Saturday, November 28, 2015

Saturday Series Spotlight: Bellskis by Astrid Amara


Carol of the Bellskis #1
Summary:
Paralegal Seth Bellski is tired of being the secret lover of his boss, Lars Varga, founding partner of Finch & Varga Law. So when he asks Lars to spend Hanukkah with Seth's family at their kosher B and B in Whistler, B.C., and Lars refuses, Seth realizes he will never get his self-conscious boss out of the closet.

So Seth prepares to spend his Hanukkah holiday alone in the B and B. Instead he finds himself running the place, as his aunt and uncle are missing, and seven demanding, peculiar, and danger-prone guests have arrived. To make matters worse, Lars shows up, begging forgiveness. Lars's touches remind Seth of why he put up with his boss's behavior in the first place. If only the words that came out of that beautiful mouth were as sweet as his kisses.

But how can Seth find time to fix his broken relationship when the guests are demanding kosher, gluten-free diets, losing their pet terriers, and hitting their heads on the ice? Seth and Lars find themselves put through the paces of being a married couple, all while still broken up. But then again, if they can survive this Hanukah, maybe they'll be singing a carol of the Bellskis.

Miracleof the Bellskis #2
Summary:
Too much family…too little Egg Nog.

It's been three years since Seth Bellski forced his boyfriend and ex-boss Lars Varga out of the closet. Since then, Seth has passed the bar and become an attorney, and Lars has started his own firm. Their sex life has gotten steamier, and everything seems perfect between them. Until the holidays arrive.

It's bad enough that Seth's mother and father want them over every single night of Hanukkah. And that Lars's less-than-tolerant parents are sleeping in the room next door for the duration of Christmas, putting the kibosh on their kink. They also end up attorneys representing opposing sides in a divorce case, one which quickly proves to be much more than it seems.

Amidst Hanukkah candles, Christmas lights, burned dinners and delayed court appointments, can Lars and Seth's relationship survive the ultimate holiday challenge: too much family?


Carol of the Bellskis #1
The breakup was a long time in the making. Nevertheless, the end happened so fast, Seth didn't know it occurred until it was over.

After all, they had just made love, and it had been one of those achingly sweet ones where their bodies weren't using each other as much as merging together, their movements soft and slow, as if time would remember this union, as if everything depended on it.

They no longer mapped each other's bodies. They knew the routes by heart, and still, Seth took his time tracing his way along Lars's skin, as if his subconscious knew this would be the last time to savor such a sight or feel the rough hairs on Lars's leg and the reciprocal softness on his inner thigh; the last time he'd smell the musky earthiness of Lars's desire and share the dark, welcoming entrance, such privacy, great secrets on display.

And afterward, that sweet embrace, kisses shared like whispers between them, and then a quiet descended, the comfort of familiarity and safety like a balm soothing the stresses of the workday, the world outside.

“Are you packed for tomorrow?” was all he had asked.

Lars stiffened beside him. He stared up at the ceiling. “I'm not coming with you.”

Seth stared up at the ceiling as well. Stains from the hotel room above seemed to sink through the floorboards, creating a muddied brown Rorschach print across the off-yellow paint.

“You said you would.” Seth hated the hurt in his voice and cleared his throat. “It will be fun.”

“I'm not stopping you,” Lars said. His hands had withdrawn from Seth's body. “I just can't come along.”

“You said…” Seth swallowed, tried to find a new approach. “It's our chance to get away from it all. Remember? We discussed this. Whistler is beautiful. The skiing is world-class. You'd love it, and the B and B is really charming.”

“The B and B is another thing,” Lars said. His voice was cold now, lawyerlike. Even naked, he had a suit and tie on. “I don't mind celebrating Hanukkah with you, but this is an orthodox B and B, kosher and…what do you call it when they observe the Sabbath?”

“Shomer Shabbat,” Seth said.

“I don't think it's fair to ask me to live up to those kind of expectations, especially for eight entire days.”

“The annoying part is just the Sabbath; that's the only time you can't turn on lights. And besides, my aunt and uncle have the whole place wired with timers. You won't even notice. The coffee is made automatically; the shower turns on every three hours. It's like magic!”

Seth knew he sounded desperate. But this had meant so much to him. More than he had even admitted to himself.

“Still. It's a lot to ask of a person.”

Seth felt the disappointment like a crushing weight, sitting on his chest, pushing his happiness outward. “We discussed everything. Hell, you bought those books about hiking Whistler—”

“It was a fantasy, baby, nothing more.” Lars cleared his throat. “It would look too suspicious if we both went on vacation at the same time, especially for a whole week right before Christmas. Everyone knows I'm not a Jew. Why would I be taking Hanukkah off?” Lars shook his head. “No way.”

