The Gallows Tree - Sale, discounted price

The Gallows Tree - Sale, discounted price


I've decided to put some of my first books *my blasts from the past* out on sale. Just for a few days at a time giving anyone new to RJ Scott a way of trying my writing with only a small outlay.

The first one is The Gallows Tree, originally written in 2011 the book was with another publisher but was one of the books I took back and self published as soon as I could.

For just one week from 31 October I have lowered the price of this to 99c. The timing of it being Halloween is perfect as although this book is a contemporary love story it also has a ghost story line.

Hope you enjoy...


Buy Links


The lower price is available from: Love Lane Books, Amazon UK & Amazon US (and other Amazons), and All Romance


The Book


Cody Garret is only just finding his way after an abusive relationship ended with his ex in prison. Coming to England to restore Mill Cottage is his way of running so he has time to heal. His goal is simple-hire a company to help make the mill cottage saleable then go back to the States.

What he doesn't count on is meeting Sebastian Toulson-Brown, the brother of his contractor and the man who may be able to show him he can stop running.

But first Cody and Sebastian must deal with the ghosts of lost loves and the destinies that are woven into the story of the mill and the sycamore trees that stand on its land, one of which might be the gallows tree.

For buy links, reviews and excerpts click HERE


State of Play - writing in November, Nanowrimo, Angel in a Book Shop, Alpha book, Storm book, Texas Fall

State of Play - writing in November, Nanowrimo, Angel in a Book Shop, Alpha book, Storm book, Texas Fall

I once participated in Nanowrimo (Nation Novel Writing Month). I wrote Back Home which was originally with an old publisher and is now with Totally Bound.

I haven't done it since, 2012 was the Silver nightmare and last year was the start of my burnout which lasted until February this year...

So, it has come to November and I realise actually there is no wriggle room in my schedule to stop and write something different to what I had planned... so this is my November writing list:

Angel In A Bookshop - 40,000 words
Alpha book with not title as yet for AllRomance - 20,000

So, my targets for writing are 10k above Nanowrimo. Potentially 20 working days in November, 60,000 words = 3,000 words a day. I can do this, it appears to be a nice level amount of words that I can accomplish in a day... so fingers crossed. There will also be some editing on Texas 6, and maybe even some additional writing.

December early is my MLR storm book, but I am hoping to get some of that into November as well... What I might do is use my Nano profile to keep an eye on word count.

Are you doing Nano this year?

If you are and you want to buddy then my user name is  RJScott - http://nanowrimo.org/participants/rjscott/novels

Reviews

Reviews

I have got SO far behind on my reviews and I realise I missed a few from before GRL and even before that!

Please remember I am not a *proper* reviewer. I'm just a reader who thinks maybe the people that like my writing may be interested in the kinds of books I love. I only EVER post reviews of books at 4/5 or over, and these are not structured reviews, just my immediate reactions.


Clare London - A Twist and Two Balls (with a kick #1) 4/5

4.5/5 and a fab start to this series. Amazon (US)


Sue Brown - Hissed as a Newt (with a kick #2) 4.5/5

4.5/5 and oh so lovely. Good follow up to book 1. Amazon (US) 


Garrett Leigh - Heart 5/5

5/5 and classic Leigh angst, hurt and comfort, read in one sitting - Amazon (US)


Raising the rent from JL Merrow 5/5

Loved this so much, JL pretty much never puts a foot wrong. Gorgeous sweet sexy book. 5/5. Amazon (US)


The 1000 smiles of Nicholas Goring 5/5

5/5 and an added awwww and an added omg. And a happy sigh. OUT SOON.


Jordan L Hawk - Bloodline 6/5 & Highly Recommended

Yep you read that right. 6/5. Love this book. A master storyteller in Jordan L Hawk. Amazon (US)


Amy Jo Cousins - Five Dates 5/5

Loved this books a funny cute and sexy read that I couldn't put down. 5/5. Amazon (US)


Too Stupid to Live (Romancelandia Book 1) - Anne Tenino - 5/5

Too Stupid to Live (Romancelandia Book 1) - Anne Tenino - 5/5

It isn't true love until someone gets hurt.

Sam’s a new man. Yes, he’s still too tall, too skinny, too dorky, too gay, and has that unfortunate addiction to romance novels, but he’s wised up. His One True Love is certainly still out there, but he knows now that real life is nothing like fiction. He’s cultivated the necessary fortitude to say “no” to the next Mr. Wrong, no matter how hot, exciting, and/or erotic-novel-worthy he may be.

Until he meets Ian.

Ian’s a new man. He’s pain-free, has escaped the job he hated and the family who stifled him, and is now—possibly—ready to dip his toe into the sea of relationships. He’s going to be cautious, though, maybe start with someone who knows the score and isn’t looking for anything too complicated. Someone with experience and simple needs that largely revolve around the bedroom.

Until he meets Sam.

Sam’s convinced that Ian is no one’s Mr. Right. Ian’s sure that Sam isn’t his type. They can’t both be wrong . . . can they?

Review - 5/5


I couldn't put this book down, I enjoyed it that much. I loved Sam (hugs him) and as for Ian and how his resolve melts... brilliant. Funny, sad, emotional and hot, this book was just what I needed.

Buy Links




Heat, written with Chris Quinton

Heat, written with Chris Quinton

Cover Art by Meredith Russell

The Book

Serving up passion, family, love and hate, with a side order of arson.

Lewis has lost nearly everything, and now it seems that Devon is here to take the last thing he has left - working in his beloved restaurant, Laurels. But when an arsonist threatens everything Lewis loves, he realizes sometimes everyone has their ghosts, and he discovers an unexpected ally who is prepared to risk everything for him.
Set in the small cathedral city of Salisbury, Master Chef Lewis Mandineau no longer owns the Laurels, the restaurant that had been in his family for generations. Betrayed and robbed by an ex-lover, he's had to sell to Carnegie Enterprises, an American corporation. That isn't all Lewis has to contend with. Rachel, his beloved younger sister has been left severely hurt by the car crash that killed their parents, and taking care of her has to be his priority.

Enter Devon Trelawney III, sent to assess the viability of the restaurant and its staff. Devon knows all about family tradition. But he also knows sentiment has no place in business matters, and the Laurels' potential is swamped by the debts it has accrued. Devon is a hardheaded businessman, first and foremost, but Lewis and Rachel test his resolve in different ways. Soon Devon is forced to admit that what seems like an impossible love can sometimes become something very real.

Salisbury Series

Book 1 - Heat
Book 2 - Ice

Buy Links

Amazon (US) | Amazon (UK) | ARe | Smashwords | B&N | iTunes

Reviews

MM Good Book Reviews - 4.5/5 - "....The storyline is really good even if it is a pretty simple one, the added twist does come from nowhere but there is a slight hint for some of what happens earlier in the book. I have to say that I thoroughly enjoyed this story and would love to see another story involving Lewis and Devon, they have such potential that I hope R.J. Scott and Chris Quinton with explore them further.
I recommend this to those who love stories with a little suffering and angst, great characters who touch your hearts and bring the story alive, a wonderful storyline that does surprise and a very happy blissful ending...."

Multitaskingmommas - 4/5 - "....What did I like about this story? Despite Devon's background edging on the billionaire-plot, this did not read like one at all. Even better, neither Devon nor Lewis have any egos that clashed or wills that dominated. Both men were relaxing characters to read and somehow, that made them even more romantic and surreal in a way. This ease in the characters' personalities and behaviors was, for me, the real story behind this read.

What am I grumpy? Well, its the first of the series called the Salisbury Tales and the introduction of one character I really, really, want to read about: Jon. This means, there is more to this tale than we are left to believe. I guess we wait it out and find out what happens next in Salisbury.

...and I am not the most patient when having to wait :( Is that asking too much?...."

Book Bike Reviews - 5/5 - "....This book is like a savory stew, thrown in is a hot headed businessman, a chef that deserves something better, and loveable supporting characters that make this lovely book a hearty literary meal! Great job Chris and Rj, I walked away from the table fully satisfied!!...."

