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Authors: Gred Herren

BOOK: Mardi Gras Mambo
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PROLOGUE
Last night I dreamed it was Mardi Gras again. It seemed to me I was standing inside an iron gate, watching one of the night parades go by. The sidewalks in front of the gate were crowded with people, all shouting, with their grasping eager hands up in the air. Out beyond the edge of the curb, I could see people sitting in lawn chairs. Still others were up on ladders, with coolers and plastic bags of booty piled around them on the ground. Fathers and mothers were holding up babies, while black kids with the crotches of their pants down around their knees walked behind the crowd, weighted down by the ropes of beads around their necks. Beads were flying through the air, some getting caught and tangled in the branches of the towering, gnarled oaks lining the avenue. The heavy upper branches of those oaks also blocked out the glow of the ancient street lamps, so the night seemed even darker than it should. I could hear a marching band, playing a recent hip-hop hit, and the strange clicking sound of the baton girls' tap shoes on the pavement. The air was heavy with the fragrance of hot grease, corn dogs, and the strange, melted yellowish-orange substance the vendors put on nachos that purports to be cheese—but no one is really sure what it is. A group of flambeaux carriers was passing by, dancing that odd little circular dance they do, their propane tanks popping and hissing, throwing long and twisted shadows that also danced inside the iron fence I was behind. Right behind them a huge float pulled by a tractor was coming and the crowd's shouts became louder, more desperate, more pleading. On the float's front was a huge white clown face, its bright red lips parted in what passed for a smile but seemed to me to be a frightening leer. The masks on the float riders glowed supernaturally at the hordes begging them for generosity in the strange light cast by the moon when it cleared the thick clouds in the cold night sky. I stood inside the black iron fence, my arms wrapped around me against the cold as an increased sense of menace and dread built inside me. Something bad was going to happen—
Oh, get real, Scotty!
If I do have bad dreams, I don't remember them when I wake up. I've certainly never been troubled in my sleep, even though crazy things always seem to happen to me. I'm just one of those people, I guess. For whatever reason, the Goddess has decided to throw some wild stuff at me—she always has, even when I was a kid—and what can you do? I just don't think I am one of those people who is destined to have a nice, normal, quiet life. Maybe it's because I was named Milton Bradley at birth. Yes, that's right. Milton Bradley. My older brother started calling me by my middle name, Scotty, before I started school, and thank the Goddess, it stuck. Can you imagine how cruel the kids would have been to someone named Milton, let alone Milton Bradley? And then of course there's the gay thing. I was lucky—my parents are pretty liberal and are delighted to have a gay son—like it somehow proves how truly cool they really are or something. They are pretty cool, actually.
But I was talking about dreams. Sometimes the Goddess does speak to me in my dreams. I've always had this slight psychic gift all my life—see what I mean about not being normal? Usually I have to read tarot cards to focus the gift and actually see things. But that's been changing over the past year. I've started having visions, which never happened before, and I even communicated with a dead guy a couple of times. But on those rare occasions when the Goddess speaks to me in a dream, I kind of have to pass out first—or be knocked unconscious—rather than fall asleep. (She apparently has a rather bizarre sense of humor.) But I haven't been dreaming about this past Mardi Gras, thank you very much. If I did, I feel pretty certain the dreams would be fricking nightmares. But then again, who knows? I mean, after all, the reality was worse than anything I could dream up—and I've got a pretty vivid imagination.
I was really looking forward to this past Mardi Gras. It had been a while since I'd been able to just kick up my heels, put everything aside, and just party till I dropped. Well, it had actually been since the last Mardi Gras. My three favorite times of year are Southern Decadence, Halloween, and Mardi Gras—not necessarily in that order. Mardi Gras comes first every year, forty days before Easter. Southern Decadence is next, over Labor Day weekend, and I certainly hope I don't need to explain when Halloween is.
Mardi Gras last year had been really fun—I hadn't had to work my wiles as a go-go boy and, frankly, don't remember a whole lot of the ten days leading up to Ash Wednesday. I know that I had gotten a windfall of cash and invested in a pile of Ecstasy, which I started taking the Thursday night before Fat Tuesday. The rest of the weekend is kind of a blur. I know I met a lot of hot guys, danced a lot, and woke up on Ash Wednesday feeling like something the cat had dragged in, chewed up, and spat out. Boy, was that fun!
I didn't get to enjoy Southern Decadence last year. First off, I'd been broke and had to get up and dance on the bar to make enough money to pay the rent. If that wasn't enough, I had to foil a dangerous conspiracy, got kidnapped—it's a long story I won't bore you with right now. Halloween had been fun, but not as much fun as I'd anticipated. My boyfriend Frank had been shot in the arm the week before, and since he was still really not in much shape to party and dance all night long, we'd just costumed, gone out, and come home early. So I was
really
looking forward to Mardi Gras. I wanted to go out in fun costumes, meet lots of tourists, hang out with the locals, and just grin and shake my ass on the dance floor all night long. Things had, actually, been going pretty smoothly. I couldn't complain about anything. I was back living in my building on Decatur Street, my two boyfriends lived upstairs from me, and they had never experienced Carnival before—Mardi Gras virgins. I wanted them to have a great time. I wanted it to be special. But then, I'm getting ahead of myself.
So, I'll just share some facts. My name is Milton Scotty Bradley, but my friends and family call me Scotty. I'm five feet eight, have curly dark blond hair, and weigh 165 pounds, give or take—it depends on my diet. I am in pretty decent shape; I used to teach aerobics and was a personal trainer, and every once in a while I supplemented my income by dancing in a thong in the gay bars. But that was all in the past. Now I'm a private eye in New Orleans. Yes, that's right, a full-fledged fedora-and-trench-coat-wearing private eye. Okay, it may seem like a weird career change for an ex-stripper and personal trainer, but it just kind of presented itself to me. I can't imagine there are a lot of us out there. But what do you do when something drops into your lap without warning? Treat it as a message from the Universe and go along for the ride, that's what. When I got involved in that conspiracy thing during Southern Decadence, I showed a flair for law enforcement. A Fed I met on that case, Frank Sobieski (more on him later), recommended I get a private-eye license. I was tired of being a personal trainer, and that little adventure, although having its scary moments, was kind of fun, so I figured, what the hell? So here I am, licensed and bonded, and working for the Blackledge Agency office here in New Orleans. There are two other dicks (I love saying that) in the office with me, Frank Sobieski and Colin Cioni.
Oh, yeah, Frank and Colin are the two boyfriends I mentioned earlier.
That's right—I have two boyfriends. That's kind of a long story, so I'll give you the short-and-sweet version. I met both of them during Southern Decadence. Colin was working undercover on a case for the Blackledge Agency, and Frank was in town working on getting to the bottom of the conspiracy thing. In one of those things that could only happen to me, Colin's cover was working as a stripper at the Pub with me during Decadence. So we met dancing on the bar, were attracted to each other, and I took him home with me. The next day, I met Frank when he showed up at my apartment, because I'd wound up with an important piece of evidence for his case—it had been slipped into my boot while I was shaking my ass to earn dollars. We also hit it off. I liked them both, and they both liked me. I was going to have to choose between them. I couldn't. Who could? Frank is six feet three of solid, thick, lean muscle. He clips his receding hair, and it's a
hot
look on him. He was a blonde before that, and he has steel blue eyes that seem to pierce your very soul. There's a rather nasty-looking scar on his cheek that makes him look really mean when he isn't smiling. He got the scar early in his career with the FBI but won't tell me how he got it. He also trims the hair on his massive chest (his nipples are
really
sensitive) and ripped stomach. There's no body fat on him anywhere. And he has the most beautiful ass. . . .
Colin is only about five six or seven, but he's gorgeous in a completely different way from Frank. He has 185 pounds of solid muscle packed on his short frame, olive skin, green eyes, and the most beautiful, curly, short blue-black hair. He's pure Italian, the kind who gets that gorgeous bluish black shadow on his face in the late afternoon. He has huge, round, green eyes, and the whitest, straightest teeth this side of a commercial hawking some tooth-whitening cream. When we first met, he told me he was a cat burglar (it's a long story), and although that was just his cover, I know for a fact he can climb up the side of a building. Colin's always full of surprises. He's fluent in Hebrew, for example. I'm beginning to think there isn't anything he can't do.
He's also
amazingly
limber and can contort his body into the most incredible positions.
I couldn't choose—there just wasn't any way.
The really weird thing is it wasn't my idea to have a three-way relationship—the boys came up with it all by themselves with no pushing from me. (My best friend, David, doesn't believe me. He thinks it was my plan all along.) So far, it's been surprisingly harmonious. I live on the third floor of a building on Decatur Street across from the Old Mint, and they share an apartment on the fourth floor. It's kind of cool. We all have our privacy when we need it, or if we want to be together, we can be easily. If Frank needs some alone time, Colin comes down and hangs with me. Of course, we had to set up ground rules. The first thing we negotiated was sex. We decided all three of us didn't need to be present for it to happen without guilt. Sometimes we all spend the night together; some nights we all sleep alone; some nights one sleeps alone. We also decided not to be monogamous. It seemed kind of silly to demand it of each other (things happen, after all—look at the three of us!), but so far no one's strayed out of our arrangement. Goddess, who has time? I do like to go out sometimes by myself, and the bars are always crawling with hot boys, but I am doing it less and less. On those rare occasions when I do go to the bars alone, every time some hot guy gives me the eye I think about what I have waiting for me at home and just smile and look away. No guy is so hot that he would be better than the two I have at home.
So, I guess I've kind of settled down my wayward ways. I worried about it sometimes: Was I getting old? Was I slowing down? Was I becoming someone I wasn't? I still liked to go out dancing, but if the boys wanted to stay home I found myself staying home with them and doing some kind of crazy thing—when you put together a longtime private eye, an ex-stripper, and a former FBI agent, you can come up with all kinds of interesting experiences.
One night we played “voyeur.” I thought it was kind of silly myself at first. I was supposed to climb up the back steps and pretend like I didn't know either one of them. I know I rolled my eyes when Frank was explaining it all to me—role-play has always struck me as kind of silly—but both Frank and Colin thought it would be fun. And they were really into it. So I said, sure, okay, and sat down on my couch. I waited about fifteen minutes after they went upstairs, then followed. As I climbed the stairs all I could think was, “This is stupid, stupid, stupid.” As I got closer to the window into their back bedroom, I could hear them. I stopped and listened for just a minute. It was like listening to a porn tape with the picture off. I could hear them kissing, their breathing, the occasional moan, the slap of bare flesh coming together. I found myself getting aroused. I climbed up a few more steps and then found myself peeking over the ledge and into the room. The lights were off except for a few candles burning, and looking at their incredible naked bodies, their mouths pressed together, the urgency of their hands touching and stroking each other, I found myself watching for a lot longer than I thought I would. At first, I figured I'd get so turned on watching I'd be inside joining them in no time. But watching as they got it on, their two sweating and heaving muscular bodies coming together, hands exploring, mouths coming together in kisses both passionate and tender, I couldn't tear myself away. It was like I was seeing something I wasn't supposed to see, and that made it even more intensely erotic and sexy. Once, Frank looked over at me and winked before Colin went back to work on his nipples, and his eyes closed again. It was like interactive porn, almost. And then I realized they were both getting off on me watching, with the window in between us, and it was making them hornier, like they were performing for me, to make me excited, and that was when I couldn't take it anymore and had to join in.
Why on earth would you want to go to a bar when you can do things like that at home?
Suffice it to say, we have a great sex life together.
So, in those days leading to Mardi Gras, life was good. Frank had also gone to work with us for the agency, and we had a small office in the Marigny, in an old building on Frenchmen Street. It was fun—we'd get up in the morning, have breakfast together, and walk over to the office. We'd work all day, and then around five we'd head for the gym. We didn't have anything major to work on at the office; most times it was just doing back-up research for another branch office's case, and the occasional job doing research for a lawyer (my older brother, Storm, had his firm throwing a lot of work our way). I had a regular paycheck and the kind of home life I'd never imagined in my wildest fantasies. We all got along great. About the only real problem had been convincing Frank to try Ecstasy at Mardi Gras. It hadn't been easy, but he finally gave in.

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