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
God into you, she did. Me included, most times.
And, man, was it ever hard to go back there, what with her
gone. Place was soulless. All shell, the snail now in nothing but
plain old wood. I gulped, standing on the porch, a trail of sweat
bee-lining down my face, luggage off to the side. Then I rang
the bell,
I Wish I Was in Dixie
gonging from within as I took a
deep breath, the fragrant smell of magnolia blossoms wafting
languidly up my nostrils, with jasmine close behind.
“Old times there are not forgotten,” I sang, tapping my foot
as the door creaked on open.
“Trip, that you?” came the familiar voice, her head poking
out, a smile spreading wide across her dark, round face.
My smile instantly matched hers. “Pearl?” I managed, my
heart very nearly bursting at the seams.
The door continued moving open. “Who else would it be,
boy?”
She held out her arms to me, rolls of fat dangling down,
swinging like a pendulum. I ran in and gave her a hug, face buried
in layers of cotton and breast. She smelled like fresh cut corn and
okra, a splash of vanilla with a dash of Kentucky bourbon. She
smelled, in fact, like my childhood. Her arms closed in tight, the
hug like a vice as a tear streamed down her cheek before tickling
my forehead.
“You’re looking good, Pearl,” I managed, voice muffled.
She laughed. “All you seeing is titty, boy,” she chided, slapping
me on the shoulder.
“Well, could be worse,” I retorted, backing up an inch. “You
could be much taller and I could be much shorter.”
southeRn FRied
5
She paused, letting that image splash across her brain. Then
she laughed and smacked me twice as hard. “You’re a foul talking
boy, Trip Jackson. Who done taught you how to talk that way?”
She winked and led me inside.
“My lips are sealed,” I replied, closing the door behind me,
the smell of magnolia replaced by Pine Sol, jasmine by fresh
baked biscuits. “You got strawberry jam to go with those?” I
asked, head craning from side to side, taking it all in after being
away for so very long.
“With butter and honey,” she told me, grabbing my hand and
leading me inside the belly of the beast, not a stick of furniture
moved in well over a decade, and all of it clean as a whistle, not
a speck of dust to be found. Pearl saw me staring and nodded.
“She’s gone in body only, sugar. I swear, I think she’s still around
watching me like she always did. Making sure I keep it just like
she likes it. Fussy old biddy.”
I laughed, despite myself. “That any way to talk about the
dead, Pearl?”
We walked into the kitchen, the yeasty aroma so intoxicating
it very nearly made me hard in my jeans. Then she replied to my
question. “Trust me, boy, that’s saying it nicely.” She moved to
the oven and removed the tray of biscuits, flaky and perfect, just
a smidgen of brown around the edges. She cut one open for me,
a puff of steam rising up, before she smeared a slab of butter on
top, a swirl of honey, a glob of jam over it all. Then she served
it to me on Granny’s favorite china, a glass of whole milk set to
the side.
I smiled wide. “It’s a miracle her heart didn’t go out long
before now,” I remarked, taking in Lord only knew how much
cholesterol and fat. Gleefully. It went down smooth as silk,
blocking several arteries along its murderous path.
Pearl returned my smile with one of her own, big and white
against a sea of honey-colored brown. “Boy, it’s a miracle her
liver didn’t go out long before that. Only reason she died was
because we plum ran out of that Jack Daniels of hers.” She made
the sign of the cross over her chest. “God rest her soul.”
6 Rob Rosen
“And bless her liver, too,” I added, mimicking the gesture.
“Amen.”
She joined me at the kitchen table, two biscuits to my one.
“Funeral’s tomorrow, huh?” I asked, almost in a whisper. She
merely nodded. “Hard to believe she’s gone.” Again the nod,
half a biscuit downed. “Then what happens, Pearl?” I looked
at her like I did when I was a little boy and I broke something,
something Granny was going to be awfully pissed about me
breaking. Pearl always knew the right thing to say to comfort me.
