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Tuesday, February 17, 2026

PROMO: Jag

 


(Kiss of Death MC)

 

Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense, Age Gap

Date Published: February 20, 2026

 


Spending more than half my life in prison taught me how to survive, not how to live.

 

Jag -- I took the fall for my club once and it cost me everything. Freedom doesn’t feel like freedom when your past is still hunting you. Kiss of Death MC is different now. Safer. Smarter. And full of things I don’t trust. Like kindness, loyalty, and Ada. She sees too much. Asks the hard questions. And somehow makes me want things I buried a long time ago. Wanting her is dangerous. Touching her could destroy us both. But when an old enemy resurfaces and targets her to get to the club, walking away isn’t an option. I’ll protect her. Even if it costs me everything… again.

Ada -- I know the difference between monsters and men who’ve survived hell. Jag Kross is the most dangerous man I’ve ever met. And the most broken. He doesn’t want saving. He doesn’t believe he deserves love. And he definitely doesn’t want me anywhere near his darkness. Too bad. When someone starts watching me, following me, threatening everything the club protects, Jag becomes my shadow. My shield. My temptation. He says he’s not a good man. I say he’s exactly the one I want. I’m not afraid of the scars he carries. I’m afraid of what happens if he leaves.



EXCERPT

 

Jag

The gates of USP Terre Haute swung open with a mechanical groan that I’d heard a thousand times from the other side. This time, I was walking out.

The guard shoved a manila envelope into my hands without meeting my eyes. “Use your prison ID until you get your state issued ID. Inside the envelope you’ll find your release papers, a debit card with two hundred dollars. I was informed you didn’t need a ride?” He finally looked up at me, bored, and raised an eyebrow in question. When I didn’t answer, he shifted his weight with a huff. “Well?”

“Was there a question?”

“Do you have a fuckin’ ride or not, buddy?” He slapped a piece of paper down in front of me.

“What’s this?” I asked, nodding to the form.

He slapped a pen down on top of the paper. “Says you understand the terms of your release supervision and that failure to comply can, and likely will, result in an extended stay in the Hilton back here.” He hiked his thumb over his shoulder, indicating the prison.

Instead of answering him, I picked up the pen and signed my name at the bottom across the highlighted line. “Anything else?”

When the guy shook his head, I stormed out the door. I had no idea if Knuckles followed through with his promise to have guys waiting on me when I got out. I hadn’t called him, but he’d told me I wouldn’t have to. When I was released, there would be a couple of brothers from Kiss of Death to offer me a ride back to Nashville, if I wanted to go. I hadn’t really been sure if I’d take him up on the offer even if he did actually show, but when the prison asked me where I planned on setting up residence, I’d told them Nashville.

I stepped across the threshold, the highly recognizable line between captivity and freedom in the form of a smaller gate through a big-ass fucking prison gate. I squinted against the natural light. Closing my eyes, I inhaled deeply, then relaxed.

Nothing happened.

“Expecting the air outside the yard to smell different than it did inside the yard?” The guy had one elbow resting on the open window of a black F-150 in the slot two spaces over. Another, a truly massive man, rested against the bed of the truck next to the first guy, like they’d just been having a chat. He’d crossed his legs at the ankles and his arms over his chest, his pose casual.

“Jag?” the giant asked. “I’m Tiny. This is Rancor.” He was soft-spoken, his voice a gruff rumble.

I nodded once, acknowledging but not inviting further conversation.

“Ready to roll?” Tiny asked, gaze friendly.

I shrugged and nodded again, fingers digging into my palms, the sharp pain grounding me.

Tiny straightened. “Front or backseat, man?”

“Back.”

Tiny nodded respectfully, obviously expecting my choice since Rancor hadn’t offered to move. He climbed behind the wheel while I opened the back passenger-side door. I tossed the small bag holding my few possessions across the seat to the far side of the vehicle. Sitting behind the passenger left Rancor with a huge blind spot. While the driver could still watch me, he needed to watch the road, too. I didn’t think these guys meant me harm, but I also wasn’t going to get shanked my first hour out of prison.

The interior of the truck smelled like leather and tobacco. Clean. No blood. No piss. No sweat. No puke. Definitely nice for a change.

The rumble vibrated through the seat and into my bones, a foreign sensation after years of concrete and steel. Of all the things I’d missed in prison, I’d missed riding my bike the most. I’d been away for thirty-seven years. My bike had probably long since been sold off.

