Authors: Rob Rosen
Tags: #MLR Press LLC; Print format ISBN# 978-1-60820-435-9; ebook format ISBN#978-1-60820-436-6, #Gay, #General, #Romance, #Erotica, #Fiction
Portnoy. The latter was a family name. Still, talk about cruel and
unusual punishment. No mention of Beau, though. Probably just
a coincidence, all of this, I supposed. It was, after all, a common
enough southern name. Still, the dates all worked, and Granny
most certainly knew the Senator, had to have, in fact.
But now what? I couldn’t walk into either of their offices
and start asking questions. One look at me and security would
be called, right quick. Gay and coming from the North? I mean
really, talk about your double wammies. Might as well lie and say
I was Jewish, too. At least the secretary would get a good laugh
before I was promptly thrown out on my gay, northern, almost-
Jewish ass.
And what would my line of questioning be, anyway? “Hello,
Senator. Did your son father an illegitimate child with my mother?
Because I’d like to find that child and play catch with him, build
us a few sand castles. You can even take pictures. Get yourself
some of the gay vote.”
As if.
Nope. That route was closed off before the road even got
started. Besides, there was no mention of Beau in any of their
bios, and what was the likelihood that they’d be willing to admit
to him now? Anyway, the odds of Beau being
that
Pellingham
were unlikely at best, despite how good a made-for-TV-movie
it would be. Very Lifetime. I pictured it with Harry Hamlin and
Valerie Bertinelli.
In other words, I’d just have to find Beau and hope he’d maybe
know how he came to be. And be willing to share it with me. And
then maybe go play catch and build us some sand castles. Maybe
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77
down on Hilton Head or Tybee Island. I know, that’s a whole hell
of a lot of maybes, but better to dream alligator-smile-big than
not at all, as Granny used to say.
So I headed on home, the windows rolled down, the late
afternoon sun pouring in, burning my arm as I strummed my
fingers on the outside of the old Cadillac. The radio was blaring a
nice country tune. Something about someone losing her man and
then something about a shotgun. Very uplifting stuff. I smiled as I
drove, staring at the worn down houses, single roomed dwellings,
barely shacks, at people rocking on their front porches, smoking,
gulping down bottles of Coke. This was the South. My South.
And then I spotted something even more quintessential.
“Boiled peanuts,” I yipped, pulling off to the side of the road,
my car kicking up dust as it crept up to the stand.
I hopped out, the smell of them overpowering, the giant
metal pot boiling over, steaming, hundreds of peanuts bobbing
atop the surface. Only, this wasn’t what my eyes were glued to.
No sir, no how. Not even fucking close.
“Afternoon,” he said, sitting on the stool behind the stand.
He was in his early twenties, short, thin, scruffy, wearing nothing
but denim shorts, flip-flops, and a shit-eating grin.
“Afternoon,” I replied, just slightly breathless.
“Want some?” he asked, with a sly wink, sending a bevy of
bats loose inside my belly.
“Um, uh, yeah. What flavors you got?” I replied, my arms
resting on the old wooden countertop, staring down at him, his
legs splayed, hands resting atop hairy thighs.
“Got ‘em all. Just depends, I suppose.” The smile grew, as
did the tenting in my pants. “How do you like your nuts?” He
laughed. “I mean, you like ‘em salty, sweet, hot and spicy?”
I coughed, my crotch pushing against the stand. “Big and
salty, I guess,” I rasped.
He stood up, etched belly tightening as he did so. Then he
reached beneath the counter and handed me two bags. “Biggest
78 Rob Rosen
and saltiest I got,” he said. “Five bucks.” Then he stared right
at me, eyes boring on through. “You know, you look awfully
familiar. Like I recognize you, but I don’t. Know what I mean?”
Honestly, I hadn’t a clue. Still, he sure was nice to look at.
Sinew for days, all in a fiercely compact body. Like an Adonis
start-up kit. “Haven’t been through these parts in nearly ten
years, so it’s doubtful. Guess I just look like someone else.”
