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
I nodded. “Sounds good.” Well, maybe not good, per se. But
it was a plan. And it didn’t involve any breaking or entering. Or
horse tranquilizers. Though, truth be told, those did indeed come
in handy. Who knew?
We sat at a table for four. By then, we were starving. Over
lunch, we rehashed what we knew. And what we didn’t. Sadly,
there was a still a lot in the latter column. Hopefully, soon, we
could put an end to that.
“Anything else?” asked the waitress when we were done.
“Dessert?” we all asked.
She shot us a withered smile. “Peach pie, peach ice-cream,
peach pudding, or peach cobbler?”
182 Rob Rosen
“Uh,” I uhed, “no cherry or strawberry anything?” I was still
smarting from all that peach brandy.
“This is the South, hon,” she replied. “And it’s peach pickin’
season. You want strawberries, come back in a month.”
I groaned. “I’ll take the cobbler.”
Zeb sighed and ordered the cobbler as well. As did my other
friends. A la mode, with peach ice-cream. Might as well go whole-
hog, we figured. In any case, it was delicious. And homemade.
And a heck of a lot better than peach brandy.
Full now, we left. We had a long drive ahead of us, after all,
and it was getting late. Though, to be honest, the thought of
leaving and driving five hours away was a welcome relief. At least
we were free from those nasty Pellinghams for a spell. However
briefly.
There was little to see along the way, just endless miles of
road. We could’ve been anywhere; one highway looks just like all
the others, I suppose. Though, five hours later, Atlanta loomed
ahead in the distance. An oasis in an otherwise bleak, southern
desert, so to speak. It wasn’t New York, but still it filled my heart
with something resembling hope.
We skirted the city, our necks craned upward at all the glass
and steel, at the smaller brick buildings, older remnants of the
city, at newly built condos for the downtown dwellers. It was
all sleek and clean looking. Like I said, not New York. Not by a
mile. More like a genteel version of it. And it passed by us all too
quickly.
We followed the signs to Decatur, driving through upscale,
small suburbs, past rolling green lawns, beautiful brick houses,
trendy shops and sidewalk cafes. Even a gay bar, its rainbow flag
flapping in the mild breeze. I smiled at the sight of it. Like a
beacon in the night. Which, by the way, was fast approaching.
“Better find us a motel,” I said to Zeb.
“Uh, Trip,” he said, playfully squeezing my knee. “You’re rich
now, remember?”
southeRn FRied
183
Stella tapped me on the shoulder from her seat behind me.
“And rich people don’t sleep in motels,” she added.
Jake pointed out the window to a beautiful Victorian-looking
house, the wood painted purple, the shutters blue, with rounded
steeples, trellises laden with winding ivy, and a lawn brimming
with color. Very fairy tale. And I just love fairies. “Sissy’s bed and
breakfast,” I read off the dangling shingle as we slowed down to
a stop.
“Hey,” said Stella. “You two are sissies. Must be a sign.”
I looked at Zeb and he looked at me. “She has a point,” he
said. “However slightly insulting it might be.”
She snickered. “Don’t shoot the messenger.”
“Please, no mention of shooting,” I said, wincing, as I opened
the passenger side door. “Come on,
staff
,” I said, with a flick of
my index finger. “And bring the bags around.”
They all hopped out and followed. “What bags?” asked Zeb.
I knocked on the door and whispered, “It’s what the master
says to the underlings.”
One of the said underlings elbowed me in the ribs. Judging
by the force, I’d say it was Stella. But before I could say anything,
the door swung open. “Afternoon, ya’ll,” said the proprietor, a
stately woman in her early seventies or well-preserved eighties. In
the South, it’s sometimes hard to tell. “What can I do you for?”
I nodded and smiled. “We were just passing through, ma’am,
and were wondering if you had two spare rooms for the night.”