Joyfully Jay - 4.75/5 - "....I knew this was going to be a good one just from reading the blurb, and I wasn’t disappointed.  We have two men that you just know are going to be at odds from the get go, and I couldn’t wait to watch their walls crumble as they got to know one another.  I was really pleased with this story, and I read it from beginning to end in one go over a couple of hours.  I couldn’t put it down, because I just had to see how it all turned out....

....This is a really fantastic story about two men how have some serious hurdle to overcome, and manage to do it in a believable and wonderful way.  I really enjoyed this book, and can absolutely recommend it to you...."

Prism Book Alliance - 4/5 - "....I really adore an enemies to lovers storyline. There is something very satisfying about watching two men with animosity toward each other fall in love. These two guys definitely start off in the “not friendly” category. The circumstances of their relationship sets the tone for all sorts of bad feelings. What saves the day though is that they are both likable characters, and seeing them lower their defenses and open their hearts is very rewarding...."

Excerpt

Chapter One

The sound of shattering crockery from the small scullery at the back of the kitchen startled Lewis Mandineau into dropping the bottle of food colouring. It bounced on the counter, leaving a swathe of scarlet cochineal splattered across the front of his white jacket, and rolled to rest against the mixing bowl.

“Bloody hell.” Lewis paid the bottle no attention. Instead, his heart in his mouth, he dashed around the central workstation and into the scullery to see Rachel standing in front of the sink. One arm was wrapped around her waist, and her free hand tugged at her long ponytail while she shook with fright. Around her feet lay shards of white tableware and food scraps. Again.

“Sorry, sorry, Lewis, sorry,” she whimpered.

“It’s okay, sweetheart,” Lewis said quietly before taking his sister in his arms and leading her gently away from the disaster.

“I’m sorry. I-I—” She gazed around, as if unsure where she was. “Lewis?”

“Everything’s fine,” he assured her affectionately. “Come on, you can sit in the office while I clear this up.”

Her beautiful sapphire blue eyes gazed up at him with the trust of a child. “Sorry?” she offered again.

“Nothing to be sorry about, sweetie. Just a little accident. Want to watch a DVD?” Nothing could distract Rachel from her problems like a Disney cartoon.

Aristocats?” she asked hopefully.

“How did I know you’d say that?” he teased, and she laughed, no longer trembling. Thanks to the crash that had killed their parents, Rachel was an eight-year-old child trapped in a nineteen-year-old body. But she was slowly improving. Every bit of time she spent doing everyday things like being useful in the kitchen helped those damaged synapses in her brain find new pathways. A year ago she couldn’t fasten the buttons on her blouse, let alone wash dishes and peel potatoes. The specialists had told him she would never be able to return to the person she once was, but Lewis refused to give up hope. Okay, so it was three gradual steps forward and two back, but any progress was a success in his book.

It didn’t take him long to settle her in front of the TV and DVD player kept there for occasions like this, and he hurried back into the kitchen. The timing could not have been worse. He couldn’t have his normally spotless working space in any kind of mess, and stains of food colouring weren’t a good start. With luck on his side, he’d have the place back to normal before his visitor arrived in a couple of hours’ time. Resentment swamped his concern for Rachel, an anger directed at the drunk lorry driver who’d devastated their lives and at Peter McEndry, his ex-lover who’d wrecked everything Lewis had managed to save. Hell, if Peter had walked in the door at that moment, Lewis knew he would have taken the meat cleaver to him. Familiar pain caught in his chest. He’d lost more than family that year. He’d been so tied up in dealing with their parents’ deaths, Rachel’s injuries and her long-term care, and keeping the restaurant on an even keel, he’d left the day-to-day paperwork to Peter.

That had been a monumental mistake.

“You okay, Lew?”

Lewis steeled his expression into one of calm and turned to face his sous-chef. Charlie Davis wasn’t just the man who had his back in the kitchen, he was the friend who had been part of Lewis’s life since he was a teenager. Cockney born and bred, Charlie was the epitome of a Londoner, even though his family had moved to Salisbury fifteen years ago. Lewis privately thought the man liked the reaction he got to the fake edgy personality he sometimes used. To Lewis, though, he was all concern and understanding.

“I’m okay,” Lewis lied. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. This is a fresh start, he told himself. The important debts are paid. We don’t own our own home anymore, but I still have a job, and Rachel is getting better.

“You all set for Trelawney getting here?”

Lewis inhaled sharply as anxiety coiled in his stomach. He noticed the scent of smoke that hung around Charlie, and not from his cigarettes. This was the kind of smell that would linger all day. The kind that could only mean Charlie had been somewhere near his firefighter sister post call-out.

“Don’t tell me. Abby drove you over.”

Charlie sniffed himself and shook his head with a rueful expression on his face. “She came straight from a structure fire on the other side of town, picked me up on the way through.”

“Was everything okay?”

“No one hurt, but the restaurant across town, that popular Italian place, it’s a goner.”

“Seriously?”

“She said something about the roof collapsing. Anyway, stop changing the subject. When does Trelawney arrive?”

Lewis glanced at the kitchen clock. “Two hours.” Even those few words made his chest tighten. He and Rachel used to own everything here—the restaurant, the building itself inherited from their dad—but not anymore. Now every beautiful brick and beam of it belonged to a company on another continent.

“You don’t look okay,” Charlie offered. “You look like you had an argument with a vampire and lost.” He gestured towards Lewis’s chef’s whites and smirked.

“Rachel dropped some bowls and it made me jump, that’s all.”

The amusement disappeared from Charlie’s face, replaced by concern again. “Is she okay?”

Lewis nodded. He didn’t have to explain a thing to Charlie. “Watching Disney in the office. She’s fine. But the pink buttercream icing I was making for her fairy cakes isn’t going to happen now.”

“There was something I wanted to show you,” Charlie said. “It can wait, though, if you need to…” He waved at the scarlet on Lewis’s chest.

Lewis calculated how long it would take to replace his whites and clear up the smashed crockery. “It’s fine, what is it?”

Charlie placed a copy of the Salisbury Journal on the counter and flicked through the pages. “Stan spotted it. He was going to bring it to you himself, but the wine suppliers phoned him so he passed it to me.” He summed up each page as he flicked through. “Arson… benefit fraud… films… here it is.” He pointed at the article given main stage on the comments section. “Local Restaurant Bought by Foreign Investors,” screamed the headline.

Lewis sighed. The journalist who had interviewed him had promised to play up the fact Lewis was staying on as head chef and play down the fact that Laurels was no longer family owned. Seemed like sensationalism won over a gentleman’s agreement. He read on, ignoring the fact that the restaurant that had been the love of his father’s life, owned by the Mandineau family since the seventeen hundreds, had now been lost.

“Shit,” Lewis said with heat. He’d need to get Jim to keep an eye on bookings. Laurels’ maître d’ was a man of many talents; he could probably look at some marketing to reassure potential visitors that nothing was changing. Or was that the new owner’s job now? They were all used to working as a close-knit team here; was Trelawney going to be changing that?

“That’s not what Stan said. It was something disgusting in Polish,” Charlie said. “He’s hopping mad about it. Interesting, though, that the journo picked up the history of this place.”

“It’s probably the only plus.” Lewis was distracted, but that history was in his blood. The restaurant was called Laurels now, but that was only since the 1920s. The building had started out as the Black Bull Tavern in 1446. In 1672 the Mandineau family fled the Huguenot persecutions in France and settled in Salisbury. They bought the tavern, and retained the name until 1837 when Victoria became Queen. Then Rupert Mandineau renovated the tavern and renamed it the Victoria Hotel.

Only Lewis and Stanislav Pleski, Laurels’ sommelier, had real love for the history of this place. Not even Charlie was as immersed in the history as they were. Maybe it was a family thing—Stan was the third generation of Pleskis to work for the Mandineaus and had been a close friend of his father. Then and now he was more like an older brother or favourite uncle to Lewis.

Lewis kept reading. Words such as loss of history and foreign investment jumped out at him. Only at the bottom did the journalist admit the current head chef and former owner wasn’t going anywhere and nothing fundamental was changing. He even added he’d once eaten at the place and it was nice. Nice! “Damning me with faint praise,” Lewis muttered.

Laurels’ reputation for fine cuisine extended far beyond the city of Salisbury, and Lewis didn’t want to lose that. Too many people with jobs depended on him.

