Seeds and Sunshine

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: East Meets Western #4
Genre: , , , , , , ,
Release Date: September 19, 2023
Pages: 211

Shiloh Williams lost his husband in the bullriding ring two years ago and hasn’t been able to move on. It’s been so long since he was happy he’s forgotten how to be. After making the long drive up to Vermont to visit friends, he finally decides that getting out of Texas might be the only way to leave the hard days of his past behind.

Tate Dutton is a high school math teacher in Burlington, and a part time driver for a local brewery in the evenings. It takes more than his teacher’s salary to keep his small dairy farm afloat, but he loves it so much, he doesn’t mind the extra work.

Shiloh has taken up residence in the back booth of a local bar where he’ll nurse one whiskey all night long. Tate has seen the cowboy many times, as it’s his favorite hangout too. The first time Tate stumbles into a conversation with Shiloh it doesn’t go so well, but Tate doesn’t seem to get the hint and before long Shiloh has no choice but to indulge the younger man.

Is there any hope for these two? Time will tell whether the grumpy Shiloh or the sunny Tate proves to be more stubborn, or if friends will interfere and bring them together.

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Chapter 1 

 

Jesus, Matty. I can’t do this anymore without you. I’m trying, I swear to God, but I’m…lost. 

Shiloh Williams stared into the two fingers of whiskey he’d been nursing for an hour. There was just enough for a sip left. Enough for him to swoosh around and pretend that the lights swirling madly were because he was drunk and not because his eyes were filled with unshed tears. 

He came in here to this little hole in the wall every night and sat at the back of the bar. He handed Kris a twenty, took his whiskey to the back booth, and stayed until closing time when it would be too late to disturb Skyler with a phone call, too late to do anything but walk down to the weird little apartment he’d rented on the fourth floor of one of the old downtown buildings. 

An apartment, baby? Seriously? You’re in a shitty efficiency apartment? My gardener? My baby that could spend hours in the yard, in the garden? In the greenhouse I had built for you? 

“Shut up, Matty,” he whispered. “I’m so fucking tired.” 

Shiloh had been exhausted for twenty-six months now. Worn totally to the bone since Percy’s Mission had managed to buck Matty off and hook a horn under his vest. Just as Lane Frost had died, Matty had been gone before they got him off the arena dirt. 

Matty’d been gone by the time that Shiloh had climbed into the ambulance. 

It was like his soul had bled out with Matty’s heart, in Dallas. 

Eventually he’d had enough of Texas. Maybe that was why, after damn near two years of insisting there was no possible way, he hadn’t argued much when Sky invited him up north for his charity event again. 

Now he was here, and he had stayed in Sky’s guest room for a month before he’d just sold everything barring the things that Matty’s folks had wanted to take and rented himself a place up here. He had all the buckles, the pictures, the shirt Matt had worn the day they got married and the one he’d died in. That was enough. 

“Hey, man.” 

Shiloh knew that kid. He came in with his friends a few times a week and played darts or pool or watched the TV. By this point, he knew a lot of faces, mostly because folks would wander by on the way to the head. This kid was the only one that acknowledged him, though, always giving him a wave before disappearing into the men’s room. 

He tipped his hat, offering the kid something that should look like a smile even if it didn’t feel like one. He got a sunny smile in return, so he must have faked it well. 

“Whoops. Occupied.” The kid backed out of the back area where the bathrooms were, chuckling and leaned against his booth. “That’s always so embarrassing, you know? Going for the doorknob and trying to turn it like four times, and by the time you figure out it’s locked someone’s shouting at you to wait a minute, which you didn’t hear over the music, and you’re like, sorry man! Ugh.” 

He arched an eyebrow, but he got that. “Nice thing about this seat. I know when someone comes out.” 

The kid blinked at Shiloh sort of like he’d grown a second head or something. 

You okay?” If this kid was fixin’ to have a stroke, he was leaving without his last sip. 

“Oh!” The kid laughed and shook his head. “Yeah, sorry. I was just thinking how brilliant that is.” 

That wasn’t something that he’d ever heard about himself. “Well, thank you kindly, sir. I appreciate that.” 

Now go on and let me wallow. 

A man hurried past them headed back toward the bar. “You’re welcome. My turn!” The kid pushed off the booth and moved away. 

He caught himself chuckling. Jesus, what a dork, but there was something harmless about him. 

Across the bar the guy’s friends were playing darts and one of them did something to make everyone cheer. He couldn’t see what it was, but when the kid came jogging out of the bathroom, they pounced on him. “Next round is on you, Tate!” 

“What? Dude, Dave did not win while I was gone. Someone cheated. This is a setup!” The kid—Tatewas laughing, eyes wide, but he was already pulling out his wallet. “I demand a rematch.” 

“Rematch! Rematch!” 

Christ, he remembered being that young and happy. Sort of. A long time ago. 

Maybe. 

Shiloh sighed softly and finished his drink. Time to go. He had reruns of Iron Chef America to watch.

Title: Seeds and Sunshine
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0CG4VJGQS

Pick Up Man

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: East Meets Western #5
Genre: , , , , ,
Release Date: March 19, 2024

Jack Boers and Hudson James had a wild affair one long weekend many years ago. But their lives were too different then to even think about something more. They’ve kept in touch, meeting up every year when the bull riding tour is in Anaheim to pick up where they left off, and spending every moment Jack isn’t in the arena in bed together.

But this year, Hudson has a plan. He’s in love with Jack, and even though he knows the cowboy has a man at every stop along the tour, he’s decided to ask for more.

Jack is an experienced, handsome cowboy, and he’s earned his reputation as a bad boy. He knows he can have any man he wants. But the last couple of years, he’s been looking forward to seeing Hudson more than he can understand. He’s really not the rambling man he used to be, and he wonders sometimes if there’s anything out there for him once he retires.

When Hudson’s plan backfires, he’s not sure how to handle the situation. Jack is just keeping his head down and working, unable to understand what is, or what’s not, happening between them. Can they figure out their communication issues before the weekend is over? Or will they be left with “see you same time next year”?

Pick Up Man is a second chance, opposites attract romance featuring a smoking hot bull riding pick-up man, and a wealthy entrepreneur.

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Chapter 1 

 

Jack lived for the Anaheim events—seriously. He got to see the kids, but then they all went to Disneyland. There was a ton of affordable food, decent hotels, and…Hudson. 

For years, he’d had his own personal hot little bastard in Anaheim. Hours in bed, making the bedsprings scream. Pizza delivery twenty-four-seven. Four nights of bliss with one of the ones he never once got tired of. 

He’d spent more time with Hudson in bed than out, and it was easy to picture the man with a lock of blond hair plastered across a wide forehead, and half-lidded blue eyes staring up from the pillows. That was the first image that came to mind, but Hudson knew how to wear a pair of jeans, too, the arms of a polo stretching around muscled biceps. 

Not bad for a geek. 

Hudson couldn’t ride a horse or throw a loop, and Jack was fairly sure he didn’t know what a piggin string was, but the fine motherfucker did make his eyes cross. 

He had driven down in a convoy with Mackey, Sid, and Tommy—and they had been having a ball on the pretty drive along the coast from Portland. He’d expected to hear from Hudson by now; he’d even texted twice, which was once more than he usually would for any other booty call, but nothing. Not even those little dots. 

Shit, he hoped Hudson was okay. It wasn’t like the man not to return his texts, but if Jack didn’t hear something soon, well, he’d just call. 

It was the decent thing to do, after all. What if Hudson had been in an accident or something? 

So we won’t be seeing you at dinner, I hear.” Sid winked at him as Mackey was checking in. 

“Oi.” Tommy laughed. “Only place you’ll see Jack this weekend is on the dirt. He always has plans in Anaheim.” 

“Plans?” Sid asked, and Mackey nodded. 

Plans plans. Pervy dirty many-condom plans.” 

“Wait.” Sid gave him a confused look. “How is that different than every other weekend?” 

That got a laugh from Mackey and Tommy, and he was about to say something snarky himself when his phone vibrated in his hand. 

[Plane was delayed and traffic in LA sucks.] 

Oh, hell yeah. That was the best possible answer. [Got a room at the Hilton Anaheim. 322. CUSoon] 

[Sounds good.] 

Tommy peered over his shoulder. “Is lover boy standing you up?” 

“He is not, thank you. Nosy. He couldn’t help his grin, though, not for love or money. “His flight was late.” 

“He flies in for you?” Sid asked, and his grin just got wider. 

“I’m that good.” 

“Every year, so fucking smug. It’s disgusting.” Mackey clapped him on the shoulder. “Speaking of disgusting, see you on the dirt. I’m taking Sid upstairs for a nap before showtime.” 

Tommy sighed. “Sounds like my cue to find the twins. We should have made them drive with us.” 

“You should just get your own hotel room, man.” 

“Oi, the twins would cause a disaster. Can you imagine? They’d be bouncing off the walls like a roo.” 

“Quick before he changes his mind.” Mackey laughed and steered Sid toward the elevator. “Later, y’all!” 

“Mother needs a day off.” Tommy winked at him. Grainger and Hayden—the twins on the bull-fighting team—stumbled into the hotel lobby looking wide-eyed and lost. “Oi! Boys!” Tommy waved. “Off to babysit, mate. Later.” 

“See ya.” Jack waved and headed for the bar, getting a beer while he waited for Hudson. He loved watching the fine son of a bitch walk into a room. 

Or out of a room. 

And it wasn’t long before Hudson showed, wearing jeans, a checkered button-down that tugged at his shoulders, and that unforgettable wide smile. Hudson gave him a lazy wave and headed his way, long legs and tight hips weaving around the dining tables. 

“Can you get me two Bud Lights, please, honey?” he asked the bartender, eyes on that taut belly. 

“Well, Jack Boers. Fancy seeing you here.” Hudson stuck a hand out and pulled him into a bro-hug when he took it, the familiar light cologne filling his nostrils. “And at the bar no less.” 

“I ordered you a Bud. Good to see you, darlin’.” Oh, maybe they could take their beers up to their rooms. He could order room services. 

“Thank you. I need a beer after that flight.” Hudson settled on a stool. “You’re looking healthy. Everything good?” 

“Doing great. You know how it is. I got my dream job.” He rode for three events a weekend whenever he wanted, his horses were happy and healthy, and he had both his thumbs. 

“I do know how that is, since I got mine too.” 

“Two Buds. Are you running a tab?” The bartender set out cocktail napkins, then set the glasses on top. 

“Just the one for me, thanks.” Hudson put a twenty on the bar. 

“So, you looking forward to the weekend? Feels like forever since I got to hang out with your happy ass.” Jack wrote his room number on his receipt. “Want to find a seat?” 

“Well, it’s been about a year, like always. A long one.” Hudson stood, and his sharp blue eyes scanned the room. “There’s a table over there that’ll work.” 

“You been okay? You don’t text like you used to.” And he hated to bother Hudson if he was… doing whatever he did now. Hudson was way quicker to change than he was. Way. 

“Yeah. Sorry, I… I’ve been busy. I got an incredible offer on my company, and I sold it. Now I work for them.” Hudson did some kind of work with medical technology that he didn’t completely follow, but he knew the company had been important. “But it’s good. I’m consulting now, so I have way more time than I used to, you know?” 