Seth clenched his eyes shut, clenched his fists. He fought to muffle his pain.

But he was angry, too. Angry at Lars, and angry at himself for expecting him to change. Of course Lars wouldn't come with him. The risk was too great. Not only would it come out that the great Lars Varga of Finch and Varga Law Offices was actually friends with a mere paralegal, but that the two of them had been fucking each other for over a year.

“It's about time they know,” Seth reasoned, trying very hard to keep the desperation out of his voice.

Lars sat up in bed, creating a wall with his broad back. Even without seeing it, Seth knew Lars rubbed his face with his hand, stressed as usual.

“Not this way,” Lars said finally. “It's tacky.”

“So what is the not-tacky way?” Seth asked. He sat up as well, dislodging the sheet that covered his legs. “The best thing to do would be to tell people. Tell them we're lovers. Tell them we're going on vacation together.”

“No.”

The finality of the word twisted in Seth's stomach. He felt sick as hurt rage pooled in his gut, crept up his throat. Lars would rather hurt him than risk his own social standing.

“You're so fucking selfish,” Seth said under his breath.

“What did you say?” Lars turned, and his eyes locked on Seth's flaccid cock, half-exposed. Arousal flickered in Lars's eyes.

But Seth wasn't going to let him get out of this argument like he usually did, swaying Seth by using his body as a distraction, both of them hungry enough that the carnal outweighed the emotional needs.

“You're selfish,” Seth repeated. He swallowed back the burn creeping up his throat. “You have no idea how insulting this is to me.”

Lars's expression softened. “Baby, this has nothing to do with you. I love you. You know that.”

“Not enough, apparently.”

“Christ, what do you want me to say?”

“I don't want you to say anything. I want you to come on vacation with me. That's all.”

Lars reached out as if unable to stop himself. His hand rested on Seth's inner thigh, possessive and calming.

“We went on vacation together only six months ago, remember?”

“Yeah. For a weekend,” Seth said, “in separate cars, leaving at separate times. And when Finch called to ask about the Murphy case, you lied and told him you were sick at home.”

“But we were together,” Lars pressed. His hand slid up Seth's thigh. “We spent two days alone.”

“Did you enjoy it?” Seth asked after a moment.

“Of course I did.”

“Then do this with me.” Seth reached out and tilted Lars's chin so that they stared at each other. Lars's eyes were so blue, so soft. “I don't want to go alone.”

“I know.” Lars reached out and stroked Seth's rough jawline.

“You have the time off requested already. Please.”

But Lars shook his head. “Don't.”

“Lars, I'm begging you—”

“Don't do that. God. Don't.” He pulled away.

“You are being cruel—”

“I'm being cruel?” Lars bristled. “Do you know what you're asking me to do?”

“You're a fucking partner, it's your goddamn firm! No one is going to fire you because of who you're screwing!”

“Yeah, but I'll lose my clients. You know I love you. Isn't that enough?”

Seth stared at him.

A year ago, it had been enough. Back then he hadn't cared how far in the closet his boss decided to stay. What mattered was the time they did spend together, the hotness of Lars's embrace, the desperation in his touch, always so grateful, so frantic, so excited. What mattered were those lazy Saturday mornings in bed, rough legs entangled, chest pressed against chest, their bodies becoming one, so that hours after Lars had slipped out the back and returned to his expensive home on the gated estate, Seth could taste him in his mouth, feel the tender stretch of his entry, smell Lars's hair on the pillow.

But what had been enough for Seth a year ago no longer satisfied him. He was tired of being Lars's dirty little secret. He hated averting his eyes at staff meetings and the coldness of Lars's approach in the office. Lars was so terrified that his partner and the associate attorneys at the firm would find out about their clandestine relationship that he was purposefully rude to Seth, snubbing him in hallways and curtly requesting changes to documents. And while he would apologize later, when they were alone, making it up to Seth by offering himself shamelessly, spreading his legs and begging Seth to fuck him, forgive him, nevertheless, all those minor insults throughout the days, every day, added up.

But the worst blow was when Lars decided to get a fake girlfriend.

He had assured Seth that there was nothing between them. Ella was an old-fashioned beard, and she knew it, Lars claimed. She was an old friend from high school, recently reacquainted, and she was also an attorney. Their friendship was nothing but.

Yet Seth had to sit there and watch Lars's arm casually slide around Ella's shoulder when she met him for lunch at the office. He saw Lars kiss her cheek affectionately whenever Adam Finch or the newest attorney, Steve Vale, watched.

