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
favorite, too. Came right from her own orchards.”
He poured. I sniffed and sipped. “
Blech
. Are you fucking
kidding me? What the hell is this shit?”
“Peach brandy. The recipe came from your great grandmother,
I was told,” he replied, hand on hip.
“Tastes like it was made by her, too. Like it fermented, twice
over. Thrice, maybe.” Still, I finished it and then another shot.
Then I looked in the mirror again. “Better,” I said, turning this
132 Rob Rosen
way and that, the booze taking all the edges off.
“That’s because it’s forty percent alcohol. One more shot and
you’ll think you’re the real Marlene.”
Which wasn’t the least bit helpful, but I was, at least, more
relaxed. And it did explain why Granny was always sitting on the
veranda, rocking and smiling. Now I knew why. Peach brandy.
Blech
. Still, I took the bottle with me. Just in case.
It was now getting late, the sun making its final strangle-hold
on the day. We piled in Zeb’s car and were off, parking in the
same spot as last time. Only, unlike last time, there were now
three cars in the driveway, the pick-up, the black Mercedes, and
one that looked oddly familiar, but I couldn’t quite place it.
“Guess who’s back from work?” Zeb groaned.
The house was lit up. The garage was black as the night that
was fast approaching. No dogs this time. Yippy for us. Five more
minutes and we had added cover: darkness. Then we tiptoed
through the same path as before, poking our heads up into the
window on the side of the garage. “Looks empty,” I whispered.
He reached for the doorknob. “Then let’s go inside and
check.”
And so we did. And so it was. Empty. Beau included. The
chains were there, as was the lock, but no big brother in sight.
“Think he’s in the house now?” Zeb asked.
I nodded that that seemed a reasonable idea and led him back
outside, walking as noiselessly as possible. There was a window
on the side of the house that looked into the living room. As
we’d done with the garage, we popped our heads up and took a
gander inside. Robert E. was there, as were two of his goons, but
no Beau. Though, sadly, there was one more guest, the owner of
the third car. It made sense why I recognized it.
“Fuck, fuck, fuck,” I whispered, kicking my too-tight shoes
into the ground.
“Should’ve known that Roy wasn’t working alone; he’s not
that smart,” Zeb whispered back. “Now you know who was
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133
passing the notes. Makes sense, I reckon.”
“But I was just starting to trust him,” I whined. “Fucking
butler.” Though, oddly, it did make some sense, like he said. Jeeves
had been working there since just before I was born and just after
Beau was. He’d been a plant all those years. But for what? What
kind of information was he relaying to the Pellinghams? I mean,
Granny threw teas and garden parties; not exactly classified
stuff.”
“The butler’s always guilty, Marlene,” he said, elbowing me in
the ribs.
We ducked back down and ran to the car. But I wasn’t done
yet; I had one more thing I needed to find out. And, if my hunch
proved correct, another talk with Jeeves would be necessary. Zeb
watched as I flipped open my cellphone and dialed.
He picked up on the first ring and started talking right
away. “Just couldn’t leave well enough alone, could you?” Beau
practically hissed.
“He let you go?”
He snickered. “Guess you got some of the brains in the family.
Yes, he let me go. He had to. I told him about the insurance. I
told him what little I knew. And I told him I had no interest in
fucking up his life. Then I told him you didn’t know anything
either and that you were going home. Guess Daddy somehow
managed to corroborate that and then promptly set me free. So,
did you go home?”
I paused, wondering how to proceed. “No, not exactly. But
he thinks I did. And I’m about to make it so he thinks I’m not
coming back any time soon.”
“Why?” he asked. “Why the fuck not? Just go already. Go like
you did before and stay away like you did before. I don’t need you
in my life; I don’t want you in my life. Our granny’s gone. There’s
no need for you to stay here.”
“But, you have it all…” He hung up. “… wrong.” My heart
thumped and then promptly broke in two.