So you sold the place so they could hire you?” Jack guessed the taxes on that were good? He didn’t know. “Time is good.” 

He could give Hudson something to do for a few hours. 

“Sort of? I sold it for over three times what I put into it and now I don’t run it anymore. I just work there. It was a good deal.” Hudson leaned back in his chair. He might only see Hudson once a year, but he could tell there was something off, something in Hudson’s eyes. “I’m turning my talents to my favorite sport.” 

“Yeah?” Surely that was rodeo, right? It needed to be rodeo. Rodeo rocked. 

Just ask him, he’d tell you. 

“Yep. I’m working on a glove. I’ve been working with a couple of riders off circuit, but we’re trying to find some pros to try it out. I’ve got a prototype with me. I’ll show you.” 

“No shit? Go you, man! I’d love to see it.” He was all over that. “What does it do? Protect the hand or keep them in the rope?” 

Hudson smiled and seemed to like the questions. “It’s safety gear, so protection mostly, but the riders seem to like the grip too.” Hudson shrugged. “We’ll see. It’s just nice to have the time to focus on things I enjoy.” 

“I hear that. I been staying with Mackey and his new guy for a bit. It’s nice to be able to just get out and ride.” He could outrun the world on the back of Ghost or Princess, either one. 

“He bought a place in Colorado, right? He has a guy? That’s amazing, good for him.” Hudson sipped his Bud, then studied the glass. Hudson hadn’t ever talked about wanting someone steady, and Jack knew the guy wouldn’t be here if he had someone else. 

Neither one of them were cheaters. 

Jack didn’t promise anyone monogamy. He knew how that worked out. 

“Sid’s okay. Smart like you. I like him for Mackey.” 

Hudson chuckled. “You don’t like smart people for yourself.” 

He frowned over because he surrounded himself with smart guys. He loved fucking the hot, smart ones because they had imaginations. 

“Just curious.” Hudson finished his beer. “I can’t believe how long we’ve been doing this.” 

“Long time, and every year it gets better.” He loved the California air, yessir he did. 

“You think so? Must be all the practice you get in between.” Hudson gave him a wink. 

“You got to use it, so they say.” He wasn’t getting it every weekend these days, but he wasn’t a fucking monk. 

Hudson watched him, then pushed his chair back from the table. “You wanna show me what you got?” 

“You know it.” He stood and offered Hudson his best smile. Thank goodness Hudson seemed more… normal. “I got us a nice room.” 

Mhm. Okay. I’ve got a room down the hall too. I just dropped my suitcase in it.” 

Weird. “You don’t want to stay with me? You know you’re welcome as the flowers in May.” 

Hudson gave him a smile, but it seemed… complicated. “Oh, I know, cowboy. Thank you. But I’m here on business too this time, so it just seemed… I just got my own space.” 

That sorta made sense, he guessed. He wasn’t much for business. “Well, you want to cancel your room, I got you a key made. First, though, I want to get you somewhere I can kiss the fire out of you.” 

Hudson’s blush was answer enough. “Let’s go to yours.”

Title: Pick Up Man
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0CP1HWMPX
ISBN13: 978-1-951011-94-9

Lost Boy

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: Les's Bar #5
Genre: , , , , , ,
Release Date: January 28, 2025

Lost Boy is an opposites attract, sub top, size difference, BDSM romance featuring a strong but gentle veterinarian and a K-9 police dog trainer with a fiery temper.

Veterinarian and Dom Leo Aetos adores animals, has a great apartment in Brooklyn, and even has a favorite bar. The only thing he doesn’t have is a lover and a sub to share it all with. Finding that man is easier said than done because he’s searching for someone with very specific needs. He needs a sub who steps out of the stereotype and that's tall order. Much like he is, at well over six feet.

K-9 Police dog-trainer and sub Chris Kinney figures there’s no way he’d be anything close to what Leo wants. His last D/s relationship failed miserably and he is convinced it was his own fault. He just couldn’t be sort of sub his ex needed him to be. Worse, he struggles with his temper, and he’s not even sure he belongs in New York.

Leo wants to take Chris on despite Chris's misgivings, with some help from his friends at Les’s Bar. He knows pretty much right away he’s not going to want to let Chris go, but will he be able to convince Chris they can both get what they need, without the ex threatening their new relationship?

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Lost Boy – Chapter One

“Hello, is this Mr. Muffins?”

Leo walked into the exam room where a little girl was holding an all-black cat with gorgeous golden eyes. She nodded to him, her pigtails swinging around her shoulders.

“He’s getting fat.” She was very serious, but her father snorted a laugh.

“We’re not overfeeding him.”

“Okay, so, let’s see what’s the matter with him. What’s your name?” Leo took the cat and put him on the table. He was very well-behaved, well-socialized, and didn’t mind being handled. That was very helpful.

“Amy.”

He did a quick palp of the cat’s belly. “I think I may know…” He flipped the cat over carefully and had a look, pushing fur aside. “I have your answer. Mr. Muffins is pregnant. So…she’s not a Mr.”

“She’s having babies?” Amy looked absolutely thrilled.

“What?” The dad actually took a step forward he was so surprised. “He’s a she?”

Leo nodded. “The chart says she’s an indoor cat, but has she gotten out in the last couple of months? She must have, right?”

“Yeah, actually. She jumped out an open window, and we lost her for a couple of days. Amy was so upset. But he—she—turned up near our building, and my wife found him. Her.”

He wasn’t sure how no one noticed a cat in heat, or why she wasn’t fixed as a kitten, but none of that mattered now so he didn’t even ask. “Well, she is now Ms. Muffins, and she’s got some babies on board. Congratulations!”

“Wow. Okay. I was thinking tumor, so I guess this is best-case scenario.”

He put the cat in the carrier that Amy set on the table for him and closed the door. “On the way out, stop by the front desk, and pick up the brochure on dealing with pregnant cats. And once she’s had the kittens, bring her back to get her fixed.”

“Thank you so much, Dr. Aetos.” The dad stuck out his hand.

“My pleasure. Good luck.”

Amy skipped down the hall behind her dad and he followed. “Lexie? No charge for Mr. Muffins, and please change his name to Ms. Muffins and her sex to female in the chart.”

Lexie laughed. “You got it. You off the clock?”

“Yes. I am going home. But before I go, can you order me some more scrubs?”

“Sure. Let’s see… size super extra crazy tall, right?”

“You got it. And husky.”

Lexie laughed again. “Husky. I like it.”

“Do they have Minions?”

“Uh…” Lexie started scrolling. “Captain America?”

“I have those.”

Lexie pushed her dark bangs out of her eyes. “Kermit the Frog…”

“Got ’em.” He loved them too. They were actually fuzzy pajamas, not scrubs, and they were comfy.

“Sully?”

Hold up. “Ooh. Yes. Get me Sully. But do they have Minions?”

“I don’t see Minions except in normal big people sizes. Not Hulk.”

“I have the Hulk.” He had several pairs in fact, because people thought they were funny and gave them to him as gifts all the time. He would never run out of Hulk pants. He sighed. “You know, are Minions really too much to ask for?”

“Hey, they have Little Mermaid!”

“No shit? In my size?”

“They totally do.”

That was a no-brainer. “Well, I need those. Obviously.”

“Obviously. Is that enough for now?”

“I guess so. But I’m going to keep asking about Minions, so keep your eye out.”

“If I see them, I’ll just order them.”

“Perfect. Thanks, Lexie.”

“You got it, King of the Jungle.”

He rolled his eyes. There wasn’t a big, tall, or giant joke he hadn’t heard. Not one. But they were all in good fun, and he didn’t mind.

There was no reason to get all caught up in drama when there was so much joy out there to discover, after all.

He changed out of his Lightning McQueen scrubs and clogs and into blue jeans and boots making his six-foot-four frame even taller, pulled on a clean T-shirt and his jacket, and headed out into the still-cold early-spring evening.

He got on the subway and had two stops to make up his mind before the train took him home. If he got off and changed trains, he’d leave Brooklyn and head into Manhattan where he’d spend his evening at Les’s Bar.

Or, he could go home, curl up on his couch, and watch a movie.

One stop… two stops…

Oh why not? He got off and switched trains.

The bar would be warm, busy, and a decent place to spend an evening. There was something about Les’s—not fancy, but absolutely not a dive. It was simply a good place for men of his predilections to hang out.

The only drawback, living in Brooklyn, was the bar was a bit of a trip. But he always sprung for a ride home. He could afford it, and at the end of the week, he deserved a little treat.

He got off the subway and walked the last couple of blocks, arriving after happy hour, but it wasn’t too late to order a bite to eat. He smiled as soon as he walked in the door, glad he’d decided to come out. He was always so relaxed here. He glanced at the booths where they normally sat people that wanted to eat but walked right by them.

He just didn’t fit. He always ate at the bar.

“Master Leo! How’s it going?” One of the bartenders offered him a warm smile. “Good to see you.”

“Drew.” He smiled. “Always good to see you. May I please look at your menu?” He always asked to look even though he practically had it memorized. “And whatever cabernet you have open. Thank you.”

“Of course, Sir.” In moments, he had a glass of wine and a menu, along with a warm smile.

“Thank you, boy.” Drew was adorable, and every sub in here knew just how unattached he was, so he got a lot of hopeful smiles. He wasn’t that guy, though. He didn’t take just anyone home for some fun. He had a weird tendency to crush on adorable subs whether they were really suited to his needs or not.

He couldn’t help it. He didn’t just like people; he fell a little bit for almost everyone.

“Dude, did you hear about Master Neil’s friend?” One of the little ones was gossiping to his bar mate. “My Master took me to the diner, and we saw him. He’s crazy, man. You can see it in his eyes.”

“Boy.” He interrupted in an admonishing tone. “I don’t think that kind of gossip appropriate in this setting.” Neil probably wouldn’t appreciate it.

One of them whispered, “Dammit,” while the other said, “Sorry, Sir!” in a tone so bright it was ridiculous.

Neil was in law enforcement, if he remembered correctly. It didn’t seem like Neil would have an unstable friend who worked in a diner. But then, one of Neil’s partners was a shrink, so anything was possible.

They weren’t at the bar often, honestly. He saw them once a quarter, maybe. Isaac didn’t seem like the bar type.

He looked the menu over and put it down, waving Drew back to him. “Spaghetti and meatballs, please. And what is this about Neil’s friend? Is Neil okay?”

“Master Neil? Oh, they’re talking about Chris. He’s a dog trainer. He’s from… somewhere with mountains. His apartment flooded, and he’s been staying with the three of them. I’d question more if Master Isaac is okay…”

“Four of them under one roof? That’s a lot. A dog trainer is cool though.” It sucked to lose an apartment, though. “You’re probably right about Isaac; he’s a routine guy.”

“Yes, Sir. Very much, and Alain and Neil are up and out at four a.m., while Chris is a night owl, so…”

“Oof. That sounds terrible.” He shook his head. “Why are they saying he’s… unstable?”

“He’s a bit of a wild one, that’s all. You know, a little bit of a drinker, one of those ‘I’ll submit if you can force me’ types.”

