Note: You can change font size, font face, and turn on dark mode by clicking the "A" icon tab in the Story Info Box.
You can temporarily switch back to a Classic Literotica® experience during our ongoing public Beta testing. Please consider leaving feedback on issues you experience or suggest improvements.
Click here"I'm sorry, Betty," I said softly, "I would have wished you didn't see this." She now knew why I had asked her to leave. I wondered why she hadn't told the Marshals. I wasn't worried about an assault charge, beyond the time it would keep me away from Tamara and Melina.
Betty pointed to the corner of Doug's desk. I could see the pain in her eyes. I walked over to the small stack of stapled sheets of paper. "He asked me for that this morning," Betty said, then broke down. It was our reciprocal life insurance policy. "I didn't know why he wanted it," she added as tears overwhelmed her. I looked at Doug's prone form as it started to stir. The bastard didn't even wait until I was reported dead.
Moretti moved quickly to Doug's side. I think he feared I would go at him again. I just smiled knowing Doug was done and took a step back to ease Moretti's fears.
"Mr. Finley," Moretti said louder than necessary, "do you know where you are?" Doug nodded and said something about the office.
"Mr. Finley, I am agent Moretti of the U.S. Marshall's office," Moretti continued, "I have a warrant for your arrest and an order for extradition as requested by the Peruvian government." I could see the realization of what was happening roll across Doug's bloody face. I couldn't help myself.
"I would fight the extradition with every dollar you have Doug," I added with glee, "I know a Colonel down there that wants to meet you. He was supposed to be on the same plane as I was." The idea of Doug bankrupting himself on lawyers and still ending up in a Peruvian prison made karmic sense to me. Doug's breathing was coming in gasps, and it wasn't driven by what I did to him. It was his predicament coming home to roost.
Moretti began reading Doug his rights as I watched his eyes lose their strength. I had never fed off someone's loss before. My mind reveled in his downfall. I felt vindicated and empowered. And then, like the flip of a switch, I felt like shit.
People died. More almost died. Physical pain and freedom deprivation would never make up for it. Doug deserved everything he got, but even death would do nothing to rectify what he had done. I let Doug go. Not physically, but mentally. He wasn't worth the brain power and certainly not worth losing myself and living in a personal cesspool of hatred.
"Maybe we should step outside and let these guys work," I mentioned softly to Betty. She wiped her eyes and nodded. "I need to tell you about my daughter," I added and wiped my own eyes. Hatred chewed up way too much energy.
++++++++++++++++++++++
"Why she send flowers?" Tamara demanded in Armenian. For some reason, Florencia had sent flowers to me at Yana's address, the one I had given to Emilio for the time being.
"It's nothing," I said. It was hard to explain over the phone. I thought Tamara would be happy I was flying home to her the next day. Instead, she thought I was entertaining another woman. I had to work on her trust. I certainly wasn't a Don Juan, and I already had the most beautiful woman in the world.
"I can't read letter." Tamara said stiffly. I couldn't remember if I mentioned the language barrier between Tamara and me to the Campos'. It was probably in English since they knew my Spanish sucked.
"Get Viktoria," I suggested. I heard doors opening. I could tell Tamara was walking down the hall. There was a brief conversation after Viktoria answered the door. I could hear the pain in Tamara's voice. I wished I was there.
Viktoria started laughing as she deciphered the letter. I could hear Tamara demanding to know what was so funny. Viktoria spoke quickly with humor in her voice. There was silence after she was done speaking. I heard Viktoria chuckle again Tamara told her to stop it.
"I love you," Tamara said quietly in the phone. There was a little embarrassment in her voice. I tried not to force the issue.
"I love you, too," I returned, almost making it sound like a question.
"You home tomorrow?" Tamara verified.
"Yes," I replied, "11:35 PM." It was going to be a long two days of travel.
"Meet you at airport," Tamara said. I think my Armenian was getting better. I no longer had to think hard during simple translations. I almost told her not to, but her tone made it important to her.
"Good," I said, "I will see you tomorrow."
"I love you," Tamara repeated. There was more contrition in her voice.