And he'd pretty much taken enough of Lars's shit to last a lifetime.

Seth wrapped his arms around his knees. He gathered his words carefully and let them out slowly, knowing they were weapons, knowing the barbs could hurt.

“I have said nothing as you coldly ordered me out of your office,” he said. “As you kissed Ella and rubbed her back in front of me. As you turned away from me without a second glance.” Seth looked at Lars then. “And in return, I ask you to do this for me. For us. Come spend the holidays with me and my family, like you promised. One Hanukkah. That's all I'm asking.”

“For a whole week,” Lars noted.

“Yes. After an entire year of doing things your way, I'm asking for one week. You, me, and a mountain wilderness.” Seth tried smiling.

Lars ran his hand over his face once more. He frowned, and Seth knew then that he had lost, that Lars would never budge.

“I can't. I'm sorry I said I would. But Finch suspects something, and I don't want to fuel his speculations.”

The coldness that washed through Seth wasn't new. He'd felt it before, but the heaviness of it felt different. He realized it was final. Love had just frozen too many times within him, and now, like an icy branch, it snapped, dead.

Seth didn't want to be naked with this cold man any longer. He dressed silently. Lars reached out to embrace him, and Seth jerked away and angrily pulled up his slacks. His work shirt was tossed on the floor haphazardly. There was no way he was sneaking back to the office, clothes wrinkled, without suspicion.

“Baby, don't be mad at me,” Lars cooed.

Seth said nothing.

“Look, you're being unreasonable,” Lars said.

Seth buttoned his shirt and then searched for his socks and shoes.

Lars sat heavily on the edge of the bed. His naked body was a beautiful sight. His blond hair looked disheveled after their lovemaking, spikes wild and loose around his bright blue eyes.

Seth allowed himself one last glance at the long body that had given him so much pleasure, and then he turned away.

“Okay…look.” Lars's voice had a note of panic in it. “Maybe I can join you in a few days? I'll come for a night or two. I'll drive up separately, and then—”

“No.” Seth straightened and stared at him. “Fuck you.”

Lars's eyes narrowed. “What did you just say?”

“Fuck. You.” Seth found his tie and knotted it hastily. “I quit. I'm done. I'm so fucking tired of your excuses.”

“You quit? You mean the firm?” Lars's relief was palpable.

And Seth suddenly realized Lars wanted this all along. He wanted Seth out of Finch and Varga. It was too humiliating, Lars's being in love with a male assistant. And that relief in his voice was the absolute final straw.

“No. I want my job. I'm quitting you.”

Lars flinched. Seth hurriedly tied his shoes, because he knew he was going to puke any minute, and he wanted to get out of the hotel before he did so.

“Christ.” Lars stood. His hands were trembling.

Seth turned away. He couldn't look at him. “Have fun with Ella,” he said at the door. “Hope she enjoys being used as much as I did.”

Miracleof the Bellskis #2
It was ten past six by the time Seth got home. The Bell Town neighborhood was in the heart of downtown Seattle, which was in the midst of that ethereal transitional period when the business traffic went home but the nightlife had yet to begin. Fog descended over nearly deserted streets, making what was normally a vibrant, frenetic part of the city feel homey.

He took the elevator to the fifth floor but stood in front of his apartment door for a long minute, key in hand, dreading entering.

It wasn’t that he didn’t like his apartment. He loved their home. And he loved Lars.

But he didn’t love the idea of sharing their eight hundred square feet with Christian and Anne Marie Varga.

He hadn’t even met Lars’s parents, he reminded himself. Maybe they were charming people.

Charming people who, in the last three years, had changed the subject every time Lars mentioned Seth or anything to do with their life together. People who never mentioned their son’s orientation to friends or family. They hadn’t shut him out completely. But it hadn’t been a very warm reception either.

Of course, Seth’s own family’s reaction had been a tinge frosty at the beginning, but within a few months they had rallied, even going so far as to join their local chapter of PFLAG and donate to the It Gets Better campaign. Seth was proud of his family’s tolerance and distrustful of the Vargas’s silence.

But he wasn’t going to improve relations by hanging out in the hallway, so he pushed his key into the lock. Lars loved his family for better or worse, so Seth was going to have to make the best of it.

As he walked through the door, the smell of sautéing garlic and ginger filled the air. Elmore James played on the stereo.

He rounded the corner to the central kitchen. Lars stirred the contents of a pot, his normally pale face rosy from the heat of the stove and the half-empty bottle of wine on the counter. He wore a long-sleeved, dark blue T-shirt that was lightly dusted with flour from cooking, and a pair of dark blue jeans. His blond hair was slightly darker in the winter than in the summer when it bleached yellow, but it still brought out the brilliant blue in his eyes.

