luninosity: (Default)

Free for a couple more hours -

today’s my turn to be the free brand-new story in the JMS Books Advent Calendar!

Free today, the 15th (EST time) only - “You and Me and Atmosphere,” my *very* long-distance romance between an artist and an astronaut! (And also what happens when Alex finally comes home, and Jake has a certain question in mind…)

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Out today - my next flash-fic m/m romance short story, "Patches"! It's basically first-meeting fluff with a musician, a new house, an interior designer, and a cat (or two)!

And it's only $1.12 if you order directly from JMS Books - on new release sale! Also available at Amazon, etc, of course. Enjoy the fluff!

JMS Books

Amazon

(I did not have cover input - JMS only has four pre-made covers for the flash fic length stories, so we get one of them!)


luninosity: (adventure)
As a distraction from Election Day, would you like two small snippets of scenes that didn't make it into the final version of In Focus? They're both about family and Sam and Leo and adorableness.

1 - names

Sam, working on a small amount of research for the Steadfast behind-the-scenes book—he was doing some of the writing, though it was mostly a photo archive—opened up Leo’s IMDB page. He’d meant to check an older movie title, because he wanted to mention previous historical roles.

And then he stopped, fingers on the laptop keyboard.

Surely that wasn’t true. Definitely not. He was pretty sure.

He stared at the entry. It refused to change.

He tried googling. Most of the internet seemed to be in agreement about Leo’s name being, well, Leo. But of course it was, professionally. And a couple of those sites did match the IMDB listing. So now Sam really wasn’t sure.

He knew Leo would be out late, or at least for dinner and drinks after that table read: bonding with castmates. Sam had told him to go ahead, having work to do in any case.

He drummed his fingers over the laptop. Silly question. Not actually important for his immediate project.

The afternoon lay plush and rainbow-hued across his shoulders. Leo’s house—their house, now, in so many ways—and the purple teacup that’d become Sam’s. The yellow kitchen wall, and the blue one, out in the living room space. Their snowglobe on a table. The rock collection, polished and shimmering in rich hues of earth and pearl and sand, framed by round glass curves.

Sam smiled to himself and to the teacup; and tucked a foot into the rung of the kitchen chair; and went back to poking at captions. But he kept the question around, hovering, just out of curiosity.

He forgot to eat, being caught up in art. Leo’s text buzzed against his arm, and he jumped. Did you find something for dinner? I’m bringing home food!

You are?

It was really only drinks and appetizers; everyone’s had a long day. So I’ve spent an indecent amount of time thinking about jerk chicken from that Jamaican place we found. Fried plantains?

Of course fried plantains, if you’re offering. I could order in, if you’re tired.

I’ve got it, Leo answered. Home in a few! That one came with a heart and a banana emoji, which was probably meant to be either a comment on the plantains or innuendo or both.

Love you and your banana, Sam sent back, and got up, stretching. He found the key lime sparkling water because that was Leo’s current favorite, and also the good scotch in case it’d been a very long day; he cleaned the table and moved his laptop.

He might need an office. A studio. Sometime. No hurry. This remained new. Easy, warm, moving together as if they’d always been made to; but still, only just begun.

Leo came in smiling, juggling takeaway and a shoulder bag, a swirl of long dark coat and fluffy blond hair and jerk spices. Sam kissed him, rescued various foods, kissed him again. Leo’s mouth was sweet and eager and lip-balm flavored, this one honey-vanilla and expensive; Sam tasted him and thought about sugar and spice and fitting together, melting together, home.

After food, tucked into the coziness of the colorful sofa, a bit too full for spectacular sex at the moment, he ran fingers through Leo’s hair. They’d already talked about their respective days, everything from book cover layouts to laughter at Leo’s reenactment of a dramatic moment during the table read, cast and directors doing their own sound effects for fun, for a spaceship crash. “Hey, can I ask you a question?”

“I haven’t ordered the tentacle dildo yet,” Leo said into his chest, with a kiss, “but I will. Purple, or green?”

“You look good in green. I also had some ideas about my spare hairbrush. The wooden one.” He felt Leo nod against his shoulder; sensation, bright and sharp, generally got a yes. “But later. This’s just kind of random, but I was wondering…I was looking up your IMDB page, just checking a title, and it said…your name’s not Leopold, is it?”

Leo groaned, laughed, stuck his face into Sam’s neck for a moment. “Oh, fuck, that’s not up there again, is it? Someone keeps doing that…”

“Is that really your name?”

“No.” Leo sat up more, eyes and mouth amused, exasperated, entertained. “That rumor’s been persistent, ever since some big-name publication got it wrong years ago, and that was supposedly a reliable source, so it keeps popping up… not that I don’t encourage it, mind. I do. Actively, with the fans. Leopold, Leonard, Leonidas, whatever else they’d come up with. Or I used to encourage that; it’s been a while. But no, it truly is just Leo. Mum liked it.”

“I like it, too.”

“Leo Sebastian Whyte. They get the middle name right, usually. It’s from Shakespeare. Twelfth Night. In retrospect, given that particular play, Mum and Dad might’ve guessed I’d end up bisexual.”

“Leo Sebastian,” Sam said. “Cats and Shakespeare.”

Leo laughed more. Relaxed, glorious, wearing a brazenly orange knit sweater, unselfconscious: fuck, Sam adored him. “If I were a girl I’d’ve been Leonie Viola, Mum said once.” He paused; the emotion washed through his face, a shift, a brief tidal pull. “I know they always wanted at least one more. More than just me. I know they tried for a while, they were hoping, I knew that when I was fairly young…they even asked whether I’d want to be a big brother…it just didn’t…I don’t really know why it didn’t work. But they’ve got our whole family, now.”

Our family, Sam thought. God, I love you. So much. With everything I am.

He’d also heard the unspoken words about not being enough, about parents who’d hoped for more children, about younger Leo being very aware that he wasn’t all they’d wanted to complete their family.

He said aloud, “They absolutely do. All of us. And your parents adore you. Sometimes with onion, apricot, and jalapeño tofu.”

“I love my father,” Leo said, draping himself back across Sam, finding a blue-and-white striped blanket with his toes, “and so do you. He was trying something new, for my diet. Which I cheat on, anyway.”

Sam could’ve pointed out that Leo did not need to lose weight, but they’d had that discussion; it wasn’t an unhealthy sort of problem, just that Leo wanted to shed a couple of pounds after the press tour and before a skin-tight space jumpsuit and, later, a shirtless scene. He let it go now, though he would take care of his Leo, without question. In every way. “I like Viola.”

“Mmm. Did you want to take me upstairs and do dreadful wonderful things to my naked body, yet?” Leo paused again. “Wait. You meant that.”

“Not, like, right this second,” Sam said. “But…y’know. We talked about kids.”

Leo stared at him, eyes like astonishment, sunrise, forests quivering under dawning light.

Sam reached out—couldn’t not reach out—and touched his cheek, that enchanting enchanted expression. “We can think about it. Viola Carmen, maybe. For—for my mom. If that’s, y’know. Where we end up. In a couple years.”

“Yes.” Leo’s whole face shone with it. “Yes. Exactly that.”

“We can make a list, when we get there. We don’t have to decide, like, right now. No rush.”

“Agreed.” Leo turned his head, kissed Sam’s palm. “We’ve got time. But…I do think we’ll like that one, even given a couple of years. I think it’s right.”

 

2 - family

The high-school swim meet was happening. Chlorine and water and sunshine in the air. Shouts and whistles and starting-noises. Splashes and flips.

Sam had done this before, being an excellently supportive older brother and guardian who went to all his sisters’ swim meets and journalism club awards ceremonies. He loved it, and said so: cheering for his family, being here for them, wanting them to know he always would be.

