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
202 Rob Rosen
and rape?”
“We were best friends,” he replied, an edge to his voice.
“Were?”
“Well, it would look odd for him to stay friends with a butler.”
I sighed. “A job that he made you take. Blackmailed you to
take,” I countered with. “So, did you rape Jenny then?”
He paused before answering, which made my stomach tie
further up into knots. “We left before the party. I took Robbie to
the bus station and then I drove around for a bit.”
“So you weren’t together the whole time?”
“He was… he frequently took the bus to go see your mother.
He had to do it secretly so that nobody knew. Your granny and
his parents weren’t eager for them to see each other. Your granny
most of all.”
And for good reason. “Did you see him get on the bus,
Walter?”
He shook his head. “No. But he did. As he’d done before.
And I couldn’t go back to the house until after the party because
we weren’t together and he didn’t want anyone to know that he
was gone. In case it got back to his parents.”
That burning skin of mine was now itching. “And then several
years later, just before my parents died, were you together that
whole time up at the lake?”
“No, he… he had to get back. For work.”
“So, both times, the rape and my parents’ deaths, it appeared
like it could’ve been you who was guilty, and then both times he
provides the alibi and forces you to stay on at the mansion to spy,
right? Or else he recants the alibis, right?” Jeeves simply nodded.
“Looks like you weren’t too good at picking out best friends, I’d
say.”
“But we were best friends,” he said, plaintively. “Best friends
who stuck by each other.”
“And Granny knew you had nothing to do with the deaths
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because you were in fact at the lake house. Did she know about
the rape? Did she know about the years of spying?”
He looked away. “No, Trip,” he whispered. “Not about the
rape. Not about the spying. We were… we were family.”
I snickered, despite myself. “Some family,” I said. “But I have
a feeling only you were telling the truth.”
He looked back my way. “Robbie would never have hurt your
mother, Trip. He loved her. Which is why he made those frequent
trips to see her.”
I ignored the comment, which made me even more sick to
my stomach. “So you were his alibi, too. For the rape and the
murders. But, in fact, you weren’t with him when they occurred?”
He shook his head. “He didn’t do it, Trip. He didn’t rape
anyone or kill anyone.”
“And the blackmailing?”
His head stopped shaking. “That was more his father’s doing.
He was looking out for his career. I was referred for the job at the
mansion by him. It was supposed to be temporary, some spying
before his campaign. Your granny, she threw large parties. People
drank; people talked. He needed a fly on the wall.”
“And Beau?” I asked.
“And he needed to keep tabs on Beau, too. For a time,
until the adoption went through. Just before the car accident
happened, I was going to be allowed back at the firm. Then
after the accident, they didn’t think it prudent, especially since
I was being investigated. Then Beau resurfaced and my job at
the mansion became permanent. By then, it didn’t much matter.
I could never have gone back to law after so long an absence.”
“And Senator Pellingham was reelected, again and again, and
now Robbie is up for election after a long and lucrative legal
career. Which he owes to you.” And it was then I played what I
hoped was my trump card. Because, like I said, treachery is not
the same as stupidity. And the Pellinghams were a lot of things,
but stupid wasn’t one of them. “And he owes his career to
all
the
204 Rob Rosen
others, too,” I added, waiting for a telltale sign that my hunch
proved correct.
Thank goodness, or thank my guardian granny angel, but
I got one, a sign. In spades. “You, you mean the others at the
mansion? Roy and Betty?”
I grinned. “Tip of the iceberg, Walter.”
He rose and leaned in, eyes wide. “What… what others then?”
My smile widened. My spades, it turned out, were lining up
into a flush. “The Pellinghams have spies everywhere, Walter. Ex-
cons they blackmail to do their dirty work. Dozens and dozens
of them in all the finer homes throughout the South.”
He sat back down. “Oh,” he squeaked out. “I see.” He looked
back my way, reiterating what I’d already said. “And those alibis
of his, the ones that saved me…”
“… they also saved him, Walter,” I said, finishing his sentence.
“And if Beau had returned as a baby, and the press found out that
Robert E. was the father, out of wedlock, then his father’s career
would have been in jeopardy, as would Robert E.’s, and down
would come the Pellingham name.” I paused to let him take it in,
before adding. “Didn’t you think it was an odd coincidence that
the rape occurred in your room?”
“It could’ve happened in any of the rooms,” he replied. “They
didn’t have locks on the doors. Any of the brothers could’ve
taken her back there, knowing we were gone.”
Just out of curiosity, I thought to ask, “And how many of
them had rebel flag tattoos?”
His fingers tapped nervously on the table. “I… I don’t know.”
“None that you know of you mean, right?”
He nodded. “None that I know of.”
“And let me guess, Robbie was with you when you go it,
right?”
He continued nodding. “Yes, he was. I’d only had it for a week
before the party. He... he dared me to get it. Back then, only
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sailors and drunks got tattoos. It wasn’t like today.”
“Meaning, you didn’t share the fact that you had one with too
many people?” I gulped. I knew I was on to something. And now,
at last, I realized I was getting through.
He whimpered, which put a pang in my chest. “Only he knew
about it, Trip.”
I continued with that line of questioning. “And the girl, Jenny,
have you seen her since college?”
His nod returned. “In passing, over the years. She doesn’t live
too far from here. But if she recognized me, she didn’t let it
show. Since she only ever saw me in pictures, the ones the police
showed her, ones of many of all the brothers, she probably had
no idea it was me when I encountered her.”
“Lucky you,” I said, my chuckle returning as I recalled my
own encounter with her.
But he wasn’t laughing. “Why do you ask if I’ve seen her?”
