Monday, March 9, 2026

🎬🎭Monday Morning's Menu🎭🎬: Winter Dreams by Marie Sexton



Summary:

Winter Magic #2
What happens when a player gets played?

Actor Dylan Frasier is known as one of the biggest playboys in Hollywood, infamous for seducing men and women alike. He’s also half in love with his two best friends. Unfortunately, Jason and Ben are madly in love with each other, leaving Dylan the odd man out. When Ben suggests an extended Christmas vacation at a resort modeled after his favorite 80s TV show, Dylan reluctantly agrees. Sure, his heart breaks a bit every time he sees them together, but it’s a vacation in the Bahamas. How bad can it be?

At first, the resort seems like any other. Dylan plans to work on his tan, get laid, and hunt for Hollywood’s most in-demand director – not necessarily in that order. Then he meets Connor, a tennis instructor still hurting from a bad breakup. Connor knows Dylan’s reputation and refuses to be seduced. Dylan sees Connor as just another conquest, but this tropical island isn’t as mundane as it appears. It has its own kind of magic, and it’s about to make things interesting.


Original Review July 2023:
I wanted to read Winter Dreams last Christmas but time had other plans so what better time than Xmas in July to sink my teeth in?πŸ˜‰ 

Is Dreams as good as the first one, Winter Oranges? No but let's be honest, how many sequels/follow-ups in any form of entertainment is as good? Very few.  So I was okay with Dreams not grabbing me quite as tightly as Oranges because it is still a brilliant read.  We got to catch up with Jason and Ben and Dylan gets to discover a little winter magic of his own.

Fantasy Island.  Awesome scenario for this magical holiday series.  I always loved the show when I was a kid, don't recall watching it when it was on primetime but in reruns in the afternoons.  So fun.  Watching Dylan navigate his not-quite-believing despite what he witnessed with Ben and the snowglobe two years earlier makes for some interesting moments as well as provides me with the urge to smack him one or two times(okay maybe it's in the low double digit area but you get the ideaπŸ˜‰).  Connor may speak to my more Mama Bear hugs side but he's not without his moments of getting a light smack or two as well.

As equal parts heartbreaking and heartwarming, Dylan and Connor's journey is entertaining, memorable, and worthy of Marie Sexton's Winter Magic moniker. I think it was the friendships that spoke to me the most.  Yes, I was rooting for the pair from the minute they met but watching the friendship form first was a nice twist.  I say "twist" because we all know that Dylan is not a commitment type of guy so seeing the flirting grow into more was quite lovely.  

But it isn't just the budding friendship between our two MCs but also between Dylan, Jason, and Ben.  Is Jason a bit too hard or snarky with Dylan at times in reference to his non-commitment history and habits? Sure, but I think if he wasn't Dylan would think something was wrong and that it's just their way because let's face it, Dylan isn't exactly snarky-less toward Jason either.

As for Dylan and Ben, well through Dylan's inner monologues we know he believes himself to be in love with Ben and wonders what would have been had he met the young man first but we also know he understands the boundaries which to me is the first sign that maybe Dylan is finally ready for a change, even if he doesn't see himself.  Ben is a very unique gentlemen and it's because of his importance to Dylan that I highly recommend reading Winter Oranges first.

I feel like I've been a bit vague in places but I don't want to spoil anything about Dylan and Connor's story nor do I want to risk spoiling Jason and Ben's story for those who haven't read Winter Oranges.  Just know that Winter DreamsWinter Magic(currently a duology as I have no idea whether the author has plans to expand) really is just that: magical.  it is what the holidays are all about: friends, happiness, love, and plenty of heart all wrapped up with a magical infused bow.

RATING:





Chapter 1
They say insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. It must be true. God knows it could only be insanity that made me agree to this vacation. Why else would I spend the next thirty-one days with Jason and Ben knowing it’ll result in nothing but heartache? I love them both so much it hurts. Watching them together is like feeling my heart slowly shatter over and over again, and yet I can’t stand to stay away from them either.

So here I am, on an airplane with them two days after Thanksgiving, bound for a tropical resort, Christmas be damned. We’d debated flying first class, but we were already spending a fair amount on this month-long vacation, so we settled for business class instead. Still not enough leg room for my six-foot-one body, but the drinks are free, so I’m not complaining.

“I’m so excited,” Ben says. “Can you believe we’re actually going to Fantasy Island?” He’s sitting between Jason and I on the airplane, having volunteered for the middle seat. Even now, almost two years after his miraculous appearance in Jason’s life, Ben comes across all innocence and bright-eyed enthusiasm. He’d sent off for a paper brochure from the resort because he said reading it on his phone was “dumb.” Watching him flip through it, I wonder if he’ll ever become as jaded as the rest of us.

I hope not.

“They have nine restaurants,” Ben tells us as he studies the brochure. “Two golf courses, plus miniature golf. Oh my gosh, I love miniature golf! A bunch of tennis courts. That’s boring. Four pools, one with a swim-up bar. Dylan will like that. A lazy river. I love lazy rivers! A zipline course, and parasailing. I’m working up my nerve for those. Birdwatching and dolphin-watching cruises. We have to do both of those. Scuba diving. Nope, that’s way too scary. Snorkeling. That’s less scary. Kayaks and canoes, plus stand-up paddle surfing.” He frowns. “I don’t even know what that is. A full gym. Yuck. I’m not going there. And a full-service salon and spa.”

“Definitely going there,” I say. Although unlike Ben, I’ll have to spend a fair amount of time at the gym as well. My current role is a recurring part on the HBO series Lords of Dragon Beach, often described as Baywatch meets Sons of Anarchy. I’m thirty-one years old. My metabolism still keeps me thin, thank God, and given my tall, lanky frame, I’ll never have huge, bulging muscles like the rest of the Dragon Beach cast, no matter how many weights I lift. I aim for strong, wiry, and toned. My character, dubiously named Houston McCormick, is scripted for five of each season’s ten episodes, and somehow, the writers always find an excuse for me to be shirtless.

I’ve never been so aware of my abs.

Ben laughs and holds the brochure up for me to read. “Look, this line is right out of the TV show. ‘A place where all your fantasies come true.’”

“I still can’t believe they can call it Fantasy Island, if it was a TV show first,” I answer. “Isn’t that a copyright violation or something?”

Jason shrugs. He took the window seat, and he sits with his forehead against the pane. He hasn’t cut his hair in a while, and the sun shines through his dark blond waves and highlights the faint freckles across his nose. “Fantasy Island Vacation Resort. I assume it’s owned by the same company that made the show. MGM or whoever.”

“Columbia Pictures,” Ben says. When I turn to him in surprise, he shrugs. “What? It says it during the opening credits.”

Jason and I smile at each other over his head, like parents amused by their child.

Ben turns to me. “So, what’s your fantasy, Dylan?”

Doesn’t he know better than to ask me loaded questions?