He lifted one eyebrow. “Oh yeah? So, no Dom of his own, I take it.” Interesting. He wasn’t sure what “wild” really meant though. “I’m sure Isaac loves that.”

Isaac could put his foot down, but he wasn’t one for a fight. He knew that much.

Drew shook his head, lips twisting. “No, Sir. They were in here a few nights ago, and Master Isaac took Alain home.”

“Hm. Maybe I’ll give Neil a call and see if he needs some help.” He could take the boy out for an evening, give them all a break. He knew his way around a willful sub; they’d be all right for an evening.

“Somewhere with mountains” made it sound like the boy didn’t have anywhere else to go.

“Oh, you are the sweetest man, Sir. Let me put your order in. Xavier’s in a great mood, so the food should rock.”

“Tell him extra garlic.” He wasn’t going to be kissing anyone tonight.

Leo pulled out his phone and scrolled through his contacts to see if he had Neil. Neil was a switch, an interesting guy. They’d flirted a little once, but he backed off when he found out about Neil’s needs. He knew he had a problem with investing in subs, and that would have been a poor investment for both of them.

Neil was a fascinating person, though, and could tell stories about when he’d been a cop for days. Now that he co-owned a diner with his lover, Leo could only imagine how amazing the stories had become.

He didn’t have Neil’s number. Hm. “Hey, Drew? Can you find me the number for Neil and Alain’s diner? Or even Isaac’s number would work.”

“Let me get Les for you, Sir. He’ll be able to help you.” Oh, good boy—protecting their customers.

He ought to have known better. “Of course. Thank you.” Drew ducked through a swinging door, and Leo waited for Les. Just as well, because Les might have more details. Maybe he was overstepping by thinking he could help. It was possible that Neil wouldn’t want it, of course.

But Neil was capable of saying “No, thank you,” and being perfectly polite about it.

Les came out from his office, a smile on his face. “Dr. Aetos! Welcome.”

He stood and offered a friendly hand to shake. “If it isn’t the Les, of Les’s Bar.” He grinned. “Good to see you.”

Les bowed, then snorted. “It’s good to be seen. Sorry about Drew. We have rules about giving out information, and he is… scrupulously honest.”

“No, Drew did exactly the right thing, I ought to have known better. I overheard something about Neil having a challenging visitor, and I thought I might be able to help. I can contact him another way. Stop by the diner, maybe.” The food was amazing, it would be a worthwhile trip.

“Yes. Oddly enough, Isaac had to take Alain out when they were here, and I believe Neil and his company are staying in a hotel…”

“Oh my. That’s worse than what I’d imagined. Did you meet this friend when they were here?” Maybe volunteering to help was a poor idea.

“I did. He’s…” Les pursed his lips. “Not a man you would take as a submissive. He’s very willful, strong, hungry for a struggle and unapologetically so.”

Not a man he’d take as a sub. Interesting. “Is he actually a sub? Or is he just a guy with issues?”

“Neil seems… very sure. Incredibly sure.”

“Hmm. It sounds to me like Neil has a problem.”

“Yes, well—we do know that is an issue for our friend, don’t we?”

He nodded. “Do you have any sense how long this guy is going to be in town?”

“Oh, he worked with Neil. He trains K9 dogs for the police.”

That probably meant that Neil was going to get the guy a job. “So… permanently. Issac must be a wreck. I barely know him, but I know enough.”

Les rolled his eyes, but his smile was fond. “Hopefully things will work out quickly. Isaac hates being at odds with Neil.”

“I’m going to drop by the diner. I kind of like the headstrong ones. They can be fun. Maybe I can give them a night off. Thanks for all the info.”

Drew came out with a plate of pasta and meatballs that made his mouth water from three feet away. “Oh. Come to papa.”

“Enjoy, Sir! Let me know if you need anything else.”

“Let me know how things go with Neil. I’m interested.” Les tapped the bar. “Enjoy your dinner. Always good to see you.”

He nodded and managed to say thanks around his bite of meatball.

Dinner at the diner tomorrow. That was a plan. The rest he’d play by ear. He didn’t mind. It sounded like fun.

 

 

Title: Lost Boy
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0DSCQQHM1

Sin Deep

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: The Sin Deep Series #5
Genre: , , , , ,
Release Date: July 26, 2022

Winter Love knows how to give. He gave himself his own name after all, and he’s given love to many young men who later moved on with someone they wanted more. Too many. So he’s stopped putting himself out there to be hurt by the young little birds he prefers, though he does still enjoy going to the gentlemen’s club where he has a membership. He’s older, old-fashioned, eccentric, and content to be more about people watching these days.

Harley McBride is new to New York City, having left his home in Texas for a more welcoming town. He’s hard-working, friendly, and has a curious nature, which means he’s having a great time meeting people. When his roommate takes him to an interesting new club, he decides to introduce himself to a man who is fascinating to him, even from across the room.

Caught off-guard, Winter takes a chance in return, and asks Harley to let him make up Harley’s dark eyes. Things begin to heat up, and the two of them connect in ways that neither of them could have anticipated. But Winter knows he needs to tread carefully, and Harley is used to being independent and handling things on his own. Will they be able to find a path that suits them both, or will their relationship stay simply sin deep?

Sin Deep is set in The Cowboy and the Dom universe and features an opposites attract, May-December relationship.

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Title: Sin Deep
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0B67GQK5F

 

Chapter One 

 

Winter Love wasn’t giving up anything for Lent; he never had and he never would, but he participated in Fat Tuesday every year as if he planned to starve himself until Easter. He’d pulled on a rich, green shirt, a gold tie, and a brand-new purple and gold masquerade mask for the occasion, and he was looking forward to a night out. Maybe Mardi Gras was a New Orleans tradition, but The Big Apple could give The Big Easy a run for its money. 

Along with the New Year’s Eve ball and the Halloween costume party, Mardi Gras was one of his favorite nights at Sin Deep. He’d been a member of the kinky club almost as long as he’d lived in New York. Nearly as long as he’d held his job at the public library. He’d started out as a young man, eager to experience new things, to lose himself in the scene. 

Winter studied his boots as he sat in the back of a black sedan. He’d been through countless pairs of chunky, authoritative black boots over the yearsboots with buckles or zippers, punk and biker and military style, even a tall pair with silver studs going up the back when that was in fashion. The pair he’d stepped into tonight was new; he’d treated himself as an early fortieth birthday present. They had a nice western heel and toe and the leather was rich and soft. They were more stylish than intimidating, but possibly the most comfortable pair of boots he’d ever owned. 

They suited his almost forty-year-old image better too. He wasn’t eager now. He wasn’t cocky like he used to be, or forward, and he wasn’t one to pursue men anymore. He didn’t feast quite like he used to; he’d grown into a man who preferred to taste and savor rather than devour. He’d earned plenty of respect and was one of the establishment members now; he didn’t need to impress anyone. He liked to watch, have a drink, occasionally make an overture…and he was never turned down. 

Winter’s car pulled up in front of Sin Deep, and he stepped out onto the sidewalk. The tall, heavy front doors stole his breath for a moment as they always did and he instantly broke out in goosebumps. 

Who was he kidding? That confident, forty-year-old club elder was essentially a fantasy. He’d never hunted anything more than a drink at Sin Deep, and although he knew that man intimately in the privacy of his own mind, the persona vanished in a puff of awkward smoke every time he walked through the front doors, leaving little more than a facade behind. 

He needed the place though. It was the closest thing to home he’d ever had. He was never more present, more relaxed than when he was here. Sin Deep was his drug of choice, his pleasure and his weakness, and Mardi Gras was always a good party, even for wallflowers. 

 

Chapter Two 

 

“Lord have mercy, man.” Harley plopped down with a sigh, grinning over at his roommate. “I busted my hump today.” 

No one had ever warned him that Yankees were just as bad about ragging the little guy as any bunch of rednecks. He’d done proved himselfhe was nothing if not strong as an ox and stubborn as a mule with a burr biting his buttholebut Giorgio and Miguel knew what he could do and drove him like a prize pony. 

Paid him damn well for following directions, carrying shit from one place to a truck, then from the truck to another place. All-in-all, he came home with cash, burning muscles, and the knowledge that his muscles didn’t come from a gym. 

Today was a harpsichord. Who the fuck used a friggin’ harpsichord? Who moved a goddamn harpsichord? 

This little gal with fake boobies, bright pink hair, and a tattoo of a bird on her goddamn face, that’s who. 

Oliver snorted. “You bust your hump every day. Jackson told me two things about you. He said we were going to get along great, and he said I would definitely not have to worry about the rent while you were subletting his room. I totally believe him. What do you do for fun?” 

“Sleep.” He sprawled out, as far as he could. “Uh…back home I went to a couple bars, hung out, I guess.” 

“Exciting.” Oliver rolled his eyes and wandered into his bedroom. The apartment was small enough they could carry on their conversation without even raising their voices. “What is your drink of choice?” 

“I drink Bud Light. Shiner if we’re being fancy. I been known to like a margarita too.” But that was something you drank with your momma or your cousins. Not with the guys, which was stupid, but true. 

“Oh no, no, no, Harley. Sweetheart. That won’t do. Why don’t you come out with me tonight and let me buy you a real drink?” 

That ‘sweetheart’ always made him blush. 

He’d come to stay for a couple months just because Jackson swore this was a friendly place, somewhere he could just be him, and he was having a ball. Especially now that Jackson had decided to stay in Rome for another couple-three months, and he could keep on keeping on. 

“Yeah? You want to?” He had a pair of pretty clean jeans. 

“Yes. Be my date. It will be an adventure. Trust me. Go get dressed.” Oliver came out of his bedroom in his signature skinny jeans and a shiny gold jacket. He didn’t comment on the gold high-heeled booties, but they made Oliver look tall and lean, and there was glitter in Oliver’s short but curly dark hair. “It’s a Mardi Gras party.” 

“Oh. Uh. Okay.” He put on his cleanest jeans and a black t-shirt with his leather jacket and his boots. He didn’t wear his Stetson, because he’d learned quick that meant getting knocked around a ton. He had a cap. 

“Oh, you look so handsome! No hat? Are you sure? Would you like some glitter for your hair?” Oliver held out a mask covered in purple sequins. “And here. You’ll need this.” 

“No glitter, thanks.” Lord, could anyone imagine? “I’ll wear my cap.” 

Oliver rolled his eyes so hard he thought they might pop out. “Suit yourself. Take the mask, though. You ready? My Uber is here.” 

“I am.” He grabbed his wallet and the mask. “Let’s hasta.” 

He did like him an adventure. 

The car ride didn’t take that long, but that didn’t mean he had any idea where they ended up. “My guess is you’ve never been to a party like this one, sweetheart. Just stick with me for a bit until you get your bearings.” 

They got out of the car and walked up to a set of crazy tall doors that looked heavy but seemed to open by themselves anyway. 

“Is this, like, a funhouse? It seems like something in an amusement park.” That would be cool. He was up for it. 

“It can be. Tonight it’s just a party.” Oliver took his hand and pulled him inside. It took a second for his eyes to adjust to the sudden change in lighting and by the time he had, Oliver was taking off his jacket. “I’ll check your coat with mine, okay?” 

Harley blinked, staring at Oliver, a little agog. “Dude! You are sparkly!” 