"I love you too," I responded before disconnecting. I had no idea what was in the letter, but it obviously wasn't the love note she expected. I also knew that talking about it on the phone was not the route to take. I would find out when we were together again.
++++++++++++++++++++++
My parents took me to O'Hare airport. They were as shocked as I was about Doug. They had known him and his parents for many years. He was the last person we would have suspected to go all evil on the world.
No assault charges were brought. I suspected Doug didn't want to alienate me any more than he already had. He would need my signature to liquidate his holdings in F&B Imports to pay for his legal defense. I would sign anything that separated us further, including a loan to buy him out.
I promoted Betty to run the U.S. portion of the business. She had been doing most of the work as it was, and already had access to all the files and bank accounts. I let her hire her replacement, a fine young man that seemed driven to succeed. It meant a lot more money for her family and no more bombs on planes for me.
Betty's first task was to solidify a contract for Emilio's cousin. Her in-depth knowledge of the process made me question what Doug had been doing for the last few years. I found out Doug was in debt up to his eyeballs and in the process of buying a yacht when the boom came down. I suspected he was playing playboy on my dime and dumping the work off on Betty. I considered it on the job training for Betty.
My mother brought a small note from Kimberly with her. It was handwritten on a small flowery card that was usually reserved for thank-you notes.
Jonathan,
I'm sorry I lied about Tamara's whereabouts. It was selfish. I was hoping you would come back to me if you failed to find her. We weren't perfect, but we were better than lonely. Please ask Tamara to forgive me. Give your daughter my love.
Kimberly
"She was afraid to see you," my mother said as I finished the note. I thought about the hatred I had wasted on Doug. It seemed silly to expend more on Kimberly. I wondered if I wouldn't have done the same if the roles were reversed. I would like to think I wouldn't, but I never thought I would try to beat a man to death either.
"Do you have a pen?" I asked my mother. She fished one out of her purse and handed it to me. I added a note to the end.
Kimberly,
I could never hold it against you. The heart makes us do stupid things like loudly breaking up with a lovely woman in a public hospital. As a friend, I still love you dearly.
Jonathanv
I handed the note back to my mother and asked her to give it back to Kimberly. I found it funny that Tamara and I could share no language and yet understand each other perfectly. Kimberly and I needed a translator to function.
++++++++++++++++++++++
I was exhausted when I stepped off the plane in Yerevan. I was two hours behind schedule and wanted nothing but a shower and some sleep. Tamara changed those desires instantly. She was waiting at the end of the concourse, bouncing on her toes and waving when she saw me. I had no idea where the energy came from. My heart started pounding, and muscles woke up. I ran to her arms. I had almost forgotten how soft her lips were.
"Melina?" I asked. For some reason, I wanted to see her as well.
"Asleep with Meemaw," Tamara smiled, saying it like I was a fool to think she would bring a baby to the airport in the middle of the night. I laughed at myself before I enjoyed Tamara's precious lips again. It was so good to feel her arms around me.
The cab ride back to the Kurkjian buildings was quick. There was little traffic at that time in the morning, and Tamara was there to make sure the cabbie didn't take the long way. Tamara pulled a folded letter out of her jacket and handed it to me.
"I sorry," Tamara said. I could see it in her eyes. I unfolded the letter and turned on the overhead light.
Dear Tamara,
Your intuition has saved my love as well as yours. I send these flowers as a friend in hopes that we will find time to meet in the future. I wish to know well the person who has saved my precious family.
Florencia Campos
I laughed when I shouldn't have, but it was too delicious.
"I say sorry," Tamara insisted. I wrapped her in my arms again.
"No matter where I go, my love," I whispered in her ear, "I will never stray from you. You and Melina will always be first in my thoughts." Though it was in English, Tamara understood perfectly. Her smile returned with a little foolishness in her eyes. I thought it looked adorable.
++++++++++++++++++++++
Tamara and I slept in a bed designed for one in Meemaw's apartment. It was cramped but twice the size of the hovel on the mountain. It brought back a few memories of staying warm in the most wonderful way. It was Melina who woke us early the following morning. After she had been fed and changed, I spent a good part of the morning making her smile. She was getting stronger, raising up on her knees and rocking back and forth. I knew she was about to be independently mobile.