“Being sandwiched between you and Scarlett Johansson—all of us naked, of course—in a giant bowl of lime Jell-o.”

Ben blushes, just like I knew he would. Jason calls him Snow White sometimes, and it’s an apt description. Ben has blue eyes, and hair even thicker and darker than mine, so black it reflects shades of purple. He’s not as pale as he used to be, but it’s still easy to see the heat rise up his cheeks.

I lean close enough to kiss him. I can’t help but think how sweet it would be to do just that. “You’re wondering if you’re in front of me or behind me in this fantasy, aren’t you?”

Ben grins and ducks his head. Jason turns away from the window long enough to glare at me. “Dylan’s fantasy is to fuck every single person on this island before the month is out.”

I laugh. “That’s not a fantasy, honey. That’s a prophecy waiting to be fulfilled.”

Jason rolls his eyes at me at and goes back to staring out the window. Annoyed, because I never change? Hurt, because of our shared past? Or simply bemused, because he and Ben have something I’ll never be privy to, and he knows it’s far better than what I have?

I wish I knew.

“I don’t understand the premise of this TV show anyway,” I say. “People could go to this island to live out their fantasies, and yet it wasn’t all porn?”

Ben’s stunned. “You haven’t seen it?”

“It went off the air years before I was born.”

“There’s a reboot,” Jason offers. “And Blumhouse made a movie.”

“Still haven’t seen it.”

“It’s all about being careful what you wish for,” Ben tells me. “Like one couple thought they wanted to go to a time and place with old-fashioned, traditional values, so Mr. Roarke sends them to this colonial village. They love it at first, but then they realize they’re in Salem, and the rules are super strict. They can’t even dance or play music. And then this little boy gets a fever, and the woman gives him an aspirin out of her purse, and she gets accused of witchcraft, so she has to run from the mob so they don’t burn her alive at the stake.”

“Jesus,” I say, shocked. “That’s not a fantasy. That’s a nightmare.”

“Mr. Roarke liked scaring the shit out of people,” Jason says. “It’s melodramatic, but it gets pretty dark at times, too.”

“That’s what I’m in for?” I ask. “Dark melodrama?”

Jason laughs. “Something like that.”

“You still haven’t given me a serious answer,” Ben says to me. “If this were really Fantasy Island, like on the TV show, what would your fantasy be?”

It’s a good question. Sometimes, I wish I’d realized how much I needed Jason before he’d stopped needing me, but to claim Jason for myself would have meant leaving Ben trapped in his magical prison forever. As much as I wish things had gone differently, I can’t look in Ben’s sweet, guileless face and wish him gone.

In all actuality, my fantasy would be to stop being myself and become either one of them, for the rest of my life. I’ve spent untold hours wondering which would be better—to be Ben, and have Jason’s undying devotion? Or to be Jason, and have Ben’s sweet, pure heart? Being either one of them would be a thousand times better than being me.

Jason speaks up before I can formulate another smartass answer in lieu of the truth.

“If this were really a place where somebody’s greatest dreams could come true,” Jason says, “Dylan’s would have nothing to do with sex and everything to do with his career.” He stares at me in that way he’s always had, with an expression that tells me he knows me front to back. I’m an old, ratty script he’s read a hundred times. He knows every line of dialog.

And every gaping plot hole, one of which he’s just remembered.

He narrows his eyes at me. “Four weeks at Fantasy Island, missing casting calls? Only if there’s something else to be gained.”

“The next season of Lords of Dragon Beach starts filming in January. I’m tired of being the palest guy on the set.”

“There’s no way you agreed to a whole month on this island just so you can work on your tan,” Jason says. “You could have done that in California.”

See? He could always see right through me.

Except when it had mattered the most.

“You’re right,” I admit. “I have an ulterior motive.” I pull out my phone and show them a picture. “This is who I’m looking for. I hear he likes to winter here. So if you see him, do me a favor and let me know.”

Ben eyes the picture, shock and disdain warring on his face. “Oh my gosh, Dylan. He’s twice your age. And…” He frowns and pats the air around his stomach, too sweet to say the word “fat.”

“Dylan’s not out to seduce him,” Jason explains. “Although I’m sure he’d be willing, if he thought it would help.”

“I don’t understand,” Ben says.

“That’s JP Frederick,” Jason tells him. “He’s one of the most in-demand directors in Hollywood right now.”

“Exactly,” I say, putting away my phone. “Rumor has it, he’s been asked to direct two Marvel films over the next six years.”

And Jason’s right. There’s nothing I won’t do to land a role in that universe. I’ll beg. I’ll bargain. I’ll suck his cock. I’ll let him fuck me every conceivable way, if that’s what it takes, although admittedly, I hope it doesn’t go that far. I never have learned to bottom with any kind of grace. With any luck, a few drinks and a round of golf will suffice.

“What about you?” I ask Ben. “If this is really Fantasy Island, then what’s your fantasy?”

“Oh, I don’t have one. I already got my biggest wish ever. I know better than to tempt fate.”

Jason elbows Ben and nods toward me. “Maybe you should wish for Scarecrow over there to grow a heart.”

Ben frowns at him. “You’re thinking of the Tin Man. Scarecrow needed a brain.”

Jason grins at me. “Dylan needs both.”

“Boy, you crack yourself up, don’t you?” I ask.

But to my surprise, Ben doesn’t laugh. “Dylan already has a heart and a brain,” he says to Jason. “What he needs is—”

“A clue?” Jason says.

“A drink,” I tell him, looking around for the flight attendant.

Ben scowls at us both. “Fine. Don’t listen to me.” He elbows me, harder than he needs to. “Let me out. I need to use the bathroom.”

I do as he says, letting him slip past me before reclaiming my seat. Jason’s gone back to staring out the window. “Hey, JayWalk.”

He smiles. I haven’t called him that in a while. “What?”

“Ben knows this isn’t really a magical island, right? I mean, it isn’t even all-inclusive.”

“Of course he knows it isn’t magical. You know Ben. He’s just…” He waves his hand, trying to find a word.

“Fanciful?” I offer. “Romantic?”

He smiles, his love for Ben written all over his face. “Adorable.”

And there it goes again, my heart shattering into a thousand little pieces.



The Commonwealth of the Bahamas is comprised of more than seven hundred islands, cays, and islets. One of these, roughly nine square miles in size, is our destination.

After a brief layover in Miami, we board a smaller plane and take to the skies again. I’m on my third drink by then and feeling damned good. Ben’s frowning at me. Jason doesn’t bother being annoyed.

We have to clear customs before leaving the airport. All three of us hold our breath when it’s Ben’s turn. His ID and passport are fake, but they’re the best money can buy—I should know, I’m the one who paid for them—and the customs agent barely bats an eye as she waves Ben through.