And wearing, like a…a…tube top. A sequined Harlequin tube top where his nipples showed, which made sense, since Oliver didn’t have himself boobies. It was like nothing he’d ever seen, but it was so totally Oliver that he just grinned and applauded. 

“Do you like it?” Oliver beamed and turned for him, showing off. 

“Oliver!” A guy in a purple vest and a feathered mask gave Oliver a hug. 

“Jesse! Oh, Jesscan you tighten me up?” 

“Of course. Let me see.” Jesse moved around behind Oliver and tugged until the top Oliver was wearing went taut across his chest.” 

“Ooh. Perfect. Jesse, this is Harley. He’s subletting while Jackson is in Rome.” 

“Harley? Like the motorcycle? I’m Jesse. Like the outlaw.” Jesse offered a hand like he expected Harley to kiss it. 

Harley shook, careful not to squeeze, because he wasn’t an asshole. He’d figured that out, and he wasn’t interested in seeming mean. “Pleased to meet you, sir. How goes?” 

Jesse laughed. “He called me ‘Sir’, Oliver. Where are you from, honey?” 

“Just west of Fort Worth, and I mean no offense.” He winked over. “Polite is part of my charm, I’m told.” 

“Oh my god I love him!” Jesse stepped between him and Oliver. “Welcome to the club, darling. Do you want to dance?” 

“Jess 

“You hush, Ollie. You brought me a handsome cowboy.” Jesse leaned a little closer to him, big blue eyes flashing, and he got a whiff of sweet cologne. 

“Now, can I trust you to keep me safe? Because Oliver’s told me to stick to him…” 

Jesse’s eyes went wide. “This is a very classy club, Mr. Harley. But don’t you worry, you’re safe with me.” 

“He is; his virtue on the other hand” Oliver laughed. 

“I will be very, very careful with the cowboy, I promise.” Jesse took his arm. “It’s just a dance. You can dance, can’t you?” 

“Believe it or not, I can, and I like it.” He could do everything from wild flailing to waltz. He wasn’t fancy, but he wasn’t going to embarrass himself or his dance partner. 

“Charmer.” Jesse pulled him into the crowd. Oliver shouted after them that he’d be at the bar. “Is this your scene? How long have you been in town?” 

“Three months, two weeks, and five days.” Harley winked, laughing at himself. “And I don’t know that I have a scene yet, but this is absolutely my first time here!” 

And it was electricsparkling and loud, exciting and overwhelming in the best way. 

Jesse laughed as they wove through the crowd, finally finding the dance floor. The lighting was purple and green, shifting with the music. “I can tell. You’re not dressed like you expected to be here tonight. I’m not complaining though, that t-shirt fits you just right.” Jesse’s hands slid over his chest before finding his shoulders and staying there. 

“Oliver didn’t need me upstaging him in his…top.” His hands landed on Jesse’s hips so he could find the man’s rhythm. “This okay?” 

Jesse nodded, stepping closer. “So okay. Go on and lead, honey. I can follow.” 

They started dancing, laughing as they figured out how not to murder one another’s toes. Three songs in, the DJ played a slow song, and he didn’t know Jesse that well, so he backed off. “Want to get a drink? I’m dry as a bone.” 

“That sounds 

“Jesse.” 

Jesse froze for a second and gave the tall man in a mask that covered half his face a sheepish look. “Oh, hi.” 

The man crossed his arms, silently, and Jesse looked at Harley. “Oops! I think I’m in trouble.” Jesse winked at him. “But you were a lovely dance partner. Tell Oliver to buy you that drink for me.” 

“Now, Jesse.” 

“Yes, Sir. I’m sorry, Sir. Coming. Bye, Harley!” 

The tall man caught Jesse by the nape and steered him away. He started to go after Jesse; that couldn’t be right. Was Jesse okay? But only made it one step before a hand caught him in the chest. 

“Let them be. It’s okay. This is their thing.” 

“You sure? We just met. He knows my roommate.” His brain insisted he needed to make a fuss, but his gut wasn’t near as sure about that… 

The man that stood there wasn’t so tall he was staring at his bellybutton, but at his chest, and the green eyes were sparkling at him. 

“I’m sure. I’ve known them both for years. You’re here with Ollie.” It wasn’t a question. The guy offered a hand. “I’m Winter.” 

“Winter.” That was a great name! “I’m Harley. Pleased to meet you, sir.” 

Winter. That was something else. Green-eyed Winter. 

“Hello, Harley. I don’t want to keep you from your friend. It was good to meet you. Enjoy your evening.” 

“Have a good evenin’!” He braced himself to head toward the bar, which was sure a crush of folks. There were more people in this building than in his whole hometown. 

Oliver wasn’t hard to find, being taller than most men and colorful too. “You’re back! I thought Winter might have scooped you up.” Oliver tapped the bar “Two whiskey gingers, Leighton.” 

“He wasn’t interested.” That was okay. He’d met two guys in five songs. One that was wanting to be friends was fucking great odds. 

Oliver snorted, eyes darting to the crowd and then back to him. “No? He’s been watching you all night. He’s watching you now.” 

“Stop it.” He was the least sparkly guy in a universe of glitter. A damn accidental black hole. “If he wants a drink, I’ll buy him one.” 

“He doesn’t.” The bartender sat two drinks down and pushed one toward each of them. “He’ll nurse the one he’s got for a while. And he’ll watch, it’s what he does. He’s definitely watching you.” 

“Thank you, sir. What do I owe you?” Now that the guy mentioned it, he could feel eyes on his back. 

“Nothing. A good time. You’re off to a good start. Did you have fun with Jesse?” 

“He’s fun, yeah. Have y’all been friends long?” He sipped the drink, finding it smoky and spicy, but with bubbles. He approved. 

“I guess. Maybe…five or six years? He’s been with Theo all that time. Very taken. So naughty.” Oliver sipped his drink. “He cooks too. Oh my god. Amazing. And this is a silly party night, but you should see him on a regular night. He’s beautiful. He’s just… I mean, you wouldn’t believe it.” 

“He likes to dance. I didn’t know he was with someone. I don’t like to be rude.” It wasn’t in his makeup unless he was fighting. 

“No worries. He liked you, but he was just playing, showing off for Theo. And even if you’d known he was taken, it was just dancing, Harley. Just fun.” 

“Cool. I just don’t know all y’all’s rules. If I can dance with him, that was good.” He thought it was somethinghow every group of folks, every single one, had their own sets of rules, and if you figured them? Then things worked easier. 

“Everyone’s rules are different, but in here everyone is family. No worries. You can’t get in trouble for having fun.” Oliver sipped his drink. “So Jackson says he’s staying in Rome for a while; are you staying in New York?” 

“I intend to, yessir. I think we do okay, rooming, you and me.” In fact, Oliver seemed happy as a pig in shit. 

“We’re good, sweetheart.” Oliver sipped his drink, then looked at him with a slight frown. “You know he’s not there alone, right?” 

“Jackson? Did he hook up with someone out there?” How fucking cool was that. Then he’d have a reason to go to Italy sometimes. It was always good to have a buddy to visit. 

“No. He went with his partner, Harley. He didn’t tell you he had a boyfriend?” 

“Nope. I mean, he never said one way or the other.” Which was sort of weird. They’d talked a lot about Jackson’s schooling, about Oliver, about the restaurant that he waited tables in, but not a lover? 

“Oh. Well. I’m sure he had a reason.” Oliver shrugged, and he had to wonder if Oliver knew what the reason might be. “Anyway, I don’t think he’ll be back for a while. Last I heard from him he was happy.” 

“Good. I’m all over happiness. He’s my good friend, you know?” He’d worry about whether or not he needed to worry about things later. 

Maybe Sunday. 

“Oh yeah, for sure. He talked about you a lot.” 

“Hello again!” Jesse was suddenly there, grinning widely with hands full of Mardi Gras beads. “I’ve been tasked with handing these out. Here, cowboy, you need some bling.” Jesse hung a handful of them around his neck. “Oh, much better.” 

“Good lord and butter.” He rolled his eyes, but he’d play along. No one’d asked to see his titties to get them, and he could use them to decorate his room. 

Jesse hung a handful around Oliver’s neck too. “See? I was careful with the cowboy.” 

“I appreciate it. He’s delicate.” Dude, butter wouldn’t melt in Oliver’s mouth. 

“That’s me. Like blown glass and shit.” 

Jesse rolled his eyes. “I want to see you dressed up. Dress him up next time, Oliver. Don’t you think he’d be beautiful?” 

Oliver nodded. “Go easy, Jesse. He’s new-new.” 

“Oh.” Jesse nodded. “Don’t worry, cowboy. You won’t be new forever.” Jesse kissed his cheek and moved down the bar, hanging more necklaces on people as he went. 

No. No one was new forever. He was going to enjoy all the fun of this, new or not.

Home Free

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: Higher Elevation #5
Genre: , , , ,
Release Date: July 18, 2023
Pages: 234

Connor Westin and Early Jericho have a comfortable, busy life in Denver. Connor is a lawyer who brings home the bacon and Early is a stay at home dad to their two young boys.

Sure, Early is a cowboy at heart, but he loves their kids and as far as Connor is concerned they’re happy in their suburban home.

When Early inherits a ranch on the Western Slope of Colorado, neither is sure what they should do about it. That is until they visit, and Connor sees just how much it all means to his husband.

Both men agree to uproot their family and take a shot at running the ranch together, but it takes time to shut down one life and start another. Early takes the boys to the ranch while Connor spends the summer in Denver to handle all the details of moving on.

Between the long distance, the new responsibilities, and interference from a not so well meaning employee, Connor and Early have trouble staying connected. Will the ranch become the home they need it to be, or will it tear their family apart?

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Chapter 1 

Connor Westin parked his BMW in the garage and climbed out, his phone switching from Bluetooth to speaker automatically. “Agree to fixing the window and the lock on the back door, but the kitchen appliances are as-is, and we’re not painting anything. That’s ridiculous.” 

“You want me to say it’s ridiculous?” 

Connor reminded himself that although Kit was a great paralegal, he was young. “That would be fun, wouldn’t it?” 

“So, no. Got it.” Kit was also way too serious. 

“Thank you. I’m around if they come back with anything tonight. Gotta run.” He hung up, dropped his phone in his pocket, and went into the house. “Smells good in here.” He made his way to the kitchen, where he knew his handsome husband would be cooking dinner for their family. 

“Chicken parm. Your sons had a request.” Early wore a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, button-down shirt draped over one of the dining room chairs. Pretty-pretty. “How goes it?” 

“Good, another day another house sale. And there’s some easement dispute downtown that I’m supposed to be talking to someone about tomorrow.” He slid a hand around Early’s waist, fingers spreading out across killer abs and kissed his nape. “My sons? What did they do now?” 

“Which one?” Early shot him a quick, easy grin. “Jaxson climbed behind the bleachers and found a mouse, which he proceeded to keep in his lunch box until he got ready to come home, and he showed it to Jenny Franklin. It’s now living in a cage in his room, his lunch box has been bleached, and I made him apologize to the teacher and Jenny. And Jayden…” 

Oh god. 