Yana cooked a large brunch for my return. The family gathered in her apartment and feasted while I explained, with the help of Viktoria, about what had happened the past week. Tamara had already passed on the gist of it, and I was only filling in the blanks. Yana was happy it was over and done with. She had resolved herself to an American son-in-law and didn't want it to change. The brothers wanted more details of my brief insanity. A blow by blow replay of my useless revenge.
I shocked everyone by asking Garik if he wanted to work for me. I had decided that I needed to limit my traveling since I had a family now, and Garik seemed to love the trip to Azerbaijani. I could hire him as an independent contractor with bonuses tied to the inking of deals. He was both excited and hesitant.
"What would I have to do?" Garik asked.
"Travel to find product," I replied, "I'd take you on a couple of trips to get you started. In time, you'll recognize what we're looking for and be able to head out on your own. You can hire interpreters when needed to get your through the negotiations."
"I can hire people?" Garik queried with reservation.
"In time, when necessary. You always need to keep in mind what the company will make and balance that with the fees you need to pay." I smiled, "and your own pay, of course."
"How will I know if it's the right stuff?"
"Our clients like to mix art with functionality. Uniqueness, a good history, and quality are what you need to look for. Usually, you start with a lead, so you're not traveling blind." I was mixing Armenian words with English. I was getting better at it, and Viktoria was having an easier time translating and Garik was grasping the concepts quickly.
"What do you mean about history?"
I thought about it for a moment. History was the marketing part that our clients loved so much. It was more in the presentation, the stuff they could tell their friends. I looked down, trying to figure out a way to explain it. The rug at my feet would be a good visual aide. It was certainly high enough quality and well made.
"Take this rug," I instructed, "it is very well made and has a wonderful design." I dropped to the floor and moved to the corner, lifting it back to look for a label. "A label sewn into the rug with a company logo or family crest helps give it history." There was no label, so I moved to another corner. "You want the name of the artist, maybe a sewn signature to give it a one-of-a-kind type of feel." Still no label.
"You will not find a label," Tamara said before I moved to another corner. I looked closely at the back of the rug. It had a very high knot count. The quality was excellent.
"This must have cost a lot," I mentioned in passing as I rose to continue the instruction. Yana chuckled, her face flushing.
"Mother made it," Tamara said as if I should have known. My eyes widened as I dropped back down to my knees and reexamined the craftsmanship.
"You made this?" I asked Yana.
"Yes," Yana replied. She was beaming with pride.
"She and Meemaw each make a few a year," Viktoria added, "They sell them to the families here." Victoria looked to Yana, "she sold the last one for 95,000 drams." Yana was still blushing, proud of her accomplishment. I did some quick math in my head, maybe 200 dollars.
"200 U.S. dollars?" I asked. Viktoria thought for a moment. Armen, whose math was better than mine, answered.
"About that, maybe a bit more," Armen said. He seemed proud of his mother and grandmother.
"Who taught you?" I asked Yana, my smile growing.
"Meemaw and her mother taught her," Yana replied.
"Mom is teaching me," Tamara added. She rose handing Melina off to her Armen. She walked over to the wall and began retracting the large accordion divider I thought was just decoration. An old loom in excellent condition was exposed with another rug about a third of the way done. I rose from the floor in awe.
"That is history!" I said to Garik, "add a few touches and that's what we look for."
"American's would want my rugs?" Yana asked.
"With the right documentation, they will pay thousands," I replied, "they want a piece of your story."
"I am nobody," Yana said, suddenly out of her depth.
"You are an artist from a long line of artists," I said almost laughing at what had hidden in plain site, "Your family history, as far as you can trace it back, is what they want. They want to know they are supporting that history and becoming part of it. You just have to list it out for them."
"You can teach me," Armen said to Yana. Davit pulled forward in his seat and began nodding his head as well.
"It can be Garik's first successful contract," I added. Tamara scooted in behind me and wrapped her arms around my waist.
