Monday, April 7, 2025

Monday's Memorial Moment : Duty & Inclination by Rebecca Dupont



Summary:

During the height of the American Revolution, young men Alexander Hamilton and John Laurens meet in the service of General George Washington. The two men become aides-de-camp, working alongside General Washington and his staff to manage the correspondence, intelligence and secrets needed to propel a ragtag army through a war with the greatest power on Earth.

Hamilton and Laurens quickly form a friendship, sharing similar ideas against slavery and a desire for glory on the battlefield. Yet they soon discover a passion for each other beyond their paperwork and swords. But when the war calls Laurens south and Hamilton learns of a wife left in England, the differing priorities and values between the two men begin to reveal themselves causing both to question what their love and future can be.

Based on true events and personal letters, Duty and Inclination follows the romantic relationship between two men, during one of the pivotal moments in American history, who will leave their mark on their future country and on each other.




Unexpected 
John Laurens listens to the gentle clop of his horse’s hooves over packed earth, a quiet hum of bird song and the whisper of the wind. The summer woods feel peaceful, almost serene, nothing to indicate that a war rages through every corner of the American Colonies as it has for nearing two years now. With years away from his native land in Geneva and London for his schooling, Laurens missed the sound of real nature, but he is not here to enjoy the scenery. 

The dense woods of Pennsylvania soon part to reveal the sea of white canvas tents arranged in parallel rows which make up the current encampment of the American Continental Army and his destination. 

“Halt!” One of a pair of sentries stationed at the edge shouts. “Who goes there?” 

“John Laurens.” Laurens slows his horse and pulls a letter from his cloak. “I have a summons from General Washington.”

The man who receives it scans the page. Laurens notices the sharp cut of the man’s jaw and fullness of his lips. Laurens grits his teeth and looks away until the sentry hands the paper back. “Welcome to camp, sir. Follow the main line down, you will see the General’s tent.” 

Laurens nods. “How should I know it?” 

Both men chuckle. “You shall know it, sir,” the one man says, “largest of the lot.” 

“And very French at present,” the other quips. 

Laurens frowns. “Speak plainly, sirs.” 

They both gesture down the main drive through the encampment. “Ride straight.” 

Laurens sighs and pushes his horse on slowly into the lines of tents. He keeps his horse on the straight line they indicated but cannot stop his eyes sliding from side to side over the camp. He takes in the straight rows, most of the tents the same size and make but occasionally larger ones that are perhaps officers. Part of the land looks recently cleared with some stumps between tents with the rest twisting as lines will allow through the breaks in the trees. He observes soldiers stoking small fires, men cleaning rifles, and the sound of chopping wood. 

It takes but five minutes before Laurens sees the tent the guards must mean. It is indeed larger than the personal tents of the soldiers and other supply shelters, rounder in construction with its own pair of guards in front of what must be the entrance. Laurens sees the flaps open and hears some voices inside. 

Laurens swallows as he stops his horse. He is not truly apprehensive, but a man cannot help some nerves in such a moment. He has not met General Washington before, and he is legendary throughout the colonies. Laurens dismounts and hands his horse off to a Private. Then he walks to the entrance of the tent, letter in hand. 

“John Laurens,” Laurens says, holding out the letter. 

A guard nods at him then shifts around and steps into the tent. “Sir? A John Laurens to see you. He bears your seal in hand.” 

Laurens has little time to think upon the efficiency of the enlisted men before he walks through the flap and into the tall tent. Of the three men in the tent, there is no mistaking His Excellency George Washington, commander of the Continental Army in their fight against the British. He stands taller than all the men present, though Laurens is by no means short. His face appears stern yet somehow warm, enough that while Laurens feels he should stand stiff, he does not feel off put. The General's hair is a red Laurens did not expect, certainly not the burst of Irish red he has seen in England but there is no mistaking the auburn there. Laurens would call his uniform, his manner, his simple presence in the space resplendent. He looks every bit the army commander. 

Laurens takes off his hat, shoving it under one arm, and slides off his gloves, looking quickly around the large tent – one long table with several chairs, some maps hanging off ropes of the tent canvas and a pair of side boards along either edge of the tent walls. Then Laurens looks back to the General with a deferential bow. 

“Ah,” the General says, “Mr. Laurens, thank you for accepting my invitation and position of aide-de-camp.” 

“Thank you, Your Excellency.” Laurens walks forward toward the trio on the other side of a long table taking up most of the tent. “It is a pleasure to meet you in person. My father has always spoken well of you.” 

The General smiles and makes a small noise of assent. “He is an honorable man.” The General then turns to the two men beside him, indicating the man wearing a green riband across his chest. “My military secretary, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Hanson Harrison.” 

The man nods at Laurens and shakes his hand congenially, a fatherly bearing to his expression accentuated by the gray strands in his brown hair, likely ten years older than Laurens himself. “Of South Carolina, are you not?” 

“Yes,” Laurens replies. “Though lately of England in pursuit of my law degree.” He does not mention the hurriedly married wife and new daughter he gladly left behind in that country. 

Then the General turns to the obviously youngest man in the room, nearly as tall as General Washington with powdered hair, and much red trimming to his coat. Laurens knows he is French even before the General introduces him.

“A recent addition, such as yourself, to our ranks, The Marquis de Lafayette.” 

Laurens smiles, taking the man's hand. “Bonjour, monsieur.” 

“Bonjour,” the Marquis replies, “is good to.... eh... meet.” 

“Je suis heureux de vous rencontrer aussi, Marquis.” 

The man's face changes at Laurens' French greeting, relief or joy, Laurens cannot truly tell. 

“Ah, oui, merci beaucoup...” 