“He apparently climbed into the ceiling of the school using the pipes in the boys bathroom. Did you know he’s allergic to fiberglass? He is. He looks vaguely like he’s been boiled. I’m calling him Lobster Boy. He isn’t amused.” 

Oh, the poor kid. That had to itch. “Good. Great. They’re both still alive and taking after you.” Truth be told, Jayden was more like him in this case, but he wasn’t going to admit it. 

“Dad! I got a mouse. You wanna see?” 

“Has it had its shots?” 

“What?” 

He glanced at Early. “We’re keeping the mouse?” 

“You going to poison it?” Early shrugged, altogether too unconcerned about a possible disease-ridden rodent in their house. 

“Daddy! His name is Dennis. You can’t kill it if it has a name.” 

Connor sighed. “I didn’t mean we should kill it. Geez. But maybe Mrs. Mouse misses him?” It was worth a shot. 

“He’s not married. He’s a DJ, and he’s going to be all about the bass.” Save him from smartass sons. 

“DJ Dennis Mouse?” He ruffled Jaxson’s hair. “Fine. But he’s going to the vet.” 

“Okay! Wanna meet him?” 

Early shook his head. “After supper. Y’all have fifteen minutes. Go wash and tell Lobster Boy to get his butt down here.” 

Jaxson bounced up and ran for the stairs. “Lostber Boy! Daddy says get your butt butt butt down here!” 

“Stop calling me that!” Jayden came slumping down the stairs and shuffled into the kitchen. “Hi, Dad,” he said opening the fridge door and hiding behind it. 

“Hey, kid. So, what was the endgame here? After you made it into the ceiling?” 

“Endgame?” 

“What were you trying to do?” 

Jayden closed the fridge door and looked at him, clearly confused. He was definitely red and swollen. “I don’t know. I just did it.” 

“We’re raising monkeys.” Connor shook his head. “Set the table, boys.” 

Early just went about his business like nothing was out of the ordinary and, really, nothing was. This was par for the course. “So that was my day.” 

“Just another day in paradise. Did he get some Benadryl?” 

“Benadryl, oatmeal bath, cortisone creamhe got the whole enchilada.” Early rolled his eyes and started moving food to the table. 

“You’re a good dad.” Connor gave Early one more quick hug, then hung up his coat so he could help. “What can I do?” 

“Salad. Green beans. Something healthy that we have to force our children to eat.” 

“There’s leftover broccoli.” There was always leftover broccoli because their kids were not good eaters. He opened up the fridge, grabbed the bowl, and stuck in the microwave. 

Early seemed…tired, maybe? Something felt a little dull, a little off. Not enough to worry about, he supposed. It was the end of another incredibly busy day with two active boys. He hoped the kids hadn’t brought a bug home; it was so close to the end of the school year. 

He grabbed the bowl and carried it carefully into the dining room, setting down right in front of Jaxson. “It’s hot guys, careful.” 

“Yay. Limp trees.” 

Early’s growl was immediate. “You watch it, or I’ll serve nothing but brussels sprouts for a week.” 

Oh, god. Not that. Not again. 

Never again. 

He reached over and put two florets on each of the kids’ plates. “No arguments.” Then he took some for himself because he actually liked broccoli. “Chicken parm was a good call, though.” He served them each some of that too, and himself before handing Early the plate. “Looks as good as it smells, honey.” 

“Thanks.” Early chuckled and shook his head. “So, we’ve survived another school day. Go team Jericho.” 

Oh they’re yours again now, huh? Why? Because I didn’t lose my mind over the mouse?” Connor grinned at Early, teasing. 

“He’s a nice mouse, Dad!” 

He rolled his eyes. “Eat. Jayden, tell me about the math test.” 

Jayden gave him a deadpan look. “You mean the one that I aced?” 

He laughed. “I guess that’s the one. Nice work.” 

“I got done early, that’s when I—” 

“I don’t really need the details unless the principal calls me.” 

Jayden arched one eyebrow, somehow looking just like Early. “Principal Shields always calls Daddy. She thinks he’s hot. She calls him Mister Early and puts her hand on his arm.” 

He mimicked that look, giving it to Early instead. “He is hot, but he’s mine.” And Principal Shields probably didn’t want to talk to him anyway, he’d been deemed “less reasonable” a few years back. 

“Dad! Ew! That’s nasty!” Jaxson gagged dramatically, slumping against his brother, sending his fork flying, red sauce spraying across the floor. 

“Jax! Ugh.” He sighed and got up, going for a damp towel. And another fork. “I know we taught you table manners at some point. Daddy insists on it.” He brought the towel back and handed it to Jaxson, then traded a clean fork for the one that landed on the floor. “Clean up the floor, please. Jayden, you keep eating.” 

Jayden shoved an entire stalk of broccoli in his mouth, chewing dramatically. 

“Did you want a beer, babe? I need a beer. There’s an open red wine in there too.” 

“I’ll have the red. Thank you. Jax, that’s good enough. Hand that to Daddy and finish your dinner.” God, he was ready to broil them both. 

Early headed back to the kitchen, turning on the music on his way. Ah, the boys were getting their next warning sign that Daddy was about to stroke out. 

“Both of you finish up. Jax? Broccoli. Now. And then upstairs for reading.” 

“Reading?” Jaxson started to whine, but his big brother gave him the elbow. “Okay. Reading.” 

“Thank you. Don’t forget to tell your daddy thank you for the dinner, please? He made you chicken parm.” 

“Yes, sir. It was really good.” 

Connor watched as Early set down his wine. “Thanks, honey.” 

“Thankyoufordinnerdaddymaywepleasebe…” Jaxson took a deep breath. “Scused?” 

“It was so good, Daddy. Thank you.” 

“You’re very welcome, sons. Please wash your hands after feeding/handling/touching the mouse in any way and before your reading.” Early sat with his beer, waiting for the boys to leave. “I bet that mouse escapes and infests the house.” 

“I won’t say I told you so.” They’d had mice before; it was a thing. They’d just go to battle stations. “DEFCON 1.” He looked his husband over critically. “Thank you for the wine. Something’s wrong. What is it?” This was the part where the cowboy in Early won out first, and Early would say “I’m fine”, until they were done with dishes or headed to bed and then he might sigh and fess up. 

If it was really awful Early would find an excuse to go hide in the garage for a few minutes and then they’d talk. 

“I’m fine. I—” Early twisted the top of his bottle. “It’s just some bad news from my dad.” 

And then there was this scenario. “Oh, honey.” He got up from his chair and pulled one closer to Early. “Not your Momma?” Please not his mother; she was the queen of amazing women. 

“Fuck no. She’s going to outlive us all. Uncle Rick. It won’t be long now.” 

Early’s Uncle Rick was one of Early’s biggest supporters, a good, amazing man who had rapid-onset Alzheimer’s. The last time they’d gone out for Easter, Rick had been violent, terrified, and restrained. 

“You need to go. Why are you sitting here? When did you find out? Let’s get you on a plane.” He pulled out his phone. 

“No. He’s not there. Pop says he’s not there at all. He had a stroke this morning, and they’re just waiting for the end. Me being there won’t help. I’ll go afterward, when I can be useful.” 

“You’re sure? I’m so sorry. You should have told me. I could have at least come home early, dealt with this lunacy.” He leaned closer and kissed Early’s cheek, then took a hand in his. “I know, it’s not worth hashing out. I’m here now, though.” 

“Thanks, babe. I love you. I’m just tired.” 

Ha hated this for Early. Early was close with his parents, but Rick had been the first one in Early’s corner, the first person Early really trusted with difficult things like how to manage being gay on a ranch. 

“Go take a shower, put on comfy PJ’s, and go to bed. I got the dishes. I didn’t bring home any work tonight, so I’ll join you as soon as I get the hooligans in bed.” Early liked a back rub, and he had magic fingers. It was a gift. 

“I’ll deal with the dishes, babe. You handle Thing One and Thing Two.” Early sighed and shook his head. “Lord have mercy, I hate this for him.” 

God, the man was impossible to pamper, even when he needed it. He ran a soothing hand over Early’s shoulder and stood. “Rick was loved. If he can manage to remember anything, he’ll remember that. Doesn’t matter by who.” 

“I’ll shoot myself first, before I let myself get there. I won’t make you watch me become a…whatever Rick is now.” Early’s expression was pure horror, pure pain. “I don’t understand how the good lord lets someone’s brain dissolve in their damn skulls.” 

“Oh, Early.” He caught his husband by the nape and pulled the cowboy into his arms. “It’s going to be okay, honey. It’s okay.” God, he hoped so. Early was scaring him a little bit. “I love you.” 

“I love you.” Early let him hold on, leaning in hard. “This is hard. I miss him.” 

“I know. I know it is. Just breathe and do what you need to do, okay?” He’d insist they go for the service. Bring the boys. 

“Yeah. Yeah, we’ll need to plan on going out for the funeral. I’m betting either Monday or Tuesday next week, if he dies during the night.” Early took a hitching breath. “I need to go. Do you—we haven’t ever talked about how to do funerals with the boys. How do you feel?” 

“I think this was someone very important to you, and the kids should be there.” 

“Can you come? I can’t—I can’t do this and deal with them alone.” 

Of course I’ll come. I’m not going to let you do this by yourself. We’ll all go.” He had to be there; where else would he be? Early and their boys were all the family he had. 

It was a six-hour drive to Durango, but it was a beautiful ride, and the boys were happy to have extra time on their games. They could head out Friday after school, have supper on the road, and get themselves a hotel. Early’s folks had sold their home and bought a two-bedroom condo, and while it was a lovely place, it was about two thousand square feet too small for their sons. 

He could keep them busy while Early talked with his parents. Board games, cards… 

Okay, their Switches. Or Benadryl. 

“You’re not alone, honey.” 

“No.” Early kissed his jaw. “Not since I picked up this guy at a little dive bar.” 

“I’ve never set foot in a dive bar. I’m way too classy.” It had definitely been a dive bar. But he’d never admitted it before, so why start now? 

“Mmhmm. Dive bar. Neon lights. Scary bathroom. Shots of tequila.” 

“Tequila and neon, sure. I don’t believe I used the bathroom. A sports bar maybe.” He flirted, playing Early’s game. 

“There was a TV, I think…and a piece of shit pool table.” 

“The hottest man on earth was playing pool.” And losing, but the table had been warped and the felt was bunched up near one of the side pockets. It’d looked like a neglected mini-golf course. He hadn’t cared if Early had won or lost, he’d just been watching. 

“Eh, I saw you, and it was over. I never saw another man.” Early said the words like they were simply a fact, just something that was an unalienable truth. 

“Doesn’t make it a dive bar.” He took a kiss and brought the last of the dishes into the kitchen. 

“Dive. Deep dive. Like one of them submarines.” 

Connor laughed. He couldn’t help it. “That’s a new one. I like it.” 

Early bowed deeply. “Well, thank you, sir. I worked hard for it.” 

They loaded the dishwasher, moving around each other easily. Early should have gone up to bed, but he didn’t go, he waited and helped until everything was done, and the house was locked up and quiet. Maybe his man just didn’t want to be alone. He could understand that. 

“You sure you don’t want to shower while I tuck the boys in?” 

“Join me after?” Early still looked a little shell-shocked, stressed out, with red-rimmed eyes and tight lips. 