Sadly, I wasn’t a boy any longer, much as I felt like one right at
that moment.
She swallowed and then gulped. “Her attorney is in London.
Can’t get back until a couple of days from now. He’s got the will
in a safe up in Charleston and then there’ll be a reading as soon as
he retrieves it and brings it on down here. That what you meant
by
then what happens
?” she asked, in between another hearty bite.
I swallowed too, but not because I had a thick slab of biscuit
gliding down my throat. “I suppose. I mean, it is a pretty big
estate, huh?”
She craned her head this way and that, multiple chins sloshing
about as she started in on biscuit number two. “I think that’s what
you’d call a gross understatement, Trip.” She laughed, crumbs
flying to and fro from between lips so thick they’d make Mick
Jagger jealous.
See, in terms of money, Granny was rich as Rockefeller and
twice as ornery. My family had always been rich, going back
to the Civil War. Rich from cotton. Fields and fields of it. All
spared from Grant’s torch. Marched right on past us and decided
on Atlanta instead. Thank goodness. Anyway, the house stayed
put, every last white column and stick of silver of it, all of it
passed down, down, down. Stopping dead in its tracks with me,
I supposed. There’s that bitter irony again, right? Last living
relative is queer as a three dollar bill, which, needless to say, they
didn’t have in confederate money. The genes were staying put in
my, well, jeans, so to speak. Still, I’d never laid eyes on Granny’s
will before. The inheritance was all assumption on my part, and
southeRn FRied
7
would be until the lawyer arrived.
I finished my biscuit and drank my milk. It went down cold
and satisfying. Then I washed my plate and glass and turned
again to Pearl. “Mind if I go and have a look around?” I asked.
“Been a long while.”
She shrugged. “Suit yourself, boy. Place’ll be all yours soon
enough, I reckon.” She smiled, her eyes softening. “I missed you,
Trip,” she added.
I moved in and placed a warm, wet kiss on her cheek. “Same
here, Pearl. Same here.”
And then I excused myself and started my tour. So strange to
be back after so long a time. And, yet, it felt like I hadn’t left at all,
because Granny never, ever moved anything or bought anything
new. The furniture had been around long before any of us where
even glimmers in our rebel ancestors’ cotton-pickin’ minds. Still,
it did my heart good to run my hand across the smooth, wooden
banister, to sit on the sofa, to touch the lace that draped over it.
It was like feeling my past. Her past, too, I suppose. Generations
of pasts all piled high.
I stared at her portrait over the mantelpiece. It was Granny
when she was in her thirties. Less dour, if only by a hair. There
was a scowl on her face as she stared down at me, as if to say,
get
your filthy jeans off my sofa, boy
. In other words, I jumped up and off.
“I was done sitting there anyway,” I said to the painting, turning
away as I stuck my tongue out, just in case she really was hanging
around up there.
I walked back into the hallway, staring up the winding staircase,
massive chandelier hanging high overhead, dripping with crystals,
ancestral portraits arranged along the side of the wall, older as
you made your way up. I touched the picture of my mom and
dad. She was pregnant with me, smiling big and broad. I echoed
her smile as I made my way past, instinctively heading for my old
room.
The door creaked open. Granny never oiled it. Said she liked
knowing when I was up to no good, which was often enough.
8 Rob Rosen
My room, like the rest of the mansion, was just as I’d left it.
It was all teenage boy, posters on the wall, glee club trophies,
debate plaques, comic books neatly stacked. Nerdy chic, I called
it. I sighed as I hopped on the bed, smaller than I remembered
it to be. Ironically, my bedroom in New York wasn’t any bigger,
despite my staggering rent.
I stood up and walked to the dresser, staring at the pictures,
me when I was a teenager, Granny still old, barely a meager smile
if any at all. I touched her face behind the glass, a chill riding
shotgun down my back. “Hope you’re in a better place, Granny,”
I whispered, then realized that where she had been wasn’t too
shabby. Not by a long shot. I giggled at the thought. Then my eye
caught the light twinkling from outside.