“I thought you should know before he arrived.” Charlie placed a hand on Lewis’s arm and squeezed. Lewis leaned into his friend briefly. “I’m going out for a cigarette, then I’ll help you clear up.”

After Charlie left, Lewis sighed and collected the handily placed dustpan and brush, then got down on his knees to begin the clean-up.

It never ceased to astonish him how much mess two plates, bowls and mugs could create when dropped from a height. They weren’t the crockery used by the restaurant, but cheap stuff he’d brought in for the breakfasts he and Rachel always shared here in Laurels. It didn’t matter when the cheap stuff ended up in pieces on the floor because her hands started to shake or a sudden noise frightened her. She loved eating in the luxurious panelled dining room, but would never do so during opening hours. She couldn’t cope with crowds of strangers, and safe routines were the only way to manage her life. So breakfast in style was the order of the day.

On his knees and engrossed in brushing the scattered shards into the dustpan, Lewis didn’t hear the swing door to the dining room open.

“What the hell?” demanded an irritated voice in an American accent. “Where did you hide the body?”

“Body?” Taken by surprise, Lewis looked up, and up. Standing over him was six foot plus of dark-haired dark-eyed scowling male. Lewis scrambled to his feet. This must be Devon Trelawney, from the Trelawney chain of restaurants and hotels and the new owner of Laurels.

“You’re early,” he blurted, set off-balance by the man before him. Devon Trelawney III, eldest son of the Vermont Trelawneys, was actually a lot younger than he’d expected. Somehow he’d imagined that Devon would be a middle-aged man, not a fashion model wannabe with high cheekbones and a brooding frown. Lewis thought the man might even be younger than himself, though that was hard to judge with the signs of jet-lagged exhaustion in the tension lines around his eyes and mouth.

“What happened here?” Devon asked, irritation in his voice.

Devon was staring at his chest, Lewis realised. When he glanced down, he saw why. His whites looked as if he’d cut someone’s throat.

“Oh. Cochineal. It doesn’t matter. I just dropped the bottle when—”

“Looks like you dropped more than a bottle.” Devon crossed his arms over his broad chest and deepened the scowl. “And damage to the restaurant’s property doesn’t matter?”

Intimidating and snarly was not a great look on this man, Lewis decided.

“This doesn’t.” He bit back the sarcastic comment burning his tongue. “They’re my own. I’m Lewis Mandineau, the head chef, and I’m guessing you’re Mr Trelawney?” He stood and held out his hand.

“Devon Trelawney, and I know who you are.” The clasp of hands was so brief it came close to being an insult. Anything else either of them might have said was lost as the swing door burst open and Charlie rushed back in.

“Hey, Lew, get your gay arse outside, there’s a really flash car parked in front—”

“And this is Charles Davis, Laurels’ sous-chef,” Lewis interrupted. The marked area on the street outside Laurels was clearly labelled Loading Only. With any luck, a parking ticket would be looming in the future of his new boss. If the man hadn’t treated his hand as if Lewis was contaminated, he might have advised him to move his car. “Charlie, meet Devon Trelawney.”

“Morning.” Charlie offered his hand and received the same brief shake as Lewis. “Um, shall I make some tea while you two talk important stuff? Or coffee?” he added quickly.

“Coffee, black and sweet,” Devon said crisply. “In the meantime, Mandineau, you can give me the guided tour.” Lewis blinked at the dismissive tone and the order that followed it. He might not own this place anymore, but he expected some respect. Anger coiled inside him, and he hated the feeling. He was the kind of guy who was normally glass half-full, but the last two years had been a challenge to that.

Without the usual urge to be polite and ignoring the desire to go and rid himself of the scarlet-stained whites, he nodded. “I take it you’ve read all the background history that comes with the place?”

“Some of it. So lead on.”

Lewis glanced back at his office. Rachel was in there, and he wasn’t sure he wanted to leave her. Charlie caught his gaze and nodded imperceptibly. His friend had got the message. Rachel would be fine; Lewis just had to jump to the American’s command. Gritting his teeth, Lewis walked out of the kitchen, very conscious of the man at his back. “The kitchen complex is an annex built in the fifties, before the building was Grade II listed,” he said. “In case you don’t know, that means every proposed alteration has to be run past our local planning authority before a thing is done. And whatever repairs or changes are authorised—and there’s no guarantee they will be—have to be done in as close a match to the original as humanly possible, regardless of expense.”

“I know what a listed building is,” Devon said. “Skip the background and give me the facts.”

Great start. Lewis could do succinct. He pressed on. “There are three rooms on the ground floor.” He walked into his favourite room. “This is what we call the Stuart Room.” Normally he would talk about the wall panels, fireplace and ceiling plasterwork all being Jacobean, but now he didn’t bother. “It holds twelve tables, and we have four waitstaff to serve them. The bar in the corner is stocked and run by Stanislav Pleski, our sommelier.” He gazed around the room, seeing anew the pristine white tablecloths and napkins waiting for the cutlery and glasses to be set ready for the lunchtime crowd. They glowed against the dark oak wall panels and the deep red carpet. He felt pride and contentment whenever he was in this space.

Under the critical eye of his father, he and Stan had spent countless hours renovating and refitting the lovely Victorian bar, polishing every inch of its lustrous mahogany surface and brass fittings. Between them they’d pulled off a minor miracle of restoration. Lewis freely admitted that all kudos went to Stan, history fanatic and expert handyman as well as wine expert extraordinaire, even though the poor man had signed off sick halfway through. All the hard, skilled work had been done, and Peter, then his new boyfriend, had helped him finish it in time for Ralph Mandineau’s sixtieth birthday party. One month later, it all went to hell.

“Did you never think you could get at least two more tables in here?” Devon commented, jolting him back to the reality of his situation. He considered what Devon had said, then attempted to answer his new boss in the most politically correct way he could.

“It’s not all about bums on seats,” he began in the most patient tone he could manage. “Yes, we could add in more. But then the staff would find it difficult to safely navigate while carrying plates, and the customers would be feeling cramped and uncomfortable. An uncomfortable customer doesn’t come back.” There, first criticism nipped in the bud. “This way.” Lewis led the way to the long entrance hall, a wide high-ceilinged passageway with a stone-flagged floor and whitened walls between black beams. Highly polished furniture was strategically placed, all of it antique. He spotted Devon trailing a finger over the shelf of the seventeenth-century carved oak court cupboard and waited for some comment about dust. There was nothing.

Lewis loved every inch of this old building and its history. Some small part of him stubbornly decided what the hell and he added in the details. “This bit dates from the eighteenth century. Originally coaches came through here to the stable yard out back,” he continued, relaxing into his story. “It was converted into a foyer just before the First World War, and deliveries now go through the side entrance to the back. Through here is the Tudor Room, called that because, well, it’s Tudor. Most of the linenfold wall panels are original. We hire it out for private functions. We have a small pool of part-time waitstaff we can call on when necessary.”

Devon stuck his head round the door and peered around, frowning. “Okay,” he said, “another twelve tables?”

Devon’s lack of enthusiasm irritated Lewis, so he made no mention of the room’s history. “Yes. Separate or lined up to make one long table for banquets or board meetings.” He carried on down the corridor, Devon trailing behind him. “Customers’ toilets are on your left and so is the Orangery. It’s Victorian, a sunroom,” he added. That was another successful feature of Laurels he and Stan had worked on. “Very popular in spring and summer. Weather permitting, we put a few tables on the patio outside and in the garden. It stretches up to the wall of the Cathedral Close.” He might as well have saved his breath for all the response Devon gave him.

“Okay,” Devon said again. “What about the second-floor rooms?”

“What, the attics?”

“No. The floor above this one.”

“Oh, you mean the first floor.” Okay, that was snide, but he couldn’t resist the temptation. “Four rooms off a central landing. The Long Gallery, the Jacobean, another small room and a bathroom. We only use them for storage; they need too much restoration. They’re mostly Jacobean with Victorian embellishments.”

Devon stopped in his walk and circled the area, looking pointedly up at the ceiling as if he could see the rooms beyond. If he was looking for something wrong, thinking that getting here early would catch Lewis with his pants down, he was sadly mistaken. Pride swelled inside Lewis at the thought that he couldn’t be faulted on anything. Apart from the cochineal.