“Yeah. I’m all yours tonight. Promise.” He gave Early another kiss, wondering how Early had hidden this so well from him until dinner and marveling how quickly his husband was falling apart now that that burden was off his shoulders. “I won’t be long.” He followed Early up the stairs toward the kids and the bedroom. 

“Sounds good to me.” Early tugged his shirt up and off as he walked. “Y’all sleep good, boys. I love you.” 

“Night, Daddy!” Jayden called, while Jaxon’s greeting was totally muffled. Possibly because Jayden was trying to smother him with a pillow. 

He could see Early’s shoulders slumping as he disappeared into the bedroom. 

 

Title: Home Free
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0C9XDL3QT

The Trouble with Cowboys

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: The Sin Deep Series #6
Genre: , , , , ,
Release Date: February 6, 2024

When Kacey Lowe shows up at his friend Sam’s place in New York, it’s because he has nowhere else to go. He’s lost his shot as a bullrider, and he’s beat up as anything to boot. He doesn’t want to impose on Sam, and he and his buddy tend to get into trouble together anyway. That’s how he ends up at River’s place.

River McIntyre doesn’t really understand Kacey, but he wants to help the tough little cowboy with whatever demons he’s wrestling. He’s not sure he can, and he’s not sure Kacey can be everything he needs, but he sees past Kacey’s pain and insecurities, and knows they could have something special together if they can just figure it out.

The trouble with cowboys, River finds out, is that they might be speaking a different language than a city man like him. But if they can meet in the middle somewhere, it will be worth all the effort.

The Trouble with Cowboys is set in The Cowboy and the Dom universe and features a hurt-comfort, opposites attract, D/s romance in New York City.

Buy the Book: Amazon~~Universal eBook Links

Also in this series:

 

Chapter 1 

 

“Come on, man. Answer your fucking phone.” 

Kacey Lowe tried hard to know certain shit—one, where his boots were, two, where his phone was, and three, where he was going to be able to sleep in a world that had little to no use for a broke-dick bullrider. He had two out of three. 

Now Kacey needed a couch to surf. 

Sam O’Reilly would let him stay, have a little fun, and not ask too many questions about the bruises, why he was in New York, and what the hell he was going to do next. 

lo?” O’Reilly sounded drunk. “Who’s this?” 

“Kacey. How you been?” He could handle drunk. 

“Fine as frog hair. Where the hell are you?” 

“Um… Times Square, I think. I’m pretty sure.” The place was so lit up it felt like daytime. 

“Like in the city?” 

“Well, I am totally in a city. The New York one.” The last ride was a flower delivery dude. He’d been cool, and they’d shared a spliff. 

“What? When? Why? How?” 

That was a lot of questions in a row. Sam hadn’t changed a bit. “In New York. Now. Because of life and things, and really fucking slow?” 

“Wait. Hang on.” The music in the background faded away, and Sam got back on the line with more questions. “Okay. Did you get hurt? How did you get here? Where are you staying?” 

He couldn’t answer the first two questions without opening a can of worms. “I was sorta hoping you’d have a couch I could use for a day or two while I’m visiting.” 

Or until he got his bell unrung. 

Sam O’Reilly had been his mentor on the arena floor when he was a junior, and the man had been fun to hang with the few times they’d been together on the circuit. 

“Yeah, of course. Not many of us with couches up here, huh?” He heard street noises as Sam put him on speaker. “I’m texting you the address. We’re not home… uh… I’ll just see if I can convince Mister—Thomas—to make it an early night.” 

“Is it a bad time? I can wait til tomorrow, dude.” He could walk around for hours, no problem. He had enough cash to eat for damn near a year, if he was careful, and he would do near anything to win a bet, so… 

“Right. Just stay on the street tonight, and I’ll see you after breakfast.” Sam snorted. “Get your ass over there. Tell the doorman you’re a friend of mine, and he’ll let you wait in the lobby. We’ll be there in a little bit.” 

“You sure, man? I know this is a surprise.” 

“Shut up. See you in an hour, give or take.” 

Oh, thank God. Kacey sucked in a deep breath. “Thanks, man. Just a day or two.” 

“Yeah, while you’re in town.” 

Okay. He had himself a place to stay. If he remembered right, Sam liked a bar so he might get to have some fun too, while he figured out what to do next. He looked at the text—he could walk forty blocks in an hour, right? 

If not, he’d text and say he was running late. He was good at that. 

He set his GPS and started beating feet. 

Lord have mercy this place was wild. Maybe a guy could have some fun here… 

He found the address and slowed down as he moved up the block. The building was big. And tall. Really fucking tall. There was a big white awning held up by gold posts and a dude in a jacket and hat hanging out near the front door and watching him as he got closer. 

“Move on,” the guy said in a deep voice as he slowed down even more. 

“I got me an invitation from a friend.” He wasn’t going nowhere. “Sam O’Reilly. You know him?” 

Mhm.” The guy nodded. “You’re friends?” 

He arched one eyebrow, trying hard not to be a bitch. “Yessir. We rode together in Texas, couple times in Vegas.” 

“Understood. What’s your name?” 

“Kacey Lowe.” 

“Thank you, Mr. Lowe. Mr. O’Reilly isn’t at home. You can wait inside if it’s cold out here for you.” 

“That would rock. Thank you. It’s damn chilly.” He held out one hand to shake, but the dude stopped before grabbing his fingers. 

Oh. Right. 

They were a little tore up from the last fight, and that one finger was…wonky. 

“You’re definitely a friend of Sam’s.” They clasped hands gently, the door guy shaking his head. 

“Yessir. Since I was a teenager, you know? He’s wild as anything.” And a great drinking buddy. “I’m looking forward to hanging with him.” 

“Mm. Wild.” The guy waved an arm and the doors slid open. “There’s a pot of coffee behind the desk.” 

“Thank you, sir. I do appreciate it.” He headed in and grabbed a cup of coffee, heavy on the sugar and creamer. 

Calories were good. They kept a man warm. 

He hadn’t gotten one sip down before Sam came through the door, followed by a tall, handsome, very… hot…uh. Had he mentioned tall? 

“Kacey.” Sam came right to him with a smile. “I can’t believe you’re here.” 

“Sam.” Damn, Sam looked so good. Healthy. Strong. Almost like a grown-up. Weird. “I missed your skanky ass, man.” 

“Hey now, I’ve cleaned it up a little since you saw me last.” Sam gave him a hug, and he was proud of himself for not wincing. “You look good.” 

“You appear to have been in a fight,” Mr. Handsome said. Was that a growl? 

Sam chuckled and rolled his eyes. “Kacey, this is Thomas.” 

“Pleased to meet you.” He held out his hand. Again. “And I swear, I haven’t been in a fight.” 

He’d been in a few dozen. 

Thomas took his hand, but not to shake it. He looked at it critically, turned it palm-side up and back again, then sighed. “You need to get some ice on that. I think I might have a splint for the finger. Come on upstairs.” 

“Dude, seriously? What the hell happened?” Sam grinned at him. “Tell me it was fun, at least?” 

“I wish I could, cowboy.” 

Thomas led them to the elevator, and when the big, shiny doors opened, they all got on. Thomas was… not really staring but looking him over. It was weird, but it wasn’t creepy. 

Sam nodded to him and rested a hand on his arm. “I’ll make us coffee.” 

Oh god, don’t leave me with him. “I’ll help.” 

“It’s no pr—” 

“I’ll so help.” Helping, helping, la la la. 

“Let him help.” Why did it feel like Thomas could see right into his soul? God, that was unnerving. 

“So… this is your… roommate?” He didn’t read like a roommate. More like a grumpy fuckbuddy. Possibly a sugar daddy. 

Dude. 

Dude. 

Did Sam have a sugar daddy? He had a decent belly, but he was a little un-twinkly and sparkly. In Vegas, boys like that had glitter. 

Thomas laughed as they stepped off the elevator but didn’t answer the question. “I thought you said he was a good friend, Sam?” 

“He is. He’s a rodeo buddy. He was a junior rider that I mentored.” Sam sighed and shook his head. “Thomas here, he’s my lover. My guy. My… person, huh? If you’re not cool with that…” 

“Dude. I know you’re into dick. I just didn’t know you were into…” Big growly dudes with biker boots and a fancy apartment. “Permanent guys.” 

“Yes, he’s permanently into my dick.” Thomas was still chuckling as he opened the apartment door. 

“Kinky,” he whispered. 

Sam started chuckling, the sound started soft and built. 

And built. 

And built. 

Thomas leaned close to Sam and kissed his forehead. “I’m not touching that.” 

Sam led him toward an open kitchen, and Thomas went the other way down a long hall. 

“Lord, he’s a biggun. Pretty, though.” That seemed the most polite. 

“He’s amazing. I’ve never been happier.” Sam started making coffee. “What the fuck happened to you? And don’t say nothing, because I’m neither blind nor stupid.” 

“Did you just say ‘nor’?” 

“Neither… nor…” Sam shot him a look. “I asked you a question.” 

“It’s a long story, but the short version is, got dumped, got outed, lost my sponsors, got reminded that I ain’t supposed to be in Texas.” Hell of a short version. 

Sam puffed out a breath and went back to making coffee. “I’ve heard that story before. I’m sorry. Are you okay?” 

“Yeah. Just been traveling. Seeing stuff. Wandering. I looked you up—sorry about your brother, by the way.” 

Sam nodded, took a deep breath. “Thanks. It was tough, but we caught the son of a bitch.” 

“That’s good. I hope he got what he deserved.” 

“Neosporin, band-aids, ice pack, Tylenol, and one finger splint.” Thomas appeared and set everything down on the counter one by one, then held out a hand palm-up. “Will you let me see?” 

Oh, how decent was that? Pretty damned, if you asked him. He held up one of his hands. They hurt pretty good, and that one finger needed something to encourage it not to fall off. 

He wasn’t a damn roper, after all. 

“Hm. I’ll be careful.” For the next few minutes, Thomas gently cleaned his hands up with damp cotton balls and covered the one bad cut with the cream and a band-aid. Thomas’s hands were warm, and those fingers moved over his skin like… like he cared. 

And the man never growled once. 

Okay, weird. Again. “Thanks. Seriously. I’ll slam the finger in the splint, if it grosses you out.” 

It grossed him out some, but it was easier to just do it, right? 

“Pfft.” Thomas shook his head. “I have a brother who has broken this finger three times, and several others more than once. Fists and walls don’t mix well.” There was a blinding light, and he was dizzy for a few seconds, and when he could see again, Thomas was wrapping tape around the splint to keep it in place. 

“Whiskey?” Sam asked, and he groaned. 

“Fuck me yes.” All the whiskey. 

“Rock on.” 

“You didn’t faint, and you didn’t lose your balance. You’re like my Sam.” He wasn’t sure how to read Thomas’s smile, but the man rested his hand on the counter and gave it a gentle pat. It was weirdly… what? Parental? Something. “All good.” 

“Thanks, man. I appreciate this. I’ll be on my way in a day or two. I just wanted to get a face-to-face with Sam-I-Am.” 

Sam rolled his eyes, shook his head. “I swear to God, Kacey. You carry trouble like a landed bass.” 

“I sure do try, yessir.” 