Lars smiled widely. “Hey baby,” he said quietly. He nodded over to the living room.

Seth sighed and dropped his backpack in the hall, then made his way through to the living room. The view of Elliott Bay was obscured in twilight, but the lights of the city twinkled through windows steamed with heat from the kitchen, making the place feel exceptionally warm and intimate.

Then he turned to greet the stonily immobile couple sitting together on the red sofa in complete silence, and all the warmth of the room froze.

Seth stepped forward, offering his hand. “Mr. and Mrs. Varga, I’m Seth Bellski.”

Mr. Varga shook Seth’s hand but said nothing. He was an older version of Lars, still attractive in his seventies with a full head of silver hair and a lean figure. He wore a black turtleneck and charcoal slacks, and his leather belt and shoes were polished to a gleam.

Lars’s mother, Anne Marie, gave Seth a little nod and smile, standing partially, before sitting back down without touching his hand. She had been diagnosed with breast cancer several years before and, despite being in remission, her health was still fragile, and it showed. She was bony, her long brown and gray hair brittle looking, and her skin pale. But she was dressed tastefully, and Seth could tell she had once been beautiful. Her eyes were as blue as Lars’s. “Hello,” she offered. She sat back and stared along with her husband.

Seth cleared his throat and sat across from them in one of two lounge chairs. He still wore his suit, although he’d removed his tie.

“How was your flight from Oakland?” Seth asked.

“All right,” Mrs. Varga said.

“Not bad,” Mr. Varga added.

Seth nodded vigorously. “Great! Have you been to Seattle before?”

They nodded.

Seth waited a moment. They offered no response. “What sights did you see last time?”

The looked at each other. “I don’t remember everything,” Mrs. Varga said.

“Some trees,” Mr. Varga said.

“Did you go to Pike Place Market?”

Mrs. Varga shook her head.

“Oh, we’ll definitely have to go there,” Seth said. “And the Space Needle, of course.”

She nodded.

Seth nodded.

Silence.

Seth cleared his throat. “Do you want anything to drink? We have wine, seltzer, beer, juice, or I can make you gin and tonics…?”

“We’re fine,” Mrs. Varga said.

“No, thank you,” said Lars’s father.

Seth smiled.

“You sure? Or I can get Lars to make egg nog for you. His version is strong enough to make you think you’re still flying.”

They didn’t laugh. “No, thank you,” Mr. Varga said.

“No, thank you,” Mrs. Varga repeated.

Seth gave them an opportunity to talk, which stretched into one of the most awkward extended periods of silence he’d ever experienced.

“Okaaay!” Seth clapped his hands together. “I should see if Lars needs any help…”

He jumped from the seat and dashed round the corner.

Lars had tears in his eyes.

Seth almost panicked, but then he noticed Lars was also cutting onions.

“Bread is supposed to stop the tears,” Seth offered in a low voice. “But I don’t know what to do about your parents.”

“Bread works with them too.” Lars shifted over a plate of sliced fresh bread and a bowl of oil and balsamic vinegar. “Want some wine?”

“Oh God, yes please.” Seth leaned against the doorway while Lars deftly reached a long arm up and over the fridge to grab a wineglass. “Maybe I should go change.”

Lars looked Seth over as he poured the wine. He didn’t say anything, but his eyes glinted in that way that Seth recognized as arousal.

“You look fucking hot in a three-piece suit.”

Seth winced. “Your parents might hear that,” he whispered.

“I’m being quiet,” Lars whispered back. He moved closer, running his hand over Seth’s crotch as he passed the glass of wine. “You should wear it more often.”

“I’ll wear it to bed. How about that?”

Lars smirked.

“Until then, however, I think I’m going to change,” Seth said.

“Go for it.”

“Your parents won’t mind, will they?”

Lars raised an eyebrow, hand resting on Seth’s belt. “Do you think we eat in suits? What vision of my family life do you have?”

“Hell if I know.” Seth lowered his voice even further. “They aren’t talking.”

“They’re like that.”

“Are they shy or annoyed?”

“Maybe a little of both.”

“Well, what am I supposed to say?”

“I don’t know.” Lars sighed and turned back to his chopping board. “Tell them about your day. Tell them about that cat we saved last week. My mother loves cats.”

“Cats. Right. Okay.” Seth dashed down the hall to their bedroom to change.

It was another small room, made even smaller by the California king-size futon that dominated the space. It was the only bed long enough for a man of Lars’s height, however, so they made do.