Leo had not done this before. Leo, unsurprisingly, loved every chlorinated drop of water and every blue-and-gold Chargers pennant to wave and every supportive t-shirt and sticker at the team’s fundraising table. Leo had happily bounced to both feet and cheered wildly at Thea’s first-place finish in the backstroke leg of the relay, a few minutes ago, and then again at the end when her team had, naturally, won.

Leo beamed at him now, eyes big and hazel, hair gold in the afternoon sun. They were sitting very close on very uncomfortable bleachers. Sam could almost taste the honey of Leo’s lip balm, the coconut in that hair, the tropical fruit of Leo’s favorite scent.

Leo’s sweater, over faded jeans, was new: one of his own early prototype designs, oversized, striped in blue and green with small gold-coral accents around the sleeves, neck, hem. He looked adorable and cuddly and colorful; Sam, also wearing a prototype design, a shirt in a calmer deep red and rose-pink, wanted to scoop him up and nibble all the lip balm away.

He said, “Sunblock?”

“Oh, thanks, yes.” Leo did have the sort of English fairness that did not tan well, and the sun wanted to cuddle him too. He ended up with a smudge of white on his nose; Sam helped.

The current crop of swimmers was doing an event involving butterfly. Thea would be back out momentarily for a proper backstroke event; Sam and Leo would cheer even more loudly. Diana was also around, chatting with the team: being a responsible journalist as well as twin sister support.

Leo offered, in the lull, “How many shirts would be an embarrassing number to buy, do you think? They’ve also got home-made chocolate-chip biscuits. Er. Cookies.”

“I know which mom makes those, and they’re super-dry. Don’t do it.”

“It’s in a good cause, isn’t it?”

“Yeah, but you don’t have to suffer.” One of the other parents—also a veteran of the swim team fundraisers—stifled a laugh, behind them.

“I could volunteer some baked goods, next time,” Leo mused. “Or even a shift manning the stall. Not to step on anyone’s toes, of course; I’d figure out something interesting and different from any current offerings. I’m not terrible at baking, and I could ask about Colby’s ginger biscuit recipe.”

The parent behind them made an interested sound, at that.

Sam squeezed Leo’s hand, in his. “If you want, yeah. They’d love some help. But you don’t have to.”

A few people had already recognized Leo Whyte. Sam had caught the whispers, the turned heads. Hadn’t been immediate—lots of family and friends, lots of bodies here as support, and Leo drew attention by virtue of colorful charisma but not instant Colby Kent-level recognition—but the susurration had grown.

Sam had gotten to know a few of the other parents, guardians, responsible adults, over the last couple years, at least to the extent of a friendly nod and fundraiser support and shared commiseration about six am swim practice scheduling. He’d introduced Leo to the ones he’d thought would be the most calm about that fact, and it’d gone pretty well, other than Amber’s mom asking whether Leo had an opinion on local Las Vegas club teams versus Hollywood and Los Angeles and beach culture, with the gleam of a parent focused on Junior Nationals.

Sam had been prepared to deflect, but Leo had said, “Well, you see, until recently I’ve lived in London, so I’m afraid I don’t know much that might help, but please tell me about it, I’m sure you’ve done your research?” and Karyn had indeed told him about it, and in the process talked herself into making a decision about coaches.

Leo’s voice had been a giveaway, if the movie-star handsomeness hadn’t been enough. Theater-trained, Shakespeare-polished, Castlereigh-famous even though Leo said he wasn’t the star. Jane Austen and sailing ships. The Napoleonic Wars and dry space-villain Doctor Cosmos sarcasm. The second he’d said hello, a few more heads had turned.

Someone’s older sister, wearing a Star Wars shirt, had stared at Leo bashfully, with the expression of a science-fiction fan who’d committed to memory several of Leo’s most famous lines as that space-time devoted antagonist who just might be in love with the hero. Leo had waved. She’d inched closer and whispered, “Can I…if you’re not busy…?” and held up her phone, right there on a concrete-and-brick everyday high-school pool deck next to the bleachers.

Leo had taken the photo with her. Grinning ear to ear. Of course.

“I’m happy to,” Leo said now, answering Sam’s comment, “I honestly do love this—it’s a whole new adventure, isn’t it, all of our family in this together, and of course we’ll help out with the newspaper fundraiser too, and the National Honor Society leadership meeting, helping set everything up for that scholarship essay workshop, and also if any of them would like to earn volunteer hours through Colby’s literacy foundation, we could—”

Sam lifted Leo’s hand, in his; pressed a kiss to the back of it.

Leo stopped talking, startled by affection.

“I just want you to know,” Sam said, “you’re the best sparkly rock I could ever pick up and take home and keep.”

“You didn’t collect rocks.” Leo’s eyes danced. “Until me. Us. We do that, now.”

“Yep.”

“Annika next door asked whether we could watch her cat, two weeks from Tuesday, when she’s going to Napa for her daughter’s engagement party.”

“I didn’t even know her daughter was getting married.”

“To an absolutely genius vintner and wine exporter, or so Annika says. Caroline and Jessalyn will be brilliant and revolutionize the wine industry, apparently.”

“Of course they will.” Of course Leo knew all of that, already, within five minutes of chatting, even when Sam hadn’t known; of course Leo did. Because that was exactly what Leo did: loving the world, learning about the world, fascinated by the world.

Best Supporting Actor. Always. Supporting everyone, from high-school swim teams to neighbors who needed cat-watching. Sam wanted to tackle his other half back into the stands and shove Leo’s comfortable-but-trendy jeans down and show Leo exactly how much the world should damn well appreciate him right back.

“Oh!” Leo was looking at the schedule. “We’re next! The backstroke! Well, not next-next—there’s the first heat, first. But she’s in the second and last heat, in the center—that means she’s the favorite, right? Based on the times we saw up on the wall? So we’ve got the first, and then we’re up!”

“Yeah.” Sam squeezed that hand in his, again: Leo, here with him. Their family. It swept over him and through him like a cheerleader’s routine, a wave, a wild impulse to shout and jump and leap. Their family. Their wins, their victories. Their joy. “We’re up.”



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It’s funny, I’d actually been putting off making this post, even though of course I’m thrilled at the book release and seeing Sam and Leo get their happy ending! But it comes with a lot of feelings.

But, first – yes, In Focus is out now! Book two of two, of the Character Study duology – in which supporting actor Leo and photographer Sam meet each other’s families (including Benvolio the cat!), and navigate press tours and coming out, and help their friends when a crisis happens, and find their happy ending!

(Amazon link here!) (JMS Books link here!)

It’s got a lot of emotions because it’s really the last story in the whole Character Bleed universe (as far as I know, anyway) – the original Colby/Jason trilogy, all the bonus stories, and this spin-off because Leo demanded his own book…I’ve had these characters living in my head and being excitedly loud in my writer-brain for so many years. They’re friends. I’ve written little crossovers with some of my favorite other characters – with Colby and Jason meeting Ben and Simon, who were the main characters from my first-even published M/M story, years ago! (That was “Leather & Tea,” if you’re wondering, and the crossover stories are “Coffee & Tea” and “Coffee & Tea: Epilogue,” which is, er, quite spicy!) That felt like such a full-circle moment – it was lovely.