Thomas took Sam by the chin and kissed him. “I’ll leave you two to talk, sweetheart. Good night.” 

“See you in a bit, Mister.” Sam poured two coffees, calm as all get out. “Are the hands the worst of it?” 

“Nah.” No, the worst of it was in his soul, and what could he do about that now? He’d thought Mitch and him, they’d had something workable. Something nice, even, but when they’d been caught, Mitch had said he wasn’t willing. He’d never forced no one to do anything. Not ever. 

But that didn’t matter, and that wasn’t something he was ever gonna talk about. That secret belonged to him. 

Sam gave him a knowing smile, which didn’t hurt so bad, coming from him. “I didn’t reckon. The core shots are the ones that are the worst. Come on. Let’s sit and bullshit a minute.” 

Core shots. He hated that Sam seemed to know something he didn’t want to tell. 

“That I can do. I’m full of bullshit.” His laugh didn’t make that funny like it should have. 

“We all are. Sometimes, we find the thing that we need to empty us out.” 

That was damn near deep, and he didn’t believe it for a second. “Whatcha doing with yourself these days, buddy?” 

Sam shrugged, cheeks pinking. “Believe it or not, I got my damn PhD. I teach. I write books…” 

“Cool, man. That’s… wild.” Kacey felt himself shrink inside. Sam O’Reilly had retired, become a professor, wrote books. He wasn’t broke dick, but he had a couple thousand bucks, his boots, his phone, and a single silver buckle. Fuck, he needed to find another place to go. 

“Totally is. How’d you end up here?” 

Kacey curated what he wanted to tell Sam, and he finally settled on, “I was in Columbus, and the guys were heading west, so I came over. I was on a bus, googling, and happened on your name. Thought if I came here, I’d look your happy ass up.” 

Sam took a slow sip of his coffee, then looked at him. “Why not go home?” When he didn’t answer, Sam added, “Rough weather?” 

“Yeah. My folks—” He waved one hand, because he didn’t know what say. He watched the coffee wave in his cup, back and forth, and finally words just fell out of his lips. “I fucked up, Sam. Bad. There ain’t no coming home from that.” 

Sam set his cup down. “Shit, Kace. Are you in trouble? We know people…” 

He shook his head, even as he desperately wanted to nod. “No. No, I ain’t here to fuck your life. I just need a day or two to rest, yeah? Then I’ll go traveling again.” 

“I’m telling you we can help. You rest, get your head right, but you think about it.” 

“Thanks for answering your phone.” He needed a friend, a minute to breathe. 

“Thanks for trusting me, man. Drink your coffee and breathe. You’re safe here.” Sam winked at him. “Thomas is way more badass than he looks.” 

“Is he a teacher too?” Kacey was betting on librarian more than teacher. 

“No, no. He’s the head curator for the Metropolitan Museum.” Sam sounded proud. 

“Damn.” Sam had just left his whole world behind like dust. “Good on y’all.” 

He didn’t even know what the hell he was going to do to make money. He needed to google canned rodeos. 

Mechanical bull competitions. 

Daredevil shows. 

“You’ll figure it out. I was lost when I got here, and I couldn’t go back home. This is home now.” 

“I’m tickled shitless for you. You got work tomorrow?” You want to go find some trouble with an old friend? 

“I’m not teaching. I can skip a day of writing to hang, sure.” Sam tilted his head, lips twitching. “After all, it is Friday…” 

“Yeah? No shit? Surely we can find ourselves something to do.”

Title: The Trouble with Cowboys
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B0CSW7DS8F

Temptation Ranch

Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: Standalone #6
Genre: , , , , ,
Release Date: July 20. 2020
Pages: 186

Playboy Tad Dawson dedicates his Saturday nights to looking for a strong man with the firm hand he craves at a certain sort of club in Austin. So when he heads out to his favorite neighborhood gay bar for a more casual Friday night, he’s looking to drink, dance with his friends, and maybe have a little sexy fun on the side. Tad certainly doesn’t expect to run into a man like Strait McMasters, a stunning, deep-voiced, stoic cowboy who seems to be everything Tad wants in one studly package.

Billionaire Strait intends to have a drink in honor of a friend who passed away when he stops in at the bar, but he’s not one to question his gut, and his instinct says that Tad, the young man with the unruly blond hair, is worth a second look. When their one-night stand turns into a several-day binge, Strait knows he’s found something special, and he hopes to keep it.

Tad is sure Strait can give him a stern look and a firm hand if only Tad can find the right way to tell him what he needs. Strait, meanwhile, isn’t sure Tad is ready for what it means to be part of his life, which includes a private island and full-time security. Will they find a way to truly understand each other, or is this temptation short term?

Buy the Book: Amazon~~Barnes & Noble~~Universal eBook Links

 

Chapter One 

 

“Tad! Tad, we’re over here, man!” 

Tad had just arrived, and his eyes were still adjusting to the low light in the bar, but he knew that voice well. His Friday night crowd was here and ready to party, and he was all in. He needed a beer first though, so he pointed to the bar, and Cooper gave him a thumbs up. A shot and a beer, and then he’d pump some money into the jukebox. 

His Friday night crowd was all about putting the work week behind them, getting drunk and getting laid, and that was his expectation: to blow off some steam, get stupid, and find someone to take him home. 

Sheila was behind the bar, hair up in a messy bun, her T-shirt with the faded Guns and Roses cover on it just tight enough to get attention. “Tequila and a Shiner?” 

He nodded to a guy sitting at the bar and then smiled at her. “Man, I come here too often.” 

“Jack and Coke.” Sheila sat the drink down on the bar in front of the cowboy and pulled down a bottle of tequila. 

“Thank you, ma’am.” Oh, that voice was slow and rough, like honey poured over river rocks. He took his ball cap off and tucked it in his pocket, then leaned an elbow on the bar. He did come here too often. Every Friday night and the occasional Monday through Thursday if he was bored, but he didn’t recall that voice; he’d have remembered it. 

“Tad!” He’d just been about to introduce himself when Cooper came over, cheeks glowing and eyes a little liquid. Someone had gotten quite a head start. “What is taking so long?” 

“I need a beer, bud. Give me a second.” 

Cooper hung on him and licked his ear. Did he want Cooper tonight? He’d been thinking maybe Rory. Cooper was sweet and a ton of fun, but usually only good for one round. Rory was heavy-handed and liked to draw things out, keep him up half the night. 

“Oh, Coop. Quit hanging on the man and let him have his drink.” Sheila set a shot down and his beer beside it. 

Cooper pulled back without arguing but pouted, lounging on a barstool beside him. “Bossy.” 

“Never change, Sheila.” Mmm. Bossy. Yeah, he set his mind on Rory. He picked up his shot, swallowed it down with salt but skipped the lime, going right for his beer instead. 

He glanced back over at Pretty Voice, finding a crisp white button-down shirt, a gray cowboy hat that cast a shadow, and one large, tanned hand with a gold nugget ring. Okay, that was fine as hell. 

Fine. Listen to him. How long had he been living in Austin now? Three years? Or, well seven if he counted his time at UT. He was losing Jersey and gaining words like “fine” and “y’all”. And his friends in both states teased him about it every chance they got. 

Still, fine was what it was about, wasn’t it? Guys in hats like that, hell not even as nice as that one, were the main reason he’d stayed here after he’d finished school. That, and he had no intention of ever working for his dad. 

Oh, and the music. He loved all the live music. 

But mainly it was the cowboys. 

“Okay, come on, baby.” Cooper got an arm around his narrow waist and tugged him right off his stool like he weighed nothing. He took another gulp of his beer and then dragged it off the bar as Cooper hauled him across the room. 

“Hey, Tad!” Half the crowd called his name at once, and he held up his beer, but he kept one eye on the bar. 

Oh. Wrangler butt. Nice. 

He swore that he could see the cowboy’s gaze following him all the way to their table. 

What was the universal sign for stay right there, and I’ll come say hi in a bit? Was there one? He was still working that out when someone took his beer. 

“Hey, sugar.” 

Oh. Rory. “Hey, there. That’s my beer.” 

“Uh-huh.” Rory took a sip without losing eye contact and handed it back to him. Damn, that was hot. Rory must be thinking what he’d been thinking because he couldn’t seem to look away all of a sudden. “Mmm. Shiner.” 

“My go-to.” 

“I know. Come sit.” Rory gestured to a chair at the end of the table, and he sat, making room beside him. 

“You think the cowboy at the bar knew what he was walking into?” Cooper asked. “This is not his crowd.” 

He looked over at the bar again; he’d take any excuse at this point. “I don’t know. What brings a man like that into this part of town anyway?” 

“Oh, that’s a good game.” Rory slid a hand into his hair and tugged just a little. “Maybe he’s investing in something. Building another strip mall.” 

“What? God, Rory. Use some imagination. He’s looking for someone who owes him money and was told the guy would show up here.” 

Tad snorted. “He’s…brooding. He had a bad breakup, and he needs to be where his friends won’t find him.” 

“Ooh. I like that one.” Rory gave his hair a playful tug and let him go. 

Juanito snorted. “He’s trolling for blowjobs, ese. You can tell by the boots.” 

“Yeah?” Cooper grinned wide. “Well, if that’s what he wants then he is in the right place after all!” That got a laugh from all of them. 

He wondered if it mattered that he was hoping Cooper was right. He wasn’t sure he was going to be able to break away from everybodyfrom Rory in particularlong enough to even get the cowboy’s name. 

Sheila poured the cowboy another round, laughing at something he said. He pushed money across the bar, and that made her smile even bigger. 

All right, Pretty Voice was staying. 

“TGIF!” Rory’s deep voice growled, and they all clinked beer glasses. 

“Long week?” He asked first, so nobody would ask him. 

“You wouldn’t believe it if I told you.” Rory said that every time someone asked. He worked in the prosecutor’s office, and he always had good stories. He was right too. Tad almost never believed him. People were crazy. 

“Mine was fine. The rush is over for another semester. Shit, why I became a financial aid administrator is beyond me.” Cooper grinned over, eyes catching the swirling lights. “Who’s drunk enough to dance with me?” 

More dancing, less talking. He tipped his beer back and chugged down the second half, then slammed it down on the table. “Me. Soon enough.” Not really, but he wanted to dance anyway. Coop was pure sex on the dance floor. And Rory liked to watch. 

Cooper took his hand, and Tad followed willingly, right out into the middle of the floor where the lighting was purple. 

The music thumped, the floor vibrating with the sound. Cooper grabbed him, writhing against him like a slut, and damn, it felt good. 

He was happy to play with Cooper and enjoy a little of the buzz from his tequila. This was what Friday nights were for. And then tomorrow, like nearly every Saturday night, he’d hit a different kind of bar and see if anyone was looking for a boy like him. 

Cooper covered one ass cheek with a hot hand, and he looked up, and then toward the edge of the dance floor to see if Rory was watching. Rory was kissing Juanito, but the cowboy? That one was watching him like a hawk. 

Damn, had he lost Rory? What were the chances that cowboy would leave the barstool? It seemed like the man might be happy to sit there and watch him all night. Well, he could have fun with that, show off a little, build a little steam under that gray hat. He made a point of staring back, and then turned his attention back to Cooper. 