He nodded as I handed him the fiver, his pinky tickling my
pinky for the briefest of seconds. “Yup. That must be it. Still, got
me a regular customer comes by here ‘bout once a week. Buys
them same salty nuts, sometimes the jalapeno flavor.” He paused
and scratched his mane of hair. “Beau somethin’ or another.”
It was then that my fiercely beating heart leapt from my chest.
“Beau Pellingham?” I managed, if not just barely.
He nodded and pointed his index finger at me. “That’s him.
Feller looks a lot like you. You related to him somehow?”
I nodded, too. “Somehow. Only, I haven’t seen him for quite
some time. Do you know where I could find him, by any chance?”
He continued with his nodding, steel gray eyes locked in
on mine. “This time of year?” He paused and appeared to be
thinking it over. “Peach pickin’ time, ain’t it?” I shrugged. He
continued. “Yep, I believe he picks down at the Peachtree Grove
right about now.”
Which, of course, didn’t make any sense. Not that anything
that had to do with Beau did, mind you. I mean, he came from
money. And lots of it. Granny would never let any kin of hers
pick peaches for a living. Not that any of them would have to, I’d
think. Heck, Granny owned her own orchards, peaches included.
“What did you mean about this time of year? What does he do
the rest of the year?”
He eyes me suspiciously. “You’re his kin; don’t you know?”
I pulled out my wallet and handed him a twenty. “I’ll take four
more bags. The sugar coated ones. The sweet ones.” His smiled
returned, his hand atop mine, lingering once again. Then I added,
“Like I said, I haven’t seen him in a long while. Just curious, is
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79
all.”
He took my money and placed it inside a dented metal box,
then sat back down, fanning himself, legs splayed wide. “Well
now, guess he does odd jobs, far as I can recall. Little of this,
little of that. Just trying to get by, I reckon.” He laughed. “That
makes two of us. Hard enough ‘round these parts.” He paused
again, hand creeping up his leg, index finger patting his bulge.
“You sure do look like him, though. Only, you’re, well, even nicer
lookin’.”
I blushed, a flush of crimson rising up my neck, sizzling
beneath ample quantities of sweat that now poured on down.
“Thanks,” I squeaked out. “Same here. I mean, you too. I, uh,
mean, you’re nice-looking, too.” I was eloquent as ever.
He smiled, winked again, free hand running across his tight
chest, then over a six pack of abs with a seemingly extra set of
cans. “Helps with the tips when you’re pleasant to the eyes, I
reckon.”
I took out my wallet and plopped down a ten, ample tipping
for the amply pleasant looking. “What other kind of nuts do you
have?” My prick pulsed.
“Oh now, got me some really big nuts hidden away. Been
boiling all day out here. Must be salty as all hell by now.” His
grin exploded, teeth white as sun-bleached bone. “You wanna see
‘em?” he semi-whispered, semi-rasped.
I merely nodded, gulped, leaned in. His eyes stayed laser-
locked on mine, my body wet with sweat. Both his hands went
to his narrow waist, fingers unbuttoning the top button of his
shorts, an auburn bush poking out. “These here nuts is more
expensive then those other kinds,” he informed, sliding down the
zipper, just as a car whizzed by, then another, the zipper all the
way down now, the shaft of his willy exposed.
I dropped down another ten. “That enough?”
He nodded. “Yessum, that ought to do it. You just stand there
and watch now, on account of these here nuts is just about ready
to blow.” He shimmied out of his shorts, kicking them to the dirt,
80 Rob Rosen
massive balls hanging several inches over the edge of the stool,
steely cock pressed up tight to his belly. He pulled on his hairy
sac. “See, biggest, sweatiest nuts this side of the Chattahoochee.”
My mouth watered. “And probably the other side, too,” I
corrected him.
Again he winked. “I reckon so,” he agreed, spitting into the
palm of his hand before lubing up his billy club of a prick, which
looked even larger when compared to his rather short stature.
Then he began to stroke it, watching me all the while, mouth in a
pant. Which made two of us.
