Buckets of Blessings 6
Buckets Of Blessings
By
Retta Michaels
Disclaimer:
If your laws do not allow you to read this story, then don't. All the rest of you people who read it, if you think it's true, boy, have I investment opportunities for you!
Notes From Retta:
Read and enjoy.
Chapter 6:
Heather gasped, and Gregg sat back on his seat.“I can't say.”
“That answered my question, now, as I said, Heather and I suspected and we're not doing anything. As you know, nothing good can come from this, but believe me, we suspected it.”
He looked at me and started to cry. “Why'd you ask me?”
“Gregg, Ty said your mom threw his cellphone against the wall before she left. If he called you on it after she left worried about her, how'd he do it on a busted phone?”
Heather looked at me and said, “Gregg, I'm going to call Ty in and I'm going to ask him the same question.
When he answers, I'm going to realize he's lied to Lance like you've lied to me.
It hurts like hell, but I know there's a reason for it. The only reason I can think is you're protecting either Ty, or your dad. Either one of those and I'd understand. If you're protecting someone else, I'm going to have to hear a really good explanation.”
She got up and went to the door, “Ty, you can come on in now and please pull the door shut behind you.”
He did and came over and sat next to me.
She said, “You want to ask him or do you want me to do it?”
“I'll do it.”
He looked at me and I said, “Ty, I'm not even going to go into what all came up to this point, but I've got one question to ask and I want a truthful answer.”
“What is it?”
“Who killed your mom?”
His face immediately crumpled and he started to cry. He turned to Gregg, “Why'd you tell them?”
Heather went over and hugged him and said, “Gregg didn't tell us a thing. We told him we were going to call you in and ask you.”
Gregg came over and he hugged Ty and said, “Ty, it's ok, Tell them what happened.”
“If I do, Dad will go to jail!”
Heather gasped and said, “Ty, listen to me. We suspected earlier, but we couldn't prove anything. Then, Gregg was in here talking with Lance and he told Lance you called him on your cell phone after your mom left. How'd you do that if it was busted?”
“She busted it when she came back.”
Heather looked at me and said, “Where'd she go the first time?”
“She went to the funeral home looking for Lance. She never found him there, so she came back and demanded to know where my cell phone was and for me to give her the phone number so she could call him.
She tried to hit me and dad told her to cut it out. She turned on him and said it was just like him to defend his faggot son. She then began tearing into him about how spineless he was and so on and so forth.
Somewhere in there, dad made a motion with his hand telling me to get out of the room.
I went to my bedroom and I continued to hear the battle rage. I wanted to call you Lance, but I was afraid if I did, she'd hit the last number dialed and call it.
While I was in my room, I had Smokey and sometime in there, I heard the conversation die down and I heard mom's car in the garage. I came out and that's when dad came in and said I needed to call the police as he'd just killed mom.
I went out to the garage and I saw her with a yard tool used to pull dandelions up stuck into her chest. “Dad said she'd tried to hit him with the car in the garage.
He ran into the back wall where all the yard tools were. He'd gotten out of the way and that tool was the only one that fell.
He said he picked it up and it enraged her more. She said he was so spineless he'd not do a thing and got out of the car and kept coming at her. Finally, he either had to climb over the hood of the car to get away from her, or he had to stand up to her. I guess he told her, “Back up or I'll use this!”, and she hit him.”
He said he jabbed it at her and didn't mean to hit her with it. He said it hit her the first time and stuck in. She said she fell and the whole time she died, she was cussing at him.”
Ty hugged me and began crying against my chest.
I looked at Heather and she turned to Gregg, “Gregg, as I said, we're not going to do anything. It's not that I didn't want to at first, but we talked and all we could do was think of there being nothing good coming of this. It's not going to bring your mom back and it's not going to be doing you any good to all go to jail. Each one of you covered it up, and that's what would happen if the police investigated it.”
“What do you mean “the police would cover it up if they investigated it?”