134 Rob Rosen
“Sorry, Trip,” Zeb said, rubbing my shoulders.
I nodded, though it wasn’t as simple as Beau was having me
believe. There was something to his voice. Less hatred and more
panic. “You know that Shakespeare line, Zeb?”
“Which one? Guy wrote a lot of shit. A rose by any other
name? That one?”
I smiled. “The one that starts,
me thinks he doth protest too much
.”
Zeb shook his head. “Nope. Maybe try singing a few bars for
me.”
I gave him a push and tousled his hair. “Fucker. Anyway, Beau
wants me gone, but I think there’s some kind of back story to
it all. Something we’re missing in all this. It’s like he’s trying too
hard to get me to go. I mean, he doesn’t even know me. And,
regardless of what Granny told him, he can’t possibly hate me as
much he seems to.” The mere thought that he actually did was
too much to bear. Though I didn’t think so. Really and truly, I
didn’t think that it was true. It was his voice. The way he said it.
There was a pain there. I heard it. Felt it.
Then I remembered the second call I needed to make to
ensure both our safety. I dialed. “Good evening, Jeeves,” I said.
“Walter,” he corrected. “And I’m busy right now.”
I willed my bile down. “I’m sure you are,
Walter
,” I told him.
“It’s just that I’m back in New York and won’t be returning for
awhile. My workload has piled up these last several days and we
have a major client that’s balking.”
“What about the mansion? Beau?”
“The mansion’s not going anywhere and Granny’s lawyer can
keep looking for Beau in the meanwhile,” I said, tossing in the
line that was certain to offer us maximum protection: “I’ll be back
in the fall, maybe late November. We can straighten everything
out then.”
“I’ll tell Pearl,” he said, trying and failing to hide his delight.
“See you then.”
He clicked off. I grinned, as did Zeb. “Nice one,” he told me
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135
as we both got back inside the car. “Late November. After the
elections. That should take the heat off of you and Beau. Not
like they unelect someone just because of who their kids are. But
what if one of them calls your office looking for you?”
I shrugged. “I’ll tell the receptionist to inform anyone
that asks that I’m working from home and to take a message.
Meanwhile, as far as work is concerned, I’m on an extended leave
of absence.”
He reached over and grabbed my hand, his smile doing little
to cover what he was really thinking. “And, uh, and then what?”
“You mean, do I stay at the mansion or do I leave it for Beau
to live in or do we sell it and I go back to New York?”
He nodded. “Yes, yes, and yes.”
I leaned over and kissed him. “I don’t know, Zeb. I honestly
don’t know,” I whispered, caressing his cheek, his chin, my
forehead pressed to his forehead. “Right now, I have to figure
out why Granny had two spies living in her house. And why she
knew about Beau and I didn’t. And why she lied to him all these
years. And why he was picking peaches when he should’ve been
living high off the hog.”
I pulled away and reached down to the floor for the bottle I’d
left there. “And speaking of peaches,” I said, taking a deep and
much-needed swig. “
Blech
. It doesn’t get any better each time you
drink it, does it?”
He laughed and cranked up the car. “It’s an acquired taste,
boss. Like pickled pig’s feet or chitlins.”
I took another swig. “Oh, hell no. I already ate the skin;
you can forget about the feet and definitely not the intestines.”
I shuddered at the thought. “Doesn’t anybody around here eat
plain, old meat?”
He reached over and down, speeding into the dark night.
“Don’t know,” he said, with a squeeze on my crotch. “Nobody’s
offered me any plain, old meat in quite some time.”
I set the bottle down and unzipped my dress, which sounded
136 Rob Rosen
very weird, even for me. “Nothing plain or old about this meat,
Zeb. Tender and succulent.”
“Emphasis on the
suck
, boss.”
“Major emphasis, Zeb. Major.”
Though our drag encounter of the weird kind was short-
lived. Jeeves pulled out of the driveway and sped past us. Just out
of curiosity, I told Zeb, “Let’s follow him.”
