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
sliding out of me.
Then he pulled an inch away and laughed. “What?” I asked,
gasping for breath.
“You are one hot drag mess, Marlene,” he said, another kiss
added, then another.
“Takes one to know one, Portia,” I told him, in between
hungry sucks and slurps on his full lips.
He put his forehead against mine. “Then I’m glad that I’m
taken
by you.” He kissed my nose. “But can we please get you
out of that makeup; a raccoon might see you and think he struck
gold.”
I laughed and jumped up. He led me to the shower and left
me there while he cooked dinner. Still damp and all boyed-up
again, I found him in his bed, two bowls sitting on a tray. “Yum,”
I said, taking a deep whiff. “What’s that?”
He smiled and stuck his finger inside his meal, a quick suck on
146 Rob Rosen
his finger, a wink at me. “Hoppin’ John,” he informed.
“And what in the world is that?” I asked.
He merely sighed. “Hoppin’ John, Trip. Black-eyed peas, rice,
salt, bacon, and onions. Pearl uses fat back, sometimes hamhocks.
Me, I like the bacon.”
“Healthier, huh? Makes John hop all that much higher, I take
it?”
He shrugged. “Lesser of three evils.” He grabbed a spoonful.
“You gonna eat it or continue with this line of questioning?”
I jumped into bed, my towel thrown to the floor, both of us
naked and chowing down. “Delicious,” I said, in between eager
bites. “Smokey, salty, tangy, with just a slight kick.”
“Tabasco,” he informed. “Pearl taught me that, too.”
I frowned. Ten years of missed lessons. Ten years of not
learning how to cook. Of time with what little family I had.
Of being a southerner in the South. With him, Zeb. My heart
throbbed at the thought. “Sad,” I finally said, with another bite
of my dinner. “I missed out on so much.” I paused, sighed. “But
why?” It was the million dollar question. And one I wasn’t any
closer to finding the answer to, it seemed.
“She was protecting you,” he said, mouth full.
“From what?” I asked, my spoon clinking in the bowl.
“Let’s find out.” He hopped out of the bed and flicked on his
computer, which sat on a desk by the window. The printer came
to life next. I joined him and logged in to my email. Minutes
later, the attachments were printing and we’d finished our yummy
dinners.
I read the first half, the notes from when Jeeves had come to
the mansion; Zeb read the second half, the recent stuff. He
huhed
and I
ohed
, both of us shifting in our seats, rifling through it all at
breakneck speed. “Fuck,” I cursed when I’d finished.
“Fuck,” he echoed, a minute later.
“Blackmail,” we both said, eyes wide, shocked that we’d
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147
reached the same conclusion, seeing as we were reading notes
from many, many years apart.
“You first,” he said, since you were at the beginning.
I propped my pillow up and turned his way. “Well, the notes,
they’re not for Jeeves, I think. He must take them and send
copies or faxes or scans to the Pellinghams. Like weekly briefings.
Granny’s comings and goings. My parents, when they were alive.
He talks about their deaths, the funeral, what was said, who said
it, who was looking after me.”
Zeb nodded. “And the blackmail?”
I nodded and pointed to the page I found it on. “After my
parent’s funeral, he says he doesn’t want to spy anymore, wants
to leave the mansion. Says he’s done enough for them already.
Wants to go back to working at some law firm. Practically begs
for it.” I turned to Zeb again. “Jeeves isn’t a butler; he’s a lawyer.
No wonder he’s always so bitter. What a waste of a life.”
“But what was he being blackmailed for?” Zeb asked. “And
how did the Pellinghams get the information? What a weird
connection.”
I shrugged. “Jeeves doesn’t mention it, just alludes to the fact
that the Pellinghams have something over on him. But it must be
pretty horrible, considering he’s now been a butler for close to
thirty years.” I squelched back a sob. How awful. Even for the
likes of Jeeves. Then I continued. “But the notes, they start off
boring enough, just logs, like I said, but after the funeral, after
then, that’s when Jeeves seems to get antsy, pleading to be able
to leave. But why then?” Suddenly, a cold chill rose up my spine.