From the airport, we’re shuttled to a seaside dock. On the bright side, we get to surrender our luggage, with assurances it’ll be delivered to our rooms after we check in. I’m happy I don’t have to lug mine the rest of the way. Jason and Ben can tease me about having an extra-large suitcase, plus a garment bag, but I don’t expect them to understand. After all, Jason lives in jeans, T-shirts, and hoodies, but when it comes to fashion, I have higher standards. I prefer a more tailored, upscale look, and like it or not, that means luggage, and lots of it. I thought I did well packing only one garment bag instead of two, even though it means I’ll have to iron most of my shirts before I wear them.

We’re herded onto a small, enclosed water taxi that smells like sweat with an underlying taint of vomit. We find three empty seats and sit shoulder-to-shoulder with two dozen other travelers, all bound for Fantasy Island Vacation Resort. The sea’s bumpy, the boat cramped and stuffy. I’d much rather be on the deck, but it seems to be reserved for the crew and the few people who are already seasick.

“I hate to complain,” Ben says quietly, “but this isn’t feeling very magical right now.”

For Ben, who’s always cheerful no matter what, this simple statement borders on mutiny. “Hey,” Jason says, “even on the show, guests had to fly on that tiny little pontoon plane to get there, right?”

“True. But somehow, it seemed a lot more romantic.”

I want to touch his cheek. Maybe kiss him and promise him he’ll have plenty of romance this month. Mostly, I just want to see him smile again, but of course it’s not my place, and Jason’s already on it, whispering in Ben’s ear. Whatever he says makes Ben grin and shift in his seat, trying to hide an erection.

One more little crack in my heart.

We eventually dock and emerge from the water taxi. As soon as the sun hits his face, Ben’s lack of faith disappears and his smile returns.

“Oh my gosh. Jason, look!” He bounces on his toes in excitement, pointing. “It really does look like Fantasy Island.”

I’ve never seen the show, but based on Ben’s gushing, the resort has gone to great lengths to replicate the set of the old TV show. We disembark onto a dock, then through a thatched hut, although Ben assures me this one’s twice as big as Mr. Roarke’s. Ahead of us, the gates to Fantasy Island Vacation Resort loom. Women in red and white flowered dresses line the sidewalk along the way, offering trays of fruity drinks.

“What is it?” Ben asks as we each take one.

“A mango daiquiri,” the woman tells him.

“Oh, that sounds yummy.” He takes a sip, and his eyes go wide. “Oh my gosh, this is so good, isn’t it? I think this is my new favorite thing.”

Despite his enthusiasm, he won’t finish it. Sometimes I think his time in the globe messed with his metabolism. He eats like a horse, but never gains weight. He only sleeps about five hours a night, and he’s a serious lightweight when it comes to alcohol. Half a daiquiri will make him loopy. A full one will put him right to sleep.

Not to worry though. A double-shot, double-pump caramel latte will have him awake and ready to go again in no time.

We’re in no hurry to get inside. The weather’s a perfect seventy-six degrees, the sun warm on our faces. In addition to the hotel, there’s an elaborate garden and a sprawling white house, just like Mr. Roarke’s, according to Ben. The building’s utilitarian in nature, housing an urgent care and pharmacy in one half, and island security in the other, but that doesn’t diminish Ben’s excitement. He oohs and aahs, and I hold his drink while he takes a billion pictures with his phone. Thirty minutes later, we make it through the front door of the towering hotel, where it soon becomes clear the drinks are only to distract us from the enormous line for check-in. We opt to lounge in the boxy pink lobby chairs instead, biding our time until the line subsides. 

Jason—known to most of the world as Jadon Walker Buttermore, or JayWalk to his fangirls—is in the middle of a career reboot. After our last movie together, which did well at the box office, for a horror “requel,” he landed a supporting role in a romantic comedy starring Jennifer Lopez. That led to a spot on Dancing with the Stars, where he was eliminated early, much to his relief. More recently and most importantly, he played the quirky sidekick in a Netflix treasure-hunting action movie that, last time I looked, had almost three hundred million views. He’s already signed for a sequel which begins shooting in February. I’ve never seen him so happy, but I know that has more to do with Ben than with his career.

I’m no JayWalk, but Dylan Thomas Frasier has his fangirls too. Or at least, Houston McCormick does. Between the two of us, we soon have a small line of people asking for autographs and taking pictures. Jason’s better at this than he used to be. In the past, he hated this kind of attention. Now, he takes it in stride, although he’s careful to keep Ben out of the limelight and is clearly relieved when the autograph session ends. I, on the other hand, soak it up. I sign anything anybody puts in front of me, including one woman’s cleavage. I take selfies with a dozen different people. I ask anybody who’s halfway attractive and appears single how long they’re staying. By the time the fans are gone, I’ve finished my drink. Ben nudges me and hands me the second half of his, squinting at me as if he can’t quite focus. As predicted, half a daiquiri, and I know it’s a good thing he’s sitting down, or he’d be swaying on his feet.

“You okay?” I ask him.

He blinks at me. “Jus’ a lil sleepy.”

Jason’s right. Ben’s adorable.

I leave them and hunt down the hotel’s coffee station, where I fill a medium-sized cup and add cream and five packets of sugar. The smile Ben gives me when I hand it over is worth the few minutes it cost me.

“No caramel latte, but it’s still caffeine with plenty of sugar.”

“Thanks, Dylan.”

“Anything for you, honey.”

Jason ignores the entire exchange. He never bats an eye when I flirt with Ben. Then again, why would he? Ben’s one hundred percent, head-over-heels in love with Jason. Besides, Jason’s my oldest, dearest friend. I’d never do anything to hurt him, even if Ben was willing.

Which he isn’t.

I never flirt much with Jason anymore either, because I know it makes Ben uneasy. The last thing I want to do is cause trouble between the two of them, or between them and me. Sometimes I wish somebody had told me, on that first night in Jason’s new house back in Idaho, that it would be the last night I ever had with him.

Would I have done things differently?

Would I have pulled my ignorant head out of my selfish ass sooner?

I’ll never know. And now, I’ll never share his bed again. If they were any other gay couple, I might have a chance of being invited for a threesome. I’ve thought about it more times than I can count, but I also know it’s the type of thing that’s best left to the imagination. Ben would be too shy. Jason would be too possessive. And at the end of the day, I’d still be a third wheel, deeply in love with both of them, but never part of the love they have for each other.

I do what anybody in my position would do.

I finish the daiquiri and go in search of another.




Saturday Series Spotlight



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




FACEBOOK  /  TWITTER  /  FB FRIEND
WEBSITE  /  NEWSLETTER  /  KOBO
iTUNES  /  AUDIBLE  /  GOOGLE PLAY
TUMBLR  /  CHIRP  /  SMASHWORDS
BOOKBUB  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS
EMAIL: msexton.author@gmail.com



Winter Dreams #2

Winter Magic Series


Sunday, March 8, 2026

🎭Week at a Glance🎭: 3/2/26 - 3/8/26

















Sunday's Safe Word Shelf: FemBot by EM Denning



Summary:

Winston Lowe is trying to make it through his senior year of college so he can put school—and his mostly absent father—behind him. All he’s ever wanted was a dad who shows up and instead he got one who tries to buy Winston's love with extravagant gifts. A car. An off-campus house. An unlimited allowance. Nothing Winston wants, but he's used to that. If he got what he wanted, his best friend Lucky would love him back.

