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
She waited for me to hop back down and sit beside her again.
“Yeah, oh.” She patted my hand. “I believe you found a piece
of paper up there, sugar, but it wasn’t your granny who put it
up there. Not unless she had a stool on the bed.” She laughed.
“Woman was spry for her age, but she wasn’t that spry.”
“But why?” I asked. “And it was Granny’s stationary. Smelled
like lilacs.”
Pearl nodded and then her eyes lit up. Seems like that bulb
above
her
head must’ve been glowing now, because she all of a
sudden jumped up and ran to the dresser. Then she pulled out a
pink pad of paper. “This stationary?” she asked.
I jumped up and joined her. “That’s the one.”
She smiled, a big Cheshire cat grin. And one that just ate a
canary at that. “Lookee here, Trip. You can see the indent of the
writing that was on the previous page. Maybe from the one that
was stuffed in the canopy.”
I smiled, too, but more because her smile was so damned
infectious. Then I squinted at the blank page. “Little good it does
us. Just a lot of faint lines.”
“Maybe,” she said, setting the pad down before running into
Granny’s bathroom. She returned with a tin of Granny’s blush.
“But maybe not.” She opened the tin and pinched out a tiny wad
of the powder, which she gently sprinkled over the pad. The she
lifted the pad and held it up close to her face. With a little wisp of
her breath, she blew the excess powder off the pad.
We both stared down at it, two sets of eyes growing wide.
See, the faint lines weren’t so faint any longer. It was hard to read
90 Rob Rosen
what was written, but not impossible. I gulped as I read it aloud.
“She’s dead.”
Pearl gulped, too. “That a threat or a statement of fact, Trip?”
I stared at the canopy. “Why stick either up there?”
Her eyes followed mine. “Unless you were passing notes to
someone and you knew that was the one place no one could find
it. And neither Betty, me, or your Granny could reach it.”
“And only the male workers in the house could.” I groaned.
“Not to mention, Beau.” Again we stared at the pad, a tide of
unease set loose in my gut. “But why not just use the phone?”
She set the pad down. “Because phone calls can be traced?”
I nodded. “That, and maybe the two people passing the notes
didn’t normally talk to one another. The notes, then, would be
untraceable, the connections between the two people never
discovered.” But which two people? I wondered to myself.
Pearl snickered. “Untraceable unless you used the finest rose-
colored blush.”
“Imported from France,” I couldn’t help but add, also with
a giggle.
She held the tin up close to her eyes. “From the
south
of
France.”
And my giggle broke out into a full-on laugh. “Never would’ve
bought it from the north.”
“Oh, no, child. Nothing from the north.” She snorted. “Oh,
hell to the friggin’ no.”
I woke up the next morning bright and early. I’d spoken to
Zeb the night before on his cellphone. He was putting our plan
into action, so I’d have to meet up with Jeeves first and try to
see if we could find an address for Beau. If not, then hopefully
we could find something out from Port. I was praying for the
former, because the latter seemed like a long-shot. I mean, even
if he knew something, the odds of him sharing that information
were pretty darn slim. Which is why my plan involved a little
espionage work. Oh, I hear your groaning. And rightly so. Hence
my reason for not blabbing just yet.
I quickly ate breakfast. Well, quick as one can eat hashbrowns,
sausage, bacon, and a three-egg omelet with cheese. Not to
mention a tall glass of fresh-squeezed orange juice and two cups
of coffee. And that was a small breakfast for Pearl. Damn if my
jeans weren’t already getting tight.
I met Jeeves just after I finished eating. He was already in
Granny’s study, the filing cabinets open, the computer flicked on.
“Find anything?” I asked, expectantly.
He shook his head and frowned. Least I think he was
frowning, what with that being his usual face and all. “Her ledger
is in the filing cabinet. She paid him in cash. Just says Beau and
three hundred dollars here and there. No records of what he did
for her, only that he got paid monthly, which isn’t all that unusual.