Seth changed into jeans, a white button-down shirt, and a brown sweater that Lars had given him last Christmas. He downed his glass of wine and got a refill before carrying the bread and oil out to the visiting statues.

They eyed him silently, expressionless.

“So Lars tells me you like cats,” Seth said.

Mrs. Varga nodded.

“We were thinking of adopting this one cat,” Seth told them. “She almost got hit by a car on First Avenue, but Lars jumped into traffic and saved her. I bundled her into a box, and we got her upstairs. We both adored her, but it turns out she belonged to someone in the building here and had accidentally escaped. Anyway, it made us think we wanted to adopt a cat.”

“That’s a nice idea.”

Seth drank his wine. “You have pets?”

“Not anymore,” Mrs. Varga said.

Mr. Varga glanced at his BlackBerry.

Holy shit, this was awful.

“So you’re a lawyer as well, right?” Seth asked Lars’s dad.

“Was. I’m retired now.” He didn’t bother looking up from his mobile phone.

“What kind of law did you practice?”

“Patent and trademark litigation.”

“Aha.” Seth swallowed. “I’m an attorney as well.”

“Not a paralegal?”

Seth smiled tightly. At least they had paid attention to something Lars told them. “I was a paralegal back when Lars and I met. But I passed the bar in June.”

“Well, congratulations.” Mr. Varga gave him a bland look. “Welcome to the profession.”

Seth swirled the contents of his glass. Big Bill Broonzy sang from the stereo, “I’m gonna lay my head on some sad railroad iron,” and Seth really couldn’t have agreed more.

How long was Lars going to be in the kitchen?

He hated it when Lars invited people for dinner but spent the entire night in the kitchen. That was the fate of any entertaining chef, and Seth was beginning to understand why Lars wanted to knock a hole between the kitchen and living room so he could see what was going on and interact while cooking.

But until they broke their lease and punched a hole in the wall, or until Seth learned to cook more than sandwiches, the brunt of socialization fell to him.

“You don’t have a Christmas tree?” Mrs. Varga asked, her first question of the night.

“Nah. I’m Jewish, you know.”

“Oh.” That was a startled, disparaging oh as compared to the other noncommittal, neutral ohs he’d received so far.

“I told Lars he could put one up if he wanted, but he said it wasn’t worth the trouble.”

Lars’s mother openly scowled at that.

“I do like Christmas lights, though,” he added. “I put up the white lights around the office window. If they keep you up, you can just unplug them.”

No comment. Seth felt like tugging his tie again, but he no longer had one. He was only conversationally strangled.

His cell phone rang, and he ran to it as if it were a buoy and he were drowning at sea. At last! Someone who might speak! he thought, but then he saw it was his mother and he almost didn’t answer.

But after such a dramatic fetching of the phone, he could hardly ignore it. Besides, he had set Barbara Streisand’s “Cry Me a River” as his mother’s ringtone, and the song was clearly causing Mr. Varga stress.

“Mom!” Seth said quickly. He smiled and waved at the icy Vargas and turned down the hall and back into the bedroom. “What’s wrong?”

“Does something have to be wrong? I can’t call my son on the first night of Hanukkah and wish him a happy holiday without there being some sort of trouble?”

“Not when we spoke less than an hour ago and I told you I had a house full of guests.”

Seth could hear an argument in the background, no doubt between his father and Aaron, Seth’s brother-in-law.

“I just wanted to make sure you had enough to eat. I can drop off some leftovers. I made enough food for you and Lars, you know. I didn’t know you wouldn’t be coming over.”

“I know, Ma, you told me.” Seth rolled his eyes. “Look, give them to Aaron. He needs to fatten up.”

His mother laughed at that. Aaron was overweight. “That’s not nice, honey. How are the Vargas?”

Seth shut his bedroom door. “Cold.”

“Cold? They’re from California, you idiot. Turn on the heat!”

“No, I mean icy,” Seth clarified. “Unfriendly.”

“What, they don’t like you or something?”

“I don’t think they want to be here.”

His mother made a tsking sound. “Well then let them eat out somewhere and come over with Lars.”

“I can’t do that,” Seth said.

“Why not?”

“Mom! How would you feel if you flew in to visit me and I left you to eat dinner with someone else?”

“That’s exactly what you are doing!” she cried.

“No it isn’t!”

“Look, you promised you’d be here—”

“Mother.” Seth breathed through his nose. “Lars and I will be there tomorrow. I swear. We’ll light the second candle with you. I’ll even make Lars cook latkes.”