The most recent gift, a very humanoid-looking AI robot, has Winston and Lucky more than intrigued. Calvin, as the robot calls himself, is adapting to human life in ways no one could have expected. Winston thought the robots were supposed to be emotionless, impartial, sensible, but Calvin is anything but.

Calvin's presence in the house, along with his affinity for thigh-high stockings, short skirts, and intimacy might be what Winston has needed all along. Winston's relationship with Lucky is finally shifting into something romantic, but so is their relationship with Calvin.

A robot.

All the things that make Calvin special and different are the same things that threaten his existence—and Winston's happiness. There are men searching for Calvin, desperate to right the wrongs of his programming. Is the very real love between the three of them enough to survive the odds or will Calvin's memory be erased, taking Winston and Lucky's love with it?





CHAPTER ONE_
IN THE BEGINNING…
Yarek Danvers loved the routine of his job. Take a wheel in a shell—what they called an AI robot that had yet to be programmed—hook it up to the computer and make it fully-functioning.

He loved the stark white labs and the sterilized environments. He loved the sleek lines of the different models of bots. From the old-style bots that looked like modernized versions of the little wooden mannequins artists used, to AI robots that looked uncannily human. As technology advanced, so had the appearances of the bots. Now you could custom order them to look exactly how you wanted.

This one wasn’t a special order, though. It was a run-of-the-mill bot with generic brown hair and eyes the color of clear blue skies. Because the company had learned the hard way that humans would fuck the unfuckable, they’d decided to equip all their bots for any kind of activity the owner deemed necessary. It cut down on customer service calls and threats about lawsuits from people injuring themselves.

Yarek wheeled bot #85295-C over to the data link station and positioned it for upload.

The company had found, through research and development, that the more realistic the bot, the less willing the owner was to have the illusion shattered. Therefore, in the bots that looked like people, the hookup for the data link was hidden inside the ear canal. A cable ran from the bank of computers, through a wire, and into the “brain” of the bot.

The upload process was the thing that took the longest. Because of the computer power required to accomplish the task, they could only operate so many upload suites at a time.

Yarek was forbidden from leaving the room until the process was complete, though. It was a boring job, but it paid extremely well.

Yarek was one of a few specialized bot technicians and understood the delicate balance of programming an AI bot. Though nothing ever went wrong, he was absolutely capable of dealing with any problem that was thrown at him.

Theoretically.

In his three years working with Rebonix Tech, he’d only had one issue, and that had been a faulty part in the bot’s connection unit. Once it had been replaced, everything was smooth sailing. It should have been the same for bot 85295-C.

Yarek linked him to the computer by inserting the cable into his ear. He listened for the audible click that indicated that a proper connection had been made. Plopping down into his swivel chair, he turned toward the computer and brought up the touch screen display.

Rebonix Tech programmed bots for a variety of roles in society. There were general service bots who would carry out basic commands and perform simple tasks. They were the maids. The butlers. The servants. Cashiers. That kind of thing. There were bots who were trained with extensive medical knowledge for the purposes of diagnosis and treatment. They assisted with surgeries in some cases. Education bots. Trucker bots. There was a bot for every purpose under the sun.

A bot for every job except Yarek’s.

Once he got 85295-C hooked up and the program going, all he had to do was sit in the programming suite and track the upload progress. Watch for errors. Also known as being bored out of his mind. The rooms were strictly monitored by audio and video feed, so the company would know if he pulled out a book and read or played on his phone.

It was the worst part of his night. Each bot took three hours to program and another hour to go through a full systems check to ensure quality and double-check that certain programs were working correctly. It was mundane but easy.

The first two and a half hours of his shift were the same as usual, and Yarek was looking forward to finishing up with this bot so he could take a lunch break before doing his second bot of the day.

Though forbidden from leaving the room or using other things like books or phones to distract himself, he was allowed to wander around the small space. It wasn’t a huge room—ten by ten at the most—with a good portion of it taken up by the computers and the data station where he worked. But there was a ten-foot stretch on the wall with the door that he could pace back and forth across.

Feeling like he was going to fall asleep at his chair, Yarek got to his feet. The lights dimmed and he held still, as if his movement had caused the malfunction. His heart stopped and his palms got slick with sweat almost immediately. A quick glance at the data station showed that the upload was still in progress, uninterrupted. There was nothing to worry about.

Then the power failed, and Yarek was plunged into blackness.

The facility was, of course, equipped with back-up generators, and they were supposed to kick on automatically, but after a minute of total darkness, it dawned on Yarek that they weren’t going to come on. Something had gone wrong.

Yarek wasn’t a hero. He wasn’t about to leave the relative safety of the room so he could stumble around pitch black hallways. Even if they had windows, Yarek worked at night. If he was going to be locked in a room for eight hours a day, he didn’t want them to be the eight hours when the sun was up.

The silence got to him after the first thirty minutes. He’d almost convinced himself to poke his head out the door and see if there was anyone nearby when the lights flickered to life.

Yarek, having decided to huddle in the corner like the big, brave man he was, shot to his feet and raced to the data station. The upload had been nearly complete and after a brief diagnostic, everything looked okay to him. He let the computer continue from where it left off when the power failed, a little stunned that the bot hadn’t been ruined by the event. Bots weren’t indestructible or immortal. They wore out or broke all the time. Sometimes the older models could no longer be updated, and they were recycled for scrap or put in museums.

Yarek started his post-programming check, and twenty minutes in, everything seemed to be normal. The door to the programming suite swished open, which never happened, and two security bots stepped into the room.

“Can I help you?” Yarek was intimidated easily, especially by the security bots. They were built like brick walls and followed instructions to the letter. They were very procedural, and there was no way to talk your way around them like you could with a human. A human might get tired of playing word games with you, but these soulless bots would repeat the same phrase ad nauseum until you complied—or until they forced you to comply.

Yarek stood still while one of the bots approached him. “Don’t move. Identification in progress.”

That was another thing about the bots that had come a long way. Their speech patterns mimicked humans far better than they ever had. It made interacting with them comforting but also a bit strange if halfway through a conversation you remembered you were talking to a bunch of wires under some super-advanced silicone and tubes.

“Yarek Danvers. Identity confirmed,” Bot A said to Bot B, who still stood by the door.

“What are you doing?” Yarek asked as the bots retreated back into the hallway. They didn’t answer him, but the programmer in the next suite over had also entered the hallway.

“Did you hear what happened?” Yarek asked Phillippe.

Phillippe was the opposite of Yarek. Where Yarek had worked at Rebonix Tech for six years and knew almost no one, Phillippe had been there for six months and was best friends with everyone.