“I notice the restaurant is only open from noon to eleven Tuesday through Sunday and closed Mondays.” There was censure in Devon’s tone and some irritability.

“That’s right. It gives the staff a break before the rush on Tuesdays because of market day. I also get a day off to plan ahead and visit my suppliers. I buy organic and locally where possible. I don’t buy anything sight unseen.” Devon nodded and Lewis felt like patting himself on the back. The Yank finally seemed to approve of something.

Devon made no more comments, and they returned to the kitchen to find Charlie pouring coffee into fine porcelain cups. The office door stood open. The TV and DVD player were silent, and Rachel was nowhere in sight. Charlie handed Lewis a slip of paper.

“Message for you, Chef,” he said.

Lewis read the scrawled lines. R is in your car watching the DVD on my laptop. She’s fine. He gave his friend a grateful smile.

“Thanks, Charlie.” He screwed the note into a ball and dropped it into his pocket. “All right, Mr Trelawney, shall we talk in my office?”

Chapter Two
The pain between Devon’s eyes increased as they returned to the brightly lit kitchen. He had already been overtired before jet lag worked its evil on him, and the concentration needed to stay awake for the seventy-plus miles from Heathrow to this small city in Wiltshire had just about finished him. The rental agency had promised him the silver BMW would be a dream to drive and worth the extra money, but driving anything was torture. Besides, if he’d pulled over and found a place to stay, his damn headache wouldn’t have let him sleep even if he tried. Despite taking meds, Devon was close to a migraine, and he could feel the press of it in his skull.

“It’s through here,” Lewis said formally and indicated the door at the rear of the kitchen.

He’d seen photos of Lewis, but nothing had prepared Devon for the shock of seeing a gorgeous guy on his knees in front of him, let alone that he had what could easily have been blood splashed across his chef’s whites.

Cochineal. Okay, that spread of red had been the first thing he’d seen, but then he’d noticed the blue eyes, the short brown hair frosted with blond. He wasn’t sure if the scruff on the man’s face was designer stubble or he’d missed shaving for a few days, but it looked good on him. But Devon wasn’t here to drool over the staff. He had work to do, and he couldn’t afford to let one of his migraines push him to his knees. Not caring if he looked like a complete idiot, he pulled sunglasses from his pocket and slid them on to cover his eyes. He saw the questioning expression on the chef’s face but didn’t offer comment. Let him think what he wanted—it wasn’t as if Devon had the mental capacity to care at the moment.

His head was already a mess of history and facts about the place, and he sure as hell wasn’t going to remember Tudor this and Jacobean that. Something about folding doors or ceilings or something. None of it had sunk in. It was enough that he had been able to focus on table arrangement. Even that had the band of hurt tightening.

Blinking at the disturbance collecting in his vision, he attempted to focus on the office itself. The medium-sized room was a haven of normality, apart from the TV and DVD player in one corner and the easy chair in front of it. What the hell?

Before he could be offered one of the regular chairs in front of the desk, he strode around it and sat in the executive chair. It was a simple reinforcement of what Devon was in this equation, one he employed in every situation like this. He wasn’t here to be friends, he was here to see if his father’s acquisition could be streamlined enough to turn a decent profit. And if not, how disposal could be handled. That was all.

Briefly anger replaced the questioning in Lewis’s expression, but he made no comment, just dropped into the nearest chair and waited. Leaning there, all loose and laid-back, he was evidently trying to look like he didn’t care, but there was a telltale tightening of his lips that betrayed his irritation.

With Lewis sprawled in the chair like that, Devon could easily see what his mom had meant when she’d whistled at the photos in the folder on the restaurant. Nice, she’d said in the tone she used whenever she was attempting to be on Devon’s level. It was nice that she was fine with having a gay son, but he drew the line at drooling over pictures with her. Still, she was right. Not that the observation mattered. Lewis was openly gay but he was also one of Devon’s staff, and Devon didn’t dip his pen in the company’s ink.

“Coffee is presented well,” Devon observed. The small cup was on an oval saucer. A silver spoon with the Laurels logo sat on a linen napkin, and a small silver-wrapped chocolate, again with logo, nestled in the pristine white folds.

“It’s tradition to serve it on the oval plates. Started by my dad.”

Devon nodded. Lewis was still affecting not caring, but there were shadows behind his eyes. Devon knew the story: Lewis’s parents dying two years before and financial troubles meant that Trelawney Enterprises had snapped up the restaurant at a bargain price and now owned the place, including the chef in his scarlet-stained whites. He needed to change the subject.

The smell of the coffee was delicious, and Devon’s first sip told him it tasted just as good, if not better. Quality stuff. He drank more, let the caffeine soak into his system and do its thing. Fuck it, he needed some level of concentration.

“Very good. Is this what you serve to the diners?” he asked. “Do the staff normally drink it as well?”

“Of course they do.” Lewis looked and sounded surprised. “Why wouldn’t they?”

“Cost. You run an expensive ship here. Cuts will have to be made and profit margins increased.” Devon knew it was the small things like this that could sink an establishment. Too many staff treats, and suddenly there was a hole in the accounts.

The chef flushed angrily. “That’s ridiculous,” he said, then appeared to regret his outburst. He pressed his lips closed, sat up straighter and clenched his hands together in his lap.

“You and I will work together to make that happen,” Devon continued. God, he needed to get rid of this headache, and he needed to sleep. But he hadn’t even signed into his hotel yet. He knew he was coming across as an overbearing asshole, but right now he couldn’t bring himself to care. This was how he worked. He’d apologise tomorrow. Maybe. The bottom line was Lewis Mandineau wasn’t the boss here anymore. Devon was.

“I’ll want to talk to the staff tomorrow morning, so call a staff meeting at ten am. I’ll then be shadowing your operations for the next week before presenting my comments to the Trelawney board.”

Lewis sat forward in his chair with shock slashed into his expression.

“What the hell?” he snapped. “A week? You’re giving us a week? How the hell can you even begin to see what we are in just seven bloody days?”

Devon schooled his features into calm boredom, an expression he did very well.

“Trelawney Enterprises bought this place because my father respected yours. You were made perfectly aware that, while we appreciate you have an emotional stake in the retention of the restaurant business, the real estate is worth more than Laurels brand. I’m here to assess whether it is in our best interests to continue investment or whether it would make more sense to sell the buildings for development. Either way you win, as you leave debt-free and able to start over somewhere else.”

Lewis paled but said nothing to that last point. He stood. “I understood Trelawney would give us time to prove we were viable.” The words were soft, deceptively so because Devon could see the fierce temper banked in those sapphire eyes.

“Make sure the staff are assembled” was all he said in reply. He stood to face Lewis and handed him his business card. “I’m reachable on my cell number.”

With that he left the office. He had to. The pain in his temples was beginning to affect his vision, and he knew he had about thirty minutes to get himself in a dark room for the next twelve hours. He stalked past Charlie, who smiled uncertainly at him, and was out in fresh air in a few seconds. He climbed into his BMW, pulled the door shut and exhaled noisily. Then he attempted to relax his muscles on the short drive to the White Hart hotel.

Booking in was simple, his room not that far from reception, and the first thing he did was dry-swallow his meds. He closed the drapes and placed the Do Not Disturb sign on the outside door handle, stripped to his boxers and climbed into bed. He wouldn’t sleep for a while, not until the muscle relaxants kicked in, but the dark was a blessed relief. He moved a little to find a cool part of the pillow and let out a low groan at the band of agony fastened tight around his skull.

Damn planes, jet lag, working in low light, straining his eyes! When would he learn?



* * * * *



At some point sleep stole him away from the pain, and when he woke to a still darkened room, he felt marginally better. These damn things were happening way too often. Experimentally he moved in the bed and was able to reach for his cell on the nightstand. He had two missed calls and four texts. The texts he ignored. They were from Tom, and his younger brother was probably just sending him today’s joke, which inevitably came with extra photos and links to websites. He listened to the missed calls. One was his mom reminding him that his dad’s sixtieth birthday meal was only four weeks away and would Devon please write the day in his diary this year as it was important. The other was from his father asking for an update on Laurels.

He called his dad back immediately.

“How did it go?” Devon senior asked without preamble.

