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
Sissy frowned. “I didn’t now any of that,” she said. “But I
do know the girl that was raped. She’s a distant cousin of mine.”
“Is?” I asked, with a gulp. “So she’s still alive?”
Sissy’s frown turned upside down. “Very much so. Alive and
kicking, in fact. Lives not too far from you all. Maybe a half hour
away from the mansion.”
I looked to my friends and they looked at me. “Do you think
we could have her address?” I asked.
She eyed me, unsure of how to reply. “You want to ask her
about a decades-old rape? Why forever for, my dear?”
“It’s a long story,” I told her. “But suffice it to say, many lives
hang in the balance, including our own.” My friends nodded.
“But we need to know if Walter was involved.”
Again she stared at each of us in turn. I knew I’d thrown
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her a curve ball, but I had little choice; this was a piece to that
miserable puzzle of ours that had seemingly been swept under
the rug. Thankfully, she took the pitch and swung at it. “I’ll call
her and ask, ya’ll. It’s the best I can do.” She stood, straightened
her slacks, and walked out of the room.
“Nerve-wracking,” I whispered as we waited.
“Definitely,” Zeb whispered back, squeezing my hand in
support. I gratefully squeezed back as Stella and even Jake
reached over to pat my shoulder. “Here she comes,” he soon
added. “Fingers crossed.”
And in she walked, neither smiling nor frowning as a lone
bead of sweat trickled down my forehead. “Please say she’ll see
us,” I pled.
The smile on her face at last broke free. “It took some
maneuvering on my part, but the old bag owes me, so, yes, she’ll
see you.” Sissy allowed herself a small clap. “But good luck with
that one. Jenny makes a lemon seem sweet in comparison.” She
handed us the address. “Now then, anything else I can do you
for?”
I was already up and hugging her before she got the last word
out. “You’ve done more than enough, Sissy,” I said. My friends
hugged her as well.
“Any time, ya’ll,” she said, as she showed us to the door. “And
like I said, good luck.”
And luck is exactly what we’d need.
§ § § §
Jenny greeted us at the door later that day. “You have five
minutes,” she said, lips pursed, eyes in a squint. She looked and
sounded like Nancy Grace, CNN’s resident loony, only with
bigger hair and an unfiltered Marlboro dangling from between
her well-manicured fingers. A chill ran up my spine despite the
broiling, late-afternoon heat. Sissy, I figured, was being kind
when she compared Jenny to a lemon. In fact, it was an insult to
lemons everywhere.
196 Rob Rosen
In any case, we were shown inside, the door clicking behind
us, Jenny’s short heels clicking, too. We were taken to the kitchen
table. No iced tea offered this time. Not even,
blech
, any peach
brandy. Not even a smile. Just Jenny, arms akimbo, looking
mighty pissed at the intrusion.
“Thank you for seeing us,” I began.
“Don’t thank me,” said she. “I owed Sissy a favor. Now
we’re even.” She looked at her watch. “And you’re down to four
minutes.”
And so I spit it out. No sense beating around the bush.
Especially since this bush was so full of thorns. “We’d like to
know if you think Walter Smithy was the man who raped you
back when you were in college.”
Even though Sissy had warned Jenny, it still appeared that
I’d taken her by surprise. Her arms briefly fell to her sides and
her face went semi-slack. “That’s not a name I’ve heard in a long
time,” she finally said.
“So you knew him?” I asked.
She didn’t reply, her gaze a million miles away now. But she
shook it off soon enough. “No,” she said. “Only by name.” Her
steely demeanor returned.
“He was accused of… it?” Stella asked.
“They all were,” Jenny replied. “All the brothers, but him
especially.”
“Because?” asked Jake.
She sighed and rolled her eyes. “Because they found me in his
room. Little good that information did me, though”
“Let me guess,” Zeb tossed in. “He had an alibi. Namely his
roommate.” All in all, it was a smart guess.