“The Marquis comes to us with a commission of Major General from Congress,” His Excellency explains. 

Laurens raises his eyebrows in surprise; the Marquis appears as young as he. “Impressionnant!” 

The Marquis nods once with a modest smile. “Je ferai de mon mieux pour le mériter.” He turns to General Washington and nods, “Thank you, sir.” 

“Mr. Laurens,” His Excellency continues, “is a volunteer aide to my office and comes highly recommended by Congress.” 

Laurens looks down and nods. “By my father at least,” Laurens corrects as tactfully as he may, “who is a member of Congress.” 

“Oui, Henry Laurens, he, I have heard,” the Marquis replies. 

Laurens smiles appropriately. With a father as wealthy and connected as Laurens’, such remarks are a litany well known in Laurens’ life.

“Now we should proceed,” the General says turning to Harrison hovering nearby. “Harrison, if you would fetch Colonel Hamilton and Tilghman for me?” 

“Yes, sir,” Harrison says as he moves toward the tent exit. 

“Laurens, I shall be taking the Marquis on a tour of the camp while you become settled into your new responsibilities here.” The General gestures to the Marquis. “Unfortunately, I am not versed in French as I should wish and, though I know of your own fluency, I would not put you to such work so quickly.” 

“Sir, if you should wish –” 

The General holds up his hand to stop Laurens. “Thank you, but you are not the only man among my staff who speaks French, though we are quite pleased to have you as another. I plan to put you toward much of the French translation work we have.” 

Laurens nods. “Of course, sir.” 

“The Marquis has already begun his education in our language,” General Washington continues. “As you have heard.” 

The Marquis smiles gratefully, if also embarrassed. “Je suis encore lent à apprendre.” 

“You shall learn fast enough,” Laurens says. 

He thinks he should offer to help teach the Marquis, but he cannot determine if this should be out of the bounds of propriety. Perhaps there will be time in the future; Laurens should not expect so much of one day. Still, he cannot help but feel eager to serve in any manner.

“I am confident,” His Excellency continues. “And at present I have at least one other aide who may accompany us.” 

Laurens nods. 

“You, sir, shall need to learn more of your duties and find a place for yourself. It may feel short lived, however, as we shall be moving again tomorrow.” 

Laurens frowns. “So soon?” 

“Such is the nature of army life, Mr. Laurens.” 

“Sir?” 

Laurens turns at the sound of a new voice from the entrance to the tent. 

A man with sandy blond hair and a wide smile walks into the tent. “Ah, you must be our extra aide.” 

“And you must be attending myself and the Marquis, Tilghman.” 

Tilghman smiles. “Oui, I shall.” He nods to the two of them. “As you wish, Your Excellency.” 

“You also surmise correctly,” the General continues with a gesture to Laurens, “Tench Tilghman, this is John Laurens.” 

Laurens shakes hands with the boisterous man who says, “Welcome to the army, Laurens!” 

“Is this our new aide?” 

Laurens' eyes shift past Tilghman at the second voice to see another man walking into the tent. The man ducks his head under the flap as he removes his hat then looks up at their party with a wide smile. Laurens swallows once and tightens his hands around his gloves as he stares. 

While the General's hair is an auburn – more autumn than fire – this man's hair is as close to Irish as one might expect, all oranges and reds and almost a shock of color that matches perfectly with his blue and buff uniform. Despite the tight braid laid against his neck, Laurens sees this man’s red hair bears a natural curl causing a wave against the pale skin of his brow. He stands shorter than Laurens, shorter than all in the room, but the way he walks – confident and almost cocky, like those in the room should be answering to him – offsets what another man might fear censure of. His face, his expression, appears smooth and youthful, certainly of an age with Laurens – still a few years from twenty-five, with narrow points and delicate cheeks bearing an almost feminine blush to them. And his eyes. His eyes are blue, a dark blue like the sea, deep and dangerous and Laurens thinks they are beautiful. 

Laurens pulls one hand free of his own tight grasp as he catches the end of what General Washington says, “... of my aides, Alexander Hamilton.” 

Hamilton grips Laurens hand and shakes it once. “A pleasure, sir.” 

“John Laurens.” Laurens shakes his hand back. “And it is mine.” 

Hamilton lets go of Laurens' hand and Laurens' curls his fingers back up tightly by his side. 

“Lieutenant Colonel,” His Excellency addresses Hamilton. “If you would be so good as to acquaint our new Laurens here with our protocols, find him his tent, and have him set to work. I am sure you have some French which he could assist you with.” 

Hamilton nods. “Of course, Your Excellency.” 

“I shall be taking Tilghman away from you for much of the day, I imagine.” 

The General looks at the Marquis again as Tilghman repeats the General's words in French, though it appears it may have been unnecessary. Laurens suspects it will not take long for the Marquis to master their language. 

“Your Excellency?” Laurens glances at the tent flap once more to see the first aide, Harrison, poking his head in. “Your horses are ready, sirs.” 

“Thank you, Harrison.” The General looks at The Marquis and Tilghman in turn. “Gentlemen, if you will follow me.” 

They both say, “yes sir,” then follow the General outside with nods of farewell. 

Then Laurens and Hamilton stand alone in the tent. 

Laurens shifts his hat down from under his arm into his hand, clearing his throat. “Lieutenant Colonel, please lead on, I am at your service.” 

Hamilton smiles at him with a shake of his head. “You need not address me by my rank, Laurens, we are of equal footing. Hamilton is well enough.” 

Laurens shakes his head. “I have no such rank yet. I am but a volunteer.” 

Hamilton looks him up and down. Laurens' hand clenches around his hat. He has the urge to fidget or tap his gloves on his leg, but he keeps himself still.