"I love you," Tamara whispered in my ear as the conversation in the room began moving quickly, excitement infecting everyone. I turned in Tamara's arms, ignoring the questions being flung at me. I had a lifetime to answer them.
The world disappeared as I lost myself in Tamara's lips. We were back on the mountain, a blizzard we no longer cared about was raging around us. The only thing that mattered was the moment and that we held each other. A squeal brought our minds back to reality.
Melina was waving her arms in Armen' s lap, trying to join the excitement by yelling for attention. She was our new mountain, a storm we couldn't ignore. I laughed at her antics as I swept her into my arms. Life was good. Life was very good.
++++++++++++++++++++++
Tamara
++++++++++++++++++++++
"Are you sure?" I asked the doctor. My belly was barely showing, and I felt no different than when I carried Melina.
"I know my job, Mrs. Bennett," the doctor said, almost insulted. I smiled warmly while I tried to let the ramifications settle in my mind. I finished dressing as I thought how this would affect Jonathan. I knew now that I needn't fear him leaving me anymore. Those fears were borne from the initial interference of his mother...and Kimberly.
I hated the way that Kimberly looked at Jonathan at our wedding. She was so American and way too pretty. He didn't notice, but I saw it her eyes. I couldn't blame her, but I didn't have to like it. She said and did all the right things yet her eyes would linger on the man I held most dear.
The jealousy ended when she embraced me with tears in her eyes as she said goodbye. She said something I didn't understand, but we both knew why she was leaving the reception early. I also knew I would never see her again. She left as a friend, saying her goodbyes to me and not to Jonathan. She loved him enough to disappear. I could never leave him, so she was stronger than me...or never loved him like I did.
Jonathan's Armenian was growing stronger. I no longer needed to see his body language to understand him. I loved how his accent butchered the language. Every time he told me he loves me, my ears would do a little dance, and the little girl in me jumped up and down.
"You might have to revive my husband when I tell him," I informed the doctor. The doctor rose from his chair and smiled at me.
"A blessing in any form, is still a blessing," the doctor said as he put his clipboard off to the side. I wondered if that was true. I rubbed my growing belly and knew my love would be no different. The idea of it was warming in my mind. As the revelation finally took hold, I laughed. The doctor seemed pleased and chuckled himself.
I found Jonathan entertaining Melina in the waiting room. Ever since she started walking, Melina needed constant supervision. She had the Armenian tenacity mixed with American unbridled curiosity. Jonathan was busy building some kind structure with wooden blocks, and Melina was having a ball knocking it down. He was having as much fun as she was. It was some game they invented and only they knew the rules. How high could he make it before she pushed it over? I loved how he could make her laugh.
"Having fun?" I said, announcing my presence. Jonathan turned with a smile as Melina, once again, destroyed the structure he had been building. He rose quickly, sweeping Melina up in his arms.
"Mommy's done," He told Melina in his lovely Armenian. "And how is she doctor?" he asked. The doctor moved out from behind and winked at me.
"Very healthy," the doctor replied as he moved toward his office, "it is a good thing for a woman in her condition." He left swiftly, leaving me to break the news. I wasn't sure if it was a good or bad thing.
"And how is Melina's brother or sister?" Jonathan asked. I tried to figure out how to tell him without freaking him out. He looked at me funny as I stalled for the right words. I knew he was reading my body language and already knew something was wrong. "Tamara?" He queried again, with a little fear in his voice.
"It may be both," I said, sucking in my breath.
"What?"
"Boy and girl or two of either," I said, watching his eyes travel through a million emotions, "the doctor only knows there are two."
"Twins?" Jonathan gasped, his eyes looking stunned. I moved forward to soften the blow and a smile formed on his lips, "Twins," he repeated, more to himself. He slid Melina to his left arm and pulled me in with his right. "Twins," he repeated dreamily as his lips found mine. I leaned into him and felt Melina kiss my cheek thinking it was a new game.
"They will drive us insane," Jonathan said humorously, "my mother is going to flip." His eyes found mine in that loving way he had. "We survived a plane crash; we can survive twins," he said, pulling the three of us tightly together.