And it’s so odd thinking that this is really it. (Okay, technically my story for the JMS Books holiday advent calendar this year is in the Character Bleed universe! But it’s a one-shot with all new characters – they might go on a date to see a Colby Kent film, but there’s no real crossover!) And I know it is the end – we’ve left everyone in a wonderful happy place, and the characters aren’t metaphorically tugging on my sleeve and popping up with a new idea about home renovation or baking contests, not anymore. I suspect that’s how my head knows it’s probably time for the next thing. (Yep, I’ve got some Ideas. Probably more in the fantasy realm…there’s the Apprentice’s Luck sequel, and story about Lorre’s daughter, and the next Aric/Em short story, and the third Regency Magicians book with K.S. Murphy, among others…)

But this is still the biggest story I’ve ever written, counting all those books and bonus stories, and it’s been so much a part of me – it’s the story I’ve done the most outlining for (ever!), had random ideas for whilst driving home from campus, got the Good Sex Award runner-up nod for, looked up historical ship parts for, thought up terrible bread puns for…I’m so very very proud of it. I loaf it.

Thanks for reading. Thanks for sharing Colby and Jason and Leo and Sam with me. Thank you for the conversations in comments, and for the fan art and fan fic and fan trailer for Steadfast-the-movie – it’s a delight and a joy and an honor to see people making awesome things, creative things, because you love these characters too.

(Y’know, it’s also funny – I realized how many tropes I wrote into this book that I don’t normally write! It’s a coming out story, there’re kids around in the form of Sam’s sisters – well, teens, but still – there’s [sort of] a third-act breakup, or at least a needing some space, for good reasons, mind you, and it doesn’t really last that long…but all of that is just really what this story wanted to be! Of course Leo would have to be dramatic and unusual. Of course.)

So I hope you enjoy In Focus! It’s also got rather more fish and seahorse references than I expected. But everyone needs a rainbow crystal fish comfort object once in a while…

Oh, and this book also has one of my favorite playlists! I do usually have a plan for those, some more than others, and this one just…every song fits so well. I’ll probably make a separate post commenting on some of those choices, sometime, but I did start this playlist off with one of my very favorite songs (at least top five, maybe top two), which I’d been saving for the right story, and it felt right here for Sam and Leo, celebratory and tentative and determined and hopeful and full of explorations, all at once – that’s “Aside” by The Weakerthans:

…and I’m leaning on this broken fence
Between past and present tense
And I’m losing all those stupid games
That I swore I’d never play
But it almost feels okay

Circumnavigate this body
Of wonder and uncertainty
Armed with every precious failure
And amateur cartography…

luninosity: (bouquet)
I've got a short story out this weekend - the 20th – “Pippin and Rose and Fir”! This is my contribution to the JMS Books Christmas in July celebrations – aka the story I mentally refer to as “8k of nostalgia for a holiday childhood full of my father and brother working Christmas trees at the local nursery, now strategically deployed for meet-cute romance purposes” *laughs*

It’s got…Christmas trees, a garden center, a kiss under holiday lights, and a next-morning, oops, I thought we were just two employees, but surprise, you’re the boss’s son, realization…

JMS Books link – on sale, for the Anti-Prime Day Sale! – here!

Amazon link here!

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Out today – my new short story, “The Isle of Skiy”! And look at the shiny Amazon number one banner – thank you all!!

“The Isle of Skiy” is something slightly different for me – this short story is more fantasy than romance, though there is an MM romance in it! It’s about…ocean magic, and an isolated island, and a new-to-the-throne young king who has some questions about what, precisely, keeps his people and his island so hidden away from the world…oh, and his new household minister might be harboring secret radical tendencies, not to mention being terribly attractive in an officious sort of way…

By the way, this is version three of this story – my draft labeled ‘version two’ is about twelve years old, something I wrote in grad school! It’s very Ursula K. Le Guin inspired, and also Patricia A. McKillip – Earthsea, The Changeling Sea, along those lines. (I have no idea where, or how old, the mysterious version one might be. I suspect it’s on an old computer someplace.)

Amazon link here!

JMS Books link (on release week sale, if you like sales!) here!

And a lovely review by Scott over on Liminal Fiction (also on Queer Sci Fi, QueeRomance, etc) here!

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A little announcement for today – something new, coming soon!

“The Isle of Skiy” is something slightly different for me – this short story is more fantasy than romance, though there is an MM romance in it! It’s about…ocean magic, and an isolated island, and a new-to-the-throne young king who has some questions about what, precisely, keeps his people and his island so hidden away from the world…oh, and his new household minister might be harboring secret radical tendencies, not to mention being terribly attractive in an officious sort of way…

Release date June 29! (And much love to JMS Books for giving this one a home even though it’s more fantasy-with-romance-in-it than pure romance! ❤ )

Also, I’ve got ARC copies if anyone would like one! Just ask!

By the way, this is version three of this story – my draft labeled ‘version two’ is about twelve years old, something I wrote in grad school! It’s very Ursula K. Le Guin inspired, and also Patricia A. McKillip – Earthsea, The Changeling Sea, along those lines. (I have no idea where, or how old, the mysterious version one might be. I suspect it’s on an old computer someplace.)

Amazon link here!

JMS Books link (on pre-order sale, if you like sales!) here!

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It’s now been posted and shared properly over at the Small But Mighty Facebook Group Pride Flash Fic event, so I can share it here too – here’s the flash fic I wrote for Elizabeth Ellerby’s prompt of “a home designer and the ugliest cat ornament you’ve ever seen,” which was a perfect prompt, since I like cats and HGTV!

It’s also up in the group event over here, but I’ll share it here too – I may do something else with it, expand it a bit and see if JMS wants it, perhaps…I do like it, for something written quickly and unedited, purely for fun and pride-celebration joy!

So, here you go! Please enjoy! Also please vaguely picture Hozier as an inspiration for River, as a character, here. 🙂

~

“I cannot,” Taran explained despairingly, “work with that.” The horrifying ceramic cat stared at him from its shelf with profound mutual disdain. He actually shut his eyes. Opened them. No, still there. “You absolutely can’t keep it.”

“I’ve had it for years.” River Fey’s voice came low and hesitant, like bashful amber, stories hidden in honey. He still had a whisper of an Irish lilt, more so when speaking than when singing live or recording those multiplatinum folk-rock hits that’d made him the current poster-child for superstardom. River, Taran knew, played all his own instruments, from guitar to cello to fiddle to drums, though he also often brought in friends to record with. “I’m sure you’ve had stranger requests.”

“I design from the ground up. A blank canvas. Décor and all.” Taran eyed him. Much better to look at than the cat art, question-mark on the art description. “It’s why people pay me. I’m very good.”

Without exaggeration, he was: Winterink had movie-star, rock-star, billionaire, politician clients. Taran Winterink, young and fashionable and dramatic—and happy to embrace the persona, if that was expected of him—could sweep into a newly-bought home and dismiss or summon décor with a fingersnap, a cutting remark, a piece of praise. His clients generally wanted that; they could boast about it, having him work on their mansions or apartments. Always unique, flamboyant, expensive.

He’d jumped at the chance, when River Fey’s people had contacted him. River was hot, in so many ways. That long black hair, those big grey eyes, that lean taut strength. Twenty-seven, a year younger than Taran himself, and undeniably attractive, in a wistful wild-hillside fairy-ring way. Taran liked pretty and wistful and vulnerable; he also liked that River had just bought this house, a lovely if older sprawl of ocean-view and glass and good bones, up in the hills above Malibu, out in California. The house was empty at the moment, or mostly so, aside from a few articles of furniture, the grand piano, River’s teakettle over in the white-painted kitchen.

River had offered, tentatively, “I know it needs work…” upon greeting him at the door, a barefoot forest-elf wearing jeans and a cloud-grey oversized sweater and messy hair, loose around his shoulders. “I’m happy to listen to whatever you think’s best; I don’t know anything about design but I like what you’ve done for friends…oh, I’ve made tea, do you want some? It’s peppermint, but I’ve also got orange spice. I truly don’t know how this all works, but would you like food? I could order pizza. I know it’s not fancy—maybe not what you’re used to? But most people like pizza? I mean, I do.”

