenant shrugged. “Well, I can just about guarantee that the detectives will be questioning you again. Anything that happens at the jail, we have to look into it. Don’t be surprised if the Feds stick their noses in, too.”

“I’ll need to call some people, let them know.” I was figuring to call his lawyer and maybe a couple of guys over at the IAVA, and let them know, before they heard it on the morning radio.

I was surprised when Brownell said, “No, I don’t want you doing that. The detectives will be making the contacts. They’ll have the lawyer’s name from when he saw your friend during processing. You stay out of it until they tell you. Who were you planning on talking to, anyway?”

“Just a couple of guys at the IAVA.” Brownell looked curious, so I added, “The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans Association. Mikey was an Afghan vet. We look after each other. They got him the lawyer, for instance.”

Brownell nodded. “When you are questioned by the detectives, make sure you tell them who you spoke to. They have to do the follow-up.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Grim, I’m sorry about this. If you didn’t need to be questioned, I’d let you go home.”

I shook my head. “I’m good, Lieutenant. I might want to take a day or two off for the funeral, but I’m not even sure where his home is. We might need to contact the VA or Defense Department.”

“Yeah.” He sighed, “Merry Christmas.”

“Yeah. Merry Christmas.” I stood and left his office.

To be fair, I didn’t get much accomplished that morning. About 1030 the same two detectives who had processed Mikey in came and spoke to me. I told them what I had told Brownell, that I hadn’t talked to Gorsky since his attorney arrived on Friday afternoon. I told them who I talked to at IAVA and asked if they had talked to his lawyer yet. They had and had gotten Mike’s contact information from him. They were sympathetic, too. Nobody liked to see suicides, especially on Christmas Eve, and the fact it was in the jail just made it even messier. I told them who I had spoken to about Mikey at the IAVA and they said not to call them, but that they would let me know when I could call them later.

At the end, one of the detectives, Lou Fong, said, “Reaper, I understand you’re going to go to the academy and try to come on board. That right?”

“Yes, sir.”

“You did good work on Friday getting your friend to come in. This is kind of the flip side, though. Sometimes, no matter what you do or how right you do it, it doesn’t always work out the way we want it to,” he said. “You need to be able to handle that.”

“Yes, sir. I understand that.”

“Sometimes there simply are no good choices, just less bad ones.” He stood up. “We’ll let you know when you can call your friends.”

“Thank you.”

He was right, of course. Sometimes the good choice is simply the best of the crappy choices. I think that’s what we had with Mikey.

Later that afternoon I was given the green light to call some people and found that the detectives had already talked to them. There wasn’t a whole lot to say. Nobody was blaming me, and surprisingly, I wasn’t blaming myself either. I’d only been home a few months and even I had seen how Gorsky’s mental state had been deteriorating. I mentioned that, if possible and if the family agreed, some of us should try to attend his funeral.

Kelly was very worried about me, but I managed to convince her I wasn’t going to eat my gun. Still, it put a pall on things. By that evening, it was all over the evening news. Both the MPD and the Sheriff’s office put out the standard, ‘The incident is still under investigation’, statement. I already knew the MPD policy about answering any questions by reporters, which was not to do it unless I wanted to be both fired and tossed in jail. Still, several reporters managed to track me down and called the apartment to get something. I just said, ‘No thank you,’ and hung up. I would need to get the phone number changed and unlisted and decided to mention it to my grandparents.

I didn’t get too much grief from Kelly’s family that evening. I had Christmas off, so our plan was to spend Christmas Eve with her family after I got out of work, and then Christmas itself with my family. While her parents had seen the news like everyone else, they didn’t say much. For myself, I wondered about Mister O’Connor. He had been a boy during ‘The Troubles’ in Northern Ireland. Did he have issues with that sort of thing? What about the IRA? Did guerillas and resistance fighters and revolutionaries get PTSD? That wasn’t something I had ever thought about before. When the war in Iraq ended, and sooner or later it would have to, would everybody on both sides be fucked up? Something to think about, I suppose.

We went over to my parents’ house in the early afternoon, Kelly and me in her car, and my grandparents in theirs. Jack brought Teresa home with him from UGA, which was the first time he had ever brought a girl to Christmas. This was vastly amusing to the entire family, since it was obvious the little girl had well and truly hooked him. Teresa was bunking on a cot in Dad’s study, and Bobbie Joe commented to me at one point that Jack was spending an awful lot of time in there ‘tucking her in’ at night before going to bed.