Hamilton stares Laurens in the face again then nods. “You seem a man of conviction, to come as a volunteer, and immediately into the General’s office, I think it should not be long before a rank shall be yours.” 

Laurens clears his throat. “Should I distinguish myself and earn some import on the field as to deserve it, I shall be glad to accept it then.” 

Hamilton laughs once. “A modest man, are you?” 

“Merely a practical one. Why should I deserve a rank now?” 

“Well, if you have a dedication to the patriot cause and your father is a member of our Congress, is that not enough?” 

Laurens frowns. “Do you think it enough? Would you rather lesser men with better names advance before you?” 

Hamilton purses his lips and his expression changes. Laurens thinks he must have said the right thing. 

“No, I would not, but not all men think as I.” 

“I am not all men.” 

Hamilton smiles so it looks like a smirk then gestures toward the tent flaps. “Shall we?” 

Laurens nods and follows Hamilton from the tent once more, swooping his hat back on his head and shoving his riding gloves into his coat pocket. 

“At present we are confined to our tents and the command tent as you saw for our work,” Hamilton gestures behind them, “but, when able, we will commandeer a house for the General and we his staff. I am afraid you may find it cramped and crude at times, but such is the army with limited supplies and space.” 

“I understand,” Laurens replies as they walk down the line of tents. 

“As you may imagine, our work is much bound to the page and ink. The General mentioned translation, as you may know we have many Frenchmen rallied to our cause. It is myself, Tilghman and now you who are fluent.” 

“I am adept in some other languages as well, but I would not say fluent in any but French.” 

“English, I hope?” Hamilton flashes him a smile, the two of them now walking side by side with matching strides. 

Laurens cannot help a chuckle. “I am so fortunate as to have mastered English even with schooling in England to attempt to put me off.” 

Hamilton laughs too. “Ah ha, better to return where we speak it best.” 

“No comparison, of course.” 

They glance at each other, Hamilton's smile shifting into something companionable. 

“Well,” Hamilton looks away ahead of them. “We are also called upon for many other tasks as the General's most trusted men. We are involved with intelligence, prisoner interrogation, supply, of course paperwork, reports and correspondence. Meade is the best rider among us and sent most often. You shall meet him soon, I should imagine. Our tasks are more numerous than I am able to list now but we attend the General in any way he sees fit. Your hand shall tire of writing within a fortnight.” 

Laurens smiles again. “Stains upon my fingers?” 

Hamilton smirks back. “Undoubtedly.” He holds up his right hand where Laurens spies an obvious blot of ink. 

Laurens purses his lips and speaks without thought. “A shame to waste it.” 

Hamilton laughs once again. “Ah yes, we cannot afford to waste any supplies we have, even ink.” 

Laurens ducks his head and watches the grass because he truly meant Hamilton's hands, not the ink. 

“And,” Hamilton says with an audible inhale of air, “we are required to entertain all manner of guests, General's wives for one; less than you may believe but more than you should hope.” 

Laurens nods as he watches their boots match pace. 

“Ah, what else?” Hamilton's hand brushes against Laurens' and Laurens pulls his hand closer to his side. “Writing out His Excellency's letters; I have at times been able to draft my own replies.” He continues with pride in his tone. “As well as copies. You would think our army comprised more of paper than men.” 

Laurens glances at Hamilton again as he speaks. Hamilton flashes a look at Laurens, all teeth and lips. “And when upon the battlefield, we are to relay messages between officers, often recoonoitering ahead of the fray.” 

“And to fight?”

Hamilton frowns. “But little.” 

Laurens suspected such before his arrival, but he had hoped for a different reality. “Have you seen battle yourself?” 

Hamilton nods. “I was at Trenton last year and New York before joining the General's office.” 

“And now?” 

“Now a desk occupies much of my time, but it is needed work as much as the sword.” 

Laurens whispers, “I should prefer the sword...” 

“I understand you.” Laurens looks at Hamilton sharply not intending for him to have heard. “But it is where you are now, is it not?” 

“Yes.” 

“You are still an extra aide, perhaps something different shall lie ahead of you.” 

Laurens thinks Hamilton forward in his predictions on Laurens' station and advancement, but he finds himself unoffended. “I think my name puts me here, but I know myself and know what a call to arms feels like.” 

They walk three steps with no words then Hamilton says. “Our pen is our sword until it may change into that which we seek. If our ink will not steer the way, then how should our victories occur? How should these men find their fights?” 

Laurens looks up at Hamilton. “You think not of glory?”

Hamilton's lips twist as he walks, his stride quickening. “I do.” Then he glances at Laurens. “But I am here now and by the General's side, I do not call that lacking. If I am able to serve, be it by pen or sword, then I should do so in defense of my country. Do you not agree?” 

Laurens nods. “I do.” 

Laurens worries now that Hamilton will be a problem or worse, a pleasure far more than he should be in Laurens' eyes.


Rebecca Dupont

Rebecca Dupont has had a passion for writing for twenty years which often teams up with her love of history. As a member of the queer community, she wants to use her pen to bring queer history to life. Dupont believes historical fiction, especially based in fact, is a way for many people to understand and see themselves in a past that often prefers to erase them. Dupont is a history and museum studies major who lives with her partner in Washington D.C.







Sunday, April 6, 2025

🏀🎭Week at a Glance🎭🏀: 3/31/25 - 4/6/25



















🏀Sunday's Sport Stats🏀: Rim Shot by Skylar M Cates



Summary:

Forced proximity
Friends-to-lovers
Scandal

Kyle and Micah must navigate college and their futures.