“Gregg, look at the facts, your mom was found down there against a tree in her car drunk four times over the alcohol limit. The Sheriff's deputy saw it and took photos. The Coroner came and ruled her death an accident, and that made it open and shut. Now, put those two together and the fact you guys are looked at as “untouchable” in this town and you've got a case of accident. So, why would I open it if the person I love and the person Heather loves is going to go down for it?”
“How would we go down?” Ty asked.
“Well, you and Gregg knew the facts.
For crying out loud, you were there and didn't call the police as soon as you knew what happened! That's called accessory to murder. In this state, that carries just as heavy penalty as if you actually killed her yourself.
Now, I'm not saying your mom wasn't a nice person. In my opinion, I'd probably done a bang up job myself of throwing her ass around a room, but I didn't.
So, what we're doing is we're keeping our mouths shut and we're going to go on with life. But Gregg, you do anything else like this and Ty, if you even so much as think about doing anything else like this, so help me...if you don't kill Heather and I together, you better wish to God you did. “
Gregg looked at us and said, “Guys, I wasn't anywhere near the house!”
“No, but you sure got the call and you sure didn't report what happened as soon as you knew something and the Coroner told me this is the second time this has happened with you. To me, that's not a good habit to be in.”
“Oh man, the man has his dick in a knot over what happened at that football game.
A bunch of us kids were up on the bleachers and someone got drunk and fell off. Did he bother telling you there were fifty other kids on those bleacher that night? So, I'm singled out. Well fuck that dude!”
“Gregg, maybe the guy does have a axe to grind, but I imagine you not being known as such a nice guy and having attitude when you got asked about it caused everyone to think it was you.”
“No, I admit I did have an attitude but in order to get them off who it was that most likely did it, I kept them thinking it was me. To be honest, the guy actually did just fall, but you know who gave us the liquor? That prick mom was fucking.”
“So you're telling me you covered for her again? How many times did you cover for her?”
“Too many. Look at how it always went.
If every time she got too close to something that stank, it turned out to be us kids that caught blame. And, you want to hear what the cunt had to say after I came home from being questioned? She had nerve to lay into me about being more responsible!
Get that? I get intoxicated off her breath, and am covering so her boyfriend doesn't catch blame and she points the finger at me! Well that night, I told her what I knew and she shut her mouth fast because I told her that if she wanted to chew ass, that I'd go wake dad up and tell him a thing or two.
You know what she did? She started telling me how nice my truck would be and how nice college would be. Yeah, dear old mom is going to smooth out the carpet once every thing's swept under it.”
“Gregg, look at me. Your mom wasn't the best mom. Heck, I'd say she wasn't going to ever be likely to qualify for “mom of the year”, but the shit you guys were swimming in makes my head swim.
Now, do yourself a favor and look at what I've had to do with life. Yeah, my background stinks like what you came from, but believe me, my family had nothing compared to what you have. I'm not saying it was right, but rich families are just as fucked up as poor.”
“Man, what I went through ain't nothing like what you went through, so I'm to forget about it and make people's lives better?”
“Either do that, or fuck up other people's lives too. Given that choice, I'd say you'd do better trying your best to be known as a nice guy.”
Ty looked at me and said, “What's he talking about?”
“Babe, I'll tell you later.”
Heather smiled at me and said, “Lance, who's sweeping things under the carpet now? Tell him and everyone what you went though and let's leave this room with everyone forgetting the past.”
I looked at her and said, “Sis, you just want me to have nightmares.”
“No, I want your partner there to know what you're having them about when you do.”
Ty looked at me and said, “Gregg knows and you don't want me to know?”
“Hon, I told Gregg some of it, but not all. Heck, in reality, I skipped over it with him like a rock across a pond. Here's what happened.
My uncle babysat me when I was four years old. The first night, things happened, he sexually abused me in the shower room. I forgot a toy and went in while he was showering. The shower room was a huge room in our basement where we kept our toys. Dad had his workshop to work on appliances, and we took showers in there.
He was showering and for some reason, he called me over towards him. The next thing I knew, I was pinned on the floor and he was shoving his dick up my ass.