Bobbie Joe also brought around his girlfriend from high school. She was a junior, Jamie Hughes, and she was the youngest sister of my old buddy Brax Hughes. She promised to call him and let both Jack and me talk to him. He was playing for the San Diego Chargers now, his rookie season. Last year he had been one of the final candidates for the Heisman Trophy, as had our fellow teammate, Terence ‘Speed Demon’ Wayans. (No wonder we had taken State my senior year! We had two future Heisman Trophy candidates playing for us!) Brax had played yesterday; the Chargers had a rare Christmas Eve Monday Night Football game against the Denver Broncos.

My parents were very worried about my mental state because Mom worried about everything, and she got Dad to worrying. I once asked him if he had suffered sympathetic pregnancy when Mom had been pregnant with us; his reply was to swat at me and call me a smartass. Regardless, Kelly and I were able to convince my family I wasn’t going to do something foolish, unless they regarded becoming a police officer as foolish. Mom wasn’t thrilled with that, but I just smiled and said if I could survive Iraq, Matucket was going to be a piece of cake. It wasn’t that there wasn’t crime in Matucket, but I really wasn’t expecting people to come out of their houses and fire RPGs at the patrol cruisers!

I got a phone call from Bart Simmons over at the IAVA on Wednesday afternoon. He had spoken to Mikey’s father earlier in the day. Mike Gorsky was from Raleigh, North Carolina. His body was being released from the morgue at Matucket General and was being sent home on Thursday. There would be a memorial service Friday evening and the actual burial Saturday morning; we would be welcome at both. Bart said, “Want to go? It’s about a seven-hour drive from Matucket to Raleigh. I’m going with Wojo. You can ride with us, but we’ll be leaving in the morning.”

Wojo was Patrick Wojohowitz, a Marine vet like Mikey, only while Mikey had lost his mind, Wojo had lost his legs below the knees. Bart was an Air Force vet who had done two tours in Afghanistan, mostly at Bagram Airbase, which he described as a major league shithole. “Give me a minute.” I set the phone down and knocked on Brownell’s door. He yelled to come in, and I stuck my head inside. “Lieutenant, is it alright if I take Friday off? We got the details on the funeral. I’ll need to drive up early Friday. It’s in Raleigh.”

He nodded. “Fine by me. Not much happening anyway. Before you go, I’ll want to talk to you tomorrow.”

“Yes, sir. Thank you.” I closed the door behind me and went back to my desk. “Bart, I’m in.”

“Okay, I’ll call you tomorrow after I figure out a few details. We can drive up in civvies but dig out a dress uniform for the service and funeral.”

I acknowledged that and we hung up. Suddenly I was glad I hadn’t chucked my Class As. It had never occurred to me when I saved them that I might ever need to wear them again, and certainly not like this. I just hoped I didn’t need to get them dry cleaned.

I told Kelly my schedule and plans for Friday and Saturday. That basically tied us up all day both days. It would be seven hours up on Friday, attend a service, and then Saturday morning attend the actual burial, followed by another seven-hour drive back. Add in meals, gas, and pit stops and we wouldn’t be getting back until late Saturday. She offered to come with me, but I shook my head. It was something we needed to do for Mikey ourselves.

Thursday morning Bart called me with the funeral details, and we decided to leave Matucket at 0800. The service was at 1900 Friday night. That should give us plenty of time to get there, even figuring in rush hour traffic in Atlanta, and getting in and out of places with Wojo. He had prosthetic legs, but he really wasn’t all that comfortable using them yet, so he also had crutches and tended to take a bit of time moving around. We had a lot of missing limbs in the IAVA and the Coalition; I occasionally wondered which was worse, losing parts of your body or parts of your mind. Which of us were the more crippled?