Kyle:
Basketball is my life. With hard work, my position will carry me from rural Indiana to the NBA. I have big dreams, but they don’t include coming out of the closet. I'm afraid to admit to the world that I’m attracted to guys. Basketball and my dad are everything to me, and I can’t risk losing either. And now I’m secretly lusting after my new roommate, who is nothing like me. He’s out, proud, and definitely not a virgin.

Micah:
My large family can't spare the money for my education, but that won't stop me from studying medicine—I’ll work my butt off to get where I need to go. I can deal with anything now that I’m out of the house I shared with my ex, even if it means living with a straight jock. But our tiny dorm room is shrinking, and my feelings are becoming more significant. What will Kyle do if I accidentally cross a line?

When a sports scandal rocks Kyle’s world, he and Micah fight for his reputation, and love turns life's plans upside down.




Prologue
Kyle
EVEN IN the stifling summer heat, my heart felt like ice.

I could hear my teammates loudly debating from the sidelines how many suicide drills I could do, and I tried to ignore them. I sped through the gymnasium, my lungs burning, body pumping, legs growing heavy. I might have to work on my speed, but I had endurance.

All I could think about was Keller quitting. He was leaving the team and abandoning me without a roommate in the dorm. The semester was about to start. How could he do this?

Coach Larson blew his whistle. “Sweeney, enough!”

I ran one more round before I obeyed and collapsed on the bleachers, huffing a little, sweat in my eyes. Although it was supposed to be cool in the gymnasium, the air conditioner was broken again. I rubbed my face on my jersey.

“I just lost ten bucks.” Dobbin grunted at me. He was the biggest guy on the team and, like me, one of the most talented. But Dobbin liked to stir up shit. He turned on Flagler. “It doesn’t count since Coach made him stop.”

“We had no such agreement,” Flagler said. “Pay me.”

“Nobody is betting on or paying anything. Hit the showers,” Coach Larson said.

“Sure thing, Coach,” Flagler said. He was always a bit of a suck-up.

They headed to the locker room. I returned to the dorm instead.

The best thing about the upperclassmen dorm of Wyatt Hall was it took less than ten minutes to run from the gym to my room. The athletics department had made a convincing case that our players needed to be the exception in order to get to our practice on time. So even though I was only a sophomore, Coach Larson took care of me and the others. The team practices began early, before the start of the semester, so I had the same room from last year.

Once I reached my dorm, I ducked under the doorway, which was a little low for my height. A few upperclassmen were chatting up some girls. They spoke animatedly, pausing to watch me maneuver through the entrance. If it wasn’t for basketball, being tall would make me freakish. I always had to slouch in movie theaters or on airplanes. I couldn’t say how many times people had stopped me on my first day as a freshman to comment, “Geez, you’re tall,” like I had never looked into a mirror and noticed. Ironically, in terms of basketball players, I was on the shorter side at six four. Point guards, luckily, don’t have to be giants.

The other dumb observation I got was “wow, you’re pale.” That one from people in the dorm made Keller’s day, because me being only one of two white players on the Barons was great fun for him. Ragging on me was Keller’s favorite activity outside the court, but I knew he simply loved to tease about it. We had each other’s backs.

I unlocked my room, closed the door, and began to peel off my clothes. I tossed them into the small hamper like I was shooting a three-pointer from downtown.

Swoosh.

I flung a towel around my waist, and then I called Keller. Although he’d told Coach his decision last week, Keller hadn’t had the balls to tell me. I had to hear he wasn’t returning from Coach.

Keller answered on the second ring. “Hey, man. How’s it going?”

I pictured his easy smile, and I frowned. Maybe we were very different people, but Keller had been my roommate and best friend here. His departure hurt. It especially hurt that he left so abruptly. Back in May, when we’d said goodbye for the summer, everything had been normal. It was all “see ya next year” stuff. Keller had never even hinted he might not return to Harrison University.

“So you heard?” Keller asked softly after a minute of my silence greeting him. “That I’m not returning?”

“Are you really not coming back?” I absently played with the thread on the white towel.

“I can’t.” Keller paused a beat. “Regina’s pregnant.”

Regina was his on-again, off-again girlfriend and high school sweetheart. A nice girl, who trusted Keller as they’d attended different colleges.

“Wow, that’s… wow.” I wasn’t certain whether I needed to congratulate Keller or say I was sorry.

“My parents are freaking out. But the truth is I only lasted on the team ’cause of your help, Sweeney.”

“That’s not true—”

“Yeah, it’s true. All those extra tips you gave me, all those times you woke my butt up to practice extra…. We both know I would’ve been cut last year if not for you.” He cleared his throat. “You’re a good guy, Kyle. Thanks for trying.”

I couldn’t reply, a lump the size of LeBron James in my throat.

“Send me a picture when you make the NBA, will ya? For me and my kid. Weird shit, man, I’m going to be somebody’s dad.” For all his talk, Keller sounded scared.

I forgave him for deserting me right then and there. What was my hurt now? Keller had one heck of a reason for not coming back. I struggled over saying that to him, however, and searched my brain for some words.

“Hopefully the baby takes after her and won’t have your size-thirteen feet.”

Keller laughed, and I was relieved. I often felt as if being social was like defusing bombs. I never understood where the triggers were until they blew.

“Listen, I might have a solution for who can room with you.”

“Oh? Who?”

“Micah Hutchinson. He happened to mention needing a new place. Before you object that he’s not on the team, that he’s a trainer assistant and not one of us, give him a chance. He’d be a good roomie. Better than some stranger.”

“Isn’t Micah… gay?”

“So what? Don’t give me any prejudice crap, Sweeney. That’s not like you. And you know I got a cousin Tommy who—”

I groaned. “Not again about Tommy.”