The sun began its gradual descent, turning him a golden
orange as those giant balls of his bounced and swayed, his pace
quickening, dick nothing but a blur now. He tossed his head back,
eyes shut good and tight, a soft moan escaping from between his
lips as he exploded in a torrent. Which wasn’t too surprising, as
balls that big carry around a lot of extra come. And a lot of extra
come is just what came flying out. Ropes and ropes of it, a geyser
of hot spunk that landed,
splat
,
splat
,
splat
in the dirt, thick wads of it. Then, with an extra
splat
for good measure, he opened his
eyes and stared up at me. “You enjoy those nuts of yours, good
buddy. And come back any time. I’m always here, boiling away.”
He shot me a wicked-ass wink.
I cleared my throat and tossed in an extra five. For the show
and
the information. Well, mostly for the show. “I’ll do that. And
thanks.”
I heard him slipping back into his shorts as I made it back to
the car, my prick mega-rigid now. Then I sped on home, fairly
ready to explode as I took the stairs two at a time. Luckily, I
looked out my bedroom window before I got undressed. Zeb
was locking up the stables in what little remained of the day’s
light. I rapped on the glass and motioned him up. He smiled and
gave me a great, big smile.
Hurry
, I mouthed.
Thankfully, that’s just what he did, bounding in and hopping
into bed with me. “That’s a lot of boiled peanuts you got there,”
he said, hand already gratefully working my now-vertical tool.
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81
That blush of mine returned. “Hope you like them salty and
sweet. Two of them are for you.”
He laughed. “Yep. And judging from this here granite boner
I got here, I’d say you found them over at Billy Ray’s stand. Boy’s
a born salesman, ain’t he?” He looked up at me and smiled, my
prick so swollen with blood it was a miracle I didn’t pass out
from the lack of it anyplace else. “Biggest nuts this side of the
Chattahoochee.”
I shot at the word. “Saltiest, too, I hear.” I moaned, body
trembling as I doused the sheets. Then I eagerly returned
the favor, two big messes that would need to be cleaned up.
Eventually.
We collapsed in my bed, sticky, sweaty, and satiated. He
stroked my hand, both of us staring up at the ceiling. “You were
gone quite awhile. Discover anything worthwhile?”
I nodded, my leg draped over his leg. Truth be told, what I
discovered was that I was quickly growing very fond of him.
Though that’s not what I told him, not just yet. “Think so,” I
replied, instead. “Looks like my mom was sent away a couple of
years before I was born, had an illegitimate baby, probably Beau,
then came back with a man who would soon become my father.”
“So you got yourself a half-brother,” he tossed in. “Pretty
cool, huh?”
I sighed. “Cool if not utterly confusing.” I turned to look at
him. “I mean, he meets me and tells me off, meaning he knows
about me, but never contacts me before Granny’s funeral. Then
I find out that he picks peaches and does odd jobs, secretly
squatting in my bedroom whenever he’s able to.”
“Meaning he’s broke,” Zeb added.
“But how can that be? Granny knew he was her grandson.
She showered me with money, so why not Beau?”
“Confusing,” he repeated.
“Definitely,” I agreed.
He snuggled up even closer to me, stifling a yawn. “Know
82 Rob Rosen
what I think?” he said, but didn’t wait for my reply. “I think only
your Granny knew that Beau was her grandson. Trust me, no one
picks peaches that doesn’t have to; it ain’t much fun. Could also
explain why he didn’t treat you like the long-lost brother that you
more than likely are.”
“Makes sense,” I said, with a groan. “And doesn’t make any
at all.”
“Nope,” he agreed, squeezing my hand. “Not a lick. So now
what?”
Again I groaned, and not the good kind of groan. “I don’t
suppose you know Senator Pellingham, do you?”
He sat up and looked at me with the oddest expression. “Well,
now that you mention it.”
Then I sat up. “Huh?”
He grinned. “Um, I do have a connection to him, sort of.
Why do you ask?” And so I told him about the possible Beau
connection. And then he said, “Yup, see,
that
makes sense.”
“
That
makes sense? Why does
that
make sense?” I was