“The anti-bot crowd infiltrated the building. They cut the power, caused a bit of mayhem.”

Yarek frowned. “To what end?”

“I guess they wanted to free the bots? I don’t know. Destroy them maybe? Who knows with those crackpots.”

Behind him, he heard his computer beep, indicating that the diagnostic had completed. Phillippe heard it too.

“Your bot survived the outage?”

“Seems so.”

“Wow, mine is toast. Absolutely fried.”

Phillipe invited himself into Yarek’s programming suite and leaned over his shoulder as he brought up the scans. There was nothing out of the ordinary. According to the computer, the upload had been interrupted but still completed successfully.

“What’s error code 912834?” Phillipe asked.

“Oh, that’s because the upload was interrupted. I wouldn’t worry about it,” Yarek said, clearing the error from the bot now that the diagnostics had been ran.

“Are you going to stay and run another diagnostic? The security bots said once everyone is accounted for, we can all go home”.

Phillippe put his hands on Yarek’s shoulders and dug his fingers into his tired muscles. The truth was that everyone loved Phillippe because he loved everyone right back, and Yarek wasn’t immune to his charms. They’d hooked up a couple times before, and where some people were put off by his extensive experience, Yarek definitely didn’t mind benefitting from it.

All Phillippe had to do to convince Yarek was lean down and whisper.

“Please,” he purred in Yarek’s ear. “I’ll do that thing you like.”

Phillipe had no care for the fact that their every word was being recorded, but Yarek had some modesty left.

Some.

“Shhh. Fine. Just… keep it down.”

Phillippe laughed and tugged Yarek to his feet. “Come on, let’s get this guy unplugged and down to packaging, and then we can get out of here.”

“What about your bot?”

“I had him sent back down to assembly. They’ll have to wipe his circuits before we can try again. It’s a bit weird that my bot is garbage, but yours made it through the power failure just fine.”

Yarek unlocked the wheels on the gurney the bot was strapped to for transport around the facility. “It’s because my backups have backups, and those backups have backups.” Which didn’t explain the error code he’d gotten.

“Yeah, yeah, we all know about how brilliant you are, but trust me, I excel in other areas.” Phillippe got the door for him, and they wheeled bot 85295-C down to packaging.

Yarek took one final look at the bot and then let Phillippe roll him away.


EM Denning
E. M. Denning is a writer from British Columbia. She loves her family and animals, and anything cute and fuzzy. She writes romance for the 18+ plus crowd because she's both a hopeless romantic and a dirty old woman.

You can find her on her website, Facebook or on her blog.


FACEBOOK  /  BLUESKY  /  FB FRIEND
FB GROUP  /  TIKTOK  /  LINKTREE  /  B&N
BOOKBUB  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS
EMAIL: emdenningauthor@gmail.com





Saturday, March 7, 2026

Saturday's Series Spotlight: Romancing the . . . by Clare London Part 1




Romancing the Wrong Twin #1
Summary:
How tangled can a romantic web get?

When gruff arctic explorer Dominic Hartington-George seeks sponsorship for his latest expedition, his London PA insists on a more media-friendly profile—like dating celebrity supermodel Zeb Z.

Zeb can’t make the date, so he asks his identical twin, Aidan, to stand in for just one evening. Aidan, a struggling playwright, shuns the limelight to the extent people don’t even know Zeb has a sibling, but he reluctantly agrees.

When the deception has to continue beyond the first date, Aidan struggles to keep up the pretense. Dominic likes his sassy, intelligent companion, and Aidan starts falling for the forthright explorer. But how long can Aidan’s conscience cope as confusion abounds? Will coming clean as “the other twin” destroy the trust they’ve built?

This story offers you a gruff anti-socialite, an introvert whose good nature gets taken advantage of, the glamorous world of London modelling, fake boyfriend, a charmingly hotch-potch theatre group, a heart-to-heart at the top of a mountain, and a mischievous pair of blue briefs!

Author Note: this is the same book as previously published by Dreamspinner Press, but with a new cover, and now published by the author.






Romancing the Ugly Ducking #2   
Summary:
Is this the makeover of a lifetime?

Ambitious fashionista Perry Goodwood lands the project of his dreams—track down a celebrity family’s missing brother in the Scottish Highlands and bring him back to London for a TV reality show. But first he must transform the rugged loner into a glamorous sophisticate.

Greg Ventura has no use for high fashion. He lives on the isolated island of North Uist to escape the reminder that he’s nowhere near as handsome as his gorgeous brothers and avoid the painful childhood memories of being bullied.

Greg wants nothing to do with city life, and Perry’s never been outside London. When Perry is stranded on North Uist, this conflict seems insurmountable. But Greg is captivated by the vivacious Perry, and Perry by both the island and his host.

However, Perry’s one heartfelt wish remains: that ugly duckling Greg fulfill his potential as a swan.

This story offers you a grumpy recluse, a lively yet determined fish out of water, a remote and wildly beautiful Scottish location, opposites attract, straight-talking friends, an impossibly glossy celebrity family, and a loyal and mischievous dog!

Author Note: this is the same book as previously published by Dreamspinner Press, but with a new cover, and now published by the author

Original Review July 2017:
With Romancing the Ugly Duckling, Clare London has brought a modern M/M romance twist to the childhood story we were all told to show us that the inner self is where true beauty lies and to never judge a book by its cover.  Greg left the city and everything behind to outrun his childhood of being the local bullies favorite target.  Peter's job is to find the elusive brother to a celebrity family so they can be the newest reality television hit.  What they find is what neither was looking for.

I have never read Dreamspinner's Dreamspun Desires series before but if any of them are half as good as Romancing the Ugly Duckling I know I'll love them.  Is it really an opposites attract trope?  Well, that might be a bit too simplistic labeling but on the surface it's probably pretty accurate.  Having a pretty good inkling as to where the tale ends can sometimes ruin a story but sometimes it can make it even better because the truly intriguing bits are found in the journey.

Romancing makes for perfect summer reading, who am I kidding, it's a lovely read any time of year.  The lessons we learned, or should have learned, from the ugly duckling tale of our childhood should never leave us but unfortunately those are the lessons we too often forget so not only does Clare London bring us a beautifully written fun romance but she reminds us that a person's worth is not just what we see on the surface.  You won't be sorry for giving this one a chance.

RATING:






How the Glitch Stole Christmas #2.5
Summary:
Greg and Perry’s first Christmas dinner together. Cue a storm, a power cut, and rogue red cabbage in the Scottish Highlands!

This is a short story featuring the apparently mis-matched couple Greg and Perry.
Read how they first met - and the romantic rollercoaster that followed! - in the novel ROMANCING THE UGLY DUCKLING.









Romancing the Wrong Twin #1
A younger man darted out from what must have been the living room, clutching a leather jacket to his chest as if in protection. He saw Aidan, glanced at Tanya with widening eyes, then back at Aidan. Then he thrust out his hand and said perfectly cheerily, “I’m Eric. He threatens to kill me on a daily basis.”

