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
suggested.
That seemed like both a good and a bad idea, but mostly the
latter. “It took Robert E. less than a minute to trace that call I
made to Beau, Stella. Now he’s looking for me, too. What if we
call the police and the Pellinghams have already told them to be
looking out for me? These are some powerful people; no telling
who they have in their pocket.” I shook my head, a new thought
forming. “And what if I called the police and forced Robert E.’s
hand with Beau. They could kill him if they thought the police
were on to them. Because that’s no way to win an election you
know: when you’re behind bars. No way for either Robert E. or
the senator. See, Beau would be an even bigger liability, insurance
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or no insurance.”
Zeb nodded, ruefully. “But he was right about that insurance,
Trip. They couldn’t hurt him if he had the birth certificate tucked
away somewhere. If he dies or goes missing, and the birth
certificate shows up, his death or disappearance points right back
to the Pellinghams.” Zeb looked at me and patted my hand. “He
has them over a barrel, Trip. So long as they can’t find you, they’ll
have to eventually let him go and hope you don’t ever come
forward. Plus, we heard Beau tell Robert E. that he doesn’t know
anything about you. Robert E. might just have to believe him and
stop looking for you.”
But my frown remained. “So what do I do? Sell the mansion,
take my half of the money and run? Go to some tropical island
and sip mimosas the rest of my life.”
He shrugged. “I’m game.”
Stella shrugged, too. “Count me in.”
I shook my head. “And then what? They let Beau go, we have
two Pellinghams in office, and I never see my brother again?
Beau never gets the life he was meant to have? He just takes his
half of the money and never gets a chance for a family, either?”
I fought back a sob. “I know that’s not what Granny wanted. She
was up to something keeping us apart for all these years, but that
will of hers was her way of getting us back together again. She
called him Pellingham so we’d end up together. Now I have to
make sure that happens.”
“But you can’t go back to the mansion,” Stella said. “They’ll
come looking for you there. Hell, if they know you’re his brother,
they might think it’s you that now has the birth certificate hidden
away.”
I sniffled and flipped open my cell phone. Then I dialed and
waited. “Pearl?” I said. “It’s me, Trip. No, I’m, I’m fine. I, uh,
I had a call from my office. There’s a big deal that’s about to
fall through and I, I need to fly home to help them fix it. The
client’s asking for me.” She talked and I nodded, that sob of
mine worming its way back up. “No, Pearl. Now. I’m already at
126 Rob Rosen
the airport. I’ll call you when I land. If anyone comes looking for
me, just tell them all that, okay?” She agreed, but I could hear the
worry in her voice. “I love you Pearl. And don’t you worry none;
I’ll be back soon.” I ended the call before she could say another
word.
Zeb patted my back. “You couldn’t tell her the truth, Trip. No
sense putting her in danger, or risking that she’d slip if they came
calling. And they’re gonna come, Trip. They’re gonna. They need
that birth certificate as much as Beau does.”
I looked at him and forced a smile. “I know, but still. In any
case, now I’ll have to find a motel somewhere and then figure out
a way to get him back. And lie low while I’m doing it.”
He didn’t even have to think that one over. “Or stay with me.
In disguise.”
Truth be told, I did like the first part of that. “You sure?
Could be dangerous for you.” Though I quickly thought to add,
“What kind of disguise?”
He laughed and jumped back in the car, shouting, “Wait and
see, boss. Just you wait and see.”
We dropped Stella off back at the mansion, then drove
another ten miles to Zeb’s place. It was a small house out in the
middle of nowhere, the wood painted sunflower yellow, a brick
chimney, green shutters, a small flower garden up front. “What,
no white picket fence?” I asked, stepping up the walkway.
He grabbed me and pulled me in to him. “That a dream of
yours, Trip? House with a white picket fence?” He kissed me,
long and hard and soul-shivering deep.
“I thought about it,” I admitted, coming up for air. “But does
anyone even have those anymore?”
