Take Me, But Not All of Me Byron Hoot "I'd give a man anything except my heart," she said with a smile of bitterness over a heart twice broken she could not let heal. When she was thirteen her mother said, "You were a mistake. I gave into your father and let him on top of me and stared at the ceiling until he was done and you come from that moment of weakness and indifference." After that she ran wild and her father had to leave his church. The second time her heart shattered was when her fiancé broke her nose with a punch. She never left home, became free and easy, ready for a good time, reminding her mother who she had created: a woman who hated men, except her father, becoming a married man's mistress and he tried to love her finally disappearing after decades. The daughter who couldn't love turned to caring for the mother who hadn’t wanted her and they told the lies: "Mary's a great girl!" "Gram," no longer mother, "is something for her age!" Aunt Mary kept a loaded six-shooter, .22 pistol by her bed, "to shoot preachers who might knock on the door in the night." Died all alone in a nursing home and we who remained told one another stories of how she tried to break our hearts with what she called love.