She kept lots of people on the books and called them when she
needed them. This is a big mansion, extensive grounds, and she
frequently required workers of all sorts. Though usually she cut
them checks and paid their taxes.”
“But not Beau?” I asked, knowing we’d failed before I even
asked it.
92 Rob Rosen
“Not Beau,” he replied.
“What about her computer?” I asked, with a glimmer of hope.
“I tried, but it’s password protected and I don’t know the
password. Do you?” he asked, already closing the filing cabinet.
I shook my head, a sob rising up from my chest. On the odd
chance, I called down to the kitchen and asked Pearl. “I’m the
cook, not the accountant,” she said. “Try some of the words she
liked best.”
I sat down at the computer and did just that, trying all the
words that I knew made Granny happy: Savannah, Charleston,
grits, bourbon, southern, Jackson, money, hamhocks, barbeque,
lilac. Then a dozen more. Each time I typed in a word, I got more
depressed. It was hopeless. A lot of things made granny happy.
Then it hit me. I typed it in:
Rebecca
. It was my mom’s name. I
pressed enter.
“Jackpot,” I yipped, the screen filling with her desktop icons.
And, more importantly, her address book. Needless to say, it was
enormous, filled with hundreds and hundreds of names. I scrolled
down to the P’s, my heart pounding in my ears, palms suddenly
sweaty.
Please be here, Beau. Please,
I said to myself. “Pellingham!”
I shouted.
Jeeves leaned in. “Wrong one,” he said. “That’s for the
senator.”
I didn’t let on that I thought there was a connection. “Granny
knows Senator Pellingham?” I asked, instead.
He shrugged and straightened up, moving away from the
computer. “Socially, I suppose. The Jacksons and the Pellinghams
are two fine, old, southern families, Trip. It would, as you well
know, be impossible for them not to know each other.” He
straightened out his vest. “Now, if there’s nothing else, I have
work to do.”
Jeeves. He was nothing if not predictable. I should’ve known
that the glimmer of a heart I saw the day before already flickered
out, leaving nothing but a cold lump of coal in its place. I sighed
and waved him off. “Thanks for your help,” I told him, not even
southeRn FRied
93
looking his way.
“You’re welcome,” he replied, icily, and was gone, nothing but
the smell of moth balls left in his wake.
I sat and stared at the screen, moving from folder to folder,
hoping beyond hope that she had a secret stash somewhere,
anything that could help me find Beau. Second to last were her
emails. Only, the inbox was empty. Same for the sent emails.
Empty. With no folders left, I clicked the very last icon, the
garbage. Just to be on the safe side. “Huh,” I said, surprised at
what I’d found. “Empty, too.” And Granny didn’t even empty her
own trash. Ever. That was what the help was for. How strange, I
thought, that she’d even think to empty the one on her computer.
“Unless
she
didn’t.”
“Unless she didn’t what?” came the voice from behind me.
I jumped, my heart leaping to my throat. “Fuck, you scared
me half to death.”
Zeb laughed. “Which half? Not the good half, I hope.”
Now I laughed. “Dirty boy.”
“Amen to that.”
Then I remembered why he was there. “Did you set it all up?”
I held my breath, praying for some good news at long last.
He bounded over and put his arms around me. “We’re in
luck,” he whispered into my ear, taking a slow nibble on my lobe
as a million tingles worked their way down my spine. “He has
a meeting this morning, nearby. He’s going to meet me at his
apartment just after that. Then we can put our plan into action.”
“Plans,” I said, removing the paper from my pocket, the one
with Roy’s address on it. “Might as well kill two birds with one
stone.”
“Yuck,” he said, grabbing my hand. “I hope you mean that
figuratively.”
I nodded and we walked out of the room. “Okay then, to
quote Granny, might as well kill two shots with one glass. Has a
nicer ring to it, yes?”
94 Rob Rosen
“Yes,” he agreed, the pair of us tiptoeing down the stairs and
out the back door, his car already waiting for us. He laughed as
he started the engine. “Thank goodness you’re the boss; then I’m
not really sneaking off from work.”