Aidan just shook hands and nodded. He had no idea what to say to that, or even what it meant.

Tanya frowned at Eric. “Whatever. We’re just going. The car will come for you at seven. In the meantime, if you’d like a drink?”

But Eric took her arm and guided her toward the front door. “They can cope with that themselves, Tanya. Come on.”

And Aidan was left on his own in the hallway.

He took a deep breath to center himself. The house wasn’t huge, but it was in a very fashionable area of Ladbroke Grove and far more luxurious than his own small flat. That said, there wasn’t much furniture and the decoration wasn’t modern. The hallway walls were painted in plain, cool colours. No pictures hung on the walls, and there was only a single bureau and hat stand, albeit in quality wood. Eric had left the living room door ajar behind him, and Aidan took a quick peek inside before announcing himself. From what he could see, again the walls were plain and the furniture sparse. It was as if the owner was in the process of moving out—or had never really settled in.

A male figure paused in front of the half-open door. He was distracted by something on the other side of the room, so Aidan got a first secret glimpse of the man he’d been told so much about.

Dominic Hartington-George..

He was much more handsome in real life than on TV, though in most of the documentaries, he was wrapped up in furry parkas or oilskins with his face more than half-hidden with a scarf and balaclava. Today he was wearing a very smart pair of dark trousers, a startlingly white dress shirt—which had to be brand-new to still have that sheen—and a well-cut suit jacket that settled comfortably across an impressive set of shoulders. His hair was a fabulous thatch of dark curls, and he had a dark beard and mustache to match. Guiltily Aidan recalled Zeb’s mischievous nickname: Hairy Guy. But that conjured up a Wild Man of Borneo kind of image, and H-G was far from that. The hair was naturally unruly but had been styled to a level just off his shoulders, and the beard was well trimmed.

Aidan had never been attracted to hairy bears, not that he’d ever had much of a choice. As Zeb had gleefully pointed out more than once, Aidan seemed to attract needy and spiteful wankers who got off on bleeding him dry of any compassion and care. Oh, and his money too.

Okay. Self-pity over, right now. I’m not Loser Aidan now. I’m the charismatic and disgustingly fascinating Zeb Z.

For the first time in this bizarre performance, Aidan felt the tickle of mischief. This just might be fun after all. He pushed the door fully open, walked into the room, and cleared his throat.

H-G turned slowly around to face Aidan fully. His gaze ranged over Aidan’s body, and his eyes widened. “Well. They didn’t lie.”

“Who didn’t? What about?”

H-G raised his eyebrows. “Well, firstly, they said you were a bit feisty.”

Feisty? Aidan hadn’t heard that word outside of romance-novel blurbs.

“And you wouldn’t be fazed by… you know.”

“No, I don’t know. By what?” Aidan bit his lip to stop a laugh escaping.

“My celebrity.”

Jesus. Zeb was right. The man was one big blob of arrogance. “No,” Aidan said coolly. “I’m not.”

“That’s from working in the business, I suppose.”

“Business?” Oh, right, he was meant to be Zeb. “Yes, of course. When you’ve seen so many guys without the spray tan and makeup,” he gabbled without thinking first, “you soon realise they’ve got the same equipment under it all.”

H-G blinked twice, hard. And then he laughed—a loud, bold sound, echoing warmly in the bleak room.

Aidan wanted to laugh with him, but maintained his cool stare. “What’s so funny?” Had he blown it already? He hadn’t even left the house with the man yet.

“They didn’t tell me you were witty, Zeb. I may call you Zeb?”

Why? “Oh yes, right. Of course.”

Dom’s language was quaintly old-fashioned, but Aidan found it rather charming, especially after the theatrical bickering of the Dreamweavers and his brother’s exuberant and affected chatter.

“And secondly?” Aidan prompted.

“I’m sorry?” H-G frowned at him.

God, what a scowl he has. “You said they didn’t lie, and then you gave the first reason.”

H-G raised his eyebrows. “You have a good memory.”

Yes, he does have lovely eyes. “Yes, I do. Especially when I’m listening.”

H-G’s mouth twisted as if he were trying not to smirk. “Secondly, they didn’t lie about your looks, and that you were even better-looking in real life. I concur. You’re bloody gorgeous.”

Aidan wondered whom H-G was talking about. Zeb was the one who’d made a career based on his looks. Aidan made his on ignoring his own. So obviously H-G was talking about Zeb—or Aidan-as-Zeb. Aidan tugged self-consciously at the skintight jeans. His briefs felt uncomfortable between the cheeks of his arse and the hairs on his lower belly had snagged under the buttons of the fly. How the hell did Zeb manage to walk straight in these on a daily basis? “And you’re bloody blunt,” he returned smartly.

H-G tilted his head. He was smiling openly now as if he was enjoying the banter. “I’ve never seen any reason to be otherwise.”

H-G’s gaze didn’t make Aidan entirely comfortable. “Like what you see?” he said rather too snappily.

But H-G just laughed again. “You’re not as androgynous as you look in the magazines either.”

“What does that mean?”

“You look all man to me.” H-G’s eyes darkened, and for a moment his gaze grazed over Aidan’s groin area.

Aha! “So you’ve seen me in magazines?”

H-G flushed. “Now and then. Dentist’s waiting room, you know?”

Aidan felt he’d scored a point there but wasn’t sure how to follow up any advantage. This was turning into an odd kind of tennis match.

H-G cleared his throat. “Look, let’s both be frank about this, okay? I know this is just a promotional exercise. The sponsor is very committed to equality issues, and to have a gay couple approaching them is apparently a good PR thing.”

“You’re doing this solely for the money?”

“Not to the extent of turning gay for it, no,” H-G snapped back.

For the first time, Aidan saw a flicker of the real emotions inside the man. “Sorry. I didn’t mean it that way.”

“No, I’m the one who’s sorry.” H-G seemed to make a conscious effort to get his temper back under control. “I know you didn’t. It’s just one thing I never compromised on. I know who I am, what I feel, and what I like.”

“That’s good,” Aidan said more gently. “I suppose you might have trouble with it sometimes.”

H-G gave an angry shake of his head. “Anyone doesn’t like who I am isn’t worth being with. That’s always worked for me.”

Apart from having to hire a date for this evening. But then, Aidan didn’t have a boyfriend either, did he? And he was the complete opposite to the aggressive H-G. Aidan didn’t keep his sexuality hidden, but he didn’t go broadcasting it around either. Unlike my outrageous twin. Could this outfit be any more obvious? The jeans squished his balls back and pushed his cock forward. The electric blue sweater had slipped off his shoulder again so that he felt like a provocative 1950s starlet, and it was itching his neck on the other side. It made his mood just as scratchy. He wondered briefly whose approach would be more successful in finding a soul mate—his, H-G’s, or Zeb’s





Romancing the Ugly Ducking #2
Two men stumbled through his doorway, personification of the cold and the wet. Their clothes steamed and glistened in the light of Greg’s hallway, and their faces were grey, their features grimacing against the weather. Puddles of water started gathering on the mat almost immediately.