Taran had stared at engaging elfin awkwardness, had wanted to either pat River’s shoulder in reassurance or reach over to find out how silky that long hair really was, and had been horrified by his own unprofessional impulses. He’d said yes to the tea, but waved off the offer of food. They were working. Initial consultations. Serious.

River had not said anything, in all those words, about terrible, horrible, hideous cat ceramics. Which would be a sticking point, evidently. Again: serious.

Taran ran a hand through his own hair—dark blond, neat, as carefully trendy as his rose-pink button-down shirt and perfectly paired slacks and shoes—and repeated, in case that was necessary, “It’s part of the contract. You hire us. You give us some general guidelines. Then we do the work. All the design choices. So everything fits the theme, the aesthetics. Not…that.”

That glared back at him balefully. It was definitely a cat, no argument there. But it was oversized, oddly proportioned, made of ceramic but painted to suggest patchwork fabric. The patches were eye-watering clashes of violet, lime, scarlet, turquoise. The fake stitches, also painted on, slashed thick and black across the rainbow collisions.

He transferred his own glare to the cat’s owner. River looked unhappy. Rain in those grey-sky eyes, in the music of his voice. “I thought it wouldn’t be too unreasonable…”

Normally a single small request wouldn’t be. Taran wasn’t that overbearing. But this one was really, truly, awful. He just couldn’t. He said as much.

River flinched. Actually did a tiny step back, one hand pushing up a sweater-sleeve. He was tall versus most people, not just Taran’s medium-shortness; he was a presence on stage, but in person moved with a sort of bewildered elegance, as if not quite sure how to direct long limbs without choreography. “It’s just, my gran made them…the cats…all the grandchildren got one. Before she, well. Passed.”

Taran said, because of course he had to say, “I’m sorry.” He did mean it. He knew about having, or rather not having, family.

“We used to joke about it. She knew they were just dreadful—she tried to make them so. For fun. As thoroughly ugly as possible.”

“Well, she succeeded.”

“So I’d like it on display. If we could.”

“And I’d like it in some sort of landfill. No.”

“Really no?”

“I’m tempted to walk out and quit on you.” Taran was half-joking, but only half. He did not walk out on clients, especially not at a first face-to-face one-on-one meeting. He also hated the idea that someone might think he’d had anything to do with a lumpish kaleidoscope in ceramic cat shape.

“Oh. But…would you? Over this?”

“I don’t know.” He’d worked so hard for his reputation. He’d built Winterink from the ground up. He did not have family—they did not speak, given their thoughts on their son and being gay. He did not have friends, not precisely—he had fellow designers, people he’d employed because they’d impressed him. He had fought for everything he had; he’d made himself be dazzling, daring, a personality, famous for it.

He had not had a grandmother who’d made cat sculptures, who’d given them as presents, who’d had inside jokes with her grandchildren.

He shoved that thought aside. “We explained how this works. And I’d never let that anywhere near one of my rooms. How do you feel about grey and taupe and blue? Lighter beach tones?”

“I do like the ocean. You’re the expert. I’ve never even bought a house before.”

“Then let me be the expert.” He caught the mismatched gaze of the sculpture—one blue eye, one green—and grumbled, “I don’t even like cats.”

“I do. I’ve thought about getting one.”

Taran ran a hand through his hair again. Tried, and failed, not to feel the headache coming on.

“I know it’s hideous.” River picked up the figurine, cradled it in pianist’s fingers, touched clashing paint and jagged faux-stitching lines the way a soldier might memorize the feel of a letter from home. “It’s only…can’t we keep it somewhere out here? Anywhere?”

“Why out here?” Taran waved an arm at the large bare sunlit room, and by implication the rest of the house. “You’ve got a bedroom. You’ve got four bedrooms. And a recording studio. And, I’ll just point out, a lot of closets. With shelves that could hold things like…that. With doors.”

“With doors that close, you mean. So we’d hide her away.” River ran a finger along the violet-orange tabby-striped back. “I know she looks like something from a Halloween display.”

“You hired me to design your house. Let me design your house.”

River looked at the lopsided whiskers, the mismatched eyes. His fingers stilled, a catch in a melody, a break in a line. “If you think…that is, you do know best. About design. If you really think we can’t…”

“I think purple and orange don’t belong on the same wall, much less on the same ceramic cat.”

“Maybe not.” But River’s hands, setting the oversized cat back on her shelf, moved like a heartbreak, like a small tragedy; Taran couldn’t’ve said why. Only that that was the feel of it, in the slight hesitation, the lingering. “I suppose you’re right.”

Taran shifted weight, abruptly uncomfortable. “Look, we can figure something out. Just not here. Visible.”

River nodded, but didn’t say anything. Only wandered across the room—such a glorious room, wide and high-ceilinged and calling to Taran’s love of light and vertical space and open canvases for artistic expression—and trailed fingers across the dark sleek wood of the piano, by the large picture window.

After a second he touched the keys, gently. The sunbeam brushed his hair, layering ink with pale gold. His hand was pale too, thin and graceful, summoning music.

Taran did not know the song. Something old-fashioned. Some sort of Celtic folk tune, maybe. Certainly nothing modern, not a current hit record or top-charting pop fantasia. Only simple, delicate, wild, a little sad. Drawn out of air and light by slender artist’s fingers.

Taran looked at River’s bent head, at the acquiescence—I suppose you’re right hung like the piano-notes, or grief, or resignation, in between them—and then at the crooked colorful face of the dreadful cat.

Maybe that particular violet shade wasn’t so bad. Maybe some sort of highlight color would work. Throw pillows, flecks of that hue in a rug. Wallpaper.

Maybe Taran did not like seeing River Fey, who’d been so generous and welcoming and self-deprecating, who created art out of music and light and the touch of fingers to instruments, unhappy.

Maybe he wanted to do something, because he did not want River to be sad, and he’d made River sad, and therefore he needed to fix that. With a whole lot of need, abruptly.

It was guilt, of course. But it was more. It was a shimmering aching protective impulse, one Taran hadn’t known he had, except he looked across the room at River’s bent head in beachside sunlight, and he wanted to help. He wanted to see River smile again.

He glanced at hideous feline ceramic again. The cat gazed back, with smugness.

Taran sighed, “I can’t believe I’m going to ruin my reputation over the world’s ugliest cat…” and took a small step toward River’s side, toward the music. His shoes were too loud across the floorboards. He winced.

But River’s head came up, and those wide grey eyes were blank with astonishment, first; and then they melted into absolute joy like the rush of thunderstorms, electric. His fingers made a note on the piano, a startlement, a shooting-star sound. “You’d do that for me?”

Taran inched a bit closer. “For me. I like a challenge. And that’s definitely…well, a challenge.” He said it lightly; he said it because it was that or admit that, inexplicably, his heart had done a somersault at River’s happiness.

“It is, yes…” River moved away from the piano, closer to Taran. Tall height, awkward as a heron learning about long legs, a swoop of night-black hair across his face, he was artwork himself, shy and hopeful. “What changed your mind?”

“I don’t know.” Taran tipped his head back, met those curious thunderstorm eyes. “I like making my clients happy.”

“You want me to be happy.”

“Something like that.”

“But you were ready to walk out, if I argued.”

“But you didn’t.”

“And that changed your mind.”

Taran shrugged a shoulder, not looking away. River was very close, and gorgeous, and the air hummed and sang, drenched in sun and possibilities. “I didn’t want you to be sad. And…” Honesty, because he couldn’t not say it, caught by those eyes and their questions. Truth for truth, here and now. “I know about being lonely. You shouldn’t be. If I can help it.”

“Oh.” River’s gaze got more surprised, and thoughtful: taking that in. And then they warmed up even more. “Which is why you love design, of course—making someone a home. No wonder you’re so good at it.”