The next time he did it, we were watching television and he wanted me to lick it like an ice cream cone. When I said I didn't, he shoved my face down in the crack of the sofa until I said I would. Then he face fucked me.
I was pissed and I told my mom. Well, he went to her and told her I wasn't doing what I was supposed to while they were gone, so guess who got the butt whipping and guess who wasn't believed? From then on, I knew I couldn't tell because mom wouldn't believe me.
As time progressed, he did it more and more and then began to molest his step kids.
To intimidate us, he took us outside and took an old string mop and tied it to a dog's collar and lifted the dog up over the trash barrel until he burnt the dog to death.
Other times, he hung cats on the side of the house alive by nails and skinned them alive. He had us kids afraid of him so much that I just went through life not speaking to anyone.
Then, his step kids told their mom and she divorced him. The consolation prize was he was single again and came around our house more. So, I got raped more often.
Finally, about the age of 8, I figured I'd do what I could to make it feel good for him so he'd get off faster. All that did was make him like it more so he'd do it more.
So, I was in a no win situation. The blessing was that the son of a bitch felt sorry for himself one night and committed suicide in his apartment he was living in.
To be sure he was dead, I went to his funeral so I could see he was really dead. The fucker was there and that's why I say Gregg, if he didn't come out of that coffin, no one is in a funeral home because I spat in his face.”
Gregg said, “Oh God.” and Ty said, “Hon, I'm so sorry.”
Heather looked at them and said, “Guys, you don't know the half of it. He'd come to my house to eat because they were so poor they hardly had anything to eat.
When he told me what happened with his uncle, it was because he was afraid to bleed to death. He was tore up down there. I started stealing my mom's maxi pads so he'd have those.
When his uncle died, he thought it was over, but that's when the nightmares began. He screamed so loud he woke me up in my house from yelling in his bedroom in his house.
It got so I'd get woke up and go over and wake him up and just hold him. If you knew how often that happened, you'd told me to just go over there and live. Sometimes, it was three and four times a week and often, it was several times a night.
I think my dad knew I was going, but I think my dad heard him screaming. My dad told me one time that he sure got beat a lot as he thought it was that causing him to scream.”
“Where were your parents during all this?”
“While I was getting molested, or during the nightmares?”
“Both?”
“My dad worked the graveyard shift and my mom worked two jobs.
We rarely saw my mom during the week and she put in earplugs while she slept. She'd get home real late from tending bar and then would get up early to go work in a factory.
My dad just stayed the hell away from us kids. It was like he didn't know how to deal with us, so we were non existent to him.”
“So that gave your uncle free range?”
“No, that's what's strange is my two little brothers he never sexually abused...just me. If he had, I would have told.”
“Why didn't you?” Gregg asked.
“After seeing someone get by with all he did and killing animals, do you think he'd stop? He told us it'd be us next and then he'd go to prison for that.
He was so mean that he lifted my one cousin up by his head and threw him across the room. Something happened because that kid got put into foster care. I've never seen him since.” I paused “Did he get put into foster care, or did he get killed? I don't know.”
Ty said, “If you knew martial arts, why didn't you use that on him?”
Heather said, “Ty, you don't understand. By the time he knew enough, he was already scared so much of his uncle, he'd just freeze up when he saw the guys car sitting in front of their house. He'd come to my house and try not going home until way late just so he'd not have to see the guy.”
“Oh man...”
Heather said, “And, some of the stories he told me, he's not even told you guys. Some of them are really really sick. There was one time Lance came home and just stank.
My dad told him to go home and wash up which put him in the house with that guy. What had happened was the guy threw him down the hole of the out house at his grandparents. Lance nearly drowned and only got out because he clawed his way up the side. He got really sick because he got bit four times by a black snake in there!”
Gregg said, “Guys, you've got to stop. I'm way into over load here.”
To be honest, so was I. My nerve endings in my body were all firing and it felt like imaginary fingers were poking me all over. Ty felt it and said, “Yeah, Lance is shaking like a leaf.”