As we pulled away, I allowed myself one last glance at the prison. The limestone walls and razor wire had been my entire world. I’d learned to kill there. I’d learned to survive there. I’d forgotten how to live anywhere else.

Tiny met my eyes briefly in the rearview mirror. “Long ride to Nashville.” He handed me something I recognized as some kind of smart phone. I’d never held one, but I’d seen them on TV, watched as people used them in commercials or movies, when I’d been allowed to watch. Also, a few of the guards didn’t bother with the policy on no phones out of the locker rooms.

“Scroll through.” He used his finger to drag the screen upward, revealing more. Yeah, I’d seen that before from some of the guards. “It’s my social media feed. I set it to show articles you might be interested in about Nashville. I like to call it my ‘Long-Term Incarcerated’s Guide to the New World.’” I took the phone from him. “It gives you some information about our club, the shelter we help fund and protect, as well as terms you might not be familiar with. A bunch of the guys got together, at our old ladies’ insistence, and made a list of things hardest for them to adjust to when reentering society.” He shrugged. “Some of the guys found it helpful. Including me.”

I grunted. Though, I had to admit, this surprised me. I’d been worried about looking like an idiot when someone handed me something like the famed “Three Seashells” and I looked just as dumb as Stallone’s character.

I still didn’t know if I could concentrate while basically helpless in a moving vehicle with two men I didn’t know who had served time just like me. And had likely learned the same lessons I’d learned. Yeah. Concentrate fully on something right now? Not fucking likely. I kept my expression neutral and pretended to take in the material for a moment until I was sure neither of them watched me too closely. Then I turned my head to look out the window instead.

My reflection stared back at me from the glass -- hollow eyes, angular face, hair cropped close to my scalp. Prison-pale skin already burning under the unfiltered sunlight. I barely recognized myself. The man in the reflection wasn’t the one who’d gone inside. He was something else now. Something hardened and remote. Something dangerous.

An hour into the trip, the interstate rolled beneath us, mile markers ticking by like a countdown to something I wasn’t sure I was ready for. Tiny kept both hands on the wheel except when he leaned one arm on the window. Rancor sat with one arm propped on the window ledge, fingers drumming occasionally to whatever was playing low on the radio.

The silence stretched between us, but it didn’t feel uncomfortable. I thought, maybe these guys understood I needed time to adjust to friendly company. Though I couldn’t trust them yet, my respect for them grew with the care they showed for my sanity.

After another half hour of silence, other than the low music on the radio, Tiny turned his head slightly to speak to me. “Knuckles runs a tight ship. We’ve got legitimate business fronts now. Auto shop’s doing well. Custom work bringing in good money. Also help with a shelter for especially traumatized and terrorized women and children.” He shrugged. “Most of the time, we just have a couple guys stand outside the gate. Their… problems tend to give us a wide berth.” Tiny chuckled darkly.

“Legal?” I said, the word feeling strange on my tongue.

Tiny shrugged. “Mostly. Still got side hustles, but we’re careful. Knuckles makes sure of it. Shelter’s all on the up-and-up.” He spoke like the shelter was his pride and joy. I used to talk about my bike with that kind of reverence, so I knew this place meant something to the man.

There was another beat of silence before Rancor glanced at me in the rearview mirror. “We know what you did for Kiss of Death that put you behind bars.” He waited until I met and held his gaze. “That ain’t this club anymore. We have each other’s back, and no one takes the fall for anything.”

“Ain’t goin’ back.” I snarled the words before I could stop myself. “Gave my fuckin’ soul for this club once. Not sure I can do it again. If that’s a deal breaker, you can drop me off here.”

“Never said you had to, brother. Knuckles knows his people. You don’t have to prove anything. In his eyes, you’ve already proven everything he needed to see, and he’ll make sure you never go back.”

Rancor reached forward and turned up the volume slightly as “Sympathy for the Devil” came on. My fingers twitched involuntarily against my thigh. I’d had a cellmate who would sing this under his breath for hours, driving the guy in the next cell into a rage. Ended with a shank to the kidney during yard time. Though I liked the song, my cellie’s singing, not so much. And he was a dick. Fun times.

We crossed the state line into Kentucky, the landscape gradually shifting. The F-150 ate up the miles, comfortable in a way that made me uncomfortable. Too soft.

Tiny pulled into a truck stop off the interstate. “Need to fill up,” Tiny announced. “You want to stretch your legs?”

I shook my head. The thought of navigating the open space, the strangers, was all too much to attempt right now.

“Be right back,” Rancor said, unfolding himself from the passenger seat. “Taking a piss.”