“Just saying. If you said shit about Tommy, I’d have to hurt you. Look, Micah’s cool. He might eye-fuck your ass on occasion, but that would be it. You don’t have a problem with the gay thing for real, do you?”

I swallowed hard. I had almost come out to Keller on several occasions, especially after hearing all the stories about his “gay cousin Tommy.” The trouble was Keller loved to gossip.

“Is he neat or messy? Does he snore? Does he party too much?”

“What the fuck does it matter? Micah knows who you are, and he’ll respect your space. Shit, man, all I know is he mentioned having to find a better living arrangement at the end of last season. He’s as serious about his studies as you are with basketball. You two might actually have some things in common.”

More than you know.

Even Keller didn’t know the “real” me. It was my fault, I suppose, and it made me unbelievably sad. I was too afraid. In one simple revelation, I could lose my future career. Yes, other athletes had come out, but there was a cost. It was bull to pretend otherwise. So I didn’t give in to all this need—this longing—inside me.

“Okay, give me his number, and I’ll see if I can make it happen.”

“Good. You won’t regret it, Sweeney.”

After putting Micah’s number into my contacts, I said goodbye to Keller. I couldn’t believe how fast my life had just changed.

Lying back on my bed, I turned the situation over a few times in my mind, Micah’s contact information open on my phone. I didn’t do great with sudden changes.

Micah was cool, like Keller said. He was always cheerful with all the players and the staff. Last spring he openly spoke of a boyfriend now and again. Nobody cared. It was good that Micah had a boyfriend. It made it easier. As cute as Micah was, I wouldn’t want to flirt with somebody who was already taken. Maybe Micah would set me up with some available friend?

I snorted. Yeah, and what if that available friend told everybody he fucked me just to brag or something? It would be different if the team knew I was gay. Sure, they were fine with Micah, mostly, but he wasn’t in the locker room. And while sports had changed in the last decade and become more tolerant, I had zero desire to be the gay poster boy of the NBA. I mean, I admired Jason Collins and his courage, but he was the exception. I would keep my eye on the prize and make my dad proud. I’d waited this long for a real life; I could wait some more.

Yes, my roommate situation changed, but my life would stay exactly the same. My excitement suddenly flatlined. I couldn’t be honest with Micah any more than I had been with Keller.

I grabbed my flip-flops and a bucket of toiletries and padded over to my door.

When the guys were in the locker room with me, I never looked at them in their tighty–whities, or worse, naked. I loved being on a team. I couldn’t imagine doing some solo sport. I have to have basketball in my life. Being on the team wasn’t always easy, hiding my secret wasn’t easy at all, but I wouldn’t trade who I was for anything.

It would be great to figure out a way to have it all. But it seemed unlikely. How could I even begin to trust someone with the fact that I wanted to be screwed so hard my ass would hurt for a week? I would simply have to forget that Micah was gay.


* * *

Micah
LACK OF money stopped me from moving out of the house I currently shared with my ex, Chance, and our roommates. Three weeks after our split, Chance found Austin, “the love of his life,” and Austin moved in. I braved the news with a fake smile. Chance and I were over, after all. Why should I care? But it fucking stung. I stayed, even as I felt it was bullshit. I went to my room and drank cheap vodka and listened to some angry chick music. Angry chick music understood me.

“We can remain friends, right?” Chance looked at me with a mixture of pity and conceit when I finally showed my shamed, hungover face a few days later. “Nothing has to change there.”

“Friends,” I agreed and slipped past him out of the house.

I went to the university for ideas, but so far the campus housing department remained unhelpful, and I was stuck.

Staying all summer had been foolish, but where could I go? I was already struggling financially, living the Dollar Tree diet of ramen noodles and Chef Boyardee, and the house we rented was dirt cheap. So Austin moved in, and I tried to keep out of the way, focusing on my work and upcoming semester. Classes hadn’t begun yet, but that didn’t mean there was time to relax, not for the premed students, and least of all me. Getting an early start on the material was crucial to my doing well, and I knew once the semester was officially underway, I’d be too busy to breathe.

Having multiple jobs for once was a blessing. I worked as a porter in the teaching hospital that offered HU students like me internships, and as a personal trainer assistant for the college basketball team. I loved the hospital work, and to my surprise, I even liked the job with the Barons, despite knowing jack shit about sports. I enjoyed helping the players. Last semester when I got the assistant trainer job, watching the team run through their normal routines had been eye-opening for me. Not just what constituted a practice, which was a grueling workout the players were run through—exercises that seemed to push the guys to the very limit of their physical abilities. Color me impressed. While I hadn’t exactly befriended any of the team, I did have respect for them in a whole new way.

One player in particular impressed me. Kyle Sweeney. Okay, to be honest, impressed wasn’t the right word for my reaction. A lot of the players were in top condition and attractive, but Kyle? He was in a league all his own. I couldn’t think of a single word to describe him in action other than breathtaking. The way he moved was incredible. I had expected basketball players to be lumbering and ungainly, but Kyle was light on his feet, darting this way, then that. He ran circles around the other players, and he did it gracefully. The others would laugh or joke around together—when they caught a breath—but not Kyle. He was always stretching or doing push-ups or running drills. Those muscled, tattooed arms. That buzzed blond hair, tall build, and the raw power when he moved—a shiver went through me. I enjoyed the free show, but I’d never even spoken to Kyle beyond my job. I was with Chance then. One thing I never was or would be was a cheat. Besides, it wasn’t as if Kyle Sweeney would return my admiration.

Despite enjoying both my jobs, neither was enough to not worry about money. I wish that burden could be magically lifted from my shoulders, but some are born with financial luck while others are not. My money troubles have always been a roadblock to my goals. I was the first in my family to go to college. My family was wonderful, but with seven kids, they could not offer me much help. If I needed a baked ham or somebody to fix my car, they could help. But none of them knew about student loans or applying for scholarships. When my scholarship fell through, forcing me to scrabble for ways to afford to stay in school, I was alone.