At 0730, I was outside of Bart’s house in Piney Glens. Bart was different from Wojo, Mikey and me. While the three of us had been grunts, Army and Marine enlisted, Bart Simmons had been an Air Force officer, a former Captain. He had graduated from the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. He once told me that he had given the Air Force eight years, four duty stations, two tours in Afghanistan, and his first marriage. At that point, he got out and started fresh. He was also an oddity in that he was a black man married to a white woman, which in Georgia was still considered more than a bit unusual. He taught science and physics at Matucket High. When I got there his new wife, a pretty blonde, was loading their toddlers into her minivan. She smiled and waved, and then kissed Bart when he came out. I grabbed my hanging bag and tossed it into the trunk of his Honda Civic. Next stop was Wojo’s house. He and his wife lived in a small rancher close to West Springs. Wojo was using his VA benefits to go to school over at Matucket State, and his wife worked at the Wal-Mart warehouse; he had plans to get his degree and get a job there, also. He figured that by the time he graduated he should be fairly expert at getting around.

In the meantime, he was a bit ungainly. His wife came out the door carrying a large hanging bag, which I grabbed, and then she held the door for him. He was using forearm crutches because he really wasn’t quite used to his new prosthetic legs. Still, he considered this a considerable improvement over the wheelchair he had started in. His wife kissed him good-bye, and we got him into the back seat of the car. Bart and I would swap off driving; Wojo said that he would be able to drive, too, someday.

It was a straightforward drive - I-20 to Atlanta, I-85 to Raleigh. If the timing worked out, we’d find a truck stop or something in the Charlotte area to gas up and have lunch. Bart explained that we each had rooms at a Best Western somewhere near the church in Raleigh. The plan was to get there, check in, and grab a bite to eat. At some point, either before dinner or right after, we’d all change into our Class As and go to the service. The memorial service was being held at the funeral home; the service tomorrow would be held at his family’s church. I figured they would somehow gloss over the fact that Mikey had offed himself, at least in regard to the church services.

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June to August 2002 The following week we had finals, and that was it. Seniors had to go through graduation, but the rest of us were out for a couple of months for the summer. For me that meant I had about a week of goof-off time before I had to go back to the mill full time. That would take me through all of June and into July, at which time it was back to practice for the football season, running twice-a-days and sweating off about ten pounds under the July sun. Somewhere during that...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 41 Abu Dhabi

January 2007 Mom was very upset that I wasn’t going to come home on my leave. She just wasn’t buying my explanation about losing my squad. She wanted me to come home, squad or no squad. I think Dad understood, and he told me that his father understood, but Mom was very unhappy. I had been in the Army now for four Christmases, and three had been spent in Iraq. I didn’t even bother telling her about the incident at Yankee North. One of her latest kicks was, “Are you the only soldier in Iraq?...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 17 Miles Madigan

Summer 2023 The job in Sullivan Springs was a larger project than most of those I had already worked on. The spreadsheets were smoking by the time I got through with them. When I contacted Ballantine in two weeks, it was only to tell him I was still working the project. Unlike some of my other jobs, in this one I didn’t have a single answer already packaged. In my other jobs the chief or sheriff already knew what he wanted to do and simply needed an outsider to give him a third-party...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 2 Reunion

It seemed late when we finished dinner. There was a Welcome Aboard talk in the ship’s theater and after that we did a bit more exploring. There were all sorts of stuff on the boat, including a shopping center with incredibly overpriced stuff, a casino, and a bunch more bars, restaurants, and lounges. We walked around the deck and then went back to our cabin, where we discovered it had been made up, the bed turned down, and an odd animal formed out of some folded towels. Kelly decided she...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 48 Administrative Assistant

I was able to get in to see Captain Crowley on Thursday morning. Another young officer, African-American this time, was the one who escorted me in, and this time Crowley had some paperwork on his desk. I got the impression that after this meeting it would be time to shit or get off the pot. Crowley outlined the procedure to apply, and then reviewed the pay and benefits. “Grim, as an Administrative Assistant you make a bit more than minimum wage, but it’s a full-time job and it qualifies you...

3 years ago
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Sisters Funeral

The long miles evaporated into scenes in my rear view mirror. Ahead, more miles appeared. I knew where I was headed having made the trip many times, however, this time the trip was to see my only sibling for what was the last time. My premonition was correct. She had a catastrophic relapse shortly afterward and died quickly. Cancer is the great killer that took her, and our parents. I remained the last member of my nuclear family and cancer free. What were the markers that separated me from...