Heather came over and said, “Lance, stand up. Ty, I'm going to show you what works with him here. When he's doing this, hug him and keep him standing up.
If he sits down, he'll go to sleep and have a nightmare. In those dreams, he's getting chased or he's trying to hold the door shut to protect the other kids and his uncle is grabbing at him through the hole in the screen of the door.”
She hugged me and just held me. What's strange is the world went black and she just talked to me real soothingly telling me it was going to be ok and that no one would get me.
Ty apparently stepping in and started hugging me the same way. Heather showed him how to caress me and to talk to me. After about fifteen minutes, my eyesight returned and I hugged him and just cried.
Gregg was sitting down and I could see him crying and could feel Ty crying too.
Heather said, “Guys, what you are seeing is what he didn't do the whole time that stuff went on.
The whole time, he never cried and Ty, don't ever ever tickle him. He will kill you if you do it.
That's how his uncle started the molesting. The only time Lance has ever lashed out was when we were about ten years old, I tickled him.
Believe me, I knew a lot of martial arts and couldn't get back fast enough. He came up swinging death blows. Fortunately, I got knocked back by the first swing and was falling when the one meant for my throat came. By the time he realized what he was doing, I was back in stance and was ready to defend myself. We explained the black eye away as a bike wreck.”
When I was back to where my nerve endings weren't so hyper, I said, “Ty, take me home.”
“Ty, if you need me tonight, call Gregg or I's cell phone. It's been a long time he's been this way, so I don't know how it will be.”
Ty nodded and as we walked through the house, I think everyone was shocked by the way I looked. Heather walked through and said, “Joan, we'll talk in a minute. I'm going out with them to get Lance in the truck.”
She hugged me and said, “Lance, that's our family in there and I'm going to tell them. I'm not going into detail, but they've got to be told. I love you and Ty, you hold him and sleep behind him hugging him. He'll be ok if you do that. If you do get out of bed, don't get back in until he's awake. He'll view you as a threat.”
Ty said, “Ok, thanks for telling me Heather.”
“No, thank you for being there. Now don't worry about anything else Ty. It will be ok.”
As Ty drove, I sat in the passenger seat with the balls of my hands in my eye sockets. That seemed to ease the pressure and keep me from seeing things.
Ty said, “Lance, no more. From now on, I'm not going to let anyone hurt you no more.”
“He's dead Ty, no one can hurt me like that again.”
“And I thought I had it bad. Sometimes, it's better when they die isn't it.”
“It's just a trade off. When they die, you're left with the memories. They're worse because then you remember everything.”
“I'm here. I'm sorry we put you through that.”
“No, you had to know.”
“If me knowing something ever puts you through pain like that again, just tell me. I don't need to know and I'll have Heather tell me.
I just thank God she was there for you when you were going through all that.”
“She did all she could. That's why we're so close.”
“I understand and won't ever question your closeness. She's been there better than a friend, I now know the bond you have.”
“Be there for me like that and you'll have me for life.”
“Can I ask you a question without you getting upset?”
“Hon, there's no way I can get upset with you.”
“After going through all that with him, why'd you go right back into being molested by Tony? I mean he was twenty seven and you were thirteen.”
“It was different with Tony. Yeah, he was older, but I wanted him. It wasn't that way with my uncle. Tony was by choice and my uncle wasn't.”
“It still doesn't make sense to me. But if that's how you justify being molested, then I guess....”
“What do you mean?”
“Tony was fourteen years older than you. Don't you see how sick that was?”
“No”
“Would you go out with a nine year old?”
“No”
“Well, that's the age difference. So how's one right and the other wrong?”
“Ty, maybe Tony wasn't in the right, but I loved him, ok?”
“Ok, so I won't ask anything else.”
“No, ask whatever you want. I just might not be able to give you the best answer. To me, they're totally different.”
“That's like asking me if I'd like to be shot to death or if I would like having my head cut off with a guillotine. The end result's the same. All you're saying is one's less painful.”
“I guess, but I prefer dying a slow death with you of old age.”