“Rory’s just trying to make you jealous, rev you up, man.” Cooper licked his ear, bit his earlobe. “We’ll give him something to watch.” 

“You just like showing off.” He liked Cooper’s brand of flirting, and he liked that his buddy seemed to get that he wanted more than something sweet tonight. He let Cooper handle him a little, spin him, pull him in close, kiss him quick and hard enough to make him blink. He smiled. “You’re drunk, Coop, huh?” 

“I’m not hurting, honey, but I’ll remember this in the morning.” 

“When Rory takes me home, I’ll make sure you get into a cab.” He kissed Coop on the cheek. He thought Cooper was the closest he had to a best friend. They’d tried being more, but neither of them was enough for the other that way. It didn’t stop them from taking advantage of some benefits now and then, though. 

“You’re a good guy. I wonder if the pretty cowboy dances?” 

“Nah. Not here. He’s a two-step guy, don’t you think? Isn’t that how that type rolls? He drinks Jack and Coke. That’s all I really know about him.” That, and he’s been watching me since I walked in. That was fair; he’d had his eye on the cowboy too. 

“Classic. Classier than beer. Dressed to the nines.” 

Maybe Cowboy had stopped after supper or a meeting. 

“Right? You think Juanito is right about his boots?” He winked at Cooper. 

“What do I know about cowboy boots, honey?” Coop scoffed. “Juanito isn’t exactly Western.” 

He laughed. “I thought you knew everything about men. Wasn’t it you that told me that? Oh my.” 

How shocked was he when a blond and smiling hottie danced in between them, sights set on Cooper? Far be it from him to come between his friend and a good time. He waved over the guy’s shoulder and winked, then made his way off the dance floor. 

Oh rats, he’d finished his beer. He’d just have to head back to the bar for another. 

The cowboy was still sitting there, strong and silent and still and sexy as fuck. God, he loved that stoic cowboy thing. Just getting close to that energy made his skin tingle. Made him want to hit his knees. 

“Sheila, I lost my dance partner!” He was going to say something to the guy. He didn’t know what yet, but something. 

“Oh, no! What are you going to do?” Sheila winked at him. 

“I’ll have what he’s having.” 

“You sure?” 

He gaped at her, jaw dropping. “Yes, please, bartender.” 

Sheila just shook her head at him, laughing. “Coming right up, honey. Sit.” 

He did sit, one stool over from Cowboy. Despite the way he’d been watched, he was still getting a bit of that arm’s length vibe. “Hey. TGIF, huh?” 

The cowboy turned to look at him, near-black eyes burning at him like a demon’s over sharp cheekbones and a trimmed dark beard. “You know it, honey. Long damn week.” 

His heart rate sped as he looked into those eyes, and he was thoroughly intimidated. Not scared, not worried, but he definitely had respect. And, Jesus, that voice made his balls ache a little. “Want to talk about it?” 

“Nothing much to talk about. Had a good friend and a good man pass away. We put him in the ground today.” 

“Oh. God, I—I’m so sorry about your friend. He lived in town?” 

“Jack and Coke. Enjoy.” Sheila winked at him and set it on the bar. 

“My treat,” the cowboy said, sliding a bill across the bar. “Dave was a local, yeah. We were frat brothers.” 

“Thank you, sir. UT? Which house?” He picked up the drink and took a sip, wincing a little at his first taste of the Jack, but mostly it went down pretty well. He looked at the glass. “Not bad.” 

“Fiji, and yeah, I’m a fifth-generation Longhorn. Hook em.” 

“Hook em.” He did love football. He held up his glass and took another sip. That one went down better. Fiji. Damn. The guy must have been deep in the closet, or richer than God. Which, okay. Look at the guy’s hat. “Fifth-gen? When did you graduate?” 

“I got my undergrad in 09, my graduate degree in 11. How about you?” The gravel never left the man’s voice, never smoothed out. “I’m straight, by the way.” 

The cowboy held out one hand. 

What? That was impossible. He shook hands with the guy. “Class of 2015. And you have no idea how sorry I am to hear that.” 

“Pardon?” He got a blink, a single raised eyebrow, and then a grin appeared. “No. No, honey, that’s my name. Strait, like King George. Strait McMasters.” 

“Oh! Oh my God. I’m so sorry.” Ordinarily he’d feel like an idiot, but the cowboy—Strait had to get that all the damn time, right? “Tad Dawson. Man, that’s a name, huh? Your parents gave you some big shoes to fill.” 

Class of 2009 made Strait…thirty? Thirty-one? But that voice and the look in those dark eyes…the man came across older. 

“Indeed. Daddy’s a big fan.” 

Tad was fascinated by the way Strait’s hand wrapped around the glass, brought the whiskey up to his lips. Those lips were pretty interesting too. They definitely had his attention. 

“His name doesn’t come up often where I’m from in New Jersey, but I was schooled big-time once I got here. I joke that I stayed for the music, but it’s actually pretty true. I love the music scene here.” And men like Strait were another reason. Though he couldn’t say he’d met anyone quite like this cowboy. 

“Yeah, there’s nowhere quite like Austin. It’s special.” 

“What are you drinking?” Rory’s hand landed on the small of Tad’s back, as Rory reached around to grab his glass. 

“Jack and Coke.” He covered his glass with one hand. “Rory, this is Strait. Strait buried a friend today. I’m keeping him company for a while.” 

Rory stopped short, stood, and held out one hand. “Man, I’m sorry. That sucks.” 

“You know it.” Strait shook with Rory. “Pleased.” 

“Rory’s another Longhorn, a couple of years before me. 2012? Is that right?” 

“You got it. You look a little out of place, Strait. How’d you end up in this bar tonight? Don’t seem like your crowd.” 

“The wake was three doors down. I wanted a drink before I headed home.” 

“I’m glad you picked this place.” 

Rory looked at him with one eyebrow raised. “Ah. So, I think I left Juanito alone over there.” Rory turned to Strait. “Sorry about your friend. Good to meet you. Safe home.” 

He winked at Rory and squeezed his friend’s hand before Rory headed back toward the dance floor. 

Those dark eyes landed on him with an almost physical weight. “Did I piss off your lover?” 

He stared into them a second, so infatuated with Strait. Then he blinked and laughed. “No. God, no. He’s a fuckbuddy, not a lover. A good one, but just a friend. And he knows me well enough to understand what I meant when I said I was glad you ended up here.” 

“Yelp said it was friendly, and I’m not looking for a fistfight.” Those eyes dragged over his body, making it clear what Strait was looking for. 

“Not a fistfight, no. No.” He moved over to the empty stool between them and played with the fabric of Strait’s dress shirt. “But I’m sometimesdifficult. I like a little convincing.” 

“Do you now.” It didn’t sound like a question, not really. Just a statement. “I wouldn’t mark that pretty face of yours with a fist.” 

He shook his head. “I won’t consent to that anyway. But…” He reached out and pushed back the cuff of his shirt, letting Strait see the faded marks from last weekend’s play. 

Damn, honey, you got you some bruises. I hope it was worth it.” Strait traced the marks with one fingertip, sending lightning through his arm. 

He wasn’t sure how to feel about the light touch over a spot that had been so roughly used just a week ago. It felt good, kind. Not at all like the Dom who had put the marks there. “I got what I needed.” 

It had been his third time with Bryce. He’d even thought about texting and seeing if the Dom wanted to go for four. Bryce was heavy-handed and rough as hell, but the Dom respected his few rules, played safe, and got him out of his head. He just wished he liked Bryce better. They played well, but they’d never be friends. 

He covered Strait’s fingers with his other hand and leaned in close. Close enough to allow a kiss. “You’ve had your eye on me since I walked in.” 

“I have. You walk like you know how to take it good and hard, and you have a mouth made for sucking.” 

Mother of God. 

Every nerve in his body responded to that: his heart raced, his face flushed hot, and his cock went from interested to…well, fuck. He wasn’t sure he could get up and walk right now. He closed the short distance between them like he’d been summoned, pressing his lips to Strait’s. 

One hand cupped the back of his head, tilting his face and holding him so Strait could take his lips, demanding control of the kiss and fucking his lips like he was storming a beach. 

Fuck, yeah. He didn’t think he’d ever been kissed like this in a bar before. Or anywhere. Strait’s complete focus made him groan, made him want to leave the bar and get naked. 

Right. Now. 

He let Strait have control for a second, but just long enough to show he was willing before he fought back, tongue shoving and defending. Tad knew he’d lose; he was looking forward to it, but he wanted the cowboy to know he wasn’t an easy mark. 

Strait chuckled softly into their kiss, those eyes watching him as Strait eased back. “This isn’t the place for this, honey.” 

God, even that laugh sounded like it was running over gravel. He liked it, the sound and the intention both. 

“No, Sir.” He took a breath and one more sip of his drink, then slid off his barstool. “My place?” He knew his buddies were watching and probably just as stunned as he was. The phone call from Cooper tomorrow would be epic. 

“Works for me. I’m parked right outside. You want to ride or follow me?” 

He smiled as sweetly as he could manage at Strait. “Can I trust you with my virtue? No? Good. We can take your car. Mine stays in the garage when I’m drinking.” 

“Good boy. I had two. I’m good to drive.” Strait caught Sheila’s gaze and shot her a smile. “Pleased to meet you, ma’am.” 

Sheila grinned back. “Y’all have a good night. Be good to our boy.” 

“Night, Sheila. Here comes Coop to get the gossip.” He waved to Cooper who gave him two thumbs up and the universal sign for “call me tomorrow”, then he hooked his arm through Strait’s, and they headed out the door.

Title: Temptation Ranch
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ASIN: B098LQ7F4Z
ISBN13: 978-1-951011-53-6

Cowboy for Sale

Cover for Cowboy for Sale, featuring a man in a cowboy hat wearing a checkered shirt.Contributors: Jodi Payne, BA Tortuga
Series: East Meets Western #6
Genre: , , , , ,
Release Date: November 25, 2025

Cowboy for Sale is an opposites attract romance featuring a champion bullrider at the top of his game and a grieving talent agent who's reluctant to get back into it.

Talent agent Cole Bates is on a long hiatus after his best friend, a bull riding champion and his top client, dies following a horrific riding accident. Out of the game, he ignores the first call from current champ Bodie Jimenez. He deletes the second voicemail too, as well as some emails, but stubborn, persistent Bodie doesn’t get the hint.

Bodie Jimenez has a plan. He might be the reigning champ, but he wants to retire in one piece. He’s confident he can bring home another big buckle, but he knows that locking in sponsors and networking is the only way off this ride without a career, or life, ending injury.

Everyone has told Bodie that Cole is the best in the business, and he’s a good guy, as well. So Bodie doesn’t give up until Cole agrees to see him ride.

Cole has every intention of turning Bodie down, but the way the cowboy rides reminds him of everything he loves about the sport. It’s Bodie’s smile that has him taking the job, however, along with the offer to share the fancy suite the league gives Bodie at events.

Can they have it both ways, or will the cowboy and the agent have to give up pleasure to take care of business?

Buy the Book: Amazon~~Universal eBook Links

Also in this series:
Title: Cowboy for Sale
Published by: Tygerseye Publishing, LLC
ISBN13: 978-1-963644-16-6