She nodded, anger clearly boiling at the surface now. “The
roommate claimed they left the party early. Earlier than when I
arrived there. Conveniently earlier.”
“So you didn’t believe him?” I asked.
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“It didn’t matter. His last name was all he needed.”
“Pellingham,” said Stella.
“Pellingham,” Jenny echoed. “He said they weren’t there and
so they weren’t there.”
Again Jake spoke up. “Even though the boy whose room you
were in had the tattoo you described?”
Her eyes squinted even tighter. “How on earth are you coming
up with all this information?” she practically growled. “I mean,
it’s ancient history.”
As I said to Sissy, “It’s a long story.” I cast my eyes to my
watch. “And our four minutes are up.”
She shrugged, her shoulders loosening as she slumped into
a chair. “Doesn’t matter anyway,” she said. “But, no, the tattoo
didn’t count for anything. Lots of folks have that same tattoo.
And without a face to identify, it didn’t go anywhere. In the end,
no one believed me. I was just a drunk girl in a place I shouldn’t
have been to begin with.”
We stood up to leave. But it was then I thought of one more
question. “But how did you end up in their room then? Especially
if they weren’t there?”
“Ah,” she said, also standing up. “The million dollar question.
And for that I have no answer. See, I can’t remember. I just woke
up there, alone, the party long-over. It was close to midnight.
Late for back then. The roommates returned at about one in the
morning, I was told.”
“But the rape you remembered?” Stella asked, as gently as
possible. “And the tattoo?”
Jenny nodded, walking us to the front door, hurriedly now.
“Hazily, but yes. It’s not something easily forgotten. Drunk
or not.” She opened the front door. “Please don’t come back
here,” she added, escorting us out. “That’s the last time I want to
remember that night. Ever.”
And with that, our five minutes were long up. The door again
went click, with us on the other side of it. We walked back to
198 Rob Rosen
the car and continued the conversation. “So,” I said. “Two alibis
from Robert E. that saved Jeeves both times. And Robert E., to
boot. What do we make of that?”
“Like Jenny said,
convenient
,” offered Jake.
“Too convenient,” said I. “And where were they, supposedly,
until one in the morning?”
“And why did they skip the party?” added Zeb.
“And how did Jenny end up in their room?” Stella piled on.
I looked at each of them and lifted up my cell phone. “I hate
to do it, but I’m going to have to go to the source now. We’re out
of any other options.”
“Robert E.?” asked Stella, with a shake of her head and a
frown.
“Jeeves,” I corrected her. “And not in disguise. Just me.
Alone.”
Zeb once again squeezed my hand. “But what if he is a rapist?
Or a murderer? Or both?” he asked, with a noticeable gulp that
made his Adam’s apple bob. “It could be dangerous.”
I nodded. “Could be, but I don’t think so. If he was dangerous,
Granny wouldn’t have had him around me since I was a baby. No
way, no how.”
Though the way and the how was barreling down on us.
Rushing headlong like a bullet. And, yes, I’m speaking literally for
a change. Too bad, huh?
I called him as we drove. He picked up, my name obviously
appearing on his cell. “How’s New York?” he asked, dryly.
“Cut the crap,” I replied. “By now you know I’m not in New
York.”
“And how would I know that?” he asked, smugly.
“Because your old roommate must’ve told you, I’d think. Told
you too keep an eye out for me.”
He coughed, then paused for a moment. “My boy, I haven’t a
clue what you’re talking about.”
I snickered. “Jeeves, just so you know, I don’t think you killed
my parents or raped that girl at Emory.
Now
do you have a clue
what I’m talking about?”
Again he coughed, louder this time, but still managed to say,
“Meet me at my apartment in thirty minutes.”
“Deal,” I readily agreed. “But if you call Robert E. right now,
I’ll know. And we’re watching you, so nothing funny.” I flicked
my phone shut and stared out at the road as Zeb sped to Jeeves’
apartment house, my mind racing faster than the car.