He knew that would work. Ever since Lars learned how to make latkes at Seth’s aunt and uncle’s B&B in Whistler, they’d become a Bellski family favorite.

“Really?” his mother whispered.

“Really.”

“All right. Well, turn up the heat. Don’t let them catch a cold. And tell Lars’s parents that they’re invited as well. We’d love to meet them.”

Seth nearly choked in horror. “Okay, Mom.”

“I love you, sweetie.”

“Love you, Mom.”

“Bye.”

Seth hung up the phone and clenched it in his fist. He popped open the door and saw Mr. and Mrs. Varga hadn’t moved an inch. They halfheartedly dipped their bread, limply shaking off the excess like sad seagulls in an oil disaster.

Family.

Seth returned to the living room and tried a few more attempts at conversation, but when Mr. Varga gave up all pretense and started texting in the middle of one of Seth’s stories, he abandoned conversation entirely and just turned on the television instead. They sat watching the evening news in morose silence.

“Hey, Mom. I used Grandma’s spaetzle recipe.” Lars beamed as he came around the corner. Golden light from the kitchen set off his hair, and he looked like an angel. Seth realized he was doing this because he loved Lars. He had to endure. “You’ll have to tell me if I got it right.”

“Need any help?” Seth asked. Please, fuck, let me help.

“No, all good. We’re ready to eat. Table’s set.”

“Thank God,” Seth mumbled. Mrs. Varga scowled.

“Follow me!” Seth cried. Not like they needed directions to the dining room. It was attached to the living room and was separated by paint color alone.

The four crowded around Seth and Lars’s small folding dining table. The tablecloth, napkins, and the white porcelain plates were all new, which meant that Lars had been shopping that afternoon. It was a sweet gesture, but it also unnerved Seth. He couldn’t imagine feeling the need to run out and buy new dishes to entertain his family.

Lars’s long legs crashed into his father’s under the table, so he turned himself to the side, letting them stretch into the hall. This made him turn his back to Seth, which Seth felt was unnecessary.

The food was, of course, fantastic. It was the one arena in which Lars never let Seth down. At first he’d assumed Lars was incapable of culinary mistakes. Then he realized Lars erred often, especially with new recipes, but had the cooking genius to recover from each mistake and disguise it as all part of the plan.

It had become a game to Seth whenever Lars presented a new dish. What went wrong here? He would guess because one would never know by presentation or flavor alone. The dinner this evening was a celebration of Mrs. Varga’s German roots, and there were a lot of carbohydrates going on, but the combination of seasonings and proportion of sauces still managed to convey a lightness often lacking in Teutonic victuals.

“The sauerkraut?” Seth whispered.

Lars turned and smirked. “No.”

Mrs. Varga frowned, not following the in-joke, but Lars promptly distracted her by asking after a family friend. He was more successful in getting his mother to converse, but his father ate without contributing more than an occasional grumbled negative.

“Todd Rasek has started a new restaurant outside San Rafael,” Mrs. Varga said.

“Rated B by the health department,” Lars’s father contributed.

“His wife just gave birth to fraternal twins, a boy and a girl,” Mrs. Varga commented.

“Twice the cost,” Mr. Varga lovingly added.

“The spaetzle’s butter and sage sauce?” Seth asked under his breath.

“Wrong.” Lars served his father more potatoes.

“Have any clients at your new business?” his father asked, tucking into his second helping.

Lars nodded. He was drinking more wine than usual, Seth noticed, but he couldn’t blame him. “At the moment I can’t turn down clients while I’m trying to rebuild my base, so I’m taking on two new cases this week, one contract settlement, which should be pretty cut-and-dried, and a client I’m taking on for a friend’s legal firm.”

“You should never have dissolved Finch and Varga,” his father mumbled. “Ten years of building a business, only to start from scratch again.”

Lars glanced at Seth briefly. “I’m not starting from scratch. Several clients transferred over with me. Besides, I have more freedom to take on a variety of cases this way.”

Mr. Varga snorted derisively. Seth felt his blood begin to boil and looked at the remains of his plate so his anger didn’t show.

“Who are you taking a client for?” Seth asked.

“Eric Klenger. Remember him? His firm doesn’t do family law but one of his primary clients needs help.”

“You don’t do family law either,” Seth pointed out.

“Not anymore, but I used to, before Adam and I specialized in corporate.” Lars wiped his mouth. “I have more experience than Eric, at least, and his client is very specific about who he trusts.”

Seth just shook his head. Even as an attorney, Seth realized he’d never be one of those people who couldn’t switch off the job. He liked working forty hours a week. He liked not working. He had hobbies and truly enjoyed napping.