Zeb stared at me, sensing what I was thinking. “Your parents,
they died in a car accident, right?”
I nodded, yet again. “Right.”
“Did your Granny ever tell you how it happened?”
I stared at him. “Icy roads. They went into a ditch, smacked
their heads, died instantly, no pain.” The chill spread, my feet
jerking, hair standing on end.
148 Rob Rosen
“Icy roads? In South Carolina?”
I gulped. “It happens, right?”
“Rarely. Very rarely. And Jeeves getting all antsy after the
funeral, he must’ve seen or heard something to the contrary. But
what? And how are we going to find out? It’s been nearly thirty
years, like you said. No way are we going to find the information
on the Internet.” His foot kicked his bowl. But then he snapped
his fingers, smiling all of a sudden. “Hoppin’ John,” he yipped.
“You can’t still be hungry, Zeb. That stuff’s heavy as a brick.”
I backpedaled. “A, uh,
tasty
brick, I mean.”
He socked me one in the arm, playfully. “No. Jake.” I shrugged,
tilted my head like a confused puppy. “Jake!” he repeated, louder.
“His given name is John. He just goes by Jake.”
“Jake? The pool man?” I asked. “What, you’re hungry
and
horny?”
He sighed. “Oh, you don’t know. I forget that you’ve only
been around a short while.”
I frowned. “Yeah, it does seem a lot longer though, doesn’t
it?”
He was all smiles now. “Only in the nicest of ways, Trip,” he
said, patting me in the place he’d just hit me. “Anyway, Jake’s not
mentioned in my section of notes. Plus, he’s not at the mansion
as much as the others. Probably just a worker, like me. Not a spy.”
I patted his thigh. “And you’re going where with all this?”
“Jake’s uncle is the sheriff around here,” he replied, smugly,
arms folded over dense pecs.
It was then that I got what he was getting at. “And we might
not be able to find out about the accident…”
“… but Jake’s uncle can. Seeing as the accident happened in
the same county,” he said, correctly finishing my sentence.
I grinned, then frowned. “But why would Jake want to help
us?”
Again he hit me. “Uh, Trip, need I remind you of that
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nickname I keep calling you?”
I giggled. “Thunder Dick?”
The hit repeated. “I’ve never called you that.”
I rubbed my arm, which was now getting red. “Not yet.”
He sighed. “Not yet,
boss
.”
The lightbulb above my head pulsed, shimmering, however
figuratively. “Ah. Boss. Right,” I said. “And you can’t say no to
the boss.”
He smiled, teeth white, eyes crinkled. “Yup. And, besides, we
still have our secret weapon.”
I gave it a tug. “What’s so secret about Thunder Dick?” I
ducked down before he could hit me yet again.
“You’re cute, but frustrating, Trip,” he said, then added,
“Stella. Stella’s our secret weapon. Remember?”
“Stella? The handyman? Woman, I mean?” I scratched my
head. “But she’s gay. And he’s straight. And neither of those
things is much of a secret.”
Thankfully, he sighed rather than hit me. “He’s straight. She’s
bi. Remember? And he likes her, always has. Best guess: he’s so
damn hot and can get any woman he wants.”
I snickered. “Any woman but Stella, the handyman.”
He touched fingertip to nose. “Exactly. And if anyone can get
Jake hoppin’, it’s her.”
It was then I remembered what else he’d already said. “Hey,
you said that Jake wasn’t mentioned in the notes. But who was?”
The nod returned. “Everyone else. Same kind of weekly log
as you saw. Notes on who said what and who went where. Mostly
your granny, but he mentions Roy and Betty, too. Jeeves and
the two of them were all being blackmailed, both of the others
working for your granny and reporting back to Jeeves, who then
reported to the Pellinghams.”
“But what was there to report? Granny tended to her gardens
or drank iced tea on the veranda.”