I’d hoped for a raise, but no luck there either. The hospital was all about funding. No money in their budget for raises this year, for me or anybody else. Raymond, my boss, was always reminding me that medical care was all about the well-insured and the emergency, and nothing in-between. And sadly, I saw doctors all the time lose their connection to patients. I got how it happened—long shifts and constant stress. Every day, I worked around medical professionals who discussed the cases but couldn’t recall the patients’ names.

So as I went to my shift, I knew not to count on the hospital for much. I was so exhausted, and I’d soon be on my feet all day. But sleeping in the house, in the room next to Chance and Austin, was slowly killing me. I had been functioning on a few hours a night, tops. I hadn’t had insomnia in years, but I got it when my brain couldn’t turn off and stop worrying.

I shrugged against the humid outside air, waiting for my bus to the hospital, rubbing my eyes to get the morning crud out. Despite the summer temperatures climbing, the hospital would be an air-conditioned block of ice. It usually ended up making me sick at some point. Across from the bus stop near the quad, I saw a group of students congregating around Harrison’s statue—the huge bronze figure of the twenty-third president astride a horse. Why on horseback, I had no clue. Every time I saw it, I wondered if President Benjamin Harrison ever actually rode a horse. Probably. Still, the university seems to be inordinately proud of their namesake, if this ungainly chunk of metal was any indication. The group was laughing and having fun. I’d never had that kind of time to waste just hanging out—something Chance’d had a problem with. I called it paying the bills, but he called it my “workaholic tendencies.” Well, fuck him.

After we broke it off, Chance met Austin at the same club where we’d met, back when I “knew how to have a good time.” Chance loved to tell the story. Austin had moved to Indiana that same day. His mother was divorced and living here and had convinced Austin to give it a try. He had barely unloaded his truck when he decided to hit the clubs.

“What are the odds, right?” Chance had chuckled to our other roommates. “Isn’t that so funny? I mean, we meet the exact day he moves here!”

Hilarious.

The bus finally arrived and came to a stop with a loud beep. I felt like one of the zombies from a bad horror movie, groaning as I staggered up the steps.

I pulled my scrub top on over my head as soon as I was through the door, dropping my backpack on the unoccupied seat next to me. Job number one would be starting in fifteen minutes, and all I wanted was to go home and pull the covers over me. Only my house was no longer a home. Living there was soul-sucking.

And I had nowhere else to go. I was royally screwed.

Unless I got a miracle.

Nothing could have shocked me more than getting one.

My phone buzzed with a voicemail from a missed call. As I listened to the message, Kyle Sweeney’s voice was like an answer to a fucking prayer.

“Um, hey, Micah. It’s Sweeney. From the team? Keller mentioned you needed a better roommate situation this year, and as it turns out, Keller had to leave unexpectedly this semester. So he suggested that you could move into Wyatt Hall right away and take his place. If you’re interested, call me back, and we can put in the request with the housing office.”

I listened to the message again and smiled. No more house and no more watching my ex be all happy without me. I glanced at the other passengers on the bus and wanted to shout, I’m done with this shit.

It felt good to admit it. Finally I could move the fuck out of there and away from them.


Skylar M Cates

Emotional, Roller-Coaster Romance

Skylar M. Cates loves a good, heartfelt romance, especially ones that are both steamy and emotionally satisfying. She is quite happy to drink some coffee, curl up with a good book, and not move all day. Her novels feature strong, passionate characters who care about their friends and family. Skylar loves to craft stories where people are challenged by vulnerable situations. Although lately the laundry room is the farthest place she has visited, Skylar still loves to chat with people from all around the globe. Contact her on Twitter, Facebook, or through her newsletter.



Saturday, April 5, 2025

💻Blogger Review💻: Mine to Keep by Davidson King



Summary:

Saint Brothers #3
Matt lives a pretty simple life. A physical therapist, he helps people to heal and become their best selves once again. When he’s offered a live-in position at the Saint residence, he accepts easily and for a while, things go smoothly. But then there’s a drunken night…and a possible stalker. Matt is really starting to miss that simple life.

Nick likes computers more than people…except maybe his twin brother. Matt living with them for months on end doesn’t affect him much…until one weird night. Now Nick sees Matt in a different light, and when someone else starts looking at Matt in a very dangerous way, he is filled with a need to help. But will Matt let him? And who is stalking Matt?

When the situation begins to escalate and it appears that Matt’s life may be on the line, Nick refuses to stand on the sidelines—he calls for his family to step in and help. As Nick and Matt get closer in every way, so does the threat. Can Nick and Matt keep one step ahead of danger, or is luck not on their side?

Mine to Keep is book three in the Saint Brothers Series. While the story is a standalone, characters from past books appear in this story so for the full experience I suggest reading in order Book one: Slay Ride. Book two: Kill Me Sweetly.





Davidson King brings everything to the kitchen and delivers a 5-star meal once again with Mine to Keep.  The title gives you an idea the featured subject: stalking and she shines a spotlight on so many disturbing emotions felt when one is stalked.  I don't speak from personal experience but from everything I've watched and read on the subject over the years, is within the pages of Mine.  I certainly hope the author speaks from research and not experience but either way the respect for the topic is shown on every page.  Don't get me wrong, there are many scenes of humor, generally between the Saint brothers and their loving banter we've come to know them for, to help balance the overall story.