He laughed and took my hand, walking me to a shed in the
back. He opened the door, great stacks of wood piled to the side.
“Picket slats, boss,” he said. “Next on my list.”
And that soul-shiver went all magnum eruption. “Seems like
you got yourself a little slice of heaven out here, Zeb.”
He grinned. “Sure do, Trip. Third cloud to the left.”
But then the clouds turned black. “What if they come looking
for me here, though? Stella seemed to put two and two together
about us pretty quickly. What if other people have seen us
together these last couple of days? Or Roy, the snitch?”
He shrugged. “But they won’t find you here. Least not this
version of you.”
I gulped, not liking the sound of that. “I’m getting an upgrade?
Model 2.0?”
He grinned, impishly, and I knew I was in trouble now. “You
could say that, yes. If it makes it any easier.” Cryptic and nerve-
wracking. Not a good pairing. At least for the likes of me.
He led me inside. The place was decorated all
Martha Stewart
128 Rob Rosen
Living
, right on down to the throw pillows and homemade
potpourri. Paintings of horses appeared in between the
lace-curtained windows. “Did you inherit this from your
grandmother?” I asked, innocently enough.
He kicked me in the ass. “I decorated it myself, fuckwad.”
I blanched. Really? Himself? No help from an eighty year old
woman? “I mean, it’s, uh, lovely.”
He smiled and shrugged. “Well, with a little help from
Martha
Stewart Living.
”
See! Told you so!
“But getting back to Model 2.0. Are we going to shave my
goatee? Dye my hair blond? Get me some colored contact
lenses?”
His face reddened. “Not exactly.” Then he walked me to
the bedroom. It was a small room, a double bed, lavender walls,
those same lace curtains, wrought iron end tables, and even more
potpourri. In truth, the place smelled like a florist shop had
exploded in there, and then someone who had eaten a bouquet
of lilies threw up. Twice. But far be it from me to say so. Again.
Anyway, that’s not what we were there to see. “Um, since we
really don’t know each other all that well, Trip,” he began, “this
next bit might come as a, well, as a surprise.”
My shoulders tightened. “A pleasant surprise?”
He paused and stared at me, face just a bit scrunched up.
“Okay. We’ll go with that.”
He was staring at his closet while he was talking, so to that
I quickly strolled over. Like a Band-Aid over a healing wound, I
ripped it open and prepared myself for the stinging pain. Or a
dead person to fall down on top of me. Like his grandmother,
who really must’ve helped with the decorating, I kept telling
myself. Because, seriously, it was more like
Martha Stewart Dying
than
Living
.
But what was in there was no dead woman. Unfortunately,
because that would’ve made things a bit easier.
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129
“Huh,” I said. “I don’t get it. Were you married to, a, uh, to
a woman before? I mean, that’s okay. Some people take to the
whole gay thing later in life.”
Again he kicked me in the ass. “Do I suck dick like a man who
took to the whole gay thing later in life?”
In fact, he sucked dick like it was the first thing he sucked on
after his pacifier. Which is to say, expertly. And for years. Then the
lightbulb went off above my head. Well, inside the closet, anyway,
illuminating one long row of dresses and skirts and blouses, wigs
on the top shelf, shoes on the bottom, boas dangling to the side.
“Oh, please, not boas, too,” I groaned, hands instinctively
rummaging through it all. To be fair, at least his taste in clothes
was better than his taste in furniture. Or paint. Or curtains. And
definitely than in potpourri.
“Drag, like fried chicken, Trip, is a staple in the South,” he
explained, looking nervously at me. “I’m just keeping up with
the Joneses.”
“Which Jones, Shirley or Star?” I chided, earning yet a third
kick in the pants.
“I do it for charity, Trip. There’s a bar in Charleston. Sunday
nights, all the tips go to gay homeless youth.”