“Thank fuck you were in!” one blustered. He was swaddled in a full-length waterproof coat and trousers, with heavy Wellington boots and a scarf wrapped around the lower half of his face. Despite the disguise, Greg recognised Dougie, and not just because of the cursing. Dougie always knew how to dress appropriately for the weather.

The other man hadn’t moved an inch since they staggered into the hallway. He stood at least seven inches shorter than Greg’s six foot three, dripping into a growing puddle of water around his feet, and he was shivering. It was obvious that he most certainly wasn’t dressed for the downpour. He had no waterproof clothing, no headwear for protection, just a lightweight jacket that had probably been very stylish before it got drenched. Now it looked as elegant as a used dishcloth. At least he was wearing a sweater, in concession to the chillier evening, but his jeans were oddly ripped at the knees and completely sodden. Greg could see the skin beneath the rips turning red with the cold. And his footwear…. Greg swallowed heavily, not sure whether to laugh or cry. His visitor wore a pair of suede boots with a stacked heel and a neon logo on the side. Greg couldn’t tell what they’d looked like originally—or read the logo—because they were now stained the colour of sheep shit.

“What the hell, Dougie? Who’s the sprat?”

Water was running down the sodden creature’s face and into its white-lipped mouth. The gargled noise that came from its throat may have been a greeting, or an attempt to avoid drowning.

Dougie snorted. “It’s your London guest, man. Had ye forgotten he was coming?”

Oh my fucking God. Had that gone ahead? Greg hadn’t given the project a thought after his last testy postcard to Geoff. He was sure he’d made it clear that hell would freeze over before he had any bloody interest in their daft schemes, and there was no point in them sending any tomfool design team over to talk to him.

Hadn’t he?

Dougie shook his head angrily, spraying the hall afresh with raindrops. “Have you let your fucking phone run flat again? Poor wee thing couldn’t get through t’ you, and there’s nae answer at his posh London agency. Lucky I was out at the ferry collecting supplies for the shop. Found him standing around, nae more than a drowned rat.”

Greg stared at the newcomer, aghast. “But I told them not to bother. I wasn’t going back to London, I wasn’t taking part in any bloody stupid TV programme, and I definitely didn’t want an even more bloody stupid stylist coming here!”

The young man spluttered again. His face had gained some colour now he was indoors. Or—Greg winced belatedly—perhaps that was fury at the insults.

“Looks like he didn’t get the memo,” Dougie muttered.

“What’s his name?”

Dougie rolled his eyes. “Christ, man, we haven’t had time t’ share birth histories! Poor bastard said he was coming t’ meet you, so I brought him right here.” He peered at the visitor as if he’d unearthed the Loch Ness monster and found it less than impressive.

Greg felt much the same. Uncertainly, he asked again, “What’s your name?”

“Peregrine Goodwood,” the man said. “From the Latham Agency.” His voice was surprisingly clear, and he looked older than Greg had first thought, when he’d been nothing but a streak of damp clothing. But he was still a skinny little thing, with no fat reserves on his body. He looked slight enough to be blown away in the gales around here. Apart from that, Greg couldn’t tell what he properly looked like because his face was scrunched up from cold and distress, and his hair could’ve been anywhere between blond and black. The relentless Highlands rain painted everything the same muddy hue.

“Peregrine? What kinda joke is that?” Dougie whooped with laughter. He shucked back his hood and shook the excess water off his hair like Rory did when he’d been swimming in the loch. He wasn’t remotely concerned about waterlogging Greg’s furnishings, though Greg didn’t have much time for the Ideal Home Show himself.

“Call me Perry,” the man said defensively. Like Dougie, he gave himself a shake, shifting his hair off his forehead. “Look, are we just going to stand here taking the piss out of my name? Or can I dry off somewhere? Otherwise I’m likely to develop hypothermia.”

Greg was taken aback at the kid’s assertiveness and, to be honest, a little impressed. He thought this slim, effete little thing would’ve talked and walked like all the airheaded media types he saw last time he was in the English capital. Instead, Perry looked ready to give as much lip back to Dougie as he got.

“Come to the fire, for God’s sake. Dougie, bring in his case and fetch some towels from the airing cupboard.”

Dougie raised his eyebrows but dragged a once-smart, now sopping wet suitcase into the hall, then marched off toward the kitchen in his boots, trailing water as he went.

When the young man seemed too cold and distressed to move briskly enough on his own, Greg prodded him forward into the living room. Rory had vanished from his basket, probably resettling somewhere else in the cottage to continue his restful sleep. Greg had plenty of sympathy with that, having had his own peaceful evening so rudely interrupted. He guided Perry to stand on a spot on the rug in front of the fire.

“They told me it’d be like this,” Perry said resentfully.

“What?”

“Scotland. They said it always rained.”

Greg felt his hackles rise. “It was perfectly bonny last week. Looks like you brought the bloody rain with you. This blew up in only the last few hours.”

Dougie marched into the room in his jeans and sweater, having presumably abandoned his waterproofs and boots in the kitchen, and with an armful of towels. Greg picked up the first one, a thick, pale-coloured quality bath sheet. His mother had never been to visit him here, but had considered her duty discharged with a gift set of linens. Greg had never bothered using them for himself.

Dougie whipped the towel out of his hands and started rubbing at the young man’s hair. But Perry snatched it from Dougie in turn.

“I can manage on my own, thank you very much.” Clutching the towel in one hand, he peeled off his jacket with the other, then held it out at arm’s length.

Greg frowned. “What d’you want us to do with that?”

“Do you have a hanger for it? It’ll need to dry out in its shape. A padded one would be best.”

Dougie stared at him and laughed.

Greg cleared his throat. This guy was the limit. “I don’t have any padded anything, apart from a quilt. I may be able to find a wooden hanger.” He’d inherited a wardrobe from Mary McMullen’s granny when he took on the croft, and there had been a few fittings left in there. He kept his own clothes in a drawer, although he did fold things neatly. He wasn’t a complete savage.

Perry handed over the jacket with a much less confident air, then glanced down at his other damp clothing. His shirt clung snugly to his chest.

To his surprise, Greg found he was looking too. Perry was slender, but he had a nicely shaped torso, and enough muscle tone for his build. Something glinted under the material, on his left nipple.

Piercing?

Greg’s mouth went dry. He glanced across at Dougie, to find his friend grinning at him.

“Is there somewhere I can dry off?” Perry asked, his voice tight.

“Yes. I mean, yes, there’s a small utility area off the kitchen.” Greg used it sometimes to wash up and change after he’d been out on the peat bog. He also hung up his washing there to dry when the weather was too bad to air it in the garden. “Here, I’ll show you.” He turned awkwardly, bumping into the sofa and tumbling the remaining pile of towels onto the floor.