I watched them through the windows as they moved around the station. Tiny pumped gas while Rancor disappeared inside, reappearing minutes later with a plastic bag.

A family pulled up at the neighboring pump, a man and woman, with two kids arguing in the back seat. The woman laughed at something the man said, her head tipping back to expose her throat. The children tumbled out, shoving at each other, voices high and piercing. One of them looked my way, curious eyes meeting mine before the mother called him back to her side.

I turned away, something hollow opening up in my chest. I’d forgotten what families looked like. Forgotten I used to want one of my own.

Tiny and Rancor returned to the truck, Tiny sliding behind the wheel while Rancor passed a plastic bag over the seat to me.

“Got you some water, sandwich, chips,” he said. “Wasn’t sure what you’d want.”

I took the bag, not meeting his eyes. The scent of barbecue sauce wafted from the bag as I opened it. “Thanks.” The word came out rusty, unused.

I opened the water first, taking a quick pull before unwrapping the sandwich and taking a bite, nearly closing my eyes in bliss as rich barbecued pork exploded across my tongue. “Christ,” I muttered.

Rancor chuckled softly. “Yeah, man. I think I had basically the same reaction to my first good meal on the outside.”

“Ain’t sure that qualifies as a good meal,” Tiny muttered.

“A ham sandwich would be better than what we got in that place.” Rancor waved off Tiny’s words. I agreed with him.

“Still fuckin’ good.” I took another bite, fumbling with the napkin when I realized I probably looked like some kind of primitive who didn’t know how to eat in civilized company. One more thing to add to the list of things to get used to again.

Another hour and we entered the outskirts of Nashville. Tiny made a call and the sound came through the car radio.

“We got a room ready for him.” I’d recognize Knuckles’ voice anywhere. The man had literally saved my sanity the short time we’d been cellies. “He’s gonna want some time to himself to transition, but I don’t want him isolated.”

“You just assume he came with us,” Rancor said, shooting Tiny an amused grin. “Maybe he said fuck off.”

Knuckles barked out a laugh. “Oh, I’m sure he told you to fuck off. Just maybe not out loud. But yeah. I’m sure he came. I know my people, Rancor.”

“I came.” Not sure why I thought I had to speak up, but Knuckles only grunted.

“Of course you did. This is your home. Rat Man did you dirty.”

“Almost there, Prez,” Tiny said. “Ten minutes.”

“Good. I’ll meet you at the main warehouse.” There was a pause. “Hannah made sure you’d have everything you need,” he continued. “She talked to every fucking guy in the place, so she and the other women could give you as comfortable a place as they could. I know you’re not a man who’d want a fuss made or anything but expect the old ladies to make sure you have plenty of home-cooked food in your fridge for when you’re hungry.”

“I -- what?”

“You heard me.”

“Yeah, and I guess I’m not sure which surprises me.”

Knuckles grunted again. “The fact that you have your own fridge, or the fact the girls bothered to stock it?”

“Both, I guess.”

“See you soon.” The call disconnected.

“Expect them to drop by often because our women can be mother hens.” Rancor continued the conversation as we turned onto a narrow, paved but crumbling road that cut between abandoned warehouses. “They won’t let you suffer in silence, no matter how often you tell them to leave. They don’t get their feelings hurt with big, surly bikers, but oddly, they usually know when to back off before they get irritating. It’s the weirdest fucking thing.”

That got a laugh from Tiny. “My two hellions haven’t figured out when to back off. Don’t expect they will either.”

“Oh, your girls know where the line is. They simply refuse to let a little thing like an imaginary line in the sand stop them.” Rancor’s grin said he enjoyed the show on more than one occasion.

I thought I might see irritation in Tiny’s expression, but instead I saw fondness and pride. Tiny loved whoever he was talking about. Likely loved the fact they didn’t stop when they should. The revelation settled something else inside me and my respect for the men grew a little more.

“Why?” I asked softly. “I feel like I’m bein’ set up or some shit. You guys don’t know me and the few who do know I ain’t a kind man.”

“Club takes care of its own,” Rancor said quietly. “Whether our own want it or not.”

Something twisted in my chest -- not pain exactly, but its close cousin. Why would anyone prepare for me? I was nobody to these people. The club had changed since I’d been a member. I doubted anyone knew me from anywhere but Terre Haute. Maybe not even then. The idea that someone had thought about what I might need, had taken time to prepare for my arrival didn’t compute with the world as I understood it.

“Don’t need special treatment,” I managed, voice rough.