“Mandineau isn’t happy.” Devon yawned widely. He wasn’t sure what the time was, and he switched on the TV to find the room settings. Three am UK time. Late evening back in Vermont.

“I didn’t imagine he would be,” his dad said with a sigh. “He’s good at what he does, though, just like his father,” he added. “When Acquisitions agreed to the purchase, they did their due diligence. We were buying into the Mandineau name first and the real estate second, so please take it easy on your usual done-in-a-week approach.”

Devon held his tongue. The senior Trelawney was always saying that Devon should see the potential in people, and it never failed to grate on him. Was it just Devon who understood that whatever the potential, if the numbers didn’t fit into a positive profits profile, then no single person would make the Trelawney board happy? It was like, in the past few years, he was the only one taking the money-making seriously. With Tom in college, Adam, the middle brother, leaving the family business to open a gallery, and his dad constantly saying he was retiring, it sometimes felt to Devon like he was the only sane one in his entire family.

“I’m back there this morning. Tomorrow morning. Shit, seven hours, whatever.”

His dad chuckled. “Go back to sleep, else you’ll get one of your headaches.”

Too late for that, Devon thought, irritated.

“And do me a favour, son, listen to me and give this thing more than your week of doom approach. Look at the staff and the community. I have a good feeling about Laurels and Lewis Mandineau in particular.”

“I can’t promise that if their financials don’t…” Devon stopped. There was no point in arguing when he had residual pain in his temples and his dad was clearly working some weird agenda. “Okay,” he ended.

“Good, good,” Devon senior said with enthusiasm. “We’ll talk later. And do some tourist stuff, see Stonehenge and at least two other places, okay?”

“Stonehenge.”

“Yes.”

“Dad…”

“Bye, son.”

The call ended, and Devon dropped his cell to the bed. There was no way he was going to be able to sleep for the next few hours, not without help. At least this time he managed to swallow the tablets with water. After he clambered into bed, he attempted to clear his head of everything so he could relax back to sleep. He refused to think about Trelawney Enterprises, the board, or Laurels.

Except. That chef. Lewis. He had the most amazingly clear blue eyes.

Competition

Win a $15 gift card and free e-books, 24 October – 7 November

a Rafflecopter giveaway


The Coda series, by Marie Sexton

The Coda series, by Marie Sexton


Exciting News! A new Coda book is to be released 2015 - featuring a brand new couple, but set in Coda, so Matt, Jared, Zach and Angelo will all make an appearance. More news to follow!

* * * * *

Mountain bikers, grumpy cops, playboys, workaholics, slackers and ex-street punks with commitment problems. What do they all have in common?

They all have a place in Coda, Colorado, a tiny town with spectacular scenery (and the mountains aren't bad either).

Whether you live in Coda, visit, or just know folks from your past, you'll find the place accommodating, the passions high, and the romance hot and satisfying.

The List of Books


Promises
A to Z
The Letter Z
Strawberries for Dessert
Paris A to Z
Fear, Hope, and Bread Pudding

This is a very clear article talking about which order to read the books

Buy Links

Quick and Easy Dreamspinner Buy Links

Promises:

Ebook on Amazon: http://amzn.to/fcJxni
At ARe: http://bit.ly/g17YRZ
Audio book at iTunes: http://t.co/D899iKzS
Audio book on Audible: http://goo.gl/Av8mj

A to Z:

Ebook on Amazon: http://amzn.to/hAgc4P
At ARe: http://bit.ly/bQczwZ
Audio book on Audible: http://goo.gl/wBS5X
Audio book on iTunes: http://goo.gl/nYll1

The Letter Z:

Amazon: http://amzn.to/hInnMg
At ARe: http://bit.ly/fXh4u6
Audio book on Audibles: http://goo.gl/cJ6l8
Audio book in iTunes: http://goo.gl/S0w0x

Strawberries for Dessert:

Ebook on Amazon: http://amzn.to/hTYkxV
At ARe: http://bit.ly/fyYlZY
Audio: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?cPath=201&products_id=2848

Paris A to Z:

At Amazon: http://amzn.to/hfq3jq
At ARe: http://bit.ly/e12nIi
Audio book on Audible: http://goo.gl/6yCxB
Audio book on iTunes: http://goo.gl/9TToQ

Bread Pudding:

Marie Sexton (who also writes as A.M. Sexton) lives in Colorado. She’s a fan of just about anything that involves muscular young men piling on top of each other. In particular, she loves the Denver Broncos and enjoys going to the games with her husband. Her imaginary friends often tag along. Marie has one daughter, two cats, and one dog, all of whom seem bent on destroying what remains of her sanity. She loves them anyway.

Visit Marie’s website at http://mariesexton.net/

Heart, by Garrett Leigh

Heart, by Garrett Leigh

Release date: October 27th

The Book


Cornish pastry chef Seb Wright dreads the summer tourist season. The cash injection to his artisan fudge pantry is more than welcome, the extra work, less so. 

Then one summer, a shadowy Good Samaritan catches his eye. Irish Traveller Dex is bewitching, a beautiful sullen enigma who turns Seb's world upside down until he disappears in the night, vanishing like a mystical summer rain. 



Twelve months later Dex is in the midst of a dark storm. A slave to his master, 'Uncle' Braden, he spends his days cleaning caravans and his nights working in Braden's other businesses. His short summer with Seb seems a lifetime ago. 

Lost in the savage violence of the murky underworld, he doesn't dare dream he'll ever find his way back, until one night, a brutal crime opens the door for a chance escape. A new life beckons, old faces emerge, and immersed in the heady vibe of London’s East End, new love begins to heal his fractured heart.

Preorder link


http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=5551

Garrett Leigh

Garrett Leigh is a British writer and book designer, currently working for Dreamspinner Press, Loose Id, Riptide, and Black Jazz Press.

When not writing, Garrett can generally be found procrastinating on Twitter, cooking up a storm, or sitting on her behind doing as little as possible.

Garrett also works as a freelance cover artist for various publishing houses and independent authors under the pseudonym G.D. Leigh. For cover art info, please visit blackjazzpress.com

https://www.twitter.com/Garrett_Leigh

https://www.facebook.com/garrettleighbooks

https://www.garrettleigh.com


Excerpt


Taken from Heart…
Dex never ventured to the front of the shop. Civilized he may have been, but he still looked―and smelled―like the vagrant he was. Instead, when he was done with the cleaning, he invariably turned his hand to packing up the Internet orders Seb had let slide, and it fast became clear he was far better at folding gift boxes and tying ribbons than Seb was, something that didn’t go unnoticed by Nicole.

“Is it me, or are you getting much better at this?” she said one day, holding a box up to the light. “Your boxes usually look like a five-year-old packed them.”

Seb scowled but averted his gaze. He’d neglected to tell Nicole about his regular evening visitor. In fact, he hadn’t told anyone about Dex at all. Distracted, he glanced at the clock. It was nearing 5:30 p.m. and closing time. Time for Nicole to leave and Dex to arrive. Without answering her question, he sent her home and locked the front door, trying to ignore the familiar bubble of excitement in the pit of his stomach.

Because, vagrant or not, and despite Dex’s often sullen silence, there was no denying the growing attraction Seb felt. His shock of angelic hair, his shrewd, intelligent eyes. Even his grubby, nail-bitten hands haunted Seb’s dreams.

Sometimes he thought he imagined the invisible current between them. The half smiles, the lingering looks. The zap of energy when their hands brushed. Other days, he allowed himself to become convinced Dex felt it too. After all, it wasn’t the crappy sandwiches that kept him coming back. It couldn’t be. No one liked Marmite that much. Seb drifted to the kitchen to make Dex’s supper and wondered how he’d feel today.

And wondered, and wondered, as, long after the shop was clean and ready for the next day, the sandwich and obligatory bag of Hula Hoops lay on the counter, untouched.

For the first time in weeks, Dex hadn’t stopped by.



Bloodline - Whyborne and Griffin, Jordan L Hawk

Bloodline - Whyborne and Griffin, Jordan L Hawk

Connect with Jordan L Hawk

Between his bullying father and dissolute brother, Percival Endicott Whyborne has quite enough problematic family members to deal with. So when his sister returns to Widdershins asking for help solving the mystery of a derelict ship, Whyborne is reluctant to get involved. Until, that is, a brutal murderer strikes, leaving Whyborne and his lover Griffin no choice but to take the case.