“I hope so because that's how long it's going to take to get rid of me.”
“Thank goodness.” I smiled. “Ty, I'm sorry for everything you went through with your mom. It seems what doesn't kill us makes us stronger.”
“Sometimes I don't feel that strong Lance.”
“Well, from now on, I'll be there when you're not feeling strong. Just be there for me, or call Heather if it's too intense for you.”
“Hopefully, everything she showed me will work. I'd like it to be me from now on.”
“I understand.”
“Lance, I didn't know how to tell you.”
“Hon, you had your reasons. What I don't get is how you did it?”
“What.”
“Got the car off the cliff and down the embankment.”
“She wasn't in the car when it went off the cliff. I put her in the car after we ran it down the hill and into the tree.”
“Did your mom have a necklace on?”
“No, that mark came from the rope I used to carry her. I was afraid you'd see the other mark that was down by her right armpit. That's why I wanted to be down there.”
“What did you do with all the blood?”
“My dad's a plumber, we sucked it up with the Shopvac and used muriatic acid on the floor. If the police had came to the house, all they would have seen was a heater in the garage we used to dry the floor.”
“When did you tell Gregg if he got home when I met him?”
“Earlier when we went to get the fireworks. I figured the gig was up since you wouldn't let me go down there, so I told him.”
“Ty, I really wish you'd told me.”
“I couldn't. I was afraid my dad was going to be arrested and I didn't want him to go to jail for her.”
“No more secrets and I don't care what the reason is.”
“Ok, you've got me babe. I don't need any other secrets now.”
“Does your dad know about the guy out there?”
“No, I don't think so. TO be honest, Dad hasn't been in the office out there in a long time. Now, I've got a question?”
“What?”
“If mom bought the Mercedes herself, how did we get the double indemnity clause?”
“You mean it's not in the business' name?”
“I don't think so.”
“Then, I'd say no one bothered to check. I mean it's not going to be on the death certificate what the license number was of the car she was in. Other than that, I'd say your Uncle did some creative writing with the insurance paperwork.”
“Don't you have to be involved in that paperwork?”
“No, the way it goes is the only time I'm involved in anything like that is if it's a pre-need burial plan and then I get paid by that policy.”
“What do you mean?”
“Ok, here's the way it goes and I don't want you to say anything because it's a shuck and jive.”
“Ok”
“Say you are Joe Blow and you come in and you buy a pre-need burial plan from the funeral home.”
“Ok”
“What I have you do is you pick out the plan you want and all that. Usually, the casket companies still carry that style of casket for a long time, but to be really honest, the casket you pick out in the plan isn't the one you're going to be buried in.”
“What do you mean?”
“Ok, let's use a car for example.” I took a breath and began, “A pre-need plan would have you pick out a new Corvette today. Then, let's say you die in twenty five years. You'll be buried in a new Corvette then.
We're not going to buy a casket and just keep it around for you to be buried in. What we do is we make out the plan and the arrangements and then we buy an insurance policy that assures us what you pay for today is going to be what you get then....but, what we do is we really pad the policy.”
“What do you mean?”
“Ok, here comes the part you're going to look at me and say it screams of fraud.”
“What?”
“Just listen.”
“Ok”
“Let's say your funeral is going to cost ninety five hundred dollars in todays dollars.
What I do is look at life expectancy for someone your age. So, let's say you're expected to live until seventy four years old. Then I know you're going to live for another fifty six years. So what I do is I buy a life insurance policy with the money you pay me and I divide that ninety five hundred up into seven hundred payments for that policy.
So, the payments are going to amount to over a hundred dollars a month. Now tell me if you went out and bought insurance how big of a policy you could get for that hundred dollars a month.”
“I don't know.”
“Well, let me tell you that you could get a policy for approximately seven hundred thousand dollars for that same payment.
Now ask me if I'll bury you in fifty six years if you pay me seven hundred thousand dollars and I'd tell you I'd give you the best funeral we had, but you said, “No, I want this funeral I picked out, so you see, I'm getting about six hundred thousand dollars extra for that funeral.”