A warmth spread over me. Memories of the first time Jonathan took me, warming the blizzard away and my fears with it. He looked at me with those same loving eyes. We could weather any storm, even twins.
"The mountain, my love," I said softly, "was the easy part."
I can't remember how many times I've read this one, but it's still a favorite. Always makes me smile.
WOW!!! This is another one of those stories that blows my doors off! There can not be any negative additutes from your readers, and if so, they should be locked up for mental in competency. More than 'well done'! Great storyline. Keep writing.
XYZ
It is a shame someone stole his stories. This one is wonderful and one of my favorites. Some idiot stopped him adding new stories here.
I think I've read this a dozen times and just keep coming back. This is a great story.
A very engaging and heart felt story. Characters and plot development were precise and flowed effortlessly. Loved Tamara perspective at the end adding to the complexity of the story. A wonderful and joyful read. Thankyou for the gift of your time, effort and talent.
It was hard for me to get through the plane crash aftermath. Really difficult. But, it was worth it after she woke up. Thank you!
Thank you, again. I wish I could give you another five stars each time I read this.
Really trite and soupy ! in 85 years , probably the most entertaining story I have ever read , and I read a lot ! It has everything and should be presented to a movie producer . Really . Thank you much for sharing !
Excellent... A novel with elements of intrigue, drama, tenderness and eroticism
I really liked it
(excuse me for my English)
You know your story is awesome, when people like me re-read it every few months! You Rock!
I fully agree with the praise I read in some of the comments. This is one of the best stories here.
Eventhough I started skipping through the first part where Tamara was still unconscious as it felt a bit long-winded; I still liked the story. The part about his partner being the ultimate bad guy was a surprise. But also felt like it wasn't really necessary for the story. Just my 2 cents.
I find that most of the stories Literotica recommends for me are ones I've already read, this one being no exception. When I saw the title I knew I had to read it again and I'm glad I did. Still gets me emotional reading the story of their survival and love. Wish I could give it another five stars.
A story of a 1st prize in ANY category. 5 out of 5 for well thought out and written plot. Keep up the good writing.
DaveS
An amazing story!! The mind blowing twist of the partner trying to kill MC !!! Thanks for sharing your wonderful creation!
Oh my god what a fantastic story!!! I don't have enough words to express how much I loved this. Deserves much much more than 5 stars!!!!!!!!!!
This belongs in a library next to actual books and could make a great movie. I’ve reread this many times and love it each time
Rereading and love it. The one thing that is missing tho - Mikhail deserved to be told that the crash and his brother's death was not due to him. And he should know that the individual responsible has been caught and will spend a very long time in a not very pleasant prison.
Yes this would make a good movie, while I can't picture the proper actress for Tamara, how about Jake Jylhehal for Jonathan, just a suggestion.😁
I still LOVE this story, it never fails to improve my mood, even with the sad bits. Thank You.
I agree wirh all of the positive comments on this fine story. As Anonymous 2 months ago said, you should get yourself an agent and consider rewriting this as a film script. I can easily see it as a Hollywood blockbuster.
My only criticism; it jars when, several times in the middle section, the word interpreter is rendered as interruptor.
And, once or twice, my personal bugbear, the transposition of 'to' and 'too', as in 'I love you to' (to what?) or 'I'm going too find her.'
Small issues, but the result of relying on spell-checking apps rather than either rereading your own work or getting an editor.
This is the second of your stories I have read and I look forward to (not too!) reading the othersVery well done,
7527Crater
Excellent story. Really well written and highly entertaining. The twist was very well concealed as it should be. A story to be cherished. BardnotBard
Exceptional, right up there with the best tales I've read on this site. Great twist with the bomber and time taken to develop all the characters. Enjoyed it very much
Like everyone else, I am a fan of this story. Even after a 2nd time reading it.
A truly awesome story. Well crafted. This story deserves much wider publication! It would make either a great movie or serial. Suggest you contact a literary agent!
Definitely one of the better stories here. I reread it every year or so.