The investigation leads them deep into a conspiracy of blackmail, murder, and darkest sorcery. But worst of all are the secrets held within the family itself, one of which will destroy everything Whyborne believed to be true, not only about his family, but about himself.


Buy Links:

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00NF5W2LW
ARe: https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-bloodline-1618590-145.html
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/474867


Excerpt:

A part of me hoped the door would be locked. But the knob turned easily under my hand, and I flung it open.

“Here,” I said, not bothering to hide my resignation from him.
He stepped just inside, found the light, then waited for me to join him. I brushed past him with a sigh. The air held a certain musty smell, but the servants cleaned often enough it wasn’t overwhelming. 

“Father chose the decorations,” I said, gesturing to the bloody hunt scenes depicted on the tapestries, the battles woven into the rugs, the swords carved into the mantelpiece. “That’s my paternal grandfather,” I added, indicating the massive portrait facing the bed. As a youth, I’d drawn the bed curtains against the censure of his gaze, while I laid hand to my length at the thought of handsome men.
At least until Leander had died. The boy I’d loved as a youth myself; the guilt of having survived when he died convinced me desire was poison. After, this bed had truly been a prison, a struggle between grief and horror and guilt and longing.
“Not many good memories then?” Griffin asked quietly from behind me.
“No,” I said, grateful not to have to explain. He understood me so well.
The lock on the door clicked sharply.
I turned. He leaned back against the door, a knowing smile on his face. “Then perhaps we should make a better one.”
My heart beat faster. But… “This is my parents’ house!”
He stalked toward me. “It is.”
I swallowed. “Th-there are people here. Downstairs. I mean…”
He reached me and pressed close, so his breath stirred the small hairs beside my ear—and stirred something else, as well. “Yes. The elite of Widdershins, who won’t have the slightest idea I’m sucking you just two floors above their heads.”
Clearly, everything I found to be an objection, he considered a benefit. Desire fogged my thoughts. “A-all right.”
He mouth turned up into a triumphant grin, green eyes flashing at me from under his lashes. “Lie down on the bed.”
My clothes would be in danger of becoming creased—but to the devil with it. We’d sneak down the back stair and leave that way if we ended looking too disreputable. I tugged off my gloves and shed my tailed coat to keep it in decent form, and he did the same.
I pulled him close, kissing him. He tasted of champagne and chocolate cake, mingled with warm male. Griffin returned the kiss, plundering my mouth with his tongue even as he gripped my hips and pulled me tight against him.
“Father thinks you’d be perfectly happy if I were to marry some heiress,” I mumbled against his lips.
Griffin snorted. “Then your father doesn’t know either of us very well, does he?”
Griffin had been with women in the past. Mainly men, but he was not entirely unmoved by the feminine form. I lacked even an aesthetic appreciation, a fact on which my dear friend Christine occasionally teased me.
“No, but I thought he’d entirely washed his hands of me.” And his talk about how sorcery might assist Whyborne Railroad and Industries…what the devil was the man about?
Griffin caught my chin gently in his fingers. “Shh. Quiet your busy mind, Ival.”
The pet name always brought warmth to my chest. “Perhaps you’d best offer it a distraction.”


"Tart With a Heart" - Raising the Rent by JL Merrow

"Tart With a Heart" - Raising the Rent by JL Merrow


Hi, I’m JL Merrow, and I’m delighted to be here today as part of the Raising the Rent blog tour!

Giveaway: I’m offering a $20 Amazon gift certificate to a randomly chosen commenter on the tour. (See here for a full list of the blogs I’ll be guesting on, in case you’ve missed any)

I’ll be making the draw around teatime on Monday 1st September, GMT. Good luck! :D

Never fall in love with a customer—especially if it’s sex you’re selling – Raising the Rent

As befits the oldest profession, there’s a long history of writing about rent boys.

The earliest stories I’ve read myself come from Sins of the Cities of the Plain, by Jack Saul (the cities in question being, of course, Sodom and Gomorrah). The book, one of the first works of gay pornography to appear in English, purports to be the memoirs of a young Mary-Ann, or rent boy, as he frigs, fucks and gamahuches (fellates) his way through Victorian London.

The extent to which sodomy is carried on in London between gentlemen and young fellows is little dreamed of by the outside public.

- Jack Saul, Sins of the Cities of the Plain

So is it fiction, or fact? Undoubtedly, a mixture of both. Known personages are mentioned, such as Boulton and Park, a couple of Victorian cross-dressers who were put on trial in 1871. They were acquitted when it was discovered that cross-dressing was not, in fact, a crime—which must have led to a few red faces from the prosecution! ;)


Another early(ish) work, Jean Genet’s influential “epic of masturbation” Our Lady of the Flowers, written in prison in 1943, tells of a male prostitute who comes to a tragic end. In fact the tragic end is something of a feature in rent boy tales, particularly those of a more literary, ahem, bent.

But what about a happy ending for our fictional renters that actually turns into a happy ever after?

The idea of a prostitute finding love with a customer is, of course, not new—Verdi’s La Traviata (literally, the fallen woman) is a courtesan who sacrifices herself for the love of a client. Yes, female prostitutes get their fair share of unhappy endings in fiction, too.

Still, there’s always Pretty Woman. That, of course, was at heart a re-telling of the Cinderella tale, with the lowly “working girl” swept off her feet and saved from a life of, shall we say, menial work by the modern version of a handsome prince.

I’d like to think there’s a little more equality between my heroes; Nathan may be young and poor, but he doesn’t plan to stay that way, and his plans don’t rely on any sugar daddies. Stephen, for his part, wouldn’t be half so interested in Nathan in a romantic sense if it weren’t for his determination to make something of himself.

***

Question: do you have a favourite fictional depiction of a prostitute in a book, film, theatre or any other art form? Did the prostitute get their happy ever after?

***

JL Merrow is that rare beast, an English person who refuses to drink tea. She writes across genres, with a preference for contemporary gay romance, and is frequently accused of humour. Her novel Slam! won the 2013 Rainbow Award for Best LGBT Romantic Comedy.

She is a member of the UK GLBTQ Fiction Meet organising team.

Find JL Merrow online at: www.jlmerrow.com, on Twitter as @jlmerrow, and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/jl.merrow


***

Never fall in love with a customer—especially if it’s sex you’re selling

Rent boy Nathan’s determined to get an education and get off the streets for good. But when he turns up for his first day at college he’s horrified to find his English teacher is one of his regular customers: Stephen, the one Nathan dubbed The Voice because of his educated, honeyed tones.

Stephen’s just as shocked to see Nathan sitting in his class, not to mention terrified he’s about to be exposed as having paid for sex with a student. This could mean public humiliation and maybe the loss of his job. But when Nathan shows he’s only interested in getting his A Levels, not in blackmail, Stephen realises there’s more to the nineteen-year-old than meets the eye.

Nathan still has to earn a living, though—and when a customer turns ugly, he finds himself unable to work and homeless as well. Stephen steps in to help, and Nathan starts to think they could have a future together—but Stephen’s guilt and lack of trust could end this back-to-front romance before it even starts.

Warning: Contains unfashionable haircuts, unreasonably long words and a May-December romance between a not-so-streetwise rent boy and an erudite English teacher.

Samhain | Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk



Out Of Time, by Clare London – New Release

Out Of Time, by Clare London – New Release

Is immortality a dream or a curse?

Ambrus travels in space and time, a mature and confident vampire, not looking for any permanent companion.

Then in the bloody trenches of WWI, he meets Edward, a beautiful young soldier turned vampire against his will and fighting his fate with bitter anger and resentment. Ambrus is irresistibly drawn to him but Edward rejects him at first.

What then follows is an anguished and erotic courtship throughout the century, as Ambrus seeks to help Edward find his own way to peace as an immortal, and Edward learns what real love–and a real lover–is.

Buy Links:

  amazon.com / amazon.co.uk / all romance ebooks

Excerpt

© Clare London

“Are you a Jerry? You bastard, creeping up on me. Filthy, sodding coward!” He spat the words at me and I saw him glance swiftly at the ground either side of him, looking for a serviceable weapon. Unable to find anything, he glared back at me, confusion tangled in with his fear. “You don’t dress like one.” He frowned. “Where’s your rifle? You don’t dress right at all.”