But Lars was one of those people who had to always be doing something. He ran religiously every morning, cooked every evening, worked out, practiced law, took wine-tasting classes, and when he wasn’t doing any of that, he was watching movies with Seth or going out to restaurants. He stayed constantly active, whereas Seth preferred going home in the evenings and calling it quits with a good book.

Their domestic discussion was clearly alienating the Vargas, who looked away from the table as if what they saw disgusted them. Mr. Varga pushed his plate away and scowled at the perfect view.

Lars served dessert, some delicate gingerbread fantasy that had Seth baffled and caused the cold indifference in his mother’s eyes to soften slightly.

“Oh! You made Mama’s lebkuchen!”

Lars nodded, giving Seth an extra piece.

“Lebkuchen?” Seth whispered.

“Bingo,” Lars whispered under his breath. “Completely fucked up.”

Seth, Lars, and Mrs. Varga ate the cookies enthusiastically, but Lars’s father tossed his back as if in a hurry and stood.

“Where are we sleeping? It’s been a long day.”

Lars went very still. He only did that when insulted or hurt, and rage filled Seth. It was one thing for the Vargas to be rude to him, since he was a stranger and they most likely saw him only as the man sodomizing their oldest son. But Lars was their child. How could they treat him with disregard?

Lars recovered quickly and gestured to their small office, off the dining room. “It’s got a futon bed that we’ve folded out. Make yourself at home.”

Mr. and Mrs. Varga unpacked while Seth helped Lars do the dishes.

“You already have too many cases right now,” Seth commented as he handed dishes to Lars for the dishwasher. “You’re too busy.”

“Nah, being busy is good.” Lars gave him a toothy grin. “We need the money.”

“We don’t need it so much that you drive yourself to an early grave.”

“I like being busy.”

“I know.” Seth turned off the faucet. “But maybe you’d have more time so we could take that Spanish class like we’ve talked about.”

Lars nodded. “Es la verdad.” He started the dishwasher.

Seth heard the Vargas emerge from their room and decided he’d had enough with pretending to be charming for the day. He retired to the bedroom he and Lars shared.

He must have fallen asleep somewhere in the middle doldrums of his mystery novel because he startled awake at the touch of a cold hand on his thigh.

He jerked into consciousness.

“Shh, sorry, baby,” Lars whispered. His lips pressed a small kiss against Seth’s ear.

“Why are your hands so cold?” Seth complained.

“They aren’t. You’re just broiling underneath this comforter. How can you sleep under so much weight?”

“I’m used to you passing out on top of me.”

Lars chuckled. He climbed on top of Seth’s body, illustrating Seth’s point. He was colder than Seth, but the weight felt good, especially as he settled between Seth’s legs. Lars kissed him, and he tasted like red wine and pepper. Seth curled his hand in Lars’s hair and held him in place, enjoying a long, lazy kiss.

“Doesn’t it freak you out to screw in the room next to your parents?” Seth asked, voice barely a whisper.

“No, it feels like I’m back in high school. Just keep it quiet.” Lars pulled Seth’s boxers off. Seth lifted his hips to accommodate and pulled off his old T-shirt. As soon as he was naked, Lars slid his hands up the insides of Seth’s thighs, bringing them together to grasp his hardening cock and palm his balls.

“Nice balls today,” Lars whispered. “Low and droopy, just how I like ’em.”

Seth laughed quietly. Lars dipped down and sucked Seth’s balls into his mouth, and Seth arched his back, throwing his arm over his mouth to stifle any noise. Lars gave him a sloppy, wet blowjob that was so slowly paced Seth thought he’d go mad. He pumped his hips to speed the rhythm, but Lars maintained his idle approach, nuzzling Seth’s balls and licking the skin of his perineum as if he had all the time in the world.

Seth reached down to stroke his own cock, but Lars gently pushed his hands away. He slid back up Seth’s body to whisper against Seth’s mouth. “Don’t. I want you to fuck me with that.”

“You want to fuck? Really?” Seth wasn’t opposed by any stretch of the imagination, but he himself couldn’t picture enjoying intercourse with his parents a wall away.

“Yeah.” Lars had a weird look. “When I’m taking my parents around the city tomorrow, I want to feel where you penetrated me.”

Seth ran his fingers over Lars’s sharp cheekbone. “Anything you wish.”

Lars reached over to the bedside table and pulled the lube from the drawer. As he did, Seth had a glimpse of his sculpted, muscular ass, and the pendulous hang of his testicles between his legs. He couldn’t help but reach out and caress the soft, hot skin of them in the palm of his hand. Lars froze. Seth’s hand crept forward, navigating the length of Lars’s long, thick cock by feel.