Taran, breathless at this compliment, gazed at him. River blushed.

Taran said, “I’m thinking about built-in shelves, over there, on that wall behind you—white, simple, but with color in the back panels, different colors, bright ones. And we’ll have to buy a few more decorative pieces. Strong designs, patterns, eclectic choices. Like Patches.”

River’s smile swept back up, brilliant and brimming over. “You named my hideous cat sculpture?”

“She was staring at me. I couldn’t not.” They’d moved even closer together. A breath away, a touch. The quickness of words, of connections, beat under Taran’s skin. He thought that River must hear it, know it, feel it too; that same emotion tap-danced in the sparkle of grey eyes, the glory of River’s smile.

Taran said, softly, “Of course it’ll require some revised plans. Updated. With your input.”

“Yes…”

“If there’s anything else you want to tell me. Any other requests.” He paused, added, “Might take a while. I could stay longer.”

“Possibly,” River said, tentative but happy, “you could stay…for dinner? I know the kitchen needs remodeling, but it works. I could try to cook. Or we could have something delivered. From anyplace you’d like. And we could talk about plans, and colors, and what we both might…want?”

Possibilities, Taran thought again. Unfolding. Elated as the sun, tangible as kitten-fur. Himself and River Fey. Who’d just asked him to stay for dinner. And neither of them would be alone, or lonely; the night would, instead, be full of color and plans.

He said, “You said pizza, earlier. And pizza with you sounds exactly like something I want; it’s actually been a while, I can’t remember the last time I just ordered, y’know, delivery.”

River’s eyes got even happier. Taran added, filled up with the edges of sunlight, color, delight, “Also I think Patches approves.”

River started laughing—Taran wanted to hear that sound forever—and glanced at patchwork cacophony, grinning; swung back to Taran. “I think she does. I think she likes you coming up with designs.”

“Good,” Taran told him, “because I can definitely come up with more designs, for you,” and he watched River get the innuendo and then laugh more, spectacular and weightless, like everything Taran hadn’t known he wanted until right now, like the recognition that he was exactly where he wanted to be, forever, with River Fey and a piano and laughter and every ugly cat sculpture in the world, if Patches wanted friends; he’d give in and buy them all.

And, six months later, when they brought home a tiny kitten with fur in black-and-white patches, and named her Sally after a certain sewn-together rag doll, Taran looked around at his life—his new home office in one of those former bedrooms, the big comfortable space of the living room with the piano and the ocean views, the built-in display shelves with sea-glass stripe backdrops, holding colorful animal sculptures collected from various stops on River’s latest tour, when Taran had come along and cheered so loudly—and ended up smiling.

Home, he thought. He had one, now. With Winterink’s ever-expanding client list, and design work which had grown even better—more warm, said the comments, the praise: more human and friendly. With River’s wide unfurling smile, looking up while teasing Sally with a feather-toy, both of them down on the floor atop the violet-flecked blue shaggy rug.

And with Patches, in all her familiar cacophonous ceramic glory, front and center on her display shelf—painted whiskers crooked as ever, proudly approving of color and warmth and joy.

luninosity: (jazz hands)

A Neat Thing - and a reminder of how much I love being part of fandom, and all the marvelous creative people in it! -

over on AO3, the fabulous fuckedinthehead has been recording the podfic version of my Steve/Bucky fic The Tones That Tremble Down Your Spine!

He’s got the first three chapters up now, and the last one’s on the way - so go and listen and be excited with me!!

I’m always so thrilled whenever anyone likes the words I write enough to be moved to make a thing - it’s always an honor! <333333

(please do heed all warnings, it’s a fairly dark fic, especially chapter two, though with a happy ending, I promise! but it goes to some rough places in Bucky’s flashbacks)

luninosity: (jazz hands)

Out today from Amphibian Press: We Came to Dance, a charity anthology benefiting Club Q!

Such a great cause - and you get a brand-new, never-before-seen story by, er, me, K.L. Noone, as well as stories by fabulous author-friends like Olivia Wylie & Kaye O'Malley & more! with gorgeous art for each story, by Olivia, as well!

You can get both the digital and the paperback versions here, and all proceeds go to Club Q!
 

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luninosity: (bouquet)

Happy Thursday!

Would you like a present? Would you like a free short story of mine?

"Staircases and Stories" is up for free over on the RoMMantic Reads 'zine today, as the final story in our summer photo prompt challenge!

I'd already written something for the sand sculpture prompt, but I wanted to do the staircase as well, because, well - this prompt photo was my photo, taken at a local historic hotel that dates to 1876.

I don't know why this one wanted to be a 1920s period piece, but it did! So...have a meet-cute (with, er, speculation about good locations for murder and possible crime?) in which a mystery writer and a lawman meet atop a vertiginous staircase in a historic hotel..

Also, all the names are sneaky references to classic mystery and crime writers, just for fun. Enjoy!

luninosity: (waterfall)

For today, I wanted to give some attention to one of my little stand-alone stories - one that I sometimes forget to promo, but it's holiday-themed and wintry!

"Revelry" was also one of the times I gave in to my publisher's wishes for shirtless men on the cover - what do you think? It's not something I always go for, but I do think this one's adorable!

The story itself is just under 7k and is full of historical trivia (hey, I'm a medievalist!), a scholarly conference and Christmas in California, a cute bartender, and a mermaid tiara...if that sounds intriguing, you can grab it at JMS Books here, or at Amazon here, or at various other book-buying places!

And here's the story blurb!

Stephen Hunt’s having a terrible holiday season. It’s mid-December, and he’s about as far from the familiar scholarly walls of his Oxford professor’s office as he can get -- Southern California, in fact, for an academic conference. Back home, his ex-boyfriend’s moved out, and Stephen’s alone and miserable in the hotel bar with his research on obscure ancient Roman holiday traditions. The bartender’s adorable, though, so at least that’s a good distraction from his thoughts.

Brian Dwyer’s a very good bartender. Good at making drinks and having holiday spirit, good at talking to customers, good at making people smile. He’s decided that the gorgeous but unhappy professor at the end of the bar definitely needs to smile. And once Stephen opens up and starts talking to him, Brian just might be in love with historical trivia, knowledge and passion, and those soft brown eyes.

And if the night’s one of those decadent ancient holidays that Stephen knows so much about, even better -- they’ll just have to find a way to celebrate together.

luninosity: (jazz hands)
It's a book release day! "Spectacular," the final-ish* Jason/Colby-as-main-characters Character Bleed story!

*"final-ish" because there'll be the holiday JMS Books advent calendar short fluff, and then Jason and Colby have fairly prominent roles in Leo's upcoming novel, too! So we'll see them again.

"Spectacular" is the story in which...well, to summarize...Jason & Colby spend time with Jason’s family, do some switching in bed, and talk about something they maybe didn’t completely talk about way back in book one…

Come buy it here! (
Amazon ) (JMS Books ) ...and everywhere else too, like Barnes & Noble and such!

To celebrate...hmm...five pieces of trivia? Or, if not exactly trivia, some thoughts?

1 - did you spot the Finn Ransom reference? That's a nod to the Wes & Finn stories - more fluffy, contemporary, with a medievalist and his actor fiance! I like to think they'd all get along. Colby and Finn can trade recipes. And they all like historical trivia. :-)

2 - I do actually have vague ideas for a couple other little Jason/Colby scenes that never got written! I don't know if they will - maybe just for fun freebies at some point? We'll see. Among them: Colby's first time getting on a motorcycle with Jason (definitely a turn-on), and also Jason's 40th birthday party (at which someone makes a movie reference from Jason's teenage years, Colby says, "Oh, I've never actually seen that," Jason says, "Wait, what?" and Colby points out, "Well, when you were seventeen and going on dates, I was nine years old," and Jason protests, "No, wait, that CAN'T be right, don't make me think about that!" and Colby says, very sweetly, "Oh, don't worry, I've always liked older men!" and Jason stares at a birthday cupcake in horror for a few minutes)...and also the little crossover story in which Jason and Colby meet Ben and Simon from the Leather & Tea stories (and it turns out that, not exactly directly, Colby's and Ben's paths have crossed before)...

3 - a little bit of this story owes a little bit, in a way, to Gregory Ashe's last Hazard & Somerset novel - not a reference, not even anything as direct as inspiration, I think, but...I was reading that, and loving it, and so impressed by the emotional arc, and all the emotional complexities, especially coming back to something from early on that I'd actually wanted to be dealt with in more depth for one character - and then, look, here at the end, that was such a huge and tender part of his character arc, and it was beautiful. And it made me think - you know, there is actually something in this series, my own series, back in book one, that...as Jason accurately points out...Jason and Colby didn't entirely talk about, not then. They did, a bit - enough to move on with - but there was a question Jason didn't ask and maybe should've. And he realizes that. (I also really like Colby's answer, if I'm allowed to like my own words! He does take the question seriously, but he's also very clear that that was then and this is now, and he's sure of himself and Jason and their love.)

4 - the murder mystery they're talking about at the beginning is, of course, inspired by Knives Out. Love that movie, love Chris Evans.

5 - unusually for me, this one was written fairly linearly! Not entirely, but mostly. I tend to start in the middle of stories, usually with an important conversation or character emotion - something that lets me know what the characters want and what they care about. But this one started with the opening, and - also unusually - very visually: Jason standing in the hallway, in pale sun, on the phone, and then suddenly no longer alone, because Colby's there. I also hadn't planned it but that's such a good parallel, at the opening of the last-ish story starring them, with the first book for theirs, Seaworthy, which also opens with Jason on the phone. Like bookends. (Oh, maybe I should've pretended I had planned it! Oh, well...)

This whole series has been such a joy - and we're not done yet! - and I'm so glad to've shared it with you all. <3

Spectacular by [K.L. Noone]
luninosity: (waterfall)
As part of trying to do some book promo for this...sort of milestone story...as "Spectacular" comes out tomorrow...I wanted to share my playlist in advance! It'll be in the Note, as usual, but over here I can also give some commentary and quote some lyrics. So, if you'd like to know some of what I was thinking, with this story...

The Tubes, “Turn Me On” (this one's for both Jason and Colby - together, happy, in a world of bright lights and color and these lines: let me stand and wonder / let me feel the thunder / see the lightning and the picture show...)

The Pretenders, “Love Colours” (I love The Pretenders, and this one's such a gorgeous love song.)

Rex Orange County, “Keep It Up” (This one's for Jason - his usual style is more classic rock, but he has a soft spot for catchy pop - as in the Katy Perry songs he and Colby both know! - and this feels like something that he'd be worrying about: being enough, doing enough.)

The Pixies, “Where Is My Mind” (For Jason, being tired, wanting everything to go right, wanting his father to be okay, leaning on Colby in a kitchen...)

Bruce Springsteen, “When You Need Me” (Springsteen's one of Jason's favorites, and Colby would pick this one at this moment, I think, for Jason and for both of them: I got two strong arms waitin' to hold you / and when those mean days come along / we'll stand together and we'll take 'em on...)

Crowded House, “Weather With You” (If the Springsteen is Colby picking a song for Jason, then this one's Jason picking a song for Colby:
everywhere you go, always take the weather with you...) (I actually really love this song, but have given myself a near-permanent ear-worm by putting it on this playlist! *sigh*)

Arctic Monkeys, “She’s Thunderstorms” (We needed an Arctic Monkeys, because I have a mental image of Colby absolutely doing killer covers of Arctic Monkeys songs - the voice, the stage presence - and the mood, the thunderstorms, well...)

The Regrettes, “Show Me You Want Me” (I was listening to the Regrettes a lot, and this one was just so lyrically perfect - for Colby, I thought initially, but really for both of them! Plus I like this one with the confidence of the morning sex scene, in this story!)

Angels & Airwaves, “Everything’s Magic” (This one was always on this playlist, and always last, to end it with that rightness, that delight, hands taking hands: reach out your hand, and I'll make you mine / everything, everything's magic)


luninosity: (jazz hands)
Coming Feb 12 from JMS Books: “February Sugar,” the next Finn & Wes holiday story!

~Valentine’s Day fluff
~but Wes has to work! and it’s raining!
~it’s okay, Finn has a plan involving chocolate & sweetness
~knitting & medieval love tokens!
~at least one Indiana Jones joke + me sneaking some fictionalized versions of real-life medievalist friends into Wes’s conference! <3

Amazon link here!
JMS Books link here!
Also at BN, etc, and various other book-buying places!

This one was very light & fun & sweet, and I'm working on the next story for them, too... :-)

Coming Feb 12 from JMS Books: “February Sugar,” the next Finn & Wes holiday story!~Valentine’s Day fluff~but Wes has to work! and it’s raining!~it’s okay, Finn has a plan involving chocolate & sweetness~knitting & medieval love tokens!~at least...

luninosity: (cookie)
It's a release day! "October by Candlelight," my autumn-themed story, is out from JMS today, October 20!

"October by Candlelight" is just under 12,000 words (literally - it had to be <12k, and mine's...11,988 words...not counting the author's note... *laughs*) of soft autumn-themed m/m (gay and bisexual main characters) romance, all about moving in together (and learning how to do that), and discussions about fall decorations, and pumpkin-spice cinnamon rolls!

This story was written for the JMS Books Trick or Treat theme this year, and it's very much a treat, I think - all soft and warm, low angst, maybe a bit of emotional hurt/comfort, but not even really much hurt, just something they need to talk about. And it's full of candles and autumn decorations and tidbits about medieval history research and tender romantic sex scenes and a whole lot of love and wanting the other person to be happy.

And did I mention the pumpkin-spice cinnamon rolls?

This story did end up somewhere among my favorite things I've written, honestly - it just flowed so well, and I knew Wes and Finn as soon as I started writing them, and I knew what the next scenes were, and before I knew it I'd written so many words... And of course autumn is my favorite season, too!

In my head, by the way, this story exists in the same universe as my Character Bleed trilogy, though it doesn't explicitly tie in anywhere and it won't matter if you've not read those! But Wes and Finn have absolutely gone on a date to see Jason and Colby in Steadfast, and Jason and Colby would probably recognize Finn's name, less from the teen idol days and more from the more recent character work and indie films, though they've never worked together, for reasons of timing of their careers, mostly. I like to think they'd all get along.

Find all the candlelight at JMS Books here!

Or at Amazon here!
October by Candlelight by [K.L. Noone]

luninosity: (Default)
From "October by Candlelight," available for pre-order now, release date October 20! Domestic autumnal just-moved-in-together warmth, pumpkin scents, many many candles, and talking about important things...

Here's chapter two, as a teaser!

#

 

Two days later, on Saturday, a delivery arrived: three pumpkin-spice candles, a paperback copy of The History of Silver Age Superheroes, a zucchini, and a loaf of raspberry wheat bread. None of these had been on the shopping list tacked to the fridge, except Finn’s zucchini, which had a muffin-related destiny.

Wes, who’d answered the door and opened the package, considered this fact. “I’m not sure you’re allowed to buy things without me.”

Finn gave him a sorrowful-kitten look. Wes knew that look. He gave in to that look just about every time.

“Is this what living with you is like? It is, isn’t it? Not,” he added hastily, “that I mind.”

He didn’t. Not at all. This house had room for their combined eclectic library; Wes’s organized desk and an old guitar from his wayward college rock band days lived alongside Finn’s hobby-of-the-month origami and card-trick magic practice and ocean-themed coloring books, finding three-month-old harmony. The pool out back was good for Finn’s physical therapy and also just for floating around in, and they did a lot of that. These days Wes’s world was wondrous.

He lifted up a bright orange shape, turned it around. “More candles?”

“They were on sale,” Finn protested. He’d gotten up, and Wes nearly argued, but it seemed to be a good day; that wasn’t even much of a limp. “They smell like pumpkins. And autumn grass. And bonfire smoke. Here, I can help—”

“Yes, thank you,” Wes said, now juggling three candles and bread and zucchini and a book, trailing Finn into the kitchen. “You want pumpkins and bonfires in our house.”

“I’ll make cinnamon rolls with pumpkin cream cheese.” Finn was only half paying attention, entranced by autumnal temptation and finding gleaming silver to put candles inside. “Anyway you like pumpkin spice.”

“I’m not sure I want to, you know, breathe and eat pumpkin…” He did love Finn, though. And he loved the sparkle in those huge eyes, diving into the world with full-on enthusiasm. “I can build a fire if you want. In our fireplace. For you.”

Finn set down the third candle. Smiled. “Come on, baby, light my fire.”

“Terrible classic rock puns,” Wes informed him, “mean absolutely guaranteed seduction,” and took a step forward, everything else shoved onto a countertop, hands finding and cupping Finn’s face, thumb skimming over a dimple because it was there and he could.

Finn looked at him, smiling, waiting; pure anticipation danced in every line of him, every lifted eyebrow. Wes kissed him for it, leaned down and conquered Finn’s beckoning mouth with tongue and lips and teeth, all of himself; and shifted closer, pressing Finn up against the counter, held securely between smooth pale granite and Wes himself. Finn made a sound, light and wordless, lips pink and parted; Wes paused.

“Oh, no, don’t stop.” Finn had one hand on the counter, but the other slid along Wes’s back, keeping him close. “Good sound. Promise. You feel so good. Have I mentioned I love you being all possessive and in charge? I do.”

“What was it you said about cream,” Wes said, and dropped to both knees, and tugged down Finn’s loose flowing pants.

He was decently good at this, though Finn was better; Finn was phenomenal, a skillful mouth and generosity and fearless pleasure. Wes had been getting a lot of practice, though. And he liked knowing exactly what motion, friction, licks and strokes and repetition, would make his boyfriend gasp and shudder and clutch the countertop as if trying to dig fingers through it.

Finn managed, “Wes…” voice shaking; his hips jerked, and Wes tasted desire, readiness, need gathering. Looking up, knowing Finn was watching him—the slide, the length, the plunge in and out—he watched Finn, too, and loved the sight: the unguarded ecstasy, the moment when Finn simply fell apart with pleasure, feeling nothing but bliss.

He wanted to do that, to give Finn that, forever; he knew what Finn liked, and he did it, harder, more, until Finn practically screamed his name, and Wes swallowed and drank down and licked up his release, every drop.

Finn’s legs wobbled. Wes lunged upright, throwing an arm around him. Finn leaned into being held, but promised, “I’m fine, it’s not that, it’s just that someone finished off my sense of balance along with everything else, unfair,” and did something between a kiss and a bite at Wes’s chest, through his shirt. “I’m not complaining, but what was that for?”

“Nothing,” Wes said. “You. Pumpkin candles and cinnamon rolls.”

“Don’t make fun of my pumpkins. They’re totally appropriate for what we just did.”

“I’m going to regret this, but how?”

“Well.” Finn put both arms around Wes’s neck. Got nose to nose, and very serious. “Because I’m…falling for you.”

“Why,” Wes said to the ceiling. “Why.”

“You did ask.”

“I did.” The kitchen smelled like ridiculous pumpkin candles, like autumn, like giddy heat; Wes’s mouth tasted like Finn, and he’d never been happier in his life.

~*~


The week after that, they ventured out of the house. The rain had let up, they both loved their small local independent bookshop, and they needed to do some shopping for Wes’s niece’s birthday. Finn, in frayed jeans and a blue hoodie, looked like the Southern California teenager he’d once been, bouncing across beaches with a surfboard when not working, running around in flip-flops in the summer. He was moving more easily now, mostly recovered from filming and travel.

Wes glanced at them both in the mirror, getting dressed, and couldn’t hide his own wry expression. Finn laughed. “Sorry, is it worse than usual?”

“Maybe I should finally start coloring my hair.” He wasn’t exactly self-conscious about it. Not as such. He’d willingly admit he thought they looked good together: matching height, with his own dark gaze and golden skin and high cheekbones and silver flecks in black hair next to Finn’s casual sun-kissed prettiness and tropical-beach eyes.

That didn’t mean he didn’t look older than Finn. Particularly when his other half dressed like that.

“I like the grey,” Finn said. “Distinguished. Keep it.”

“Should I wear the reading glasses out in public, too?”

Finn put his head on one side, let his eyes travel up and down Wes’s body and face, and smiled. Slowly. With a lip-lick.

Wes pointed a finger at him. “No.”

“In bed, at least?”

“Do you love me, or your sexy professor fantasies?”

Finn spread both arms in invitation. “Lecture me about medieval gender theory while bending me over the bed?”

“Maybe later. Errands first.” While the weather was good, and Finn felt good, and they could go out and wander around a bookshop, hand in hand, on a date. “We can stop by that coffee place you like. Get something seasonal.”

“Ah, more bribery. You know me so well.” Finn swept a hand toward the bedroom door. “Caramel apple spiced latte. Vanilla ginger pumpkin mocha. Pecan praline cream.”

“Are any of those actual coffee, or are we still in your fantasy universe?”

“Both,” Finn said, and laced fingers into Wes’s on the way out the door. “I like my universe, thanks.”

~*~

The coffee shop was close to the bookshop, and the bookshop also had a small local art corner, handmade crafts and knickknacks for sale, supporting the community. The girl at the counter recognized them and waved, but didn’t come over; Wes thought she’d been in a first-year survey course he’d taught, but she’d also worked here for a few months and knew them as customers. He wasn’t sure whether she knew who Finn was.

Most people were good about not bothering them, even if anyone specifically recognized Finn Ransom. Sometimes there were a few double-takes, but more often than not those were along the lines of, “Is that…somebody?” or “Do we know that guy?” or “I swear he looks like someone famous, who was that…”

Finn usually found this amusing, or he said he did. Wes had asked once, unsure whether his own reaction should be gratitude about not being mobbed, annoyance on Finn’s behalf, or sympathy for a career and a level of recognition Finn had lost. Sort of all of the above, he thought.

Finn had shrugged a shoulder, lying stretched out beside him in bed. Had said, “I’m not exactly the kid from Cody and Finn’s Upside-Down Life anymore, I get that, I just always wonder who they think I look like. I hope it’s at least flattering. I mean, can you imagine some of the possibilities?”

“No,” Wes had said, truthfully. “You look like you.”

Finn did, he thought. Not as innocent and sunny and boy-next-door as that teenage superstar had been. More aware of pain and effort and the randomness of the world. Older in both time and experience, and if he was leaning on the cane for support most people either looked at that or looked away from that. But he’d never be anyone else, not with those spellbinding eyes and that wide-open heart.

Finn had blushed at that evaluation, which had meant Wes needed to kiss him, and more.

Sometimes people did figure it out, especially if they were looking at the eyes and the dimples. Wes didn’t mind, as long as they were polite about it; hell, his own university students recognized him too, in bookshops and movie theaters. One of them, with no apparent irony, had said enthusiastically, “Dude, Professor Kim, your boyfriend’s totally hot, like a grown-up Finn Ransom from that old show!” while handing Finn a bucket of popcorn before a new Colby Kent romantic comedy film.