His accent was coarse, his fright making him clumsy with speech. I concentrated more carefully, strengthening my image, making sure he would notice the points of similarity between us and not the anomalies. “I am not your enemy.”

His face went pale under the dirt. “You’re not my friend, neither. I’m not a fucking idiot, you know.”

I nodded. “You are far from that. I can help you, too–”

“Piss off!” He scrambled to his feet, panting. “It was you! Was it you?” He struggled to stay upright, his legs weak. “Damn you, damn you, make it stop…” The breath he sucked in didn’t seem enough for him–his chest dipped up and down, the movements desperate and shallow. His pupils were dilated, I could see that very clearly as he stared at me. He was alert, but barely coherent. Barely there.

“It wasn’t me.” I stared back at him, my gaze fierce, determined that he should understand that, if nothing else. It mattered to me–strangely, suddenly–that he should know I cared. “Calm down, or things will feel even worse. I was not the one who did this to you.”

He shook his head, rocking on his heels. His hands fisted then opened again, the palms lifted toward me, the gesture pitiful. “Look at me! Look at you.” He peered at me, searching my face, my form, his expression becoming even more confused. There were tears in his eyes, now. “Fucking cowards…What are you? You are…you’re not…”
It was pitiful, both to see and hear him in this transitory state. I had no idea who might have passed through here before me, but this job had been ill done, and someone should pay for that. “It does not matter what I am. Do you remember who did this? Do you remember him?”

The young soldier flushed and I knew I had been correct in my assumption that it was a man. “No. Yes. He was…He came in the night, when I was caught under fire, over by the ridge. It was dark. He didn’t listen to me…touched me.” He frowned, anguished at the memory of what would have been his utter helplessness. “I can’t remember his name or how he looked. I tried not to want it…But then I did. I wasn’t fucking scared, you know? No one’s ever going to say I was scared.” His eyes rolled up in his head and I thought he would pass out, but his gaze came back to me, steady again. His pupils glittered with a new slyness. “You know, don’t you? Tell me. What’s happened to me?”

I took a step forward. I wanted to touch him and draw him far closer than was necessary, compared to the other men I took. The stark ferocity of my desire shocked me. How long had it been since I felt that way? It led to vulnerability and pain, I knew that too well. And what was I thinking I’d gain? He was a beautiful young man but he was unregulated and out of control here. I ran my eyes up and down his body. I didn’t mistake the gentle swell of cock beneath the coarse fabric of his uniform. Blood pumped faster in my veins.

“You are responding to me, it’s natural you should. It can feel good–it will feel good. Believe me.” I lifted my arms up slightly from my sides, displaying myself. “Do you want me?” With more concentration, I showed myself to him, shifting the image, making him realize what I was offering. Ecstasy; passion; the best of its kind. The gentle tang of arousal lifted from him like morning dew. Excitement rose in me, thick and thrilling. Yes, he would be willing. I would welcome his body, and I would create joy in return that he couldn’t possibly imagine. I could raise light in this unholy darkness; I could deafen him to the distant gunfire; I could overwhelm the stench of rot in his nostrils with the thick, rich aroma of something that would give him life, not death…

When he laughed, it startled me. It was a harsh, unhappy sound, and a response I hadn’t expected. “You’re fucking mad, mate.” He glared at me. “You want to get me shot?”

“No,” I said quietly. “But that’s what you want, isn’t it?”

He grimaced. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Whatever is in you, it’s new and it hurts,” I continued. I took another step toward him. “It disgusts. It terrifies. It has been growing inside you like a parasite. And it demands things of you. Up until now, you haven’t thought of any way to escape it, except to die.” I glanced at the body at his feet. Its head was thrown back, the pale neck exposed. There was a single trail of liquid running from under the jaw–in the dim light, it showed black against the marble-like white of a corpse’s skin, glinting against the dull husk of lifeless flesh. “You wish you had been hit instead of him.”

His eyes went wide, the whites gleaming around the irises. “How the hell do you know that?”

I shrugged. He would understand his inherited abilities, one day soon. “You can come with me, if you want. I will ease it for you. I will show you what pleasure you can find, what compensation there can be.” I was only a foot away from him and I could smell the sweat on him: see it glinting in the hollow of his throat where he’d opened the top button of his jacket. He was fresh–aching. Truly gorgeous. When I reached out and touched his face, he didn’t pull away but he flinched. “I don’t offer to everyone,” I murmured, piqued. It had been a long time since I’d been resisted, yet an even longer time since I’d been interested enough in a man to offer him companionship. Sex was far easier; far less intimate. The young soldier’s gaze was fixed on my face and I could hear his heart beating very fast. A beautiful, sincere, passionate heart, but now darkened beyond rescue. When the lights flared briefly on the horizon behind him, they lit a corona around his head–a momentary, mocking halo. “You want me,” I persisted. My tone held a plea, something I hadn’t utilized for many ages. “You want to be with me. It will be glorious.”

“Yes, I know,” he whispered, his eyes closing. When I ran my fingers along his top lip, he shuddered. I slipped my thumb into his mouth and let him suck at the stray drop of thick, viscous blood I had wiped from his own mouth. He had been clumsy with the fresh corpse; too greedy with his victim. New travellers so often were. Desperation and disgust, I could feel them both in the beat of his pulse. I would teach him how he should deal with his new life.

“But I won’t go with you,” he said, so softly that I had to lean over to hear.

Clare London Bio:


Clare took the pen name London from the city where she lives, loves, and writes. A lone, brave female in a frenetic, testosterone-fuelled family home, she juggles her writing with the weekly wash, waiting for the far distant day when she can afford to give up her day job as an accountant. She’s written in many genres and across many settings, with novels and short stories published both online and in print. She says she likes variety in her writing while friends say she’s just fickle, but as long as both theories spawn good fiction, she’s happy. Most of her work features male/male romance and drama with a healthy serving of physical passion, as she enjoys both reading and writing about strong, sympathetic and sexy characters.

Clare currently has several novels sulking at that tricky chapter 3 stage and plenty of other projects in mind . . . she just has to find out where she left them in that frenetic, testosterone-fuelled family home.

All the details and free fiction are available at her website. Visit her today and say hello!

Pulling Leather- LC Chase

Pulling Leather- LC Chase

The toughest ride of his life is all in his head.

Bull rider Scott Gillard has a reputation for quick fists and harsh words. What no one knows is where that anger comes from. After a shocking incident sends him into a tailspin, he knows he needs help: he’s been fighting a battle he could never win. Now he’s trying to navigate a new life and embrace his true self, but some days are easier than others.

Pickup man Cory Ackerson has suffered his share of harassment, but his light still burns bright. He doesn’t let anything or anyone keep him down, so when he meets the rugged cowboy with a battered chip on his shoulder and regret in his dark eyes, all he wants to do is help.

As their unlikely friendship grows into something deeper, Scott must overcome his past to be the man Cory deserves, or lose his best chance at his own happily ever after.

You can read an excerpt and purchase Pulling Leather at Riptide Publishing, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, and All Romance eBooks!

* * *

About L.C. Chase:

Cover artist by day, author by night, L.C. Chase is a hopeless romantic and adventure seeker. When not writing sensual tales of beautiful men falling love, she can be found designing book covers with said beautiful men, drawing, horseback riding, or hiking the trails with her goofy four-legged roommate.

L.C. is a 2014 Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Pickup Men; a 2013 EPIC eBook Awards Finalist for Long Tall Drink; and a 2013-2014 Ariana eBook Cover Art Awards Finalist. She also won an honorable mention in the 2012 Rainbow Awards for Riding with Heaven.

You can find out more about L.C., story extras, works in progress, and cover designs at her website, on her blog, or on Google+, Twitter and Goodreads. L.C. is also a proud member of Art= a collective of artists who donate a portion of their art sales to GLBTQ charities.


The Plumber’s Mate Series, by JL Merrow

The Plumber’s Mate Series, by JL Merrow

Some secrets are better left hidden.


To most of the world, Tom Paretski is just a plumber with a cheeky attitude and a dodgy hip, souvenir of a schoolboy accident. The local police keep his number on file for a different reason—his sixth sense for finding hidden things.