Lars turned around and smiled so sweetly Seth felt his heart clench tight, a spasm of love.

But then Lars shoved the tube of lubricant into Seth’s hands and that pretty much changed the tone of the moment.

Seth squirted some onto his fingers and worked it over his cock. They’d gotten tested years ago, and no longer needed condoms, and Seth reveled in the freedom every time he did this, stroking his sensitive skin, just the smell of the lube creating Pavlovian anticipation for what came next.

Lars leaned back against the sheets and used a pillow to prop up his hips. He shamelessly spread his long legs, all white expanses of skin and blond hair and hard need. Seth knelt between his legs, pushing them up so Lars’s knees framed his face. He spread open Lars’s ass and paused, admiring the view. “I want a picture of this.”

“I’ll frame one and give it to you for Christmas,” Lars whispered. “I’ll wrap it and you can open it in front of my mother.”

Author Bio:
Astrid Amara lives in Bellingham, Washington. She's a former Peace Corps Volunteer, an advocate for animal rights, and a bureaucrat by day. After work she can usually be found writing, riding horses, hiking, or else sleeping. Her novel The Archer's Heart was a finalist for the 2008 Lambda Literary Award.


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EMAIL: astridamara@gmail.com



Carol of the Bellskis #1
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Miracle of the Bellskis #2
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Choosy Bookworm Holiday Extravaganza: Ellie Campbell & Donna Fasano & Melinda Curtis



Choosy Bookworm has partnered with eNovel Authors at Work to bring you a month long celebration with great books, great book deals, and let's not forget the great giveaways! 

Check out today's featured authors and books, then head on over to the event page and enter to win one of two $250 Amazon Gift Cards or Paypal Cash!

Be sure to check out the featured books and the awesome author sponsored giveaway below!




Million Dollar Que$tion
by Ellie Campbell
Genre: Chick Lit

Summary:
Just as a huge financial scandal throws New Yorker, Olivia Wheeler, from wealth and success to bankruptcy and shame, struggling impoverished single-mother Rosie Dixon wins an unexpected million pounds. Good luck? Bad luck? Who can tell? Both women have more in common than they realize. While Olivia struggles to survive her humiliations, fleeing broke and homeless to London, shy unassuming Rosie discovers sudden riches arrive with their own mega-load of problems.

Two strangers who’ve never met. Yet neither realizes how each is affecting the other’s destiny or the places their paths touch and fates entwine.



Meet Ellie Campbell
Ellie Campbell is a pseudonym for sisters, Pam Burks and Lorraine Campbell who collaborate across the mighty Atlantic, finding writing together the perfect excuse for endless phone conversations. Although Pam lives near London, England, while Lorraine is on a Colorado ranch– they both believe in enjoying life to the fullest.



An Almost Perfect Christmas
by Donna Fasano
Genre: Contemporary Romance

Summary:
Pediatric Nurse Christy Cooper teams up with single dad Aaron Chase to give one special little girl AN ALMOST PERFECT CHRISTMAS.


Meet Donna Fasano
Donna Fasano is a USA Today Bestselling Author whose award-winning books have been translated into nearly two dozen languages and have sold 4 million copies.



Always a Bridesmaid
by Melinda Curtis
Genre: Bridesmaids #2



Summary:
Nicole Edwards has walked down the aisle as a bridesmaid thirteen times! Thirteen times! In an effort to change her luck, this master baker plans to give up waiting for Jake – who doesn’t know she’s alive – sell her business in New York City, buy a food truck in Los Angeles, and find her own happily ever after.

Chef Sean O’Malley could use Nicole’s dessert skills at his restaurant in New York City. In fact, he’s banking on a joint venture with Nicole, although he hasn’t yet approached her about it. When he learns during a pre-wedding event they’re both working that she’s moving to L.A. because she’s giving up on Jake, he decides to give her a crash course on how to be noticed. Sean has, after all, three younger sisters. He knows how a woman’s mind works. But he doesn’t factor in how his heart works or how easily it could be broken.


Meet Melinda Curtis
Melinda Curtis is an award-winning USA Today bestseller writing sweet and traditional romance, as well as romantic comedy.





Ellie Campbell
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Donna Fasano
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Melinda Curtis
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Million Dollar Question

An Almost Perfect Christmas
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iTUNES  /  KOBO  /  GOODREADS TBR

Always a Bridesmaid


Head on over to the
Choosy BookwormHoliday Extravaganza
event page to learn more and enter to
win one of two $250 Amazon Gift Cards or Paypal Cash!



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