1 year ago
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My Second ChanceChapter 44 Book 1 Funeral

During the morning break, at school, Monday morning, I get paged to the office. I can tell something is up by the way the secretaries are looking at me. One of the counsellors takes me to his office and informs me that Gran is dead. I phone Zlata and tell her to take the day off to be with Sam and Grandpa. I am a bit of a dick; in that, I refuse to go home and stay in school for the day. I know how emotional my family gets and do not want to deal with it while I am dealing with the loss of...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 20 Schools End

Dad didn’t say anything to me the next day, so we must have covered our tracks. At least the back seat in the SuperCrew was wide enough for us to lay semi-flat on. We still drove around in the cold air with the windows down. Monday at school I saw Coach Summers and gave him the news. I was out for a week, and would be reevaluated afterwards, so I might be able to play if we won next week and went to State. “I won’t let you back on the field until you bring me a release from the doctor,” he...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 27 Returning Home

June 2004 - August 2004 Word came down from Battalion that the rest of Second Brigade would be deploying to Iraq soon. It was expected that they would show up sometime in July, but no dates were available. What they would do then was not known, or at least not known to us down at Camp Custer. Where exactly they would be positioned wasn’t known or might change before they got here. However, one interesting tidbit came out. Fourth of the Fourth was going to get some leave. Over the next few...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 8 Sunday October 1 2017

For the last few days President Trump had been on a Twitter rampage, demanding that the NFL players stand during the anthem, demanding the team owners and coaches fire them if they didn’t, and promising dire actions otherwise. Both Jack and I were getting slammed left and right, me for not complaining about the football players’ protests and Jack for not doing more. He was also bitching about Puerto Rico, primary elections, and fake news. No wonder he wasn’t doing his job - he was spending...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 24 Boxie

2024 Sunday, I helped Jack get home. He had chartered a plane to fly from California to Matucket (“ Can you imagine flying commercial through Atlanta with a wheelchair?”) so I simply drove over to their house Sunday morning and helped him out of the house and down to his rental. None of our homes had ramps and I asked whether we should build some for their next visit. “Grim, I’m not sure you should bother. I don’t think I’ll be coming back here any time soon.” “Jack...” “Grim, I just...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 19 Rescue

I never really passed out, but I wasn’t in a mood to keep talking. The immediate threat was contained, and since I was trapped under a tree and wounded, I wasn’t going to wander around the battlefield. After a few minutes I began to hear sirens, both police and fire department; I wouldn’t be alone for long. I twisted my head to the left but couldn’t see to the end of the driveway out on Lakeside Drive. I did see flashing lights approaching, and the sirens went silent. Moments later I heard a...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 66 Old Acquaintances

Grandpa was right about some of what he had said. I googled ‘medal of honor procedure’ later and it turned out there was a huge process involved in giving the Medal of Honor. Once the recommendation worked its way up from Battalion to Brigade and then to Division, it landed at the Pentagon. At least two boards in the Human Resources Command had to approve it, and then it went before the Chief of Staff, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 12 Thanksgiving

Thursday morning was an exercise in controlled chaos. I had time to do a nice breakfast of scrambled eggs, toast, and bacon, which could be a bit of a luxury. I tried to cook a nice family breakfast on weekends but shift work with the MPD meant I frequently missed weekends. At least three of us ate well. Seamus only ate Froot Loops; he was almost three and was still a knucklehead in the Terrible Twos. After breakfast Kelly put Riley and me to work cleaning the house. Seamus, on the other...

1 year ago
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She Only Wore a Shirt to the Funeral

Foreword A note on this story: Everything up until you see the line "My prayers weren't answered" actually happened, and yes she was pretty much dressed like the girl on the cover. Once I left the reception, I couldn't wait to get home and write a story about what could've happened. Chapter 1: The Funeral Today, I just got back from attending my ex-girlfriend Lois's father's funeral. He had lived a full life, and as a Catholic he'd had a large family. Most of the women in his...

2 years ago
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Single Mom Gmommas Funeral

“Hey, baby,” sniffled Linda Perkins.“Hey, mom! I missed your calls. I was seeing patients,” Rochelle explained.“It’s okay. I was just calling to tell you G-momma passed away in the nursing home last night.”“Oh my god! I’m so sorry, mama!”The older woman sobbed, “Thank you! I’m workin’ on the arrangements with Paul and Dianne. I’ll let you know when the service is gonna be.”“Okay! Take your time. Is Clarence around,” she inquired about her mother’s husband.“He’s mowing the lawn.”“Alright. I need...