When he’s called in to help locate the body of a missing woman up on Nomansland Common, he unexpectedly encounters someone who resurrects a host of complicated emotions. Phil Morrison, Tom’s old school crush, now a private investigator working the same case. And the former bully partly responsible for Tom’s injury.

The shocks keep coming. Phil is now openly gay, and shows unmistakable signs of interest. Tom’s attraction to the big, blond investigator hasn’t changed—in fact, he’s even more desirable all grown up. But is Phil’s interest genuine, or does he only want to use Tom’s talent?

As the pile of complicated evidence surrounding the woman’s murder grows higher, so does the heat between Tom and Phil. But opening himself to this degree exposes Tom’s heart in a way he’s not sure he’s ready for…while the murderer’s trigger finger is getting increasingly twitchy.
Product Warnings

Contains a flirtatious plumber with hidden talents, a cashmere-clad private investigator with hidden depths, and an English village chock full of colourful characters with plenty to hide.

Runner-up in the 2013 Rainbow Awards category Best Gay Mystery/Thriller.

Samhain Publishing | Amazon.com |Amazon.co.uk



If you dig up the past, be prepared to get dirty

It hasn’t been all smooth sailing since plumber Tom Paretski and P.I. Phil Morrison became connected at the heart, if not always at Tom’s dodgy hip. Neither of their families has been shy about voicing their disapproval, which hasn’t helped Tom’s uneasy relationship with his prickly older sister, Cherry.

But when Cherry is poisoned at her own engagement party, the horror of her near death has Tom’s head spinning with possible culprits. Is it her fiancé Gregory, a cathedral canon with an unfortunate manner and an alarming taste for taxidermy? Someone from her old writers’ circle, which she left after a row? Or could the attack be connected to her work as a barrister?

Phil is just as desperate to solve the case before someone ends up dead—and he fears it could be Tom. At least one of their suspects has a dark secret to hide, which makes Tom’s sixth sense for finding things like a target painted on his back…

Warning: Contains a strong, silent, macho PI; a cheeky, chirpy, cat-owning plumber; and a gag gift from beyond the grave that’ll put the cat firmly among the pigeons.

Honorable Mention and Finalist in the 2014 Rainbow Awards category Best Gay Mystery/Thriller.

Samhain Publishing | Amazon.com |Amazon.co.uk

And coming in March 2015:

The wrong secret could flush their love down the drain

It’s been six months since plumber Tom Paretski was hit with a shocking revelation about his family. His lover, P.I. Phil Morrison, is pushing this as an ideal opportunity for Tom to try to develop his psychic talent for finding things. Tom would prefer to avoid the subject altogether, but just as he decides to bite the bullet, worse problems come crawling out of the woodwork.

Marianne, a young barmaid at the Devil’s Dyke pub, has an ex who won’t accept things are over between them. Grant Carey is ruthless in dealing with anyone who gets between him and Marianne, including an old friend of Tom and Phil. Their eagerness to step in and help only makes them targets of Grant’s wrath themselves.

With Tom’s uncertainty about Phil’s motives, Tom’s family doing their best to drive a wedge between them, and the revelation of an ugly incident in Phil’s past, suddenly Tom’s not sure whom he can trust.

The body in the Dyke’s cellar isn’t the only thing that stinks.

Warning: Contains British slang, a very un-British heat wave, and a plumber with a psychic gift who may not be as British as he thinks he is.

Due out from Samhain Publishing 17th March 2015.

***

Connect with JL Merrow


JL Merrow is that rare beast, an English person who refuses to drink tea. She writes across genres, with a preference for contemporary gay romance, and is frequently accused of humour. Her novel Slam! won the 2013 Rainbow Award for Best LGBT Romantic Comedy.

She is a member of the UK GLBTQ Fiction Meet organising team.

Find JL Merrow online at: www.jlmerrow.com, on Twitter as @jlmerrow, and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/jl.merrow



Sue Brown

Sue Brown

Sometimes when I write, I have early episodes of a long-running series on in the background because they’re on endless repeat and I don’t have to concentrate on them.

The episodes were first aired in the mid-noughties. I’m not going to name and shame, but I’m shocked at the overt homophobia and transphobia that permeates the episodes.

When I’m not watching the screen somehow the words become sharper and more in context. They whooshed over my head when I first watched the series. Now I hear it, and I’m ashamed I didn’t understand it before.

Two years before this came out, a British cop show, The Bill, had an openly gay policeman and a storyline with a young policeman struggling with his sexual identity. I only appreciate now that it covered some powerful storylines and didn’t hold back on cultural attitudes of the era.

I still watch the American series and I’ve seen the attitude and the scripts change. They’re much more respectful of LGBT people now. Sadly no major gay characters. Heaven forbid they would have evolved that far. But at least gay people are generally not treated as if they are diseased or have two heads. It will be good when gay characters just ‘are’, rather than something unusual.

As I typed this I started to watch an episode of the series. A later one, I checked. Oh yuk, they’re making a comment about sweaty woman on woman action. Maybe it hasn’t changed that much at all.


Hissed as a Newt 


Book 2 in the With A Kick series

A drunk clown rolling around in the gutter is not what David Wright expects to find as he walks to With A Kick, his favourite ice-cream shop. David has had a lousy day. A literary agent has crushed his dreams and all he wants is the consolation of alcoholic ice-cream. He’s about to walk away when he realises the clown has been dumped by his boyfriend. On a whim, David takes the clown into With A Kick before he gets arrested. Underneath the smeared make-up, he meets Stan, who has just discovered his boyfriend and best friend getting more than friendly. Over ice-cream, David and Stan discuss their problems and discover maybe they can help each other.

Excerpt

As he turned the corner into Covent Garden he noticed a small crowd had gathered, obstructing his path to alcoholic heaven. He huffed as he negotiated kids, parents and tourists with their cameras snapping incessantly. A large crowd was assembled in one corner and he expected to see a street performer in their midst, juggling or miming—or whatever other crap they called art. David was curious enough to walk over and take a look. It was indeed a street performer, a clown in fact, but the bloke wasn’t juggling or miming, he rolled around in the road, arms flailing as he mumbled to himself. David’s lip curled as he realised the clown was drunk; absolutely paralytic in fact. Lucky bugger!

“It’s a strange show, Vera,” an old man standing next to David commented to his wife.

She sniffed in agreement. “Nothing like our day, Bert. They were true artistes.”

The couple moved away, the woman still complaining.

The man in the road rolled over onto his side and vomited. A groan of disgust rippled through the crowd and they moved away en masse.

David was about to do the same when he caught the man’s words.

“I loved you, you fucking bastard. I loved you and you cheated on me.”

Bastard, not bitch. Huh.

Cursing his impulsive nature, David knelt by the man, careful to avoid the puke. “Are you all right?”

The man mumbled incoherently. His makeup was smeared, and David realised he’d been crying. At the moment he looked more like an Allison Schulnik painting than a clown.

“You really need to get out of the road, man.”

“Leave me in the gutter.”

Oh Jesus, a drama queen. “Listen mate, you can stay here if you want but you’re liable to be nicked. Why don’t you get up and come with me? I want to drown my sorrows. We can cry on each other’s shoulders.”

The clown opened one eye. It would have been a pretty, blue eye if it hadn’t been so bloodshot. “A drink?”

“Don’t you think you’ve had enough?”

“Probably.” With David’s help the clown sat up then clutched his stomach. “Definitely. I’m going to puke again.”

Make sure you catch up with the first book in the series: A Twist and Two Balls by Clare London.

{AT&TWB cover}



About Sue Brown


Sue Brown is owned by her dog and two children. When she isn't following their orders, she can be found plotting at her laptop. In fact she hides so she can plot, and has become at ignoring the orders.

Sue discovered M/M erotica at the time she woke up to find two men kissing on her favorite television series. The series was boring; the kissing was not. She may be late to the party, but she's made up for it since, writing fan fiction until she was brave enough to venture out into the world of original fiction.

Come over and talk to Sue at suebrown.stories@gmail.com.

Her website can be found at http://www.suebrownstories.com/

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/suebrownstories

Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/suebrownstories

Blog: http://suebrownsstories.blogspot.com/

Email: suebrown.stories@gmail.com