I’m loving your stories, I’m going through them all, love the romance ones especially
All of this author's stories are great and leave you feeling good. I can't believe he quit writing. I can see them not being posted on this site.
Does anybody knowhere he may post other stories? About 4 of these stories are on good reads. But I don't think that's the real author. I just can't see someone with this much talent stopping because they're mad. I can see someone having tragedies in their life or illness, or burnout and stopping. Anyone know the real story behind this author.
Amazing piece of writing, truly heartfelt and very well done. Slightly questionable ending line of “we survived a plane crash; we can survive twins”… — yeah, seems like an unintended connection — but aside from that beautifully written. Some grammatical and spelling minor errors, but we all make mistakes!
Thank you for this wonderful romantic story. This is after yet another reread. I'm sorry you had to stop writing here.
Another great story from you. Loved your characters and the unfolding of the story. Though I wonder why would Tamara keep the baby when she and her family were so definite that Jonathan was nothing but an asshole for using and ditching her and shutting her off. She surely knew about abortions. Residents of the Soviet Union were allowed abortions, and so knew about them, long before they were allowed in some of the states of the US. Even if she wished to hold on to the baby for sentiment's sake, I'm sure her family would have convinced her to opt for it. But I suppose then we would not have had this beautiful story. So thank you. 5 stars.
Another excellent piece of writing. You always manage to show your characters at their absolute best as well as their soul crushing worst but it clearly explains through actions that both are part of everyone so just accept it and move forward. I never saw the twist within his business that was written so perfectly not to forget the response which was even more of a surprise. Thanks for sharing this wonderful story with us.
One of my most favorite stories. Vivid characters, compelling action, real sense of place. I assume Jonathan called Mikail (?) to inform him of the real culprit. Makes me regret deeply that we've been deprived of further stories from you by the actions of the useless.
LMJ
Even after several times reading it, this remains one of my favorite stories I've read on here.
That was just plain amazing. Yes, I could speak to the spelling errors and other nit-picky things, but to be completely honest I just don't care. As with your main characters, I knew what you meant, and the heart that you put into this story was frankly impressive. Bravo.
Good story with some spelling mistakes and a daughter that switches names 3 times in a paragraph
Another story I read when I need a spiritual lift, it makes me feel much better after. Thank You.
There are spelling and grammar issues, to be sure, especially the repeated use of the words "interrupter" and "interrupted" instead of "interpreter" and "interpreted". Also, I still don't know if the daughter's name is supposed to be Melina or Milena because it swaps back and forth between them, sometimes in the same sentence. And I did predict the twist with Doug coming before it happened, although not a super long time before. But the story itself is wonderful and I love the concept of two people who don't speak the same language falling in love through surviving life threatening hardship together. I'm giving this one 5 stars.
Wow just read this again! DreamCloud could really write! Very Sad no longer writes here but being ripped off and plagiarized can really piss you off strongly. I do hope the author DreamCloud is still writing and creating somewhere. If epublish I hope there is a link or mention somewhere! I am thrilled the stories are still available to read on this site. I know I have several in my favorites that I have read again occasionally. Just as I just read this again! I can’t give an author any higher praise than reading their work multiple time because it is that enjoyable of an experience. A sincere thank you for writing, sharing (especially leaving your works on this site) your efforts with us readers on this site!!!
As I said I hope you have continued to write and publish because you have way to much talent to not because of the few thieves but much larger fans.
Peace to you DreamCloud writer extraordinaire.
Mariverz is a moron. Nothing Latin whatsoever about Azerbaijan. It's a predominately Muslim country in the Caucasus Mountains, which span Asia and Europe.
As for Pinochet, unless communist/socialist is a race, there was no genocide.
it's obvious that you don't know the Latin culture....
the protagonist, the Armenian bride, the baby, the families... would already be dead before Doug was arrested.
I mean, we blew up a US citizen and our chancellor in exile in front of the white house... and we didn't give 3 shits.... ( being honest, our friendly genocidal dictator Pinochet, by the way... ahhh and thanks for installing him in power mr. Nixon and mr. Kissinger )
no se como me había perdido esta historia, muy linda y emocionante.
GRACIAS!