“Wow!”
“Yeah, big racket. That's why we sell pre-need. It assures you that you lock in the price today to get a funeral in fifty some odd years when you need it. However, what you don't know is I'm not going to lose that money.”
“What do you mean?”
“If you came in with cash and said you wanted to buy that funeral, I'd sell it to you and then I'd put it into the account to make the payments for that policy and you then walk out and get hit by a truck and killed. Guess what? I still bury you and make the profit on the funeral, so I'm not going to lose any money.”
“Wow.”
“Yeah, big racket.”
“Isn't there a law for that?”
“No, the only law they have says I do have to put the money into an account and I can't touch it to pay my bills. It can only leave the account to pay the insurance company.
So, what I do is I take fifteen percent of that ninety five hundred today and then I get the rest later.
Now, since we're lovers and what you have is mine and what I have is yours, I'm going to tell you now that if I die first and you sell that funeral home for anything less than a hundred million, you just fucked yourself royally.”
“Wow, because of the insurance policies you've got coming in?”
“Yeah, and that's what I've already sold. So far, there's been over three thousand pre-needs sold by me and I'm giving you a low ball figure on the price there.”
“What?”
“Yeah, It seems that if someone is going to make payments on a ninety five hundred dollar funeral and sees the nicest is coming in at sixteen grand, then they go ahead and splurge the extra forty dollars a month for the more expensive model.
The only difference between the more expensive funeral and the cheapest is the casket. And I'll tell you now the wholesale price of a casket is way cheaper than what I'm pricing them at.”
“What's the most expensive casket cost?”
”The one that has all the options and the highest grade of metal is going to wholesale to us at about two grand.”
“Man, that's a lot.”
“No, not really considering I'm selling you that funeral for sixteen thousand, so I'm making fourteen grand on that funeral.”
“Ok, what are your expenses?”
“Well, I have the funeral home and I've got the limos and the hearse and so on and so forth. It's quite a lot.
But, as I said, I have to have seventeen funerals in order to break even. So figure I'm profiting about seven grand a funeral It's costing me about a hundred and twenty grand to run the funeral home and pay the bills a year.
Now, as you know I had fifty eight funerals last year and a lot of those were higher end funerals. I made about four hundred after the bills were paid.”
“But you said you've got quite a bit paid off on the funeral home.”
“Yeah, because I took the money from the profits and I invested them into oil futures and a Mexican telephone company which's really doing good. So, I earned enough to bring it down to where I'm looking at having it paid off in about a year. Also, I've got the income coming in from other sources.”
“Well, you're going to pay it off now, aren't you?”
“Yeah, and just as soon as we can, I'll have that building torn down and the addition put up for you.”
He smiled and said, “Lance, I'm really glad things are going the way they are for us.”
“Me too.”
“When I get home, I've got to call Chili's and tell them I'll be quitting”
“You sure you don't want to give them notice?”
“I've got twenty six million dollars and now have half an interest in a funeral home and we're buying into hotels and probably White Castles, so tell me what I'd be doing working at Chilis?”
“Ok, I just thought it'd be easier for us when we go there to eat.”
“No, it'll be ok, I don't have anything of theirs which they need back.”
“Ok, do you want to eat there tomorrow night before we go to the arcade with the guys?”
“No”
I chuckled and said, “You that burnt out on their food?”
“Yeah, you don't realize it's good the first few dozen times, but after that it gets pretty old.”
“Well, I guess I'd feel the same way if I ate it every day.”
“Lance, do you have anything at home to cook?”
“Breakfast food, but nothing for pancakes. I've ate enough of those to be happy for a lifetime.”
“What do you mean?”
“We were so poor Ty, we ate them like three or four times a week.”
“Where'd all their money go if they worked two jobs a piece?”
“There's wasn't much money to start with. Mom didn't make a lot at either place and my dad worked on televisions and worked in a factory.
The problem was we bought a house in a nice neighborhood. They paid for it, but there wasn't much left after that each month.”