“Just a hunch, Walter,” I said. “But if I’m correct, and I think
I am, then I think we can clear all this up. All of it. And then you
can sell the cars and leave the mansion and start all over again.”
He gulped and looked away. “Thank you,” he said, over his
shoulder.
“Don’t thank me yet,” I said, with an angry edge to my voice.
Because, trust me, I wasn’t forgiving or forgetting what he had
done. “This will cost you,” I quickly added.
He turned back around. “But you’re rich now; you don’t need
whatever I could afford to give you.”
“Not money,” I said. “Information.”
He turned back around, his eyes still watering. “I told you
everything I know.”
“Really?” I asked. “Do you know where Beau is?”
He stood up now, pacing around the room. Because he knew
that I knew about everything he’d thus far told me. But this,
this he was certain was the one piece of information I had yet
206 Rob Rosen
to discover. And so we both had trump cards. Still, mine was
a face card and his some middling number. And this he knew,
too, because eventually I’d find Beau or he’d find me. And
Jeeves would still be a lowly butler and one that was still being
blackmailed.
He stopped pacing and turned to look at me. “She would’ve
kept Beau, you know.” I simply nodded. “It was Robbie who
convinced her. Told her it would ruin her life, not to mention his.
And your Granny’s good name. They’d all be whispered about.”
“I know,” I told him. “I’m not blaming her. It was the times.”
And Robert E., of course.
He walked toward me again. “I already know that you found
his trailer,” he told me. “But he had that when he came here, came
here knowing about your mother from his adoptive parents. So
your granny wasn’t hard to find. And, of course, she knew about
him, too. Knew he’d some day return. So she had a place waiting
for him. Just in case. Hidden. Or so she thought.”
I glared at him. “You knew about it, too. And you told
Robbie.”
“If I didn’t, the others would have anyway,” he justified. But
he wasn’t fooling anyone. Least of all me. “In any case, she put
him up and paid him in cash, a little here, a little there.”
And now I knew the whole story. “Because she knew they’d
be watching him. Knew he was in danger as soon as he acted like
he knew that he was Pellingham. Or a Jackson. Because if he
admitted to being a Jackson, or if anyone suspected that he was,
then the Pellingham connection would be found out, too. People
knew that my mother dated Robert E. And putting two and two
together wouldn’t be all that difficult.”
“Exactly,” he agreed. “So he had an apartment and some
money and that was it. And it was enough.”
I jumped up and slammed my fists on the table. “He fucking
picked peaches for a living, you idiot,” I yelled. “How on God’s
green earth would that be enough? Enough for whom?”
He looked away. “It was the best for everyone.” He glanced
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my way.
“Ah,” I said. “And so I was never allowed to return home,
in case I found out. And I would’ve spilled the beans for sure.
Would’ve tried to get close to him. Would’ve ruined all you and
she put in place.”
“And then everyone would have been at risk. Especially Beau.”
I sat back down, fighting back the tears now. “So she turned
him against me, just in case I ever tried to get close.”
“She was saving you both, Trip,” he said. “In the best way she
knew how.”
A tear streaked down my face. “Give me the address, Walter.
Give me the address and I’ll fix this. I promise, I’ll fix this. And
no one will get hurt.” No one, except the Pellinghams. God and
Granny willing.
He walked out of the room and returned with a slip of paper.
He held it in his hand and stared down at me. “If you’re wrong,
Trip, if you can’t fix it, and you bring them down without some
sort of exit strategy, then we’re all dead. Me and you, everyone at
the mansion, Beau. Dead or missing or destroyed.”
I snatched the paper from his hand. “As Granny always said,
Walter, better to live dangerously in the light than hide like a
coward in the shadows.”
He shuddered, his shoulders slumping. “Let’s fix it,” he
whispered. “She also always said, better late then never.”
I smiled. “I think she was referring to drinking her nightcaps,
though.”
He hazarded a smile as well. “Still, it holds true for this
situation. So let’s get a move on. I’m tired of
never
.”
And for the first time since I’d been back, he looked young
again. Well, younger, at any rate. Like the Jeeves I’d left when I
was a teenager. Only happier. Sort if. I mean, it was hard to tell
with Jeeves, what with that stick forever buried up his ass.
But I had one more thing to do before we left for Jenny’s,
because that’s where we were headed again. I took out my cell
208 Rob Rosen
and dialed Zeb’s. They were all now at Pearl’s, Pearl included.
Seeing as Beau knew the staff, and probably had an inkling of
trust in them, and not an ounce in me, I figured it was best for
them to get him and bring him over to our side of things, before
the shit hit the fan. Because once it hit, even he wasn’t safe, birth
certificate or no birth certificate; they’d have to get him, to keep
him silent. Because he’d been kidnapped by them, his very life
threatened, and was related to them, to boot, his story could
never get out. Not if the Pellinghams wanted to get elected.
“What will you be doing?” Zeb asked, after he agreed to my
plan.
“We’re going back to Jenny’s,” I told him, with a moan.
He laughed. “If I’d known you were such a glutton for
punishment, I would have brought out my whip a lot sooner.”
“Please tell me it’s part of one of your showgirl outfits,” I
said.
“Okay,” he replied. “We’ll go with that.” Then he added, “But
I’d bring something with you, to sweeten her up. Otherwise, I
have a feeling you’re gonna have a thick slab of wood slammed in
your face. And I love your face way too much to see that happen.”
Again I moaned. “Something tells me she’s not a sweets kind
of person.”
He giggled, knowingly. “You’ll think of something, Thunder
Dick.”
“Please tell me the staff isn’t standing behind you right now.”
Then I heard Stella. “We’re in the other room.” Only she