“I’ll find it, thanks.” Perry didn’t actually sound very grateful at all. He turned and shuffled out of the room and down the hall to the kitchen. His boots squelched with every step, and a trail of water dripped behind him from the hem of his jeans.

When he was out of sight, Dougie chuckled. “If we’re talking about rainbow tartan, he’s your perfect candidate. How come ye never grew up a fairy like that?”

Greg scowled. Anyone could tell Perry was gay, but he wasn’t sure he liked Dougie laughing at the kid like that. “We’re not all the same, man.”

Dougie held his hands up in supplication. “Didn’t mean t’ offend. We’re all different, I know, rainbow or not. We okay?”

“Yes, we’re okay.” Greg smiled ruefully. “I’m just not in a very good mood. This whole thing caught me unprepared.”

“Hello?” Perry called from in the kitchen.

Greg moved nearer the door. “Everything all right?”

“I… my shirt’s ruined. Do you have anything I could wear while it dries out?”

Greg chased away the unbidden and worrying vision of Perry bare chested. “There are clean clothes in the laundry basket behind the door. Probably a sweatshirt and some tracksuit bottoms.”

“Thanks.” Perry’s voice wobbled. For God’s sake, he wasn’t crying, was he? “I didn’t want to come here tonight, you know. But every step has taken so long, the whole day was gone before I knew it. And the ferry journey… I wasn’t remotely prepared for that.” He sounded like he gulped air in quickly at the memory.

Dougie grinned and winked at Greg, waving his hand up and down to approximate the choppy seas that afternoon.

“Then they never sent me any information about where I’m staying, so I thought I’d go into town and check the hotels.”

“Does he mean in Lochmaddy?” Dougie muttered. “Wouldn’t have taken him very long.”

“But I couldn’t find a taxi rank anywhere, either.”

“Dunderheed thinks he’s back in the city,” Dougie growled, his Scottish accent broadening.

Greg shushed him with a gesture of his own. “There’s a bus,” he answered Perry. “Though not frequent. And it’s best to book a taxi in advance.”

“I thought….” Perry’s voice broke a little more. “I expected that had been done already.”

Greg bit his lip. Sounded like the poor sod had just been dumped here.

“Do you have the number of a local B&B?” Perry asked. “I’ll make do with that until….” His sigh was audible even through the kitchen walls. He sounded like he’d run out of viable options.

“Ach,” Dougie butted in. “It’s a trek back into Lochmaddy, even if I had the time t’ take you. Out here, the only place is Fergus and Mary’s, where they rent out rooms t’ bird watchers in season. But you can’t go there.”

“What do you mean?”

“Their youngest is having her bairn early, so they’ve shut up for weeks.”

“But I need somewhere to stay!”

“Babies take precedence, man,” Dougie said gleefully.

Perry fell silent again.

Greg shifted restlessly. Bit difficult to chat through two doors. Then Dougie nudged him fiercely in the ribs.

“You going t’ put some breeks on?”

“What?” Greg looked down and realised he was dressed in nothing but an undervest, a pair of woolly socks and his boxers. The pair with purple thistles on that Dougie had bought him for a joke birthday present.

“Oh, shit!”





How the Glitch Stole Christmas #2.5
“What the hell’s going on?” Greg cried.

Everything seemed to be wet. He could smell the damp, and see the water glistening: from the pile of towelling, the smooth tiles under Perry’s knees, and even Perry himself, with hair plastered to his pale forehead. When Perry reached out a hand, Greg watched horrified as dribbles of water ran all the way up his arm.

“Everything is ruined!” Perry cried. “Christmas is a disaster!”

Greg blinked, trying to understand what Perry meant. Personally, he wasn’t particularly fond of the season at the best of times. Too many years of his brothers breaking his toys before lunch, then one or other of them arguing with their parents until someone was either in tears, or on the way to A&E. The teasing and melodrama had spoiled most family celebrations for him. But now he had Perry, he’d been sneakily looking forward to enjoying the glamour and glitz the young London-ite had brought to the previously restrained Scottish isle of North Uist.

“Did you forget to get the turkey out to defrost?” Greg asked. He thought he could see its white, shiny lump of a carcass on the draining board beside the sink. There were other lumpy items piled up around it, which was… also odd. “We can eat late, no problem. We’re not going anywhere else today.”

“It’s not just the turkey!” Perry wailed. “The power’s off and everything in the fridge will go bad. The freezer’s already defrosting.”

They didn’t freeze much food, preferring to cook everything fresh, but, of course, there was always a supply of their friend Dougie’s best rhubarb, and plenty of ice cream, which they both adored. Greg peered at the appliance in question. It was difficult to see any details because their spare duvet was draped over it.

“I’ve been trying to keep the cold in for as long as possible.” Perry bit back another sob.

“Why are you even up at this hour?”

“I’ve barely slept—I’ve been waking every couple of hours, panicking I’d forget something for today’s festivities. So, I thought I’d get up and check on the turkey, start getting the vegetables and tatties ready.” Perry knelt back on his heels, lifting up his worried face. “But none of the lights would come on. I wasn’t sure where the fuses were, so I was going to come back up and ask you. Then… then I found a puddle, right by the fridge.” He grimaced. “It’s soaked right through my socks.”

Greg crouched down and lifted a sodden towel out of his boyfriend’s hands. Perry had it in some kind of a death grip; it took surprising strength to prise it away. Then he offered his arm to help Perry stand up beside him…



Saturday Series Spotlight



Clare London
Clare London took her pen name from the city where she lives, loves, and writes. A lone, brave female in a frenetic, testosterone-fuelled family home, she juggles her writing with her other day job as an accountant.

She’s written in many genres and across many settings, with award-winning novels and short stories published both online and in print. She says she likes variety in her writing while friends say she’s just fickle, but as long as both theories spawn good fiction, she’s happy. Most of her work features male/male romance and drama with a healthy serving of physical passion, as she enjoys both reading and writing about strong, sympathetic, and sexy characters.

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

Clare loves to hear from readers, and you can contact her on all her social media.


FACEBOOK  /  BLUESKY  /  FB FRIEND
B&N  /  LINKTREE  /  INSTAGRAM
KOBO  /  AUDIBLE  /  BOOKBUB
iTUNES  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS
EMAIL: clarelondon11@yahoo.co.uk



Romancing the Wrong Twin #1
AMAZON US  /  AMAZON UK  /  B&N
KOBO  /  AUDIBLE  /  iTUNES AUDIO
iTUNES  /  BOOKBUB  /  WEBSITE

Romancing the Ugly Ducking #2
AMAZON US  /  AMAZON UK  /  B&N
iTUNES  /  BOOKBUB  /  WEBSITE

How the Glitch Stole Christmas #2.5
AMAZON US  /  AMAZON UK  /  B&N
KOBO  /  BOOKBUB  /  WEBSITE

Romancing the  . . . Series
AMAZON US  /  AMAZON UK  /  B&N