I moved to the window and stared down, the pool off to the
corner of the yard, the sweeping lawn cascading over and down,
trimmed with magnolias and loblolly pines, water oaks, Spanish
moss hanging down off the branches like grayish green locks of
unkempt hair. A white egret took flight off the lake in the rear
of the property. “Fuck it, Granny; you were in a damn fine place
already.” Again I laughed, once more noticing the sunlight as it
reflected off the pool. Only this time I spotted movement, as
well.
It was hard to see him from my vantage point, too far down
and off to the side. Still, it was a man, shirtless, tan arms, his body
rife with hair. Then I saw the fluid motion of a net swiping the
top of the water, retrieving leaves and debris. That was my job
as a kid, but now the hired help’s. I gulped when he came into
view, at the sight of his broad hairy chest, etched belly, love trail
disappearing into tight work slacks. Handsome fella, super tan,
short hair, graying at the sides. Early forties with the body of a
twenty year old’s. My jeans bulged at the sight of him.
“Who are you, I wonder?” I asked, aloud, craning my neck
over, cheek against the cool glass, trying and failing for a better
shot of him. “Better view from Granny’s sewing room,” I added,
with a snap of my fingers. “That’ll look straight down on to him.”
I left my bedroom and hot-footed it across the hall and around
southeRn FRied
9
the corner, flinging open the sewing room door. I stopped, dead
in my tracks. “Oh, uh, fuck, sorry,” I yelped, frozen to the spot. As
was he. He had his pants around his ankles, hand at mid-stroke.
Obviously, whoever this guy was, he’d had the same thought as I
did. “You, uh, you want to put
that
away?”
His face went beet red, then an even deeper crimson. “Come
in, quick, before Pearl hears us.” I jumped inside and shut the
door quietly behind me. “She doesn’t like the help in the house,”
he informed, reaching for his shorts and then stuffing his rather
fetching stiffy inside. Dude was my age, or near about, shorter
than me by several inches, cute as all get out, with eyes a startling
blue, blue as that pool outside, of the sky on a hot August day. I
gazed out the window at what he’d been staring at. He followed
my eyes downward. “Jake,” he told me.
“Jake,” I echoed, with a nod, my heart beating hummingbird-
fast. “And you are?”
He laughed, nervously, his zipper rising up, shorts now
buttoned. “Zebulon. But everyone calls me Zeb. I take care of
the horses.” His eyes stayed locked on mine, boring down deep,
a smile wide on his tanned face, cheeks sprinkled with a day’s
growth of hair. “And you are?”
I gave him the quick run down. He’d heard of me, of course,
then apologized again, pleading with me not to tell Pearl.
As if
,
I thought. She was scarier than Granny when she wanted to be.
And she usually wanted to be. Besides, I loved having the upper
hand. “Does Jake know you’re watching him?” I asked, an inch
closer now, then two, both of us staring longingly down at him.
“I reckon not, not if I want to live to tell about it,” came
the reply, hand pushing down at his still hard prick, now sadly
encased in denim. “Promise not to tell?”
I grinned, that upper hand quickly put into play. “But Pearl
doesn’t want you in the house,” I said, all smiles, again staring
down as Jake emptied the net, his chest flexing, biceps massive,
sweat trickling down between his bulging pecs, which looked like
boulders after a morning rain. “Not smart to go against Pearl’s
wishes. I learned that the
hard
way.” Emphasis on the hard.
10 Rob Rosen
He gulped, eyes wide. Like a deer caught in the headlights.
“Oh, come on now; I was just having me some fun. Nobody
needs to know nothin’.” His smile made a forced return, nervous
if not downright adorable. My heart went
thump
,
thump
,
thump
inside my chest.
I paused for effect, hand rubbing my chin as I pretended to
think it over. “I suppose so,” I relented. “Fun is fun. Too bad I