I reached over and patted his crotch. “Something tells me it
isn’t
goodness
we’re in for.”
He returned the favor and gave my crotch a squeeze. “Then,
thankfully, it wasn’t this half I scared half to death before.”
I leaned back and smiled, slipping on my sunglasses as he sped
off, a trail of dust rising behind us. He lowered the windows, the
warm air hitting our faces, the greenery whizzing by. I breathed in
deeply. The trail had gone cold, but at least we’d picked up a new
one, maybe two. I said a silent prayer that Beau would be at the
end of one of them. That he’d be glad for the inheritance. That
he’d be glad for me. After all, a gay, mostly northern, half-brother
was not high up there on a southerner’s most wanted list.
I turned to Zeb, taking in his square jaw, dimpled chin, scruffy
cheeks. My heart beat madly in my chest. “Is it weird to be dating
the boss?” I blurted out, then waited with interest for the reply.
He chuckled, the sound like seashells being tossed at the
shoreline. “Oh, are we dating?”
Volley tossed. Volley returned. “Um, since, as you say, I’m the
boss, then yes. Yes, we’re dating.”
He returned it with a lob. “Is it weird to be dating the hired
help?”
I scrunched up my face and giggled, lobbing it right the hell
on back. “Nope. Kind of hot, actually.”
He smacked it, hard, and scored. “Then, no, it’s not weird,
and, yes, I’m glad we’re dating. Now, any chance for a raise, boss?”
I turned to him and smiled. “You already got one, remember?”
Once again he grabbed for my crotch. “Different kind of
raise.” He looked over at me and winked, pulling the car to the
side of the ride. “We’re here, boss.”
I looked up. Roy’s house was more than I’d been expecting,
southeRn FRied
95
the gardens extensive, a veritable field of color, all exquisitely
tended too. How much did Granny pay him? For that matter,
how much would I be paying him? Guess we’d have to find all
that out after we had a talk with him.
But all that would have to wait. Suddenly, we were confronted
with a monkey wrench in the works.
“Look,” Zeb said, pointing to the driveway.
There were two cars parked. The first a Volkswagen, the
second a Mercedes, new, and waxed to perfection. “I think I’m in
the wrong field.”
“No,” he said. “Only the first one is Roy’s.”
I sensed he knew who owned the other one. “And the
Mercedes?”
He turned to look at me. “Port’s.”
My jaw dropped. “I think we’ve moved way past coincidences
now,” I squeaked out.
He nodded. “Looks that way. Now what?”
I stared at the house. “I suppose we could just knock on the
door and see how it unfolds. It would be interesting to see their
reactions. Maybe we can glean something from that. And then we
won’t need Plan B.” Which I was all for because our other plan
meant that Zeb and Port would have to be alone. Not to mention
a little breaking and entering on my part. Yes, sorry, that’s what
I should have told you about sooner, but I didn’t want you to
worry. Thankfully, it now looked like we had a Plan C.
We got out of the car and walked to the front of the house, my
heart thumping a mile a minute. I looked over at Zeb; he looked
just as nervous. I rang the bell and we waited. And then waited
some more. “Ring it again,” Zeb said. So I did. Still nothing. I
knocked, loudly. Nada. Zip, nil, nicht. “Wait,” said Zeb. “I hear
something.”
We paused and held our ears up. “Two men talking,” I
whispered. “Sounds like it’s coming from out back.”
We followed the sound, our faces soon pressed up to a slatted
96 Rob Rosen
fence. “Roy,” I whispered.
“And Port,” Zeb whispered.
Holy motherfucking cow. I thought Roy was Stunning, capital
S. Port was all caps. STUNNING. And get this, they were both
naked. NAKED. In fact, I could cap the rest of this, but it would
get annoying, so I won’t. But, trust me, it’s deserving of it. It was
like a naked, gay Banana Republic ad come to life – well, even