Wes had felt himself go red, ears and cheeks and throat included. Finn had grinned at the kid and said, “Thanks, you know, I’ve heard that a couple times, maybe I should finally watch the show!” and tossed a piece of popcorn at Wes’s open mouth, accurately.

At the moment Finn had acquired a selection of graphic novels—research for the superhero project—and a book about women in the French Revolution, on the basis that it sounded interesting. And then he’d wandered over to the local arts and crafts section. “Oh, awesome, come look at these—”

“More candles?”

“They’re candles shaped like ghosts! Handmade!”

“Do we…need more candles?”

“They’re perfect for Halloween!”

“You don’t need more things to light on fire around the house! We live in LA! It’s like ninety degrees out even when it’s raining!”

“Are you honestly anti-ghost-candle?”

“I just don’t see the point,” Wes tried. He wanted to. But he really, really didn’t.

“But they’re ghosts! And they’re cute! And they smell like, let’s see, this one’s trick-or-treat scented, what does that mean…the tag says marshmallows and sugared candy and linen pillowcases—”

“When you light them they’ll only melt,” Wes said, a bit desperately. “Their faces will melt.”

Finn’s shoulders drooped. And he put a ghost back. “No, yeah, you’re right. That probably would be weird. Okay. So we should think about Valerie’s birthday, they’ve got some neat jewelry, she likes blue, but more lavender, that color that’s almost sort of violet? What do you think about this bracelet? And maybe also a book? She likes fantasy, right?”

Wes, standing amid local artisan crafts, stared at the man he adored, who knew his niece’s specific favorite color when Wes himself didn’t.

Finn had already wandered into handmade jewelry displays, fingers skimming through beads and stones and metal. He did not turn around while talking.

Wes eyed the candle-ghosts. Ridiculous kitschy molded whiteness with wicks sticking out of their heads. Holiday-themed and overpriced, even if hand-crafted. They would definitely match Finn’s decorating sense, which could best be described as exuberant, and not at all Wes’s wistful desire for order and serenity.

The ghosts smirked at him, not unkindly.

He cleared his throat. “If you, um…think about it…if they melt when you light them…”

Finn turned back. Surprise in his eyebrows, in the tilt of his head.

“…they kind of work well, as ghosts? It’s like, um, living—not living—up to their potential? Ending up insubstantial and floating around a room?” Maybe that counted as an apology somehow.

“The one in front says it smells like candy corn,” Finn said, a question that hid in hopefulness.

The fact that it was a question just about broke Wes’s heart. What was he doing, objecting to something as small as his boyfriend liking candles? It wasn’t as if he even cared that much. And it made Finn happy, for some mysterious reason, and that was the most important part.

He ended up buying six flowing wax Halloween-scented ghosts. They had different scents and different faces, so he had to find them all.

luninosity: (bouquet)
...but, er, I probably ought to do that! Especially since the first one's out in three days, on the 9th! (And for some mysterious reason I can't find it on my Amazon author page yet, though it IS up on JMS Books for pre-order, for 20% off!)

So...

First up, this Sunday - the 9th! - we get "The Featherbed Puzzle," which is roughly 47,000 words of pure weightless confectionery fluff, honestly! - but I needed that, so perhaps other people do as well? It's an m/m rom-com retelling of "The Prince(ss) and the Pea," set in a sort of vaguely alternate-history 18th century (there're artificers and self-warming serving dishes and such, but no real ~magic~), and it's got, oh, a dark & stormy night, and far too many prospective suitors to juggle, and breakfast pastries, and accidental falling in love over a jigsaw puzzle, and definitely too many featherbeds, and of course a fairytale happy ending.

Also this one has one of my favorite covers ever, for one of my stories. I love it - it matches the mood and the theme so effortlessly.

Grab it at JMS Books here!


Next, "October by Candlelight," my autumn-themed story, will be out from JMS October 20! Also currently on pre-order sale at JMS for 20% off! This one's just under 12,000 words (literally - it had to be <12k, and mine's...11,988 words...not counting the author's note... *laughs*)

"October by Candlelight" might've ended up somewhere among my favorite things I've written, honestly - it just flowed so well, and I knew Wes and Finn as soon as I started writing them, and I knew what the next scenes were, and before I knew it I'd written so many words... Anyway, it's essentially a soft candlelit "we've only just moved in together and we're working things out" domestic story, low angst, maybe a bit of emotional hurt/comfort, but not even really much hurt, just something they need to talk about, and it's full of candles and autumn decorations and tidbits about medieval history research and tender romantic sex scenes and a whole lot of love and wanting the other person to be happy.

Also in my head this story exists in the Character Bleed universe, though it doesn't explicitly tie in anywhere. But Wes and Finn have absolutely gone on a date to see Jason and Colby in Steadfast, and Jason and Colby would probably recognize Finn's name, less from the teen idol days and more from the more recent character work and indie films, though they've never worked together, for reasons of timing of their careers, mostly. I like to think they'd all get along.

Find all the candlelight at JMS Books here!

Finally, a book rec! I finished Lee Welch's Seducing the Sorcerer a few days ago, and I ADORE this book. It's a delight - m/m high fantasy romance, sparkling and heartfelt, by turns atmospheric and funny and sexy (oh yes) and emotional and clever and intricate and kind, and I want a worple horse now (go read it, it'll make sense). You absolutely need this book in your life. In fact I'll probably go read it again very soon, just to bask happily there.

luninosity: (adventure)
Just a quick post to say that all of Magician is now up on AO3! And it'll be there until...sometime in July, because I'll have to take it down when comes out properly, as a published book, from JMS Books! *throws confetti*

It's both an odd and a good feeling to think that it's done - this story's been living in the back of my head for probably at least a decade (and I'd had drafts of those two scenes, in chapters 7 and 17, done for years...), and now it's all wrapped up! Gosh. Though of course if there's a third one it's lesbian fantasy romance, with Lorre's daughter, now grown up... (Lorre and Gareth are around for advice, of course. Gareth's good to talk to.) Both chapter 17 and also the Gareth POV epilogue actually have some of my favorite closing lines I've ever written, which surprised me, because I usually have doubts about those!

Next, probably getting back to Leo's story - though I might try to poke something else short into shape so that I can have a short story out in August or September, since Leo's still has a fair amount to go...

I have four older short story drafts that might be revise-able, though I think my writing style's changed a bit since then, and at least one is less romance than pensive mournful fantasy, though there is a (m/m) romance; one is basically an early Barbara Hambly pastiche (and m/f, though it could probably be rewritten as m/m or at least m/genderfluid fairy person); the third's an m/m light and fluffy fantasy-romp version of "The Princess and the Pea;" and the fourth one's my attempt to do a Peter David-style terrible-pun comedic high fantasy (also m/f), which has some good lines if you like bad puns but is so unlike anything else recent of mine that I don't know how well it'd do... I poked at #1 and #3 a bit yesterday but neither began shouting *loudly* in my head, at least not yet.

Maybe I should share some beginnings, and see what you all think?

luninosity: (Default)

Just one more quick note to say that the voting ballot for the Paranormal Romance Awards is now live! Come vote for my two nominated books and support me and LGBTQ romance!

Seaworthy (Character Bleed book 1) is nominated in the general LGBT Romance category (about halfway down) and "Sundown, Holiday, Beacon" (my m/m/m superhero romance!) is nominated in LBGT Novellas & Shorts (near the bottom of the ballot)! Here's the link to the ballot:

https://www.paranormalromanceguild.com/2020-paranormal-romance-guild-reviewers-choice-award-ballot/

I love both these stories and their characters so much, and I'm thrilled to be on the ballot this year! *happy flailing*

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