I gotta say it.  Mine to Keep freaked me out more than the first two entries in the author's Saint Brothers series.  The first two were definitely more violent, more action-packed, frankly they bordered on horror as much as you can without a paranormal or slasher element in my book.  To be honest, Mine was less bloody, less gory, less in your face violent mayhem and yet it terrified me more, or at least more deeply, it spoke to the fear inside me more.  Stalking is scary and creepy on multiple levels but it is also something that happens every day, can happen to anyone at anytime.  Does it happen that often? More than you probably realize but no, not often. But it can.  Stalking speaks to the inner demon that we all have, of course only a select few actually act on it but the idea it can happen on any given day to any and every one you know, that is what makes it such a horrifying event.  This is why Mine to Keep scared me more than the first two.  

Really the above statement is surprising because just as you think Davidson King might have went a little soft with this entry, she kicks back, kicks butt, and terrified me to the very core.  The author's last release in February did something that I wasn't expecting, it gave me moments of respite from the grief of losing my mother.  I mention this not because the books are related as that was a standalone nor am I making any kind of content comparisons but because today I'm still grieving but also preparing to find a job and dealing with health issue with my dad so I'm crippled in fear most days.  Davidson King has once again given me moments of respite so that I can step outside my inner fear and yes, she has catapulted me into a fear-filled realistic fictional world but it is so entertaining and so heart-grabbing that it was a distraction from my reality fear.  For all the fear Matt and Nick face you allowed me to recharge here and there and I can't thank you enough, Davidson King for those moments that allowed me to breathe.

I want to mention Matt and Nick but I don't want to spoil anything so all I'll say is I wanted to wrap Matt in a giant Mama Bear hug to protect him just as Nick does but I also wanted to shake him to make him listen to Nick and his family before things escalated too far.  As for Nick, well how can you not love him?  He has super mad computer skills, which come in handy in this case, and he just wants to protect Matt even before they connect.  The Saint brothers may not see him as family at first, but as JJ's physical therapist helping him heal after what occurred in Kill Me Sweetly(book 2) Matt is as close as one can get without a romantic connection but not so much as they want to break the family rules of voting on interfering.  Even vigilantes have a playbook😉.

I feel like I've descended into rambling here so I'll finish with this:  Mine to Keep will hit you in all the feels that will keep you hooked till the end and guessing right to the reveal, I know I was wrong.  A winner on all fronts.

RATING:





CHAPTER ONE
One Month Ago
Matt
“I’m so happy you finally agreed to come out with us.” Joan’s violet-painted lips were wide, her eyes glassy. She’d been drinking a lot since we arrived…which had been only an hour ago.

“Sorry. I wanted to hang sooner, but this new client, he was in bad shape. I had to be more hands-on than normal. The first month was a lot of recovery, but they still needed me there. By the end of every day, I was beat.”

She nodded. “Camie gave you that assault victim.” She snapped her fingers. “J something.”

“He’s a great guy—he’s come a long way. I know Camie gave him to me, thinking I’d quit when I found out it was in-house physical therapy, but it’s cool. Pay is amazing, and the house is gorgeous.”

“This the house with all those guys living there…brothers, right?” Lewis, who worked with me and Joan, came to the table with a cold beer.

“Saint brothers. Yep, that’s them.” I pursed my lips as I thought about those men.

It was a huge house, and they were all foster brothers except for the twins. Those two were blood related. I hadn’t seen a lot of them—mostly just my patient, JJ, and his boyfriend, Shepard. I’d been there every day, even the weekends, until recently. JJ was doing a lot better. Another month and he’d cut down to maybe two days a week.

Joan fanned herself. “That’s some serious hotness. They run that bakery, Saintly Sweets. Delicious food—even yummier owners.”

I rolled my eyes. “Joan, go dance and work off some of that…” I made a figure eight with my hand. “Whatever that is.”

She laughed, pulled Lewis up, and dragged him to the dance floor. The Alibi was our favorite club. I loved its diversity and while loud at times, there was never any drama, fights, or major issues.

“All alone?”

I looked up to see Darnell holding two drinks. “Joan forced Lewis to dance.”

Darnell sat and pushed one of the drinks over to me, then sipped his own. “They need to just fuck and be done with it.”

I guffawed. “Lord, no. That can’t happen.”

Darnell hummed. “She’d eat him alive.”

“True facts, my friend.”

Darnell, Joan, Lewis, and I worked at Rybelt Physical Therapy and Sports Management. Once a month, we’d get together at The Alibi and decompress. This was the first time I’d been able to join them since I’d started working with JJ.

“I gotta ask.” Darnell leaned forward. “What’s it really like being in a house with all those guys?” He jerked his head toward Joan and Lewis. “I heard them talking to you about it.”

I had to be careful. While Darnell was my closest friend at work—hell, we’d dated for a few months a while back—I still had to maintain privacy.

“It’s different. I hadn’t done live-in therapy before, so if I’m being honest, it took me more time to adjust to that than to get to know any of them.”

“Well, what’s a typical day for you?”

I sipped my drink, wondering what I could say to appease him. “Get up, eat, then usually meet JJ. We do morning routines, break, and after that do afternoon ones. In the evening, it’s mostly massage and relaxation—things like that. Then I pass out.”

He nodded. “Was that why Tony and you broke up, you not being around?”

I snorted, thinking about that asshole. “No. I mean, it wasn’t the final straw for him, but Tony and I were never going to work. He was demanding, a serious control freak, and closed-minded.”

“How so?” Darnell cocked his head.

“About two weeks before I’d started working for JJ, I came out of the shower and he was looking at one of my photo albums. And not just any—the one Trinity made me.”

“You just had that laying out there?”

“Nope. It was in my closet. But that’s the least of it. He pointed to a picture of Trinity and said, what’s that?”

“That?” Darnell whistled.