I continued fanning through it all, guessing by his vast
wardrobe that he’d been doing Sundays for many years. With
some Saturdays thrown in for good measure. “What’s your
drag name, if you don’t mind me asking?” I inquired, over my
shoulder.
He joined me, standing to my side now, also fanning through
it all. “Portia de Chevy,” he replied. “A little bit classy and a lit bit
backwater.”
“Nice,” I told him, then froze, mid-fan. “Wait. Model 2.0?” I
turned to look at him. “No fucking way.”
“Way,” came his reply. “As in the only way. Especially if you’re
going to be hanging around these parts. Because too many people
will recognize you now.” Then he threw the salt in the wound.
130 Rob Rosen
And, damn, I wished I’d left that Band-Aid on. “Especially if you
want to free Beau and set all this shit right.”
I sighed, my shoulders slumping. He’d won. “Can I at least
have the red wig?”
He shook his head from side to side. “That’s Portia’s. She’s a
spicy one, she is.”
I reached up and took down a blonde one, long, wavy, very
German old time movie star. “Hey, I’ve got a classy/backwater
name myself.” He looked at me, expectantly. I turned and smiled.
“Portia, meet Marlene. Marlene D. Trick. Emphasis on the trick.”
He nudged me. “Naturally.” Then he winked and smirked.
“It’s for the best, Marlene.” Sadly, he was right. Sadly for me, that
is. Because I had a feeling I wasn’t going to make a very pretty
woman. Though, of course, I was soon enough about to find
out. “Pick out something pretty,” he added. “I’ll be right back.”
He ran out of the bedroom. I decided on something slutty.
Low-cut, black, with silver epaulets and safety pins running down
the side. He shot back in, and I jumped. Mainly because he was
holding up a massive pair of chain cutters. “Okay, okay, I’ll pick
something else,” I whimpered.
He chuckled. “No, these are for Beau. The outfit is fine, but
not for where we’re going.”
I gulped. “Back to Robert E.’s? So soon?”
“No time like the present. Especially since we know where
Beau is. I mean, if we wait any longer, they might move him. Or
do something worse.”
My gulp repeated. He was right, of course. And with the
chain cutters, we had a shot at rescuing him. “But in drag?”
He grinned. “No silly.”
I breathed a sigh of release. “Oh, thank goodness.”
His grin widened. “I meant, not for me. For you, definitely.”
He grabbed the slutty outfit out of my hand and replaced it with
something more demure. “Because Robert E. knows what you
look like. And if he knows about you, then so do his goons. I
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131
doubt they know who I am, so maybe they won’t harm a cute
little stable boy and his older, more homely sister.”
And this time it was his turn to get a kick in the pants. “The
homely part remains to be seen.”
He tossed the outfit on the bed and ordered, “Then let’s see.”
Unsurely, I put it all on, skirt, blouse, stockings – two pairs,
to cover all the leg hair – then jacket, wig, and sensible short-
heeled shoes. It was comfortable enough, if not completely alien,
to be wearing it all. Zeb applied the make-up, which took longer
than expected. I had a feeling, after the third try, and mounds
of base, that homely was going to be an understatement. Still,
twenty minutes after we started, he stood up, wiped the sweat off
his brow, and said, “Have a look.”
Slowly, I stood up and turned around, inching toward the
mirror, until I was standing before it, Model 2.0 complete. “My
own dearly-departed grandmother wouldn’t have recognized
me,” I moaned.
“Well,” he said, hand over mouth to stifle a laugh, “that’s, uh,
that’s a relief, right? Then neither will Robert E. or anyone else.
Glass half-full, Marlene. Glass half-full.”
I turned and sighed. “Better make it glass-way-full, of vodka,
because suddenly I need a drink.”
Again he ran from the room and again he returned with
his hand held high. Only this time it was with a decanter with
a strange looking orange liquid sloshing about. “Homemade,”
he proclaimed, his other hand proffering a glass. “Your granny’s