Tiny chuckled, a deep, low rumble. “Ain’t special, brother. It’s baseline. You’ll see.”

The Kiss of Death compound emerged from the industrial wasteland like a fortress. Which was exactly what it was. Camo netting stretched between warehouses arranged in a defensive square, breaking up sight lines and confusing surveillance. I counted four visible cameras covering the entrance alone, probably a dozen more I couldn’t see. Smart setup. Defensible. And it was designed to keep people out. Not to hold them inside.

Tiny slowed at a reinforced gate. A guard in a booth nodded recognition, and the gate slid open. We rolled through to a big warehouse well away from the entrance to the compound.

Knuckles stood waiting at the inner entrance, arms crossed over his chest. He was built solid, heavily muscled but leaner and shorter than Tiny.

Tiny parked the truck in front of the warehouse, cutting the engine. I stepped out of the cage, feet planted firmly on the gravel. The air smelled of motor oil, leather, and something delicious cooking.

“Good to see you breathing free air,” Knuckles said, extending his hand.

I took his hand, the handshake brief but firm. His eyes held mine, assessing but not demanding. He didn’t try to establish dominance through the handshake, didn’t pump my arm or crush my fingers. Just a simple acknowledgment between equals which surprised me. Even if I were technically still part of Kiss of Death, Knuckles, as the president, outranked me significantly.

“Appreciate the welcome,” I said, the words coming easier than I expected.

Knuckles nodded, seeming to understand all I wasn’t saying. “Let’s get you settled.”

He led the way through the compound, Tiny and Rancor falling in behind us. A few club members moved about their business. They looked up as we passed, nodding respectfully but didn’t approach.

“Bottom floors of the outer buildings are club business,” Knuckles explained, voice low enough that only I could hear. “Upper floors are apartments for patched members. Inner buildings are all living quarters.

“Hannah, my woman, assigned you a unit in the east building, second floor,” Knuckles continued. “Quieter side of the compound.”

Knuckles stopped at a door at the corner of the back side of the building. He handed me a keycard. “Room’s yours as long as you want to stay. Old ladies will make sure you’re stocked. Don’t ask them to do your laundry. They will shank you.”

That got a bark of laughter out of me when I hadn’t expected to feel like smiling so soon. “I appreciate the place to crash.”

“No thanks necessary.”

The apartment was simple but far larger than any space I’d occupied in nearly four decades. A main room with a couch and coffee table. Small kitchen area with actual appliances. A window overlooking the compound below.

“Basics are all here,” Knuckles said, remaining by the door. Giving me room. “The girls brought linens and shit, so you’ve got bedding and towels. There’s probably a box of toiletries in the bathroom.” He motioned to a set of doors next to each other on one end of the room. “Bedroom and bathroom.” He pointed in the other direction. “Spare room for whatever the fuck you want to do with it.”

I moved farther into the space, checking the place out. Clean surfaces. No dust. The faint scent of something lemon. Someone had prepared this place recently, anticipating my arrival. The thought was unsettling in its kindness.

“Bathroom’s got everything you need,” Knuckles continued. “Hot water takes about thirty seconds to kick in. Pressure’s good and the shower is large. There’s also a bathtub. Anything else you need, just say the word.” He paused, watching me carefully. “When the old ladies come by to bring you more food, let them in, please.”

My head snapped up, surprised by his insight. I’d been calculating how long I could go without opening that door, how to minimize contact until I’d found my bearings.

Knuckles gave me a knowing look. “They mean well. And trust me, you don’t want to be on their bad side.”

A faint smile tugged at my lips again before I could suppress it. “Noted.”

“I’ll leave you to get settled,” Knuckles said, stepping back into the hallway. “Club meeting tomorrow at noon if you want to join. No pressure. Just know you’re welcome. When or if you’re ready to take an active role in the club, we would all welcome you to find your place with us.” He gave me another grin. “Welcome home, brother.”

He closed the door behind him with a soft click, and I was alone. Truly alone for the first time in years outside of AdSeg -- what most people call solitary confinement, or Administrative Segregation. Whatever you call it, AdSeg was the only time I didn’t have a cellmate breathing in the bunk below. No guards passing by at regular intervals. No constant background noise of men living in forced proximity.

Just silence.

I stood motionless in the center of the room. The space felt impossibly large after my cell, the silence deafening after years of constant noise.

I moved to the window, drawn by the natural light. Below, club members moved about their business. Two men working on a Harley. A woman carrying what looked like groceries toward another building. Normal life continuing in its rhythm.

My reflection stared back at me from the glass, superimposed over the scene below. A man caught between worlds, belonging to neither. The prison had released my body but kept pieces of my soul. The club had offered shelter but couldn’t give me back what I’d lost to them before. I thought I should move on, put this chapter of my life behind me, but the thought made my insides twist. Knuckles was right. Though the compound had moved location, the spirit of the club I’d first joined was within this fenced-off land. I could feel the energy all around me and it felt like home.

I placed my palm against the cool glass, watching my breath fog a small circle. Outside, the sun was setting, casting long shadows across the compound. The stranger in the glass looked back at me, equally lost in a world he no longer understood.

 


About the Author

Marteeka Karland is an international bestselling author who leads a double life as an erotic romance author by evening and a semi-domesticated housewife by day. Known for her down and dirty MC romances, Marteeka takes pleasure in spinning tales of tenacious, protective heroes and spirited, vulnerable heroines. She staunchly advocates that every character deserves a blissful ending, even, sometimes, the villains in her narratives. Her writings are speckled with intense, raw elements resulting in page-turning delight entwined with seductive escapades leading up to gratifying conclusions that elicit a sigh from her readers.

Away from the pen, Marteeka finds joy in baking and supporting her husband with their gardening activities. The late summer season is set aside for preserving the delightful harvest that springs from their combined efforts (which is mostly his efforts, but you can count it). To stay updated with Marteeka's latest adventures and forthcoming books, make sure to visit her website. Don't forget to register for her newsletter which will pepper you with a potpourri of Teeka's beloved recipes, book suggestions, autograph events, and a plethora of interesting tidbits.

 

Author on Instagram & TikTok: @marteekakarland

Author on Facebook

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15



RABT Book Tours & PR

Blog Tour: Reign of Secrets

 




Historical Fiction Thriller

Date Published: 12/10/2025

Publisher: Manhattan Book Group




When the Prince of Denmark is murdered in the Florida Keys, an unlikely duo of American and Irish diplomats in Copenhagen becomes embroiled in a deadly game of espionage, ancient conspiracies and high stakes diplomacy as they confront one of the West's most dangerous enemies. In Reign of Secrets, Colonel Whit Ransom and Irish attaché Aisling Kelly race across Europe to stop the Russian President and his assassins as they chase the Danish Crown’s most guarded treasure, a thousand-year-old secret that could threaten the royal houses of Europe and return the Russian empire to glory.

In Reign of Secrets, diplomacy meets danger, and the past may be the deadliest weapon of all.

 

Praise for Reign of Secrets


"A gripping, timely story... that masterfully blends that warrior ethos with today's geopolitical reality, as Whit Ransom confronts Vladimir Putin's ruthless ambition to resurrect an empire."

- Lt. Col. James Reese (Ret.), US Army Delta Force Operator

"Through this historical thriller, Reign of Secrets offers a captivating glimpse into the essence of what it means to follow in the footsteps of legends..."

- Morten Andersen, "The Great Dane", Member, NFL Hall of Fame

"A masterfully crafted tale that explores how the West's adversaries subtly challenge the narratives of history - reshaping symbols, exploiting weaknesses, reframing legacies, and testing the resilience of democratic values and the international order."

-Lt. General Ed Cardon (Ret.), former Commander, US Army Cyber Command

 



Excerpt


Her body had lain undisturbed in its royal crypt for almost a century; but when the man in the front row discovered the letter sewn in the lining of her murdered granddaughter’s nightgown, he knew the long dead Empress had to return to Russia, to fulfill his destiny, and change the course of history.

Whit Ransom studied that man. From his seat in the balcony of Roskilde Cathedral he had a clear view of the back of the man’s bald head, square shoulders, and dark blue suit. The skill of observing small details had been part of his Delta Force training. The bald man seemed a bit smaller in stature than media photos suggested. And the man clearly wasn’t paying attention to the homily the bishop was delivering. Instead, he was glancing around the interior of the cathedral, studying the architecture, the multiple monuments, and the recesses in the walls as if he were looking for something. What?

On one side of the aisle sat the royal family of Denmark, headed by Her Majesty the Queen. On the other side of the aisle, in seats surrounding the bald man, the political leadership of Denmark sat stoically. Ransom scrutinized the face of Prime Minister Ida Samuelsen for any sign of what she was thinking as she sat next to the man. But the Prime Minister sat unmoving, betraying no discomfort except for one brief instant when Ransom saw her eyes dart to the left, at the man who most of her counterparts considered the most dangerