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
go to jail, and Beau disappears into the countryside.”
He laughed and tousled my hair. “Well, yeah, that’s the worst
southeRn FRied
103
worse case. But glass half-full, Trip. Glass half-full.” I held up my
empty Coke bottle in response; he held up the bag. “Okay, bag
half-full, Trip. Bag half-full.”
And he was gone. Longest ten minutes of my life. It ticked
by like it was covered in molasses. When the last second faded
away, I breathed in and crept up the stairs. Zeb had planned to sit
out back with Port on a small balcony overlooking a pond. He’d
then excuse himself to use the restroom, leave the front door
unlocked, and stall for ten more minutes while I snooped around.
If caught, I had the video, while, before, all we had was the story
of Beau, the illegitimate grandson of a powerful senator. All in
all, the video was so much more convincing.
Not that we’d need it, as it turned out.
At least not yet.
In any case, I snuck in. That much of the plan went off
without a hitch. I saw them on the balcony, their backs to me,
the bag in Port’s lap. I veered right, out of sight. Zeb had told me
where the bedroom was. It was a small apartment, serving but
one need, more than likely. I walked into said bedroom, my heart
thumping away, like someone was playing the bongos inside my
chest.
And there, on his bed, sat his laptop. I gulped, praying it was
already on and beyond the password. I peeked over, saw the blue
screen, the icons, and knew we were home free. I clicked the
Outlook icon first. His email filled up the screen. Port, it seemed,
was a popular fellow. Now I had just under ten minutes to find
the one we were looking for. Thankfully, it only took me about
three.
Port had mentioned to Roy that a few men were looking
for Beau. One, it seemed, had found him. A private detective.
Barely a greeting, followed by an address. I snapped a picture of
it and got ready to hightail it out of there. Sneaking out of the
bedroom, I made it to the front door, turning just for a moment
toward the balcony. But fuck, fuck, fuck! Port was flat on his
back, with Zeb directly over him, pumping his chest. He looked
up at me and shrieked, “Call 911!”
104 Rob Rosen
I ran back to the bedroom, that bongo in my chest now an
entire rhythm section. I dialed 911. “Man down!” I hollered.
“What seems to be the problem, sir?” said the woman on the
other end of the line.
“Uh, there’s a man, I think he’s unconscious, and another
man’s over him, I think pumping his chest.”
“And where are you, sir?”
“I’m in the bedroom.”
“Then why do you think there’s an unconscious man and
another man apparently applying CPR? Don’t you know? Can’t
you go find out?”
“No!” I screeched. “I mean, no, I’m, uh, incapacitated.”
“So you need an ambulance as well, sir?”
“No!” I yelled. “I mean, I’ve always been incapacitated. So I
can’t get to the balcony where they’re at.”
“Okay,” she said, sounding a bit world-weary. “Where are you
located?”
I honestly hadn’t a clue. The address was written on a piece
of paper in the car. It’s not like I memorized it. “I don’t know.”
“You don’t know?” She paused, probably counting to ten.
Or five, since this was an emergency. “You’re incapacitated, you
don’t know where you are, and you
think
there’s someone who
needs help.”
I nodded. “That about covers it. Help.”
“Okay, sir. Just stay on the line; we’re tracing the call now.”
In fact, I heard the sirens before I could even say thank you
and beat a hasty retreat. I heard the sound of running footsteps
next, all while I hid beneath the bed, cowering. Then I heard a
bunch of talking, then a lot of foot pounding, then the sirens
disappearing into the distance. I waited in the silence and then
came out from my hiding place.
“Hello?” I whispered, back inside the living room. “Anybody
home? Zeb?”
southeRn FRied
105
I waited and breathed, but I was in fact alone. Alone in my
half-brother’s half-brother’s apartment, which he used strictly to
have gay sex in, away from the prying eye’s of his Republican
senator grandfather. Talk about your one in a billion odds. Make
that trillion. Heck, this might be the only time in all of human
history that such a claim could be made. Not that I had the time
to do the exact calculations because I was too busy snooping.
There were few personal belongings in the place, which
wasn’t surprising since this really wasn’t his home. Which also
explained the inordinate amount of gay porn. Still, this wasn’t
what I was after. Not that I didn’t find something else, though. In
fact, besides Beau’s address, I’d also found the Holy Grail in our
search. See, even though he didn’t have many personal effects
there, his briefcase was just where he’d left it.
Inside were mostly work folders. Port had just graduated
from law school and was working in his father’s firm; the folders
were cases they were working on. All, that is, but one. And that
one momentarily stopped my heart when I came across it.
Beau
Collingsworth
, it read, in bright red letters. Which meant I now had
the name Beau really went by.
I sat on the floor and opened the folder up. Inside was a
sort of dossier. There were lists of jobs, addresses, friends who
he associated with, his hangouts, when he usually woke up in
the morning and when he usually went to bed. Years and years
worth of information. Seems like they’d been keeping tabs on my
brother since he was a baby. And speaking of which, that’s when
I pulled out the last item in the folder.
“Proof positive,” I said, holding the picture in my hands. It
was an old black and white. Just a small picture, maybe three
inches by four inches. A baby sat asleep in his mother’s arms, the
father with his hand on her shoulder, a distant look in his eyes.
But the mom was smiling, eyes glued to her prized possession.
“Such a happy family.” However temporary that happiness was
to last.
Yes, the mom in the picture was my mom, but the dad wasn’t
my father; it was a much younger Robert E. Pellingham. And the
106 Rob Rosen
baby was Beau, of course. I’m guessing it was the last time they
were ever together, or near about. Soon thereafter, she was back
at the mansion with my father in tow. “But who took care of you,
Beau? And how did you make it back home?”
My reverie, however, was short-lived. The front door swung
open a moment later. I froze and stared, wide-eyed, heart
apumpin’. “Well, that went well,” commented Zeb, with a heavy
sigh, closing the door behind him.
“What the hell happened?” I asked, hopping up to give him
a hug.
He laughed and shook his head. “Fucker choked on a pork
rind. Took forever to Heimlich it out. Guess he lost too much
oxygen and passed out.”
“Waste of a perfectly good pork rind,” I couldn’t help but
add, offering him the picture and the dossier.
“Well, that proves it then,” he said, with a kiss and a hug in
return. “Now what?”
I smiled. “Now we go find Beau. I go the address from Port’s
email, which Port’ll have as soon as he returns. We have a head
start, but not much of one.”
“One day, in fact,” Zeb informed. “They want to keep him in
the hospital overnight. Just to be on the safe side.”
“Meaning, the hospital probably knew who he was and it was
their
safe side they were worried about.”
He nodded. “Goody for us.” His head turned from side to
side, eyes scanning the apartment. “Find anything else?”
I took his hand and led him to the bedroom. “Lots of gay
porn.” I pointed to the stack of DVDs, dozens of them. “Guy
likes to jack off a lot, apparently.”
Zeb crouched down and rifled through them, then slid the
door to the media center open. I whistled at the stash. Easily a
hundred more. Only, most of these weren’t store-bought, just
black cases. He took a few out, opened them up. “Jack, Steve,
Ron,” he read off the DVDs themselves. “You thinking what
southeRn FRied
107
I’m thinking?”
I grinned and nodded. “Pop one in.”
He did just that, Port’s hefty schlong filling the giant screen,
saliva cascading down the shaft. Then a mouth. Down it went,
almost to the hilt. Port moaned, shooting his load, come dripping
out of that same opened mouth. “Guess that’s Jack,” I rasped.
Zeb popped another DVD in. Port was on all fours now, his
ass getting pummeled, all while he squealed like a hog in heat.
“Steve,” I said. The next one was Port on the bed, a guy crouched
over his face, asshole getting an eager licking while Port jacked
away. “Lucky Ron.” I turned around, scanning the dresser across
from the bed. “Bingo,” said I, walking toward the teddy bear.
“Fucker has a cam inside,” I quickly added, finger pointing at a
hole where an eye should’ve been.
Zeb put the DVDs back in and then found the one marked
with his name. “Fucker indeed.” Then he took that one and a
half dozen more. “Two can play at this game,” he said to me.
“That closet of his is coming down.”
I smiled and grabbed his hand. “Easy now, boy,” I told him.
“We still have work to do.” I showed him the picture I’d taken of
Beau’s address. “Know where this is?”
He nodded. “Not too far, maybe twenty minutes.” Then he
frowned. “Not the best neighborhood, either. Mostly trailers and
dense woods.”
My frown echoed his. “Then let’s hurry. The sooner we find
him, the sooner he can move from there.” And the sooner I’d
maybe find out why Granny allowed him to live there in the first
place. That still didn’t make any sense. None of it did. Why wait
until she was dead to rescue him from all that? And why not tell
me, at least?
Just to be safe, we wiped down everything we touched with a
healthy dose of Windex. Then we skedaddled. The sun was high
overhead now, broiling as it pushed its way through the clouds.
We drove in silence, his hand in mine, both of us nervous and
eager. A few more minutes and I’d be meeting my big brother
108 Rob Rosen
for the first time. My heart throbbed at the thought of it, nearly
ready to burst.
The road turned rocky soon enough, half dirt, half gravel.
The ramshackle houses on either side dwindled, turning to
trailers, old and worn, spotted with rust and circled with debris.
“Told you so,” Zeb said. “This here’s the sub part of the burb.”
I shuddered, guilt washing over me like a flood. Never again
would I complain about my five story walk-up in the city. Then, a
minute later, we were at Beau’s. It was one of those trailers from
the fifties, space-age looking, rounded edges, silver, way small.
We parked on the side of the road and walked up. “No cars in the
driveway,” I said, stomach sinking, head now pounding.
“Doesn’t mean he’s not here,” said Zeb, walking up to the
door and knocking.
We waited, and waited some more, knocking again, louder.
“That’s exactly what it means,” I finally replied. “Any suggestions?”
He shrugged and grabbed for the knob. It turned. “Uh, go in
and wait?”
The door swung in, creaking as it did so. “Think we should?”
He was already inside before he answered. “Well, he squats in
your room; might as well return the favor.”
I followed him inside. “Good point.”
Place was clean, at least. And teeny-tiny. Small bed at one end,
kitchenette at the other, living room dead center, just big enough
for a couch that could hold two super thin people, a short, square
coffee table in front of that, a box on top of that.”
“That your granny’s jewelry box?” Zeb asked, sucking in his
breath at the sight of it.
I walked the two feet it took to get to it and held it up. “So he
did take it.” I opened it up. “Empty.” I turned to Zeb. “Well, at
least now he must know everything. Know she’s his grandmother,
if his birth certificate was in here. Knows I’m his half-brother,
too, then.” I forced a smile. “At least that’s something.”
Zeb patted my back. “And with those jewels, he can afford
southeRn FRied
109
a double-wide now.” He laughed, then covered his mouth with
his hand. “Sorry, just trying to make lemonade out of these here
lemons.”
I grinned. “It’s okay. I’m glad he took them. Now we just have
to find him so he can get everything else that’s owed to him.” I
looked around and found a pad and a pen. I paused, unsure of
what to say. This wasn’t, after all, how I wanted to make first
contact. Well, second, if you counted the funeral, which I wasn’t
counting. “Wait,” I said. “He had to have stolen this before the
funeral. It went missing before then.”
“And?”
“And that means he knew about himself and me and Granny
and my mom, about all of it, before that scene at the funeral.