“Mmmhmm. Trinity was dressed up in one of their awesome creations, and I told Tony they were my ex, Trinity. He slammed the book closed and yelled that he thought I was gay.”

Darnell held his hands up. “Whoa, he looked at Trinity and…I don’t get it.”

“You know how Trinity hates labels: pangender, nonbinary. I told him Trinity was fluid, didn’t conform to one gender, and in this picture Trin was wearing a dress and makeup.”

“And he thought they were a woman?”

I shrugged. “Doesn’t matter; I didn’t feed into it. I just told him that I never said I was gay, and that I was, in fact, pansexual. Then I explained that Trinity was nonbinary, and did my best to educate him as well as I could. He shook his head and was all, ‘No, there’s only straight, gay, or lesbian.’ ”

“No, he did not!” Darnell pressed a palm to his chest.

“Oh, he did, and I explained that he needed to go home because if he felt that way, we weren’t a good fit.”

Darnell slapped the table. “Good on you. How’d that go?”

I chuckled. “We broke up, remember?”

“Shit…well, you dodged a bullet with him. What a dickhead.”

“For sure.” I drained my drink and stood. “I’m going to get another. I’d like to be drunk tonight.”

Darnell beamed. “Fuck, yeah. That’s why we Ubered it here. Go get all the alcohol.”

I headed to the bar to order myself and Darnell the next round of drinks since he’d gotten the last. While I waited, I scanned the club. Lewis and Joan were really going at it…Hmm, maybe they should fuck and get it over with.

“Here you go.” The bartender slid the drinks to me, and I tossed him a twenty.

For the next hour or so, I drank, danced, and drank some more. I had nowhere to be tomorrow, and I was going to stay in bed in my apartment. It was nice to have weekends back.

“Shots!” Lewis shouted.

“I’ll go up with you.” I followed Lewis cautiously. Seriously, the floor moved when my feet touched it.

“Four Nasty Nipples,” he ordered, and I glared at him.

“What the fuck is that?” I thought that was what came out of my mouth, but judging by the look on Lewis’s face, maybe not.

“Hey.”

I spun around…too fast actually, and stumbled. Steady hands gripped my arms. “Careful there.” The man’s voice was low and gravelly.

“Sorry.”

“I got him,” Lewis said as he tried to pull me away.

“I don’t need to be gotten.”

The stranger smiled with perfectly straight white teeth. Oh, he was lovely. “You carry the drinks; I can walk…what’s your name?”

“Matt.”

“I can walk Matt back.”

“Fine.”

We followed behind Lewis. No one else was at the table; I could see them on the dance floor.

Lewis took his shot and faced me. “I’m gonna let them know their shots are here.” He pointed at the stranger. “I’ll just be a minute.”

The guy chuckled. “He’s protective.”

I looked at the man. He was tall, built, and I tried to focus on his face but couldn’t really. “Wanna make out?”

The man grinned even wider. “Very much.”

I couldn’t believe that had worked. “Come on, fast, before Lewis returns.”

I dragged Hottie Stranger with me toward the bathroom. There wasn’t a great place for any quickies at The Alibi, so a stall would have to do. We were halfway down the hallway when I heard someone call my name.

We stopped and I turned to see a figure walking our way. There was something familiar about him.

“Matt, hey.”

“Hi?”

“You know this guy?” Hottie Stranger asked…and that was annoying.

“What’s your name?” I squinted so I could focus on his pretty face.

He smirked. “Steve.”

I was staring at him, feeling all warm and gooey inside, and then my bubble burst.

“Mattie, what’s up?”

Mattie, literally nobody called me that.

“Who are you calling Mattie?” I squinted at the man…Oh, he was pretty too. So many gorgeous specimens. He truly was familiar. I knew him from somewhere.

“Sorry, dude, I’m not letting you take him to the bathroom to do whatever it is you think you’re about to do.”

I opened my mouth to say something, but Steve beat me to it. “I’d never do anything without consent, Matt invited me.”

Hottie-familiar-man quirked a brow…I think. “An inebriated person.” He eyed me from head to toe. “A very inebriated person invited you? Anytime someone is this drunk, there’s no consent.”

“Who are you to police his choices?”

This was right out of a fantasy. Two delicious guys fighting over little old me. I leaned against the wall…Oh, it was nice and cool.

“He can barely stand, shitdick, so if you want to keep your legs, face, and arms intact, I suggest you piss right the fuck off!” Familiar man was winning.

“Fuck this. No one is worth this drama.” Steve glared at me and stormed off.

“Bye, Steve,” I yelled, then ogled the hottie blond. “So, you win…Do I get my surprise?” I reached for his belt, but he backed away.

“I’m taking you home.”

“Pardon me? I mean…did I say pardon? Did that come out right?”

“Jesus,” he mumbled. “Come on, Matt, I already told your friends I’d take you home.”

“Who are you? They’d never let a stranger whisk me away to the whatevers.”

“It’s Nick, Matt. Nick Saint. You’ve been staying at our house for five months, and you can’t recognize me? You’re trashed. Let’s go.” He went to grab me, but I pulled away.

This of course made me spin, the room spin…my stomach spin, and that was when I threw up all over Nick.





Davidson King
Davidson King, always had a hope that someday her daydreams would become real-life stories. As a child, you would often find her in her own world, thinking up the most insane situations. It may have taken her awhile, but she made her dream come true with her first published work, Snow Falling.

She managed to wrangle herself a husband who matched her crazy and they hatched three wonderful children.

If you were to ask her what gave her the courage to finally publish, she’d tell you it was her amazing family and friends. Support is vital in all things and when you’re afraid of your dreams, it will be your cheering section that will lift you up.


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Mine to Keep #3

Series