“Oh, that must have been hard.”
“Yeah”
“What other things did your mom wear you out on?”
“Chili and meat loaf. She'd cook a huge pot of chili and then the next night we'd have chili dogs and the next night after that, we'd have chili mac. On Sunday, we had meat loaf. We'd eat a lot of pinto and navy beans too. Thinking of soured beans is enough to make me sick.”
“Oh man, I don't blame you.”
“He made me eat some once. Other things he made me eat was bananas and runny yolked egg with ketchup on them. I won't eat either one to this day and won't allow a bean in the house.”
“What are your favorite foods?”
“Cheese burgers. Somewhere along the line, I got ahold of a recipe for cheeseburgers with mince onions in them and then put Colby cheddar on them. Good stuff, Maynard.”
He laughed, “Things I take for granted were a luxury to you.”
“Yeah, if you really want to know, I think that's why I went for Tony the way I did. He had the money to take us out to eat.
To him, it was a usual occurrence, but to me, it was like really nice. We hardly ate out and when Tony started taking me places, I really thought I was special.”
“Do you realize how sad your life sounds.”
“No, because that was only about the first fifteen years. By the time I was fifteen, things were a lot better, but my parents got killed shortly after that?”
“What happened to your brothers?”
“They're out there someplace.”
“What do you mean?”
“They wouldn't let me have them since I was too young when my parents got killed, so they went into foster care. I have no clue where they are.”
“So you mean I have two brothers out there?”
“Yeah”
“Well, we're going to find them.”
“They hate me.”
“Don't say that!”
“No, I got to see them once and they said they hated me”
“Lance, they look at you as abandoning them, they'll realize you love them.”
“I do, but I don't know where they are.”
“I'll have Aunt Joan contact the family services and get them.”
Tears immediately sprung into my eyes, “Do you think she would?”
“Hell yeah she will! You know her better than that! As soon as she finds out, she'll be on the phone with them as fast as she can. What're their names?”
“Lonnie and Lennox that we call Lenny”
“Your parents liked the L names didn't they!”
“Both of their names started with L's. “
“What were their names?”
“Larry and Linda.”
“Ok, we'll call as soon as we get home, let's stop by Steak and Shake and get something to eat. I'm hungry.”
“Ok, I want the new Chicken sandwich they have and cheese fries. That sundae shake is good too.”
“You're a junk food junky, you know that?”
“Yeah, but cooking at home for myself at home wasn't fun, so I ate places with Heather.”
“At least she was single so you could go places with her.”
“Yeah, but for the past few months, we hadn't seen each other much. I think it was getting to her that I wasn't going to be what she wanted.”
“Well, I'm glad she took you to Chili's.”
“It's my favorite and she took me there since it's my favorite. What's funny is I've never seen you there before.”
“I'm surprised too. I sure would have remembered you.”
“Oh, you remember a lot of single guys that went in there?!”
“Not many, but when they're as cute as you and have those eyes like yours, Oh hell yeah I did!”
“Must've been a lot since I've got two eyes.”
“No, what I mean is the color of your eyes and the way you look. You don't realize it, but your looks instantly set people on fire.”
“Nah, I look at it everyday in the mirror, now if I looked like you or your brother, then I'd be hot.”
“You think Gregg's hot?”
“Hell yeah, he looks just about like you! And you're a sizzler.”
“Which one of us do you think looks hotter?”
“Boy, that's a dumb question. As soon as we saw you Heather and I were both wanting you. That's why when I saw your brother, I called Heather. I knew she'd be all over him.”
“That's funny. I don't think I look good at all, and think Gregg's in the same boat as me. We both think the other is bad off but I do think he has the hots for you”
“No, he better only have eyes for Heather. He got told that earlier.”
“Why? Did he come onto you?”
“No, he wanted to hire someone to work out there and I told him it wasn't happening.”
“Who?”
“Let's leave some things between your brother and I, O.k.?”
“I can almost bet you who it was. He followed them around like a puppy dog and Mark jumped into his ass over it.”