Her smile grew bright, revealing perfect teeth, her eyes
twinkling. “Well, sure I do, sugar, this being a bed and breakfast,
and all.” She looked behind me. “But where’s your luggage?”
A slight flush of red worked its way up my neck. “Um, we
weren’t planning on this long of a trip, ma’am. Kind of got
sidetracked. We should’ve been home hours ago.”
She hesitated. “Where is home?” She asked because one’s
home can often be one’s calling card, I figured. It’s the same
question Granny would’ve asked.
184 Rob Rosen
And so I told her. And her eyes grew even wider, her face
suddenly growing pale, mouth slightly open. “Can’t be,” she
murmured.
“What can’t be, ma’am?” I asked, my heart suddenly racing.
“What’s your name, sugar?” she asked, a question for a
question.
I smiled. “Trip Jackson, ma’am.”
She sighed and fanned her face. “Thank the Lord,” she said.
“For a minute there, I thought you were your daddy. You two
are the spitting image of each other.” She paused and clutched
her pearls. Yes, they really do do that in the South. “God rest his
soul,” she quickly added.
And that flush of mine burnished its way across my face.
“You, you knew my father?”
The door opened wider. “Hon, your granny and I go way
back.” The pause returned, her face cast downward. “Sorry,
sugar, I heard the news. I mean,
went
way back.” She motioned
for us to come on in, which we gladly did. Then she closed the
door behind us. “Your granny was one hell of a woman, Trip.”
I looked at the charming living room in front of us and then
to her. “Yes, ma’am, I know.”
The smile remained in full-force. “But where are my manners,”
she said. “Let me give ya’ll the grand tour.” Which she did, my
three cohorts introducing themselves as she led us this way and
that. And what a beautiful home, too. It was once hers and her
husbands, but when he died, she needed the extra income, so she
moved to the bottom floor and rented out the rooms on the top.
Apparently, it was enough to keep her head above water.
As for my granny, Mary had lived not far from the mansion
in her early twenties. And as for my parents, she’d been at their
wedding. And, sadly, their funeral. Weird, but it made me have
an instant connection with her. After all, other than Jeeves,
I really didn’t know anyone that had known my parents. And,
all things considered, namely that it was looking like Jeeves had
possibly killed them, maybe it was best if I kept his name off that
southeRn FRied
185
exceedingly short list.
“And these are your rooms,” she said, at the end of the tour,
indicating one room on each side of the hall, both with a four-
poster, queen sized bed and decorated with a very southern lady’s
touch. In other words, we were being laced and embroidered to
death. Still, since I was speaking figuratively, we were quite happy
with the accommodations. “Dinner is in an hour. It’s just the five
of us tonight. No other guests are booked until the weekend.”
And with that, she turned and walked away, sensible heels clicking
down the hallway.
Zeb and I looked at Stella and Jake. They looked like mice
that suddenly had access to the cheese. Or they were just horny.
Probably the latter. “See you in an hour,” Stella said, quickly
shutting the door behind them.
“And probably hear you sooner than that,” I whispered,
shutting our door behind us.
And then we hopped onto our bed, both with contented
sighs. “Pretty weird week,” he said, his fingers caressing mine.
“Gross understatement, Zeb,” I replied.
He paused. “Do you, do you think he did it?”
My pause was longer. “As much as I hate him, Zeb, Jeeves has
always been family. Always. And I can’t see Granny keeping him
on if he did. I mean, he was accused of it and she never fired
him. So, no, I don’t think so. At least I pray he didn’t.” I gulped.
“Still, I hope we find out tomorrow and put an end to all this.”
He rolled over and our eyes met, my tummy, as usual, swirling
with butterflies. “Not an end to
all
this,” he cooed, a warm,
perfect kiss placed on my lips. He pulled an inch away, eyes still
locked, searching, drilling down deep inside me. “I know this isn’t
perfect timing, but, uh…” And those butterflies of mine went
full-on swarm, eager to break free. “… I, uh, may be in love with
my boss.”