150 Rob Rosen
He shrugged. “Yep, that about covered it. Only, he also added
that no one in the household heard her saying anything to you
or to Beau.”
“Beau?” I practically shouted.
“Beau,” he echoed. “They all new about him. Only, Jeeves
doesn’t mention what they knew about him. Or if they knew his
relationship to her. Just that they knew he was around. And they
were listening for anything unusual. Anything she said to him or
he said to her, or either one of them to you.”
“And?” I asked.
“Nope, nothing. Not from him or your granny. Not once,
not ever. Whatever it was the Pellinghams were watching out for,
they never got an earful of it from Jeeves.”
I sighed and fell back into the pillow. “But what were they
watching out for? And what did it have to do with me and
Beau? Or my parents, for that matter? And what was everyone
being blackmailed for? And why by the Pellinghams?” My sigh
repeated, my fists slamming into the mattress. “Seems like every
question we come across leads to two more.”
He stroked my hand. “I’m off tomorrow, and Stella doesn’t
work until late in the morning. We’ll call her now and see if she
can come over on her way to the mansion. Then we’ll see about
finding out about your parents. Maybe this all revolves around
them. Or at least your mother and Robert E; that seems like the
only connection I can see.”
He jumped out of the bed, empty bowls in hand, then
returned with his cell phone. He was talking to her a second later.
Then he hung up and jumped back into bed with me.
“She’ll be over in the morning, right?” I asked, praying as
much.
“Yup. Then we’ll see about enlisting her help again. My guess,
she’s not going to be thrilled about the whole seducing Jake
angle.”
I held his hand and gave it a squeeze. “Ah, but you forget
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what they call me.”
He smiled, his face lighting up like a Christmas tree. “Thunder
Dick?”
I nodded. “Well, yes, that.”
“And boss,” he correctly added.
“
Especially
that,” I agreed, praying that Stella would never find
the need to call me Thunder Dick.
§ § § §
Thankfully, that next morning,
boss
was sufficient. That and a
promise to contact Granny’s attorney and change the stipulations
of her will, which she assumed I’d have the ability to do once
the estate went into mine and Beau’s names. Meaning, instead
of being indebted to us for ten years, as Granny had stipulated,
she’d now only have five. Provided she’d be able to get Jake to
contact his uncle and get us information. “Don’t worry,” she said.
“He’ll do it.”
“And we know this how?” I had to ask.
She pushed her ample bosoms together and shot me a sly, if
not disconcerting, wink. “Gets ‘em every time.”
‘Em
not being me or Zeb, who grimaced and forced a nod.
“Uh, yeah. I’m sure,” I said. In any case, she agreed. And we were
in like Flynn. Then we told her everything we’d discovered up
until that point.
“Fucking Pelinghams,” she spat. “Think they own the world.”
“Or at least half of Granny’s staff,” I corrected.
“Which suddenly makes a lot of sense,” she said. “Those three
always did come across as being overly inquisitive, if you ask
me. Always hovering about when your granny was on the phone,
striking up odd conversations that were laden with questions.
I’d hear them, yammering on while I was working on projects.
Just thought it was your granny, eager for a conversation. Now I
know better.”
I hung my head down and exhaled long and low and deep.
152 Rob Rosen
“Sure would like to know what they were up to. What the
Pellinghams have on Jeeves and Roy and Betty. What kind of
information they were looking for from them.”
She smiled, which looked sort of scary. “One mission at a
time,
boss
,” she said, rather cryptically. “But let’s just say I might
have a second plan if the first one works out okay.”
I shrugged. Heck, the first one was terrifying enough.
Because it meant investigating my parent’s death. And I’d barely
gotten used to Granny’s. Meaning, the second I could wait for.
Especially if that smile of hers proved to be as scary as it seemed.
Gave me goosepimples just looking at it.
“Think she can do it?” Zeb asked me, a minute after she
pulled away from his house, both of us standing on his porch
watching her speed down the road.
“You see those tits of hers?” I asked.
He shivered. “I tried not to,” he replied. “But Jake won’t know