He giggled. “Yes, ma’am.” He stayed a couple of car lengths
behind, so as not to call attention to ourselves. “What’s the plan?”
I looked down at my dress and then at the bottle. “He’s not
going back to the mansion; he’s done for the night. Pearl always
told me that he stops by some bar on the way home. A snifter of
brandy helps him fall asleep, she said. But that was ten years ago.”
Zeb strummed the steering wheel and nodded. “Old habits
die hard,” he said. “And we still have a half a bottle of brandy
ourselves.”
I nodded, too. “Shame that my disguise should go to waste.
Maybe this is our chance to see just how good it is. And maybe
garner some information. There’s that two birds, one stone thing
again.”
“Worth a shot,” he agreed.
Eventually, we pulled in to a small bar off the side of the
road. Jeeves was just getting out of his car. Zeb ducked in the
back seat as I slid over and rolled down the window. “Excuse
me,” I said, loud enough to get his attention, and sounding as
much like a girl as I could muster.
Jeeves turned, squinted into the night, and walked a few steps
toward our car. “Yes? Can I help you?”
I gulped. That was about all I had worked out. Guess the
skirt was a tad too tight. “I, uh, I was hoping to borrow your cell
phone.” I paused, willing my brain to jump two spaces ahead.
“My, uh, my battery seems to have died.”
He tilted his head, again squinting, trying to make me out.
Thankfully, it was dark, the parking lot lights minimal at best.
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137
Still, he reached into his back pocket and removed his phone. He
closed the gap between us and handed it over. His soul might’ve
been dead, but this being the South, chivalry was not. “Of
course,” he said. “Here you go.”
He backed a foot away, nodded, and turned his face to the
side while I fake-dialed. Then I had a rather lovely, if not entire
whispered fake-conversation, all while Zeb tittered in the back
seat. “Don’t forget about our brandy,” he whispered, before I
fake-hung-up.
“Got it,” I whispered back. Then I turned to Jeeves again.
“Thank you so much,” I said, handing him back his phone. “I
had to call a friend. We were supposed to get together for a drink,
but I, uh, I’m running way too late and had to cancel.” I glanced
up and shot him my best come-hither look. Thankfully, he came-
hither.
“No problem at all,” he said. “And as for a drink, this is a bar
right here.” He pointed to the building behind him. “Would you
care to join me inside?”
My mind raced. Then Zeb kicked the back of my seat. “Oh, I,
uh, well, that would be nice, but I hate bars. I’m, uh, I’m allergic
to cigarette smoke.” Then I reached over and down and lifted
up the bottle of booze. “I have this, though. Homemade peach
brandy.” Then I went all sultry-like. I think. Well, hoped. “Do
you, do you live around here maybe?”
Again he closed the gap between us, clearly checking me out.
Best guess, he didn’t get many proposals such as that one, and so
he readily agreed. “I do love peach brandy,” he practically purred.
Blech
. Both to him and the brandy. “As a matter of fact, I only live
a few miles from here. Perhaps we can go
there
for a nightcap?”
I nodded, eyes wide. I’d just been picked up by my granny’s
butler, in drag, with my boyfriend hiding in the back seat. And
here I thought New York City was full of crazy adventures. Or
misadventures. It was still too early to tell. In any case, Zeb was
once again kicking my seat. “Oh, uh, yes. That would be nice. I’ll
follow you there.”
138 Rob Rosen
He nodded, smiled, and returned to his car. We both revved
up our engines and were off. “Now what, Einstein?” I asked,
over my shoulder.
He reached between the front seats and popped open the
glove compartment. The pill bottle was once again removed.
“Worked on the dogs before,” he said, breaking one in half
before chucking it into the bottle of brandy. “Just don’t drink
any, whatever you do.”
“You want me to slip Jeeves a mickey?” I asked, stifling back
a giggle.
He giggled in return. “It should work pretty quickly. Then you