“Risky,” said Stella. “Neither of those things you closed with
are true.”
“But he doesn’t know that,” I countered with. “And he must
think we’re holding more cards then we are, seeing as I know
about the murders and the rape.”
She nodded. “Smart move on your part, boss. But what
will we be doing while you’re talking with the supposed non-
murderer, non-rapist?”
“I don’t know,” I replied. “It could take a while. Plus, it might
200 Rob Rosen
not be smart for him to catch sight of the three of you. So maybe
just head over to Pearl’s for now. That’s the one place you’re
safe.” I turned around and smiled at Stella and Jake. “I’ll call you
to come and get me or have Jeeves bring me over there once the
meeting is over.”
Zeb groaned. “I’d feel better waiting for you.”
My smile brightened. “I know. And thanks. But if he wants
to harm me, he will, whether you’re downstairs or not. This way,
we won’t spook him. And we need him now; he’s really our only
hope.” Sad, but true.
Again Zeb groaned, but relented. “Point taken.”
Heart taken, too
, I thought. Then I called Pearl and told her
to head on home and wait for the troops. A short while later,
we pulled up to Jeeves’ building and I was let out. My cohorts
pulled away with a wave and thumbs up, with Jeeves driving up
not three minutes later. “Show time,” I whispered, legs fairly
trembling. Then I looked up to the heavens and added, “You
better be looking out for me now, Granny.”
He nodded as he approached and led me upstairs. And then,
once again, I was inside his apartment. Only, this time I didn’t
have any tricks up my sleeve. Not even,
blech
, any peach brandy,
which, truth be told, I could’ve used right at that very moment.
“You know what you’re up against, don’t you, Trip?” he asked
right off the bat, a world-weary frown cast wide across his face.
“The Pellinghams,” I glumly replied. “Yes, I know.”
He nodded. “Smart, Trip,” he said, a hint of a smile appearing.
“I always knew you were. Your Granny didn’t raise no idiots.”
“Or hire any,” I was quick to add. “Though treacherous is not
the same as stupid.”
He sighed, his smile just as quickly fading. “We all had our
reasons, Trip.”
“Blackmail,” I said, spitting the word out.
Again he nodded. “Blackmail, yes. And I won’t even hazard
a guess as to how you found out about all of this. But I will give
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you a piece of advice: if you just go back to New York until after
the election, you and the others, Beau included, we’ll all be a hell
of a lot safer. In fact, all of us will, you, your friends, the entire
mansion staff, everyone.”
I picked up on the Beau part. “You knew he was my brother
all along?”
“Of course. As you said, Robbie and I were college
roommates.”
“And law school roommates, too,” I tossed in.
His sigh returned. “Yes, and that.” His gaze met mine, his
eyes so full of sadness as to break your very heart. Though, by
then, mine was steely cold. “In any case, I knew about Beau. But
he was forgotten about by everyone once he was given up for
adoption. Then you came along and Robbie eased up a bit.”
“And you were almost home-free. Almost able to go back to
work as a lawyer.”
“Until your mother decided to try and get the baby back,” he
said. “That I had to tell Robbie about.”
My skin was sizzling at the comment, my brain shooting off
fireworks. “And then my parents… they were killed.”
He shook his head. “Not killed,
died
. Tragically, but
accidentally.”
My hands were now balled up into fists. “Their car exploded
accidentally? How often does that happen?”
And his head kept right on shaking. “It doesn’t matter how
often. Once was enough. In any case, as you said on the phone, I
didn’t have anything to do with it. And I did have an alibi, as you
well know. I was at Robbie’s lake house the two days leading up
to the explosion. And your parent’s car was driving fine before
then.”
I waited, collecting my thoughts, trying to quell that anger
that was rising up like lava inside a volcano. “Walter,” I said, a
few seconds later, gritting my teeth until my jaw ached. “Doesn’t
it seem odd to you that
Robbie
was your alibi for both a murder