“You'd be warm.”
“Mark's ex!”
“I didn't tell you.”
“See, I told you. He is gorgeous, but that'd sure not be happening, little Mark wouldn't have a thing to do with Gregg after that.”
“Well, I told him it wasn't happening and he better hope to God I never find out he's snuck behind Heather's back.”
“He won't.”
“How do you know?”
“Just let me say that Gregg's too analytical. He weighs his options too closely
He'll weigh Heather against that jerk and then keep coming back to Heather. He's done that since he was little.
We once split up candy and by the time he'd decided what he wanted, I'd already took mine back and ate it.”
I laughed and said, “Well, I'm glad he decided he liked Heather fast.”
“Yeah, that was amazing. The way his eyes were bugging out when he saw her, I think it was lust at first sight and then, when he found out he wanted her too, it turned to love.”
“Well, I think it was the same for us.”
“True, but for Gregg to decide that, I was surprised.”
We laughed and then ordered our meals. I handed Ty the money and he smiled. “Just think, soon, I'll have a lot of money and we won't ever have to worry about it anymore.”
“Hon, we weren't worried before. You were. I had plenty for the both of us.”
“It's strange taking money from someone, isn't it?”
“Yeah, but we'll get used to it.”
We were told to wait for our meals and he kicked on the cd in the stereo, Donna Summer began belting out “This Time I know it's for real”. He turned it down and I turned it up and began singing to him.
He laughed, but he listened to the words and got tears in his eyes. When it was about three quarters over, I hit the mute and pointed. He rolled down the window and took our food.
He smiled at me and said, “When we get home, I'm calling Joan and getting her to looking for your brothers. They can come now that you're of age, can't they?”
“I don't know. They're in foster care and the state frowns on gays having foster kids.”
“They're your brothers. That shouldn't matter.”
“Well, it did when I was 18, so it might still.”
“How old are they.”
“Oh......Lenny is probably thirteen now. Man, it doesn't seem like he should be that old. And, Lonnie is probably fifteen? He's 8 years younger than me.”
“So they were babies when those things were happening to you?”
“Yeah, mom hadn't even had them. She had a couple of miscarriages when I was little. That's why a lot of things happened because the hospital is over by our house. Mom and dad were at the hospital when it happened the first time. “
“Oh man.”
“Yeah, my parents never did know anything happened to me. I imagine mom knows now and is kicking my uncles butt all over the place.”
“Your parents probably went to Heaven and your uncle went to hell for sure.”
“Probably. That's one thing that pissed me off more than anything When they had the funeral for him, I was expected to go. For that preacher to stand up there and say he was going to heaven was more than I could stand. I went to the bathroom and vomited.”
“There's no way. He committed suicide and on top of that, he did all those horrible things.”
“Well, we're not to judge, but it's hard not to, isn't it? ”
“Yeah. From my perspective it is and I sure know it is from yours.”
We drove home and Ty was really careful pulling the truck into the garage. “This thing is way bigger than my car.”
“Yeah, but that's why I have the wide garage door. Just pull in however you please.”
“No, I've got to get used to parking mine next to yours and you better not hog all the space.”
“Oh, I forgot. We'll, I'll try. I'm not used to two cars being in here.”
“You sure made it long enough to put the limo in here.”
“No, when I built it, I thought about having a whole line of cabinets over there and along that wall. I just never got around to doing it.”
“Well, we'll get it done. What's that big ball over in the corner?”
“That's the filter for the swimming pool.”
“You got a pool!”
“Yeah, didn't you see it?”
“No, I never looked out back.”
“Well, I'll show it to you. There's a nice jacuzzi out there too. What I did wish I'd done was put a screened patio over the pool and made it so it could be glassed in. Well, maybe the next house.”
He looked at me and said, “ Well, maybe that's when we split up because I'm not moving. I love this house. It's awesome.”
I smiled at him and said, “Oh man, here I am worried someone else is going to come between us and it's going to be a house.”
He looked at me and said, “You think you're going to lose me?”