2 years ago
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THE FUNERAL

was the phone call all adult c***dren expect. We are never prepared for it when it comes though. Even when you are 45, you are not ready for the call.I was working at my desk completing some bookkeeping duties for my in-home business when the phone rang. It was my mother. "Hello David. I have sad news. Your father died during the night."WOW!!!! I was speechless. Even though he had been sick, I was not ready to hear those words. Dad had several strokes about 8 months before that had left him...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 70 60 Minutes

Captain Crowley simply congratulated me on making it through SWAT and then told me that I needed to call CBS in New York. He gave me a phone number and told me to let him know what was going on. For my mind, I was basically done with publicity. The Army had mustered me out a second time, so they couldn’t order me back to New York, and if 60 Minutes wanted to do something on the MPD, they had to come to us in any case. The call went smoothly. Now that I was home from the Academy, CBS felt...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 8 Recuperation

Mom went back to work down in the ER the next morning, which I found a blessing. I mean, I loved my mother, but she was driving me completely nuts hanging around the room with me. She still dropped in at lunchtime, but I could handle that. Otherwise, I had her bring in a few books from home that I could read holding up with my left hand. Kelly came over after school on Tuesday. She had worked out an arrangement to take a different bus over to the hospital, and then either Mom would take her...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 7 Friday September 29 2017 to Saturday September 30 2017

Friday started out like most other days. We got Riley off to school on the bus, and Kelly loaded Seamus in the Sienna to take to day care at Matucket State. The big difference was that we dug out all the luggage. While she was at class, I packed all my formal stuff in a hanging bag, with the rest in a suitcase. As soon as Kelly and Seamus came home, she grabbed her stuff out of the closet and told me to start packing, while she packed everything for the kids. It became a mad rush, since I...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 6 Kelly

Friday, February 16, 2001 School had just started again after the winter break. I was hanging out after lunch with some friends near the south stairwell lockers, with Tilly next to me, when Terry Watson muttered, “Holy shit!” as he looked at something behind me. I turned around and didn’t see anything unusual, at least not at first. What I did see looked like a bunch of girls hugging. Then I saw one of the girls turn around and come over towards us. She was slim, about my height, with...

4 years ago
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Denise and her family Part 1 The Funeral

Part 1 The Funeral By Docker5000 Introductory. A Mother and her two drunk son’s bond in a Hotel room after a family funeral. Denise huddled closer to her husband Tony she was trying to keep under his umbrella as the rain was now coming down hard. Her two sons Gary 15 and James 17 both shared an umbrella. However, even this did not stop them both from getting wet-through. Everyone at the grave side was now wet-through the vicar was trying his best to read the funeral service, but the...

3 years ago
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Janet after the Funeral

It was 9am on the day of the funeral, George had passed away suddenly and unexpectedly of a heart attack. He left behind his wife Janet and 3 young children. George had run a local business home improvement business before his passing. He had done what seemed quite well for himself owning a large house and always driving the newest model car, very few people knew he was leverage to the hilt.. Janet was only 37, she was a stay-at-home mom who had always led the easy life due to George’s...

3 years ago
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The Funeral

I guess this story is about my second time to have sex. My high school girlfriend was my first. We had dated for over a year before I finally got to actually have sex. Then it was awkward to say the least. We did not have a rubber, I had to pull out, we really did not know what we were doing. We had done it five times and none of those times went real smooth or were real enjoyable. Then one of my girlfriends relatives died. Not like anyone she knew real well. But she had to go to the funeral...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 19 A Winning Season

Jack managed to finagle a ride home with a couple of cheerleaders who were juniors. I have no idea if he got anything more from them than a lift home, and I didn’t want to know. One of these days my brother’s love life was going to bite him in the ass. Some girl was going to find him with another girl, and there would be hell to pay. Hopefully she wouldn’t be carrying a weapon when that happened. The Sports Section headline Saturday morning was “UNDERDOG PIONEERS CRUSH WARRIORS!” I had no...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 68 Television

I knew what the citation said; whether I believed it was a different question. It didn’t matter much. I stood there, kept my mouth shut, and looked straight ahead. The President put the ribbon around my neck, and everybody saluted and applauded. He gave me a whispered, ‘At ease.’, and I was able to break position and shake his hand in thanks. That was the end of the official ceremony, and it was time for a meet-and-greet. Mister and Mrs. Obama escorted me down off the stage and over to where...

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