And damn if those butterflies didn’t start winging their way
around that room right there and then. I kissed him, hard, harder
still. “Please don’t tell the stable boy union,” I whispered into his
186 Rob Rosen
mouth. “Because the boss is definitely in love with his employee,
too.”
He laughed and squeezed my hand. “The union is okay with
that.” He rolled on top of me. “In fact, they encourage it.”
“Good union,” I said, my hands working their way into the
back of his jeans.
He sighed as my index finger tickled his hole. “Best union
ever.”
“Amen,” I sighed back, our lips again shoved together, his
body writhing on mine as the tip of my finger poked its way
inside of him.
“Not on the bed,” he whispered.
“Why not?” I whispered back, knuckle-deep now.
“Have you ever tried to get spooge out of a crocheted blanket
before?”
I winked at him. “Got it.” He rolled off of me. “Shower,” I
grunted, the both of us shucking off clothes as we tore to the
bathroom, where we were quickly overwhelmed with passion and
the stink of lilac and lavender, which seemed to permeate almost
every square inch of the tiny, purple room.
“Smells like old lady,” he said, pulling me under the spray.
“I hope you’re talking about the bathroom,” said I, already
tugging at his steely rod.
“For now,” he replied, soaping up my cock with enough
potpourri-infused soap to cover up the stench of the entire
Savannah River. Then he held his nose. “Uh oh.”
I laughed, my fist working in double-time. “Too late?”
He nodded and matched me stroke for stroke. “Uh huh. Now
you smell like the garden behind my house.”
His head tilted back, the water rushing over his handsome,
stubbled face, his legs quaking a split second later as he shot.
And shot some more. His moans bounced off the purple tile,
my groans joining them a split second later as both of our hefty
southeRn FRied
187
loads got washed down the drain.
He pulled me in to him, smiling brightly as the full moon.
“Did I mention that I love you?”
I nodded. “I believe we covered that,” I said. “Did I mention
that I love you back?”
He nodded, too. “I think so. Better say it again, just in case.”
I kissed his neck, nibbled on his ear, his warm body pressed
up snugly to mine. “I love you, Zeb.” And damn if it didn’t feel
awesome saying it. Then I looked up to the ceiling with a happy
grin.
You sure do know how to hire ‘em, Granny.
We were dressed and at the dining room table soon thereafter.
Stella and Jake joined us a minute later. It was hard to tell which
couple was glowing more. Or which stunk more like old lady.
Though neither said as much. Mainly because we didn’t need to.
“Phewee,” said Sissy, walking in with a plate of cheese and
crackers. “I’m changing the soap in those bathrooms as soon
as ya’ll skedaddle.” Four faces blushed red as four sets of hands
reached for the crackers, all eyes cast around the room and not
on one another. Or Sissy, who just shrugged, and added, “Dinner
will be ready in ten minutes.”
And so it was. And, man, was it like heaven. A southern,
artery-clogging heaven of pork chops and spiced-up greens and
honeyed yams, downed with sweet iced-tea and biscuits so light
that you could practically float on them. And not a peach in sight.
Thank goodness. But we were exhausted after we finished with it
all, and said our thanks to Sissy and our early goodnights. After
all, we needed to be fresh for tomorrow’s library investigation.
Because finding information from thirty years prior wasn’t going
to be easy. Or fun.
The four of us hugged Sissy in turn and then returned to
our bedrooms. Zeb and I hopped in bed and watched the small
television off to the side. The news was on, the upcoming
election at the forefront, seeing as the candidates were all starting
to throw their names in the hat now. And there, soon enough,
were the Pellinghams: the senior Senator and his lawyer son, both
188 Rob Rosen
of them running for seats, the elder in South Carolina for the
Senate, the younger in Georgia for the House. Needless to say,
the conservative Republicans were ecstatic. Zeb and I, of course,
were downright glum.
“Time’s running out,” I sighed.