The Food Desert

PUBLIC BETA

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 smiled as I watched Kara, her hands gentle on my neck. Her gown fit her very well, her makeup and hair flawless. I'd gotten her a diamond choker for our 25th anniversary, which she loved but almost never wore unless I insisted. It was around her neck that night. She still weighed what she did when we got together, and had a mane of white hair that went almost to her waist. Even at our age she was getting looks.

The kids were on a break from college and were driving us. Bobby was going to intern with Sofia, and Sandy was going into the corporate offices to work with Mickey.

I was a big Western fan, and it was a running joke in the family that I had every Western ever made on blue-ray, going back to the first talkies. My all-time favorite was <i>Angel And The Badman,</i> the John Wayne classic. I came to realize over the years that it wasn't just a Western, it was a morality play of the influence of good versus the allure of evil. In the end, when John Wayne refuses to hold his weapons, he knew even if he died it would be with honor and dignity. I remember seeing a cross-stitch on the wall of his love interest's home. They were Quakers and it held a simple message. "Live By The Side Of The Road And Be a Friend To Man."

I thought about that for a long time. As a mantra you could do a lot worse. So that's what I strove to be. What is wealth if you can't use it to do good? What if I hadn't met a tiny black woman and befriended her one day when all I wanted to do was hurry out of the neighborhood? Or Maria, so I could be a father to Mickey? Or Sandy, who taught me what true love really was? Or Bob, the man who finally taught Kara what love should be so I could benefit? And finally Kara, who walked through her own hell of self-absorption for a while, lost and alone, before coming back to the light?

I thought about all the people who had gone before me, all of them helping forge the man I became. I was proud to be associated with them, proud to be their friend and maybe improve their lives.

I looked on the "family wall" on the way out, completely covered with family, here, and others who had gone on. One section was devoted to my "children," Mickey, Ashley, Sofia, Theresa, Emily, Michael, Miguel, Amy, Alice, Connie, and finally Bobby and Sandy, named to honor a good man and woman gone too soon. Another section was devoted to our grandchildren, all twenty-three, and our great-grandchildren, nine and counting. All college graduates or with trust funds set up for those yet to mature.

I touched the picture of Momma Chen, gone these few years past. She was probably the best grandmother and mother on the planet aside from my wife, of course, even as, like me, she never had any biological children. Sometimes love surpasses genetics.

There you have it. Sometimes love surpasses genetics. You look on my wall and see very few white faces, mostly black and Hispanic or a mixture of all the races. All I could see was love.

All I could see was Love.

*****

Another long fairy tale that got away from me. Thanks for investing your time, I hope I gave you a good dividend.

Q

Please rate this story
The author would appreciate your feedback.
  • COMMENTS
Anonymous
Our Comments Policy is available in the Lit FAQ
Post as:
Anonymous
282 Comments
ImshakenImshaken5 days ago

This story was an epic event in Loving Wives. Q... Thanks for sharing this wonderful creation!

AnonymousAnonymous6 days ago

This is the fifth round reading this. Still found it the most wonderful, beautiful, romantic and lovely story. Definitely a five star ⭐✨⭐✨⭐✨⭐✨⭐. Sincerely from Singapore.

PhredDaggPhredDagg11 days ago

Q . .THANK YOU. I have read this story twice now and look forward to rereading it several times more.

26thNC26thNC16 days ago

Great story that could be taken from today’s news. There aren’t many men like Steve though l that’s unfortunate.

GriffinmanGriffinman16 days ago

One of your best. True to life and I had to read it in one hit. 5* yet again.

tsgtcapttsgtcapt18 days ago

Fun, engaging, a bit long; however, good read - thank you.

AstordatairAstordatair28 days ago

Wow. What else could be added? I just loved it. 5* Many thanks!

SatyrDickSatyrDickabout 1 month ago

[12.05.24]

Beautiful, Wonderful, and Engaging!

11/10!!!!!

kalash777kalash777about 2 months ago

A life well lived. I loved this story. Thank you!

AnonymousAnonymousabout 2 months ago

one of your best

NitpicNitpicabout 2 months ago
According

According to the timescale in the story it was over two years between Kara showing him the lakeside property and him buying it,that can't be right.

CadaverFECadaverFEabout 2 months ago

Really good novella. Very good characters and their development and a well told tale. My own thoughts would just change their (Steve & Kara) attitudes towards their previous marriages. The revisiting of how much their others meant when the story keeps guiding us to how much they mean to each other seems a little off-putting. A really small thing though. Great tale. 5

SorchakSorchak2 months ago

"I tried to remember the last time someone called me Stevie. It was her, twenty years ago." Nope, wrong:

Celia had a thoughtful look in her eyes. "You're right, son. She is. But if something were to happen and she finds herself single again, you should reconnect and see if there's still a spark. Not your old love, that's dead and buried and never coming back. Go slowly; see if you can build something together. Give me your promise, Stevie."

Ranger001Ranger0012 months ago

I like the positive direction this tale takes.

Ignore Anonymous 2 behind me.

🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟😎

prato1992prato19923 months ago

es maravilloso como transformas una historia de infidelidad y miseria en un hermoso relati de amor, pasion, caridad y esperanza sin limites, gracias

AnonymousAnonymous3 months ago

5* Very good story. But Kara could have had his children when they reconnected. She was only in her early 40s. It's stupid when people think women can't give birth in their 40s/50s

Show More
Share this Story

Similar Stories

An Unexpected Reaction To an unacceptable situation.in Loving Wives
The Unicorn An average guy. A retired model worth millions. Can it work?in Loving Wives
Let Go CEO wife fires husband. What follows is the aftermath.in Loving Wives
Irish Eyes His love was betrayed, what next.in Romance
Charity Begins Next Door Life isn't fair. So when you fight back, fight dirty.in Romance
More Stories