Monday, March 23, 2026

πŸ€Monday's Musical MelodyπŸ€: Breaking Strings by Becca Seymour



Summary:

Chords & Courts #1
Rafe Ortiz should be focused on the music—on the gigs, the grind, and the industry eyes finally turning his way. Instead, every lyric he writes leads back to one person: Oliver Marshall, the golden-boy basketball captain with a body built for highlight reels and a secret smile meant only for him.

Behind the court and the stage lights, they burn.

In the shadows, they fall.

And no one can know.

Ollie has a reputation to protect and parents who expect perfection. Rafe has a band depending on him and a career poised to explode. Rules say they should walk away. Desire says they won’t survive it if they do.

When March Madness collides with a life-changing showcase opportunity, their stolen nights and breathless encounters become a crossroads—love or legacy, truth or secrecy, each choice carrying consequences that could break them.

Or bind them tighter than ever.

BREAKING STRINGS is an addictive, emotional, steamy MM romance about two men fighting for dreams, for each other, and for the life they’re terrified to admit they want.






CHAPTER ONE
The practice room smells like stale coffee, dust, and a thousand hours of ambition that went nowhere. It’s the kind of room where dreams either get sharpened or die. Half the fluorescent lights overhead buzz like they’re short-circuiting, but the acoustics are decent, and it’s ours for another hour if we keep the door locked and pretend we don’t hear anyone banging on it.

I sit on the amp, bass across my lap, pick balanced between my fingers. My voice is rough from the last run-through, and my throat still carries the burn of it. We’ve been chasing the same song all afternoon, but it keeps slipping sideways—like a shadow that disappears when you look at it straight.

“Again,” I say.

Eli groans but twirls his sticks, already tapping out the count. He’s all restless energy, blond curls damp with sweat, T-shirt dark at the chest. He lives for speed, loves it when the tempo gets away from us. “Fuck, Rafe. Okay. One, two, three, four⁠—”

Drew slams into the riff, his sunburst Strat snarling through the cheap amp. He’s lanky, with hair too long in his eyes, the kind of guy who’ll play until his fingertips split and then keep going. Miles follows, steady as stone, dropping in the lead like he’s planting a flag. He doesn’t talk much, but his solos do.

We hit it hard, the sound bouncing off cinder block walls. It’s tinny as fuck, but still alive. Eli drives the beat like he’s trying to outrun something, Drew’s rhythm thick and grinding, Miles’s line cutting sharp above it. I push my voice into the cracks.

“I won’t wear your weather, I’ll outrun your rain…”

But halfway through the chorus, it falls apart. Drew misses the change, Miles winces, and Eli throws a stick that bounces off the wall.

“Fuck!” Eli yells. “That’s the third time.”

“No shit,” I mutter, scrubbing a hand over my face. My notebook sits open on the floor beside me, page half filled with scrawled lyrics. Black ink, jagged lines, angry smudges. None of it feels right.

“We need new material,” Drew says, dropping onto the floor, guitar balanced on his knees. “We’ve been hammering this one for weeks, and it still sounds like shit.”

“It doesn’t sound like shit,” Miles says quietly, adjusting a knob on his amp. “It sounds unfinished.”

“Which is the same thing when we’ve got a gig Saturday,” Eli says. “Nobody wants to hear half a song.”

I lean back against the wall, the bass heavy in my hands. They’re right. We’ve been circling the same track, and it still doesn’t land. The words aren’t there, not the way they should be. And that’s on me.

“I’ll figure out the lyrics,” I say, trying not to sound defensive.

Eli arches a brow. “You’ve been saying that for a month.”

“Yeah? You want to write them?”

He grins, sharky. “I’d just put fuck in every other line.”

“Could be a hit,” Drew says, deadpan.

I flip them both off, but there’s no heat in it. These are my guys. We’re four broke students with borrowed gear and duct-taped dreams, and somehow it feels like enough. Steel Saints—that’s what we call ourselves, because it sounds like the kind of band you’d pay to see in a shitty dive bar at midnight. It’s not nothing.

My family thinks it’s more than that. My mamΓ‘, especially—she swears we’re headed somewhere. She and my papΓ‘ came here from Mexico with nothing but a suitcase and two kids, and somehow they built a life out of stubbornness and late nights. They don’t understand the music business, but they understand hustle. My scholarship pays tuition, my parents cover the scraps I can’t, and I cover the rest with gigs and shifts at a coffee shop.

I think about them sometimes when I’m sitting here, sweating under dull lights, trying to force lyrics out of my skull. About how much faith they’ve put in me. About how easy it would be to let that faith slip through my fingers.

“Let’s take five,” I say finally. My voice scrapes low. “I need air.”

Eli collapses on the drum throne like he’s been shot. Drew lies flat on his back on the carpet, guitar still across his chest. Miles just nods, eyes closed, hands resting on the fretboard like it’s an extension of him.

I slide the bass back into its case, then stand and stretch. My shirt clings with sweat as I do so.

The hall outside the practice rooms hums with end-of-day noise. Students drag their bags, laughter bounces off the walls, somebody’s blasting EDM from a Bluetooth speaker. It’s December, which in LA means palm trees against a cold sky and students bundled in hoodies pretending it’s winter. The air smells like orange blossoms from the quad, sharp and sweet under the chill.

I’m halfway to the exit when I hear them.

Loud voices. Easy swagger. A cluster of guys in letterman jackets, moving as a pack. Basketball players. You can spot them a mile away: tall, broad, dripping confidence like sweat. Everyone knows who they are—the Panthers.

I should look away. I don’t.

My gaze snags on the captain.

Ollie Marshall. I’ve seen him around—posters plastered in the union, highlight reels on the TV in the cafeteria, his name in the campus paper. Up close he’s taller than I realized, shoulders squared under his jacket, stride clean like he was built for it. His hair is dark, cropped close, his face sharp with focus. He doesn’t joke as much as the others. Doesn’t shout. And from what I’ve noticed, when he talks, people shut up.

I’ve heard his voice once—low, steady, not the cocky bark you expect from a jock. It stuck.

And now his eyes catch mine.

It should be nothing. A glance in a crowded space. But it isn’t. His gaze holds for a beat too long, a string pulled taut between us. His cheeks flush, sudden and bright, the color blooming high on his skin—crimson, almost luminous under the harsh hallway light, like a lyric I didn’t know I was reaching for.

It fucking stops me.

He looks away first, back at his teammates. They laugh about something, voices echoing, sneakers squeaking against the tile. But I’m not hearing them. I’m tracking him. The way he moves, controlled but not stiff. The way his hands flex against the strap of his bag.

It’s the first time I’ve really paid attention to him. Definitely the first time he’s ever seen me. And yet something about that flush, that startled look—it sticks.

I lean against the wall, watching until they disappear around the corner. My pulse is faster than it should be. My fingers itch, not for the strings this time, but for a pen. For the notebook waiting back in the practice room.

Dark, serious eyes. The red flush of cheeks. A face that’s supposed to be carved out of confidence, caught off guard instead.

My muse walks away in a letterman jacket, and fuck if I don’t follow his every step.

I push off the wall and head back to the practice room before the feeling fades. The corridor smells like floor cleaner and someone’s cheap body spray. A trombone squeals from a room down the hall, then dies. My boots thud a steady pace that matches the new pulse in my head.

Inside, Eli’s doing a stick trick with the kind of concentration that should be illegal. Drew is flat on his back, phone hovering above his face, scrolling with the slack-fingered stare of a man forgetting he has a future. Miles is perched on an amp with his guitar silent in his lap, eyes half lidded like he’s meditating. He isn’t. He’s composing in his head. He always is.

“Break’s over,” I say, closing the door with my heel.

Eli drops the stick, snatches it before it hits the floor, and points it at me. “Well? Did the air give you a chorus?”

“Maybe.” I grab the notebook off the carpet and squat by the amp. The paper is freckled with old coffee stains and ripped corners. It looks like it’s been in a fight. It has. “Shut up for a minute.”

“Oh, Rafe the Artist is here.” Drew lifts the phone just enough to smirk, then goes back to whatever hole he’s doom-scrolling down.

“Give him sixty seconds,” Miles says, voice calm as a lake. “When his jaw is clenched like that, it means something stuck.”

I don’t argue. I anchor the notebook with my palm and let the pen touch down. The first line lands easy, like it’s been waiting.

Eyes like a locked door, I miss the handle twice

Captain with the quiet voice, steady as advice

Crimson catching high and hot, proof you feel it too⁠—

I wasn’t looking, I swear I wasn’t. Then I saw you.

I stop and look at the words. Too on-the-nose? Maybe. But there’s a charge in my fingers I’ve been chasing for weeks, and now it’s here, steady and warm. I keep going.

You don’t talk loud, you don’t take up the space

But every hallway turns and looks to follow your face

I’m not a fan of your game, don’t know one rule

But I changed my day because you walked past school.

I scratch that last line, rewrite it cleaner.

But I changed my day because you walked past school.

But I changed my day because you crossed my line.

Miles leans forward. “What’s the tempo in your head?”

“Mid,” I say. “Not a sprint. Let it breathe.”

Eli taps the pattern on his knee without asking: soft snare, kick in a patient heartbeat, hi-hat open just enough to whisper. He is annoyingly good at reading my brain.

I flip to a fresh page and write faster.

I’ve loved boys, I’ve loved girls, I’m not a secret to my friends

But I never planned for you to happen, never planned the way it bends

The light when you look over, the heat you try to hide

That red that climbs your cheekbones like I caught you from the side.

The pen pauses on cheekbones. I cross it out, write skin. It’s simpler and sits better.

“Okay,” Drew says from the floor, voice muffled by apathy. “Who is this about?”

“No one,” I say too fast, even though he can’t actually see the words I’m scratching down.

Eli barks a laugh. “So defensive.”

I keep writing.

I don’t do poster boys, I don’t do varsity pride

But you blush like you mean it, and it shoots right through my spine

I’m not here to join your section, I don’t paint myself in blue

I’m here because a chorus woke up at the sight of you.

That one makes me swallow, which I hate. I cap the pen, uncap it again, cap it—a nervous tic I can’t kill.

Eli rolls the stick along his knuckles and eyes me. “You just—very casually—wrote a coming-out verse. You know that, right?”

I shrug. “I’ve been out since sophomore year of high school, man.”

“Yeah, but you never write it like that.” He tips his chin at the page. “It’s usually more ‘the world is a setlist and we’re gonna burn it.’ This is… personal.”

“Do you want me to go back to swearing for three minutes?” I deadpan.

“No,” Miles says before Eli can answer. “Play it.”

Drew sits up with a groan like gravity is morally offensive. “We don’t know the chords.”

“C minor,” I say. “Verse walks down, chorus lifts to E-flat minor. Keep the progression simple. The lyric’s the point.”

“Look at Mr. Pop Structure,” Eli says. “Who are you, and what have you done with my grunge goblin?”

“Play,” I say, and lift the bass.

We ease in. I keep it spare—root notes under a steady pulse, a slide into the pre-chorus to set the hook. Drew finds the shape fast because he’s a savant when he isn’t an idiot. Miles tucks a high line above it, clean and patient, refusing to crowd the vocal. Eli gives me that heartbeat and leaves space on purpose, which is his love language even if he’ll never say it.

I sing the verse low to see if the words hold up without tricks.

“I’ve loved boys, I’ve loved girls…” I let the phrase sit. No coyness, no wink. Just truth. “I never planned for you to happen…” My throat goes tight for a second, and I push through it. I hit the end of the verse and look at their faces.

Eli’s grin is gone. He’s listening like a drummer and a friend. Drew’s mouth is a thin line, that concentration face he gets when he’s pretending not to feel something. Miles nods once, the muscle in his jaw jumping.

“Again,” Miles says.

We run it twice without stopping. The second time I find a better vowel on crimson, less sharp, more open. I adjust the melody on crossed my line so the note lifts at the end instead of dying on the floor. The chorus arrives with more weight, the lyric clicking into place like a door finding its frame.

By the third pass, I know this isn’t a sketch. It’s a song. We don’t have a title yet, but that will come.

We finish and let the last chord fade. The room is quiet in that particular way that happens when sound drains out and leaves a different kind of noise behind. Eli clears his throat and then ruins the mood like he always does when he feels too much.

“So,” he says, sticks ticking against each other, “you want to talk about varsity boy?”

“No,” I say.

“Is he hot, though?”

I hate that I laugh. “Unfortunately.”

“Basketball?”

“Yep.”

“Tall?”

“Stupidly.”

“Jerk?”

“No.” I surprise myself with the answer. “Quiet. Kind of serious.”

Eli leans back. “You’re not into the chest-thumping types anyway.”

“I’m not into the types who scream their name at parties,” I say. “They’re loud in all the wrong ways.”

Drew tucks his hair behind his ear. “What is this, then? You’ve seen campus jocks before. You’re not exactly the blushing kind.”

I glance at the notebook and then away. “I don’t blush.”

“True,” Eli says. “You smirk. So what’s special?”

“I don’t know,” I say, and the honesty feels like swallowing a battery. “He looked right at me. And then he went bright red like… like he wasn’t expecting to get caught being human.”

Drew’s eyebrows tick up. “That’s weirdly specific.”

“Shut up.”

He holds up a hand in peace. “I’m not making fun. I’m observing. It’s new watching you write about an actual person you saw twelve minutes ago. Usually you need to brood for at least three days and then ask us to pretend to be impressed by your process.”

Miles’s mouth moves just enough to count as a smile. “It’s best when you don’t pretend.”

Eli taps the snare head with his fingertip. “So you’re adding him to the roster.”

“There’s no roster,” I say.

Eli squints. “There’s definitely a roster.”

I sigh. “There’s a history. Men, women. I didn’t fall out of the closet yesterday.”

Drew nods like he’s writing a thesis. “Rafe Ortiz, bisexual agent of chaos.”

“Sounds like a Marvel character,” Eli says.

“Sounds like our press bio,” I say dryly, and they all groan because they know I’ll put anything in a press bio if it sounds like it’ll sell three more tickets. That, and between our jumbled mix of sexualities—some labelled, some definitely not—I think I could totally make it work.

Miles’s gaze tilts to the notebook. “Do you think he’ll end up in more than one song?”

“I think I don’t plan songs,” I say. “They happen or they don’t. This one happened.”

“Is he going to hear it?” Drew asks.

“I don’t write to get heard by one guy,” I say, then shrug because I can’t help myself. “If he does, he does.”

Eli waggles his sticks. “You’re going to go stare at a basketball in a gym, aren’t you?”

“We have a gig Saturday,” I say, because that’s true. “If I happen to walk past a scoreboard on the way to the venue, that’s called cardio.”

“Cardio?” Drew laughs. “You smoke weed every other night and complain about stairs.”

“I complain about everything,” I say. “It’s my charm.”

Miles sets his guitar aside. “Run it again.”

We do. This time I mark a second verse that digs a little deeper.

You walk like the room is a promise you made

I move like a fuse, and I’m tired of the fade

I don’t speak your language, but I hear your name

Booming off the rafters from a different kind of stage.

I keep the vowels simple, the consonants clean. I’m not hiding in poetry today. It feels good. Like the shape I’ve been trying to hold for weeks finally stopped slipping.

Eli drags the kick a hair behind the beat in the pre-chorus, and it makes the whole thing roll forward. Drew adds a small hammer-on in the verse that warms it. Miles lands the kind of bend that feels like turning your head to listen when someone finally says the thing out loud.

We stop, breathing hard in the stale room like we sprinted. Nobody schedules sprinting, but it still counts.

Eli points at me with a stick. “You’re seeing him again.”

“Why do you care?”

“Because I want the bridge,” he says. “And if he looks at you like he did in your head, the bridge will write itself.”

“That is the worst reason to involve a stranger in my art,” I say.

“It’s the most honest reason,” Miles counters.

He’s right. I hate that he’s right and I love that he’s right, because it means we still know how to tell each other the truth without flinching. Bands die when they start lying about small things. We are not dying. Not this year. Hopefully not ever.

Drew leans back against the wall and tilts his head. “What’s the title?”

I look at the notebook. The words sit there like they’re daring me to commit.

“‘Crimson High,’” I say, and everyone nods like we all heard it land.

Eli taps the rim of the snare. “Okay. ‘Crimson High’ after ‘City Static’ in the set. We’ll test it Saturday. If they don’t look up from their cheap beer, we kill it. If they scream, it stays.”

“Fair,” I say. “Let’s be brutal.”

“I was born brutal,” Eli says.

“You were born loud,” Drew says.

Miles lifts a shoulder. “Same thing for drummers.”

Eli flips him off with a flourish. It’s almost elegant.

I write the set order along the margin. We’re always making lists, printing flyers, hunting for five-dollar strings on Craigslist, bribing the campus radio kid with pizza to do a ten-minute feature. People think the music is the job. The job is all of it.

“Rafe.” Drew’s voice is gentler. “You good?”

“Yeah.” I mean it. The coil of frustration that’s lived behind my ribs for a month has loosened. “I’m… good.”

He nods, and his mouth curves. “Cool. Because we’re going to be late for that open mic if we sit here and talk about your varsity boyfriend.”

“He’s not my anything,” I say.

“Yet,” Eli sings under his breath.

Miles stands and stretches, back cracking like a knuckle. “Pack it. Run ‘Crimson High’ twice more tomorrow. Then we don’t touch it before Saturday so you don’t overthink it.”

“Bossy fucker,” I say.

“Effective,” he answers.

We move. Cables coil. Cases close. The room cools from the heat of four bodies and a new song. I tuck the notebook into my backpack like it’s fragile. It isn’t. It’s a weapon if I aim it.

On the way out, Eli flanks me. “So, you’re bisexual, the campus captain is beautiful, and you’re writing about his face. Do we need to prepare for chaos?”

I snort. “I’m always prepared for chaos.”

He grins. “True that.”

Drew holds the door with an elbow. “What did your ma text you?” he asks, because he knows my phone has been buzzing in my pocket for ten minutes.

I check it. A photo of my little sister at the kitchen table back home, hair messy, colored pencils everywhere, a plate with two tortillas and beans shoved to the side. MamΓ‘’s caption: Tu tΓ­a says hi. We love you. Don’t forget to sleep. A string of heart emojis that would get me roasted if anyone else saw them.

“Family,” I say, pocketing the phone with a smile I don’t have to practice. “They think I’m a genius. I’d like to live up to it.”

“You will,” Miles insists.

We spill into the hallway. It’s dimmer now. Outside, the early December sun is tilting toward that gold that makes the palm fronds shine like someone polished them.

As we head toward the exit, a pack of jocks laughs somewhere behind us, that big open sound that turns heads. My neck prickles, but I keep my eyes forward. I do not scan for a captain with a face I already put in a song. I’m not that obvious.

We go through the door to the outside steps, and the light slams into me. I blink into it and see the city stretching out beyond the campus—the low sweep of buildings, the grid of streets, the distant stain of smog on the horizon like a line somebody refuses to erase. It looks like possibility if you squint right.

“Open mic?” Eli reminds me, bouncing on his toes.

“Open mic,” I say. “We test ‘Crimson High’ acoustic after the third comic bombs. We own the room. We make them care.”

Drew salutes with his pick. Miles checks the time and nods, already crafting the set in his head.

We climb down the steps, four men who feel like a band again. I touch the leather bracelet at my wrist, a habit. I think about the sudden heat on a stranger’s cheeks, the steady way he carried himself, the way he looked surprised to be seen.

I’ve never had a type beyond “interesting.” People who make the air feel different. I didn’t think a campus captain would do that for me. But he did. It hit fast. It hit true. It made my hand move on a page like someone turned the lights on.

I won’t say a word to anyone who doesn’t need to know. I won’t chase something that isn’t mine. But I will write the hell out of what it did to me. I will put it in a room with bad lighting and dirty carpet and see if strangers feel the jolt I felt.

We cut across the quad. A girl with purple hair strums a guitar by the fountain and butchers a chord. I fight the urge to correct her. There’s a time for teaching. This isn’t it. This is for taking what just woke up and giving it a name.

“Crimson High,” I say under my breath, testing the shape of it again.

“What?” Eli asks.

“Nothing.” We step onto the street.

The air outside carries a bite it didn’t have at noon. Somewhere downtown, a siren threads through traffic. A busker bangs a drum near the corner store and sings off-key about rent. The city sounds like a rehearsal. We’re ready for the show.

I give a shit about three things: my family, my band, the music we’re making. Tonight, a fourth thing tapped me on the shoulder and turned red under bad lights. I won’t pretend it didn’t happen. I won’t pretend it’s more than what it is either.

I am bi. I am out. I am not stupid.

But I am curious. And curiosity is a good way to make a song better.

We head toward the bar that lets undergrads play for free if they promise not to break anything. I walk faster than usual. My fingers itch for the strings and the pen in equal measure. I’m not a fan of basketball. I don’t plan to be. I plan to write. I plan to sing. I plan to take whatever the hell today was and turn it into something worth shouting over a room.

If a captain with quiet eyes walks past the door while we’re doing it, that’ll be a bonus. If he doesn’t, I still have a chorus. Either way, we’re going to make someone look up from their cheap beer and feel something again.

That’s the job. That’s the only job that’s ever made sense.



A rock star who burns bright.
A basketball phenom taught to stay silent.
And a love that refuses to fit inside the rules.

Rafe Ortiz turns chaos into music and ambition into noise the world can’t ignore. Ollie Marshall dominates the court with quiet precision—while hiding the parts of himself that could cost him everything.

A blush brings them together. Pressure tries to pull them apart.

Across three books, this trilogy follows two men building a life in the shadows of success—balancing careers that demand everything, love that asks for honesty, and the question neither can outrun forever: How much of yourself are you willing to risk for the person who knows you best?

A story of secrecy, devotion, separation, and the long road back to each other—set against sold-out arenas, roaring crowds, and the kind of love that never really lets go.



Becca Seymour
Becca Seymour is the #1 gay romance best seller of the True-Blue series. Known for “steamy and endearing” and “emotionally profound love stories” (InD’tale Magazine) her books have been nominated for multiple RONE Awards.

Becca lives and breathes all things book related. Usually with at least three books being read and two WiPs being written at the same time, Becca’s life is merrily hectic. She tends to do nothing by halves so happily seeks the craziness and busyness life offers.

Living on her small property in Queensland with her human family as well as her animal family of cows, chooks, and dogs, Becca appreciates the beauty of the world around her and is a believer that love truly is love.


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Breaking Strings #1

Chords & Courts Trilogy


Sunday, March 22, 2026

πŸ€πŸ’š☘️🎭Week at a Glance🎭☘️πŸ’šπŸ€: 3/16/26 - 3/22/26























πŸ€πŸ’š☘️Sunday's Short Stack☘️πŸ’šπŸ€: Just Dance by AJ Llewellyn




Summary:
Irish dancer Tiernan O’Rourke is given the chance of a lifetime with a holiday dance show. Or has Santa just delivered yet another nasty holiday surprise?

Devastated when COVID cancels his touring show of an Irish musical, Tiernan O’Rourke is given a chance shot at a special Christmas show. His ex-lover, Asher Bryson, is the one staging the show and tells him it will showcase his shillelagh, but not the kind Tiernan assumes. This opportunity seems to be the answer to his prayers, or is it?

Asher Bryson had big holiday plans until the pandemic squashed them. He lands a gig to stage a late-night, outdoor Christmas dance show for charity. Desperation forces him to reach out to the man he loved and left, Tiernan O’Rourke. Publicly he makes fun of Tiernan, calling him Lord of the Prance. Privately, his feelings are something else. Can he and Tiernan look past everything and just dance?


Original Review March 2025:
I have marked AJ Llewellyn a new-to-me author, truth is I have read the author before but ashamed to admit it has been nearly a decade since my last readings.  So technically not new but enough time has passed that I felt it fair to mark it so.

As for Just Dance, I was looking for stories to fit St. Patrick's Day and although this is a Xmas story it's heavy on many elements Irish.  Unfortunately St. Patrick's Day is not a holiday often explored in stories so I branch out to any kind of Irish connection.  I'm glad I did because this is a fun little ditty that will make you smile.

A little warning, it's been 5 years since Covid hit and I think for the most part people are okay with reading about Covid times but I know a few who feel it's still too fresh or they had close personal experience with the effects and are not ready to explore the time in fiction, which is certainly understandable.  Just Dance is set around Covid or at the very least the effects from lockdown and other facets of the pandemic so I just wanted to put that out there for those not ready yet.

As for Tiernan, or "Terry" as he shortens it for many baristas, is a man who had his big break yanked out from under him due to Covid but he keeps going, he doesn't let that weigh him down.  Asher is . . . well at first appearance I did not like him to say it ladylike, being completely honest he had his points that didn't quite endear him to me throughout much of the story but I could see he was growing and he was trying and sometimes people just have their quirks that don't quite appeal to everyone, doesn't make them a bad person just not a favorite.  But he might worm his way into my good graces but if that's true or not would be a spoiler too many I won't doπŸ˜‰πŸ˜‰.

Having stated the above about Asher did not lessen my enjoyment of this short.  Perhaps the smiles it gave me did not evolve into full-on belly laughs but they don't have to, all I need and want is a story that lightens my mood and brightens my reading time and Just Dance did just that.

RATING:





“It’s a bit bland.” Tiernan O’Rourke pushed the artfully piled lump of meat around the plate with his fork. This had been the most unusual experience of his life, taste-testing stacks of meat with varying degrees of flavor. This could really use some salt and pepper. It was his sixth sampling so far today. He hoped it would be the last.

He glanced out of the window, but the view of the red brick wall from the building next door hadn’t changed. From somewhere outside, jackhammers pierced the silence.

He was starting to feel claustrophobic. As he focused his gaze once again on the food in front of him, he couldn’t help thinking of the song, Somewhere That’s Green from The Little Shop of Horrors.

Tiernan glanced at the three chefs awaiting his response. How did they work all day without a glimpse of the sky or something a little bit green? Maybe New Yorkers got used to it. He longed for his old view... His old life.

Ugh.

Quit stalling. Man up. He mentally patted his belly. He already had a bad stomachache from the food samples he’d tested so far. I don’t think I can face this. He took a deep, cleansing breath. I have to do it. Another bite. “Okay. I like the pop of carrots and peas.” He let the food tumble around his tongue, aware of the sharp scrutiny of the kitchen staff. “And the sweet potato is a nice surprise.” He swallowed, hoping he could keep a pleasant expression on his face.

“What else?” Matthew Croft, the lead chef, stared at him.

Tiernan blinked. What else? “There’s um, apple in it, I think. Ah. I like it.”

A long but significant pause.

The taste tester sitting beside Tiernan shifted in her seat. Harsha Zhu was bright, bubbly, and super annoying with her blue-hued hair and her knowledgeable critiques. Not to mention her insane giggle at inappropriate moments. Tiernan had pegged her as a sociopath, despite the chefs’ apparent awe of her.

With a disdainful sneer in his direction, Harsha said, “The textures are there, and I think it’s extraordinary how you’ve managed to blend blueberries and chicken this way. The fruit and vegetables have been cooked to perfection, yet each retains its flavor.”

Tiernan stared at her. Wow. She’s good. She sounds like she knows what she’s talking about. I have to memorize that authoritative way she describes a lump of meat, in case I have to do this again.

“But do you think a dog would like it?” Matthew flicked glances at them, an icy tinge in his voice.

Tiernan forced a smile on his face even as he experienced a moment of pure panic. Why are you asking me that? How the heck would I know? Harsha seemed to sag on her stool.

When she didn’t respond, Tiernan jumped in. “If I were a dog, I would love it.”

“It’s my favorite, too,” Harsha piped up.

Tiernan glanced at her. The kitchen staff had all been in wonderment of the small but fierce Asian woman they told him in reverent whispers was an Instagram influencer. Did dogs rely on influencers? As far as Tiernan could tell, dogs were swayed by a bowl of edible food. And edible was in the eye of the beholder. He’d never heard of a single dog that checked with Internet strangers to tell them something was good to eat. He thought with a pang of his childhood dog, Sparky, who ate everything from socks to rolls of quarters.

“One more sample,” Matthew said.

Even Harsha couldn’t hide her dismay.

“Oh,” she said as though the wind had sunk her sails. Then she giggled once more.

“This is the last one, honest. You guys are doing great.” Matthew signaled, and a young female sous chef—who looked stressed—rushed forward and exchanged dishes.

Tiernan stared at the dark mound of mush in front of him. Dog food? Huh. That was human-grade food we’ve been testing. Needed seasoning, but still... I’m going to get a dog again one day. If Fanta lets me bring one home. The thought of his orange tabby cat waiting for him curled up on their shared bed made him dip his fork into the final plate of meat set before him.

He took a healthy bite. This one had a bit of a zing to it. Sort of slimy. Overcooked. Could he say that? Would he offend the chefs? No. He wouldn’t accuse them of overcooking food. The sample had gravy, which was an improvement on the lackluster offerings so far. He glanced over at Harsha, who was scraping at her mountain of food. She took a bite.

“It’s so good I want to take it home and finish it,” Tiernan lied, earning a round of applause from the chefs.

Harsha spat her mouthful into the small dish beside her. Tiernan realized only then she’d been spitting out her food the whole time.

“Me too.” She smiled, revealing a mouth with gold teeth.

Grillz. Holy moly. Were they still in fashion?

“You spat it out,” Tiernan couldn’t resist pointing out.

She patted her mouth with one of the starched napkins the staff had provided. “Of course, I did. You know that last sample was actual dog food, right?” She smacked her lips together. “Alpo, I think.”

The chefs roared with laughter and applauded her.

“You’re always amazing, Harsha.” Matthew beamed at her, glancing over at Tiernan. “You okay, guy? You did eat a big chunk of it.”

“Fine, just fine.” Tiernan waved off the chef’s words but really wanted to scream and barf. I just ate dog food. And I said I loved it!

“That’s it, guys. You did great. We’ll be sending out your checks today. And if we need you again, we’ll be in touch.” Matthew slid his face mask up and over his nose and mouth and pointed toward the elevator.



AJ Llewellyn
A.J. Llewellyn lives in California, but dreams of living in Hawaii. Frequent trips to all the islands, bags of Kona coffee in the fridge and a healthy collection of Hawaiian records keep this writer refueled.

A.J's passion for the islands led to writing a play about the overthrow of Queen Lili'uokalani's kingdom.

A.J. never lacks inspiration for writing erotic romances but has many other passions: collecting books on Hawaiiana, surfing and spending time with family, friends and animal companions.

A.J. Llewellyn believes that love is a song best sung out loud.



FACEBOOK  /  TWITTER  /  WEBSITE
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EMAIL: ajllewellyn@gmail.com



Saturday, March 21, 2026

πŸ€πŸ’š☘️ Saturday's Series Spotlight ☘️πŸ’šπŸ€: Irish Collar by Brina Brady Part 1




BDSM Camp #.5
Summary:
Twenty-two-year-old Brett attends a BDSM camp in Galway to act as a model for Sean in BDSM scenes. Brett hopes to find a Dom, but Sean seems to have other ideas. All Brett wants to do is please Sean, so he’ll collar him as his sub.

At the camp, Brett meets Master Cleary and his two subs, Jack and Kevin (Irish Runaway Series) and they become friends. When Brett makes a dangerous decision, nothing goes as planned, and he needs the help of these new friends as he learns a lesson about real Doms versus imposter ones.

This book is a prequel to the upcoming Irish Collar Series. It bridges the Irish Runaway Series and the Irish Collar Series.













Broken Trust #1

Summary:

Twenty-two-year-old Brett Dalton awakens to find himself dumped in a cheap hotel with a strange man. During his move from Dublin to Galway, his so-called friend Sean abandons him again to fend for himself. Brett doesn't know what to do or where to go without transportation. He needs to find a job immediately.

After making a phone call to Master Cleary, the Dom he met at BDSM Camp, Brett starts hitchhiking to Cleary's Pub for a job. A torrential rainstorm completely washes out the road leading to Galway, but though London born, the luck of the Irish is with Brett and handsome, thirty-year-old Darragh McGregor offers him a ride.

These two don't know it yet, but they desperately need each other. Brett's search for a Dom has left him abused and abandoned, and Darragh is lonely and longing for a sub. They run into some bumps along the road, including the reappearance of a dangerous acquaintance, but there is nothing they can't overcome together.

Keywords: Kind Dom, Wounded sub, Light BDSM, Newfound Family, Uncovered Lies, Hurt & Comfort, New Opportunities, Irish Romance






BDSM Camp #.5
Chapter 1
Without any clothes, Brett stepped out of the shower and into the main space of the campervan to find Sean and some young skinny guy on the bed. Brett grabbed a used towel from the floor and dried off. Sean was a Dom, but not anyone’s at the moment. Brett had had no idea this trip would turn out to be a living hell. The arrangement wasn’t quite what he’d had in mind. Unfortunately, he had hoped Sean would see him as a potential sub, but their agreement was for Sean to use Brett in his demonstrations at the BDSM camp in exchange for a free entrance ticket. Sean had overbooked Brett to the point he hadn’t had much free time to find a Dom for himself, but somehow Sean found guys to mess around with.

“Brett, give us a few hours alone,” Sean ordered using his Dom tone.

“Sure thing.” Brett scanned the young guy, shooting him a death stare as he fumbled zipping up his jeans. He raced to the front of the van, grabbed Sean’s cigarettes and lighter, and slipped them inside the waist of his jeans under his shirt. He let the door bang on his way outside.

The BDSM campground was outside Galway. The woodland consisted of mature trees covered in moss with a beautiful carpet of white flowers scenting the air. There was a feeling of magic. Time seemed to stop when he walked among the trees to the little stream. Sean had sold him on coming here to find a Dom. He’d also mentioned it would be an escape from the hustle and bustle of Dublin.

Brett hiked to the area where a thick log had fallen near the stream and sat. The BDSM demonstrations began after dinner and tomorrow night they had a meet-and-greet for unattached Doms and subs. Right now though, he had a few hours to disappear. He pulled out a cigarette and lit it. Sean had paid for the campervan and his ticket here, so he couldn’t say anything to him. He hadn’t been stuck like this since he was a child, and he had no intention of giving up his freedom when he returned to Dublin. He was always worried how he looked since he was a boy. Sean made him feel ugly. Brett pulled out a mirror and put his green bandanna around his forehead through his brown hair. His eyes looked bluer than gray today from the color of his shirt. Sean didn’t much notice his eyes changed colors from what he was wearing.

An older man stopped in front of him. He wore a tight navy T-shirt and tight jeans. His chest was impressively muscled.

Please be available. Like me. Collar me.

“I’m Master Cleary.” His blue eyes twinkled as he said his name.

Brett inhaled, then exhaled his smoke away from Master Cleary. “Brett Dalton, sir.”

“You sound like you’re from England.” Master Cleary sat beside him.

“I was born there but moved here.”

“Why are you here alone?”

“I came here with a Dom, and he’s with some twink in the campervan. I had to disappear for a couple of hours.”

Master Cleary frowned. “Is he your Dom?”

“No, sir. He paid for my ticket in exchange for using me as his model during his demonstrations. That was the deal.”

“You look upset.”

“I have nowhere to go while he’s with the twink. This is the third day in a row I’ve had to get lost.”

“What about dinner?”

“I don’t know, sir. I have a feeling he’s going to use my dinner ticket on the new twink.”

“I have an extra dinner ticket and you can meet my two subs.”

“Thank you, sir.” No one had ever cared if he missed a meal or not. This stranger was already one of the kindest men he had met. Right off, Master Cleary helped him when he was doomed to be alone and hungry.

“Come with me to my campervan. You can hang out with us until you’re needed for the demonstrations.”

Master Cleary was the perfect Dom he had read about in gay BDSM romance books, good-looking and kind to others. How did he manage two subs? His van was brand new indicating he was a provider and accomplished. He followed Master Cleary inside.

“Brett, this is Jack and Kevin. Boys, this is Brett. He’s been displaced for a few hours.”

Brett noted how Jack’s cornflower blue eyes contrasted with his ruddy complexion. His nose was sprinkled with freckles, cute. Kevin was slightly taller, with the same brown hair as Jack's and darker blue eyes.

“And I’m Aiden.” Another young man spoke as he came out of the restroom. Brett envied Aiden’s collar-length blond hair. He looked to be around the same age as he was.

“I didn’t know you were here,” Master Cleary said. “All of you stay here, I have to talk to Dr. Murray privately.” Master Cleary kissed Kevin and Jack before he left the van.

“What happened?” Jack asked.

“The Dom I came down here with is with some twink. He told me to leave for a couple of hours. Master Cleary brought me here. If you guys want me gone, I’ll leave.”

“No way. You sound like you’ve been through enough shit,” Kevin said.

“So, does your Dom cheat on you all the time?” Jack asked.

“That’s the thing. He’s not my Dom. We work together at Murphy’s Pub in Dublin. He asked me to be his model for his demonstrations.”

“But do you want him to be your Dom?” Jack asked.

“I did before we got here. I can see now he doesn’t see me that way.”

“Damn. You need to find your own Dom. There are lots of them here looking for subs.”

“I’m going to look at the meet-and-greet.” As it was for unattached subs and Doms, Sean told him he should find a Dom and he’d look for a sub.

“Do you have chaps and leather clothing?”

“At the campervan.” Brett hadn’t thought about his clothes for tonight being at the van. He didn’t much care about walking in on Sean and the twink.

“You look around my size. You can borrow some of mine if he won’t let you back in,” Kevin offered.

“Thanks.”

Brett changed into the chaps and leather vest. Kevin was right, they wore the same size.

Master Cleary returned.

“Let’s go to dinner. Dr. Murray saved an extra seat so Brett can join us.”

“Thank you, Master Cleary.” Brett smiled to cover his anxiety when anyone showed him kindness. For some strange reason it made him teary-eyed and had him feeling like he belonged here with them. Most men barked orders or insulted him in some way. Master Cleary was the kind of Dom he wished he could find for himself.

Once they were outside, they hiked along the path to the Mess Hall for dinner. All sorts of men filled up most of the tables. Some dressed in leather while others dressed casually in jeans. Brett scanned the room for Sean, but he didn’t see him anywhere. Maybe he could spend the rest of the evening with Master Cleary and his boys.

Brett sat between Jack and Aiden. Jack and Kevin wore mini-Master Cleary leather outfits. Brett wished he had a Dom who would dress him like his mini version. Master Cleary and Dr. Murray sat across from them at the table. Dr. Murray looked like a rockstar instead of a doctor. He had the same gray eyes as Brett, but his sparkled with mischief. Dr. Murray’s light hair had golden highlights under the lights.

Brett noticed he was the only one without a collar. He often made-up stories about his present circumstances, so, in his mind, he was like others, and pretended he belonged to Master Cleary.

“We’re going to sign up for some of the activities. Which ones are you signed up for?” Kevin asked.

“Sean didn’t mention I had to sign up for them.” He hated the way Sean treated him. He didn’t want him for a sub, but he behaved like he didn’t want Brett to find his own Dom. None of it made sense. He only used Brett for demonstrations.

“You can just go where we go. There are last minute sign-ups,” Jack said.

As Brett cut his steak, Sean and the skinny guy walked past their table without stopping, but Sean’s eyes caught his before they picked up the pace.

“What’s the name of the Dom you’re here with?” Dr. Murray asked.

“Sean Casey, sir.”

“Is he from Dublin?”

“Yes, we both are.” Brett didn’t like the doctor’s questions and the lovely welcome feeling dispersed with them.

“Be very careful who you play with here and always use protection,” Dr. Murray said.

“So far, I haven’t played with anyone.”

While Brett enjoyed his chocolate ice cream topped with whipped cream and a cherry, someone tapped him on the shoulder. He turned around to see who it was.





Broken Trust #1
Chapter 1 Brett 
Twenty-two-year-old Brett woke up alone in a dingy hotel room. The pain in his head roared like someone had turned up the radio volume as far as it would go. Bewildering thoughts plagued him, and he could make little sense of his surroundings. His sore back throbbed from sleeping on the rickety, old mattress. He sat up slowly, remembering nasty bits and pieces of the night before. With deep regret, he couldn’t recall what had gone down with Sean. He didn’t remember drinking any alcohol so where did his headache come from? Where was Sean? 

His bladder was about to burst if he lingered in bed any longer. He unraveled himself from the scratchy sheets and wandered towards the bathroom. He stopped at the closed door, placed his hand on the doorknob, and lifted a brow, because when he tried to turn the doorknob, it was locked. He knocked on the door. Sean had never locked the bathroom door. Why would he lock it now? 

“Hey, open up. Got to piss.” Brett tried his best to sound civil and not to shout at Sean since he’d told Brett to never order him around, but this was an emergency. 

The door slowly squeaked open. Brett gasped for a moment at the naked man standing in the bathroom. The stranger had a round red face without facial hair. He was bald as a plucked chicken, but he had the deepest shade of brown eyes. For some reason, Brett couldn’t read anything from them, but he feared the stranger. Leaning into the steamy room, he checked to see if Sean was in there too, but he wasn’t. He froze in place as if a stone wall had temporarily blocked him from running. His stomach twisted into knots from instantaneous panic as they gazed at each other for a long moment. His shock and exhaustion were too deep, not allowing him to move, but he wanted to get away from the naked man who radiated power and control. All at once a sudden jolt passed through his whole being. His vision blurred, and Brett felt wrapped in a blinding white mist. 

“Who are you? Where’s Sean?” Brett leaned against the door to steady himself. 

“Maybe you should check with the bartender at Maggie’s Pub,” the stranger said. 

Brett turned away to run, but the stranger reached out and grabbed him. Who was he? Where was Sean? 

“Hey, where do you think you’re going?” the stranger asked. 

“Who are you? Where is Sean?” Brett repeated. 

The man squeezed his wrist causing him to wince from the pain. 

“I’m Mr. Joe, the man who fucked you last night.” 

“No. You’re in the wrong room. I never saw you before. Where’s Sean?” 

“I want to offer you a job. Your friend said you need one.” 

“Let me go now.” Brett tried to free his wrist from the man. “I don’t want to be with you now or ever. And I don’t want your job.” 

“Listen up! You wanted me and begged me to come here with you. Don’t you remember?” 

“Get out of my room and leave me alone or I’ll call the Garda.” 

The man jerked him into the bathroom and locked the door. Brett wildly looked around for a weapon of some sort. When he didn’t see any, he stared at the man. He drew his limbs close to his body. The man was bulky enough to beat him to death. Maybe he’d keep it quiet and choke him. The circular thinking made his body tremble. Brett never took his eyes off the man while he mechanically and deliberately dressed himself in all black, hiding away the scars on Mr. Joe’s back.

“You were a lousy fuck anyway. I should have listened to your friend. He warned me you were a stupid little bitch.” 

Brett didn’t believe a word the man said. “Where is Sean?” 

“He left the pub with a twink. I don’t think he’ll be back for you.” 

Mr. Joe unlocked the bathroom door and left the room, slamming the door. 

Brett raced to the door and locked himself in. He turned to the toilet, took care of business, then took a second look at the condoms. Those condoms were from a fun pack of rainbow colors. Sean bought those rainbow condoms when they had stopped for lunch on their way to Galway. Did Mr. Joe or Sean fuck him? That would explain why he was sore. Unfortunately, the entire trip was sexless until Mr. Joe or Sean had sex with him last night. 

Had Sean left the pub with a twink? Brett thought he could trust Sean to make sure he didn’t end up with a stranger, but then Sean wasn’t his Dom. He clearly, and desperately, needed one. 

The spacey thinking wasn’t something he had ever experienced before, with or without alcohol. Sure, he’d had hangovers from drinking too much, but his memory had stayed intact. He vaguely remembered going to the pub with Sean. Brett promised he’d have only one beer because Sean didn’t like alcohol at all. He must have lost his mind at the pub, and he didn’t know how. Sean wouldn’t allow him to get drunk, so what had happened? He felt like he imagined he’d feel if he’d been drugged, definitely not like himself. 

He left the bathroom again and searched the room to jog his memory. The dead silence in the room reminded him of other times when men had abandoned him after doing BDSM scenes at the clubs in Dublin.

Sean’s suitcase wasn’t on the table anymore. Even his own suitcase was missing. Maybe Sean had packed the car and would return with breakfast, but he had said he would stay here for a week with him to look for a job in Galway. Sean had wanted to make a change since Andy fired him too. 

Brett slipped on a pair of jeans and a shirt he had in his backpack. Then he checked himself out in a mirror. He looked like shit. He opened the door and scanned the parking area for Sean’s car. It was missing as well. He went back inside, pulled out his phone, and called Sean. It went to voicemail so he left a message. “Where are you? What happened last night? I’m sorry if I did something wrong. Please forgive me. Call me.” 

He sat down on the messed-up bed and again looked around the small room for his suitcase. Then he remembered he had left it in the trunk of Sean’s car and only brought his backpack to the room. All he had were the items inside his backpack. He picked up his wallet from the bedside table and opened it to see how much money he had. He gasped. All his money was gone. What the hell happened to his money? It was a good thing he still had a credit card. He quickly checked his backpack for the card. He sighed in relief when he found it and moved it into his wallet. 

Brett didn’t know what to do or where he’d go. He definitely had to find a job immediately. Sean had made sure of that in his own way. Brett was somewhere between the verge of tears and anger at Sean; but none of that mattered. He had to move on without Sean’s help. Sean wasn’t his lover or Dom. He’d worn Sean’s collar for one day and he’d fucked him once. That all ended when Brett didn’t win that competition. Nobody did. The more he thought back on it, the clearer it was Sean had only given him that collar and fucked him so he would do the crazy scene at the BDSM competition. 

Unfortunately, the bottom line was Sean had mattered to him. Certainly, he respected his opinion and friendship, but all that was gone. Brett wanted to strike out at someone—anyone, but there was no one to blame for this situation. He hoped at some point he’d be able to recall all the events leading up to Sean leaving with a twink and finding Mr. Joe in his room. But as he rethought his situation, he knew he would not have done anything to disrupt his friendship with Sean. If Sean would only explain why he wasn’t in their room, but that wasn’t likely since he wouldn’t answer his phone or messages. 

Brett’s heart skipped a beat when someone pounded on the door. First, he checked the peephole to see who was there. When he cracked open the door, the cranky hotel manager, Charlie, stood there. His silver, curly hair hung over a wrinkled face. He had a scar reaching from the bottom of the right cheekbone, running across the nose. Brett wondered how he had gotten it, but he wasn’t pleasant to anyone. He didn’t approve of Sean and him renting a room together. He’d given them one of those looks a priest or nun would. 

“You need to be out of here in fifteen minutes.” He emphasized the word fifteen by saying it louder than the other words. “Why? We paid up for a week,” Brett said. “Sean cancelled the rest of the week. He paid up until today.” 

“When did he check out?” Brett asked. 

“This morning around four.” The smirk on the older man’s face angered Brett. He was delighted to see a gay guy dumped. Everyone had told him the people in Galway were friendly to gay people, but not this old fart. Obviously, it didn’t apply to the surrounding areas of Galway. 

“I’ll be out as soon as I can, sir.” 

“Fifteen minutes or you owe for another day.”

Brett slammed the door in the manager’s face and collected his things. Without any transportation, he’d have to walk to the city. Sean had promised to drive him to Galway so they could both look for a job. Sean dumped him for whatever reason. He must have wanted to be with the new twink first, or he saw Brett with Mr. Joe. He didn’t know which happened first, not that it really mattered. Sean was gone for good. He had lost patience with him and never really gave a damn about him. Not knowing when he would see a shower again, he jumped into the one in the room and cleaned up as fast as he could. Once dressed, he put his arms through the backpack straps. He tightened the straps around his waist, then the shoulder straps. 

When he figured out he was more hurt than angry at Sean, he sat down on the bed and tears filled his eyes over his current dire situation. If he could find a way to become enraged, he’d feel better, but he wasn’t prepared for Sean dumping him in a cheap hotel room. He’d wanted to teach him a lesson. 

Fuck it. And fuck Sean. 

With great reluctance, he left the room, and started walking towards Galway. The dense gray clouds were low and moving fast, but he didn’t think much of it. He held his thumb out, hoping for a ride. Two leather clad men rode their motorcycles alongside him. They stopped and glared at him as if he were prey. Brett lowered his arm to his side and made a swift turn into the wooded area. The two men got off their bikes and ran after him. He outran them, making it to the creek nearby, then crossed over the footbridge to the other side, and followed the path to another spiraling, narrow road. When he looked behind, they weren’t chasing him anymore. He continued to run to a dirt road. He wondered why those two guys were chasing him. He didn’t want any part of them. This was why he needed to travel with someone. Anytime he was alone, he ran into problems. That was one of the reasons he’d wanted out of Dublin. There were people who hated him there. Sean said there was a damn good reason people hated him, but he’d put it all behind him in Galway. 

Unfortunately, there wasn’t much traffic, so he couldn’t hitch a ride. He didn’t mind walking, but he wanted to get there before it turned dark. If he could only find a place to eat, his pounding headache would feel better. He should have eaten before he set out. He was grateful he had water with him. It could have been worse. He would find a place to stay and use his emergency credit card. He was grateful he kept the card for emergencies; Brett always arranged an exit plan in the event he needed one. He didn’t trust anyone. 

After walking for hours on the side of the country dirt road, he still hadn’t seen anything resembling a city. The huge trees swallowed him from the world. Where had he gone wrong? 

He sat down and pulled out his phone. He had remembered a friendly Dom from Galway who’d told him at a BDSM camp that if he ran into trouble to call him, and he’d help him out. Luckily, he’d added Master Cleary’s information into his contacts, so he decided to call him. 

“Cleary’s Pub, Master Cleary speaking.” 

“Hello, this is Brett Dalton. We met at the BDSM camp.” 

“I remember you, Brett. Are you in some kind of trouble?” 

“Yes, sir. Some guy dumped me in a hotel, and I need a place to stay until I can find a job. Do you think you could help me?” 

“Would that guy be Sean?” 

“Yes, sir.” Brett had deliberately avoided telling him it was Sean, but Master Cleary was too important to him to lie when asked directly. 

“I thought he collared you the last day at the camp. What happened?”

“That was only if I won at the competition. I lasted as his sub less than a day.” 

“I see. You can stay at the pub. I have a room behind the bar. You can do some gardening for me until you find a proper job.” 

“Thank you, sir. I’ll be there tomorrow.” 

“Do you need money right now? I can send you some. Where are you?” 

“I was staying at Mulligan’s Hotel, but I have enough money to get there.” Brett found it difficult to seek help but asking for money before working for it was plain wrong. Master Cleary deserved more from him than begging for money he hadn’t earned. 

“Just get your ass here as soon as you can.” 

“I’m on a dirt country road. Will it take me to Galway?” 

“What’s the name of the road?” 

“North Dawson Place.” 

“Keep going and you’ll be able to merge into the main road.” 

“Yes, sir.” 

“I’m glad you called me. Stay safe.” Master Cleary ended the call. 

Hearing Master Cleary’s voice gave him some hope. The man had listened to his life story. He could tell something had been bothering him and even though Master Cleary had two subs, he had taken the time to talk to him by the lake.




Saturday Series Spotlight

Sunday Safe Word Shelf





Brina Brady

From the streets of Pompton Lakes, New Jersey, where I ruled as the eldest of five siblings, my life’s journey has been an adventure. After marrying my partner, we started a family and welcomed three amazing daughters into our lives. In 1973, the waves called, and we answered—moving to the sun-kissed beaches of sunny Huntington Beach, California. It was a dream come true.

Later, I married my loving second husband, and when family called, we packed up and headed to Indiana. Retirement opened a new chapter for me, filled with the laughter of my four adorable grandchildren and the company of two sweet cats. It’s a life full of love and completed goals.

For twenty-seven years, I taught at a Continuation High School in Los Angeles, California, where I shared my passion for learning with my students. I earned a Bachelor of Arts in History, a Secondary Social Science Credential, and a master’s degree in Secondary Reading and Secondary Education from California State University, Long Beach. I also took creative writing classes at UCLA, which helped fuel my love for storytelling.

Speaking of storytelling, I’ve been hooked on it since I was a kid. As a child, I’d spend Saturday afternoons writing novels while sipping on my grandmother’s homemade, comforting chicken soup. Even as a busy stay-at-home mom, I made time to write every day—it was my escape and my joy. Later, while teaching, I kept writing, though the demands of the classroom meant I had less time to devote to it.

Today, I’m a contemporary romance author who loves writing LGBTQ+ stories. My books often explore complex relationships and emotional journeys, with several series diving into BDSM dynamics. I also write MM romance without BDSM themes, focusing on engaging plots, well-developed characters, and plenty of steamy moments.

When I’m not writing, I’m indulging in my other passions. I’m an avid reader, always getting lost in new worlds and characters. I also love graphic design, where I get to blend art and technology to create something beautiful. And when it’s time to relax, I’m hooked on Turkish TV series—their rich stories and cultural depth totally captivate me. Each of my hobbies reflects my love of creativity, storytelling, and exploring new horizons.



FACEBOOK  /  BLUESKY  /  WEBSITE
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EMAIL: brinabrady@gmail.com



BDSM Camp #.5
AUDIBLE  /  BOOKBUB  /  WEBSITE

Broken Trust #1
AUDIBLE  /  BOOKBUB  /  WEBSITE

Irish Collar Series

Irish Runaways Series