Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
answering.
“I am,” I say. “At least on my mother’s side. Never knew my
father. My mother was a prostitute. And a good Catholic one to boot.”
“So that’s why you gelled so easily with the working girls.”
I nod. “They all want to make a good living. My mother liked the
sex too.”
Nick raises an eyebrow. “Your mother told you that?”
“When I told her I was gay.”
“How old were you?”
I smile at the memory. “Fourteen.”
“She sounds like a great lady.”
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 586
“She was. Very open-minded too. She introduced me to one of the
new girls at her club with the intention of giving me an education, so I
told her I wasn’t interested in the girl. Or any girl. And then she told
me she wasn’t just a hooker because it was good money, but also
because she liked the sex.”
“What happened to her?”
I can tell Nick is almost afraid to ask me, so I put him out of his
misery quickly. “One of her johns killed her when I was seventeen.
There was hardly any money and I knew I was smart enough for
college so I joined the Marines, hoping they’d give me a shot at a
career.”
“I’m sorry about your mom,” Nick says softly.
“I still miss her,” I confess. “She would have supported me in
what I did, although she would have been scared shitless, both about
me being a Marine and going undercover.” I chuckle. “She probably
would have gone undercover with me. I can almost hear her say she
would have been great to flesh out my character. A real Italian
Mama.”
“My parents were hippies and didn’t want to have anything to do
with me anymore after I was recruited into the FBI,” Nick admits. “I
changed my name in college. I was sick of being bullied for being
called Stormfeather.”
I can’t help laughing. “Stormfeather,” I repeat. “Seriously?”
Nick shrugs but he’s smiling. “I wasn’t kidding when I said they
were hippies.” Then his face turns serious. “I missed you. And I was
scared you wouldn’t want to see me again.”
“You weren’t that rough with me,” I reply with a soft voice.
“Besides, you know I like it a little rough.”
Nick looks at me sideways. “Not that kind of rough.”
Now it’s my turn to shrug. “You’re right. I like the physical
roughness. I like being shoved around. I like being tied up, maybe
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 587
even in an uncomfortable position.” I look at Nick the way he looked
at me just moments ago and our gazes lock. I extract my hand from
his and let it slide across his thigh and up to his groin. “And I like
being fucked until I know sitting is going to be an issue for a while.”
Nick swallows and I see his Adam’s apple bob up and down. “But that
only works if I really trust the guy. Otherwise it’s just sex.”
“And do you trust me?” Nick asks with more apprehension than
I’d expect.
“With my life.”
Nick moves swiftly forward and kisses me roughly. I can feel the
tenderness through his actions, though, and I feel the need in him as
he pushes his groin harder against my hand. “Can we take this
inside?” he asks, our lips still touching.
“I thought you’d never ask.”
Author bio:
Zahra Owens was born in Europe, just before
Woodstock and the moon landing, and given a much less
pronounceable name by her non-English speaking parents. Being an
Aquarian meant she would never quite conform and people learned to
expect the unexpected.
She started writing fairy tales in first grade; the same year she
came into contact with her first group of English speaking friends, a
group which would eventually grow to include people from all over
the world. On the outside she was a typical only child, accustomed to
being with adults most of the time. On the inside, she sought ways to
channel her wild imagination.
During the daytime she earns a living as a computer specialist,
but it’s her former career as an intensive care nurse that tends to seep
into her fiction. Maybe this has to do with her weak spot for flawed
characters and imperfect bodies, or maybe it’s just her sadistic streak
coming through. You be the judge.
Check out Zahra’s websit
e: http://www.zahraowens.com
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 588
Twitter: @zahraowens
Faceboo
k: http://www.facebook.com/zahra.owens
And her publisher
: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com
where you
can find her 4 novels and countless short stories in genres ranging
from Contemporary to Fantasy/SciFi.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 589
Sloan Parker – SWEPT AWAY (Established-Couples)
Genre:
contemporary
Tags:
established-couples, bears, businessmen-
lawyers, over-age-40, anniversary, beach
A night at a gorgeous beach
Words:
8,309
where the moon shined the
ocean…the bear men
SWEPT AWAY
cuddled, celebrating their
anniversary.
by Sloan Parker
[PHOTO: Two burly,
“Motion denied.”
shorts-clad men with hairy
I tried not to flinch, but the judge’s decision
chests and chins and buzzed
heads kneel on a beach side
hit me hard. “Your Honor—”
by side. They lean together,
elbows linked. The man with
She gave me a stern look that said don’t
a wealth of tattoos presses
push it, and I backed off. I’ve been told I’m a
his face to his lover’s
dominating presence in the courtroom. I wasn’t
shoulder, bringing their
sure what it was about me. Maybe the tats
cheeks together. The other
across the back of my fingers didn’t convey I
man’s closed eyes and smile
reflect affection and
was a by-the-procedures kind of guy, although
content.]
that’s exactly what I was.
Please tell us their story of a
This was my first time in her courtroom,
truly best anniversary they
and I couldn’t afford to push my luck on a long
could have on a beach.
Love,
shot. Not this early in the game. The Ohio
LGBT Coalition for Equality needed this win
Sean C. Norris
and part of that was not pissing off the judge.
“Thank you, Your Honor.” I took a seat in
the solid wood chair, and I just knew my
underwear would be stuck to my ass when I
stood again. The courtroom wasn’t nearly as hot
and humid as the heat wave outside, but with
the air conditioning on the fritz it was
unbearable, to say the least. I could feel the
sweat streaming down my back, soaking a line
down the dress shirt I had on under my jacket.
My tie felt like it was trying to strangle me. I
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 590
couldn’t wait to get home and strip down to nothing.
I resisted the urge to rub my temples. Not like that would help
anyway. Nothing eased the ache that had been pounding in my head
on and off for months. Since the president of the Coalition had taken a
seat in my office (back when five inches of snow had been on the
ground) and had told me about the elderly gay couple who’d been
forced into separate rooms when they’d moved from their senior
community apartment to the on-site assisted living facility.
This was the case I’d become a lawyer to win, and the stress was
taking its toll.
The judge spoke again as she dabbed at her upper lip with a tissue.
She looked miserable. The heavy robe had to be worse than my suit
and tie. The industrial fans they’d brought into the courtroom didn’t
do much to help. They just blew the humid air and the scent of
everyone’s sweat around the room. They also left me straining to hear
the judge, which was doing nothing for my headache.
“Very well,” she said. “If there’s nothing further, Counsel, I will
see you both Wednesday morning at eight a.m.” She adjourned the
court and was off like a shot for her private chambers. Maybe she had
a secret window A/C unit and was also going to strip down to nothing
and stand in front of the window. Maybe I could hire some kid to
climb the fire escape on the building next door and take pictures to
blackmail a win in the case. I almost laughed at that, but I was too
damn hot to muster the energy for even a half-ass chuckle.
I slipped the paperwork for the filed motion into my backpack,
said goodbye to the representative from the Coalition, and left the
courtroom. I was dying to get home and into a cold shower. The
hallway outside the courtroom was even worse than inside had been.
Apparently circulated, rank, humid air was better than nothing. I
picked up the pace and headed for the elevators. I wanted to get out of
there before the press or anyone else could stop me. After the shower,
I was parking my naked ass on the couch in front of a fan, kicking
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 591
back with a cold beer and a mindless action flick or two, and I wasn’t
moving until the morning.
“Hey, Eddie. Wait up.”
Damn. Ten feet from my escape route.
I sighed and faced Tony. I’d known him for years, and it wasn’t
his fault I was tired and in a shitty-ass mood. In fact, I always felt like
I owed the guy something. Maybe that’s why we’d stayed friendly all
these years. It had been his ass I’d been chasing when I conned my
way into that private party in the normally-hetero sports bar fifteen
years earlier. I hadn’t known then it had been Tony’s private party —
with a few dozen of his closest gay friends in attendance — or that the
tough bald guy named Mike working behind the bar would rock my
world. I’d just been after a blow from the lawyer with the pretty lips.
Tony was out of breath when he reached me. “Damn heat.” He
wiped his brow with the back of his hand. “I heard about the judge’s
ruling. Sorry it didn’t go as you’d hoped.”
“Thanks. It was worth a shot.”
“Definitely.” Tony knew about risks. He took them all the time. It
was what made him one of the top civil rights attorneys in the state. A
slew of high-profile clients paid him a shit-load of money to “fight the
good fight” as he always called it. He could afford to host all the
private gay orgies he wanted, while I took on neighborhood nuisance
gigs, representing the little guy for a minor fee. Hell, if I didn’t win
this case I might not even be doing that any longer. The president of
the Ohio LGBT Coalition for Equality said they had hired me because
they wanted someone hungry for a big win. She’d come to the right
person, then. I was starving for it.
Tony slapped me on the shoulder and let his hand linger a moment
too long for a couple of colleagues standing in the hallway of the
courthouse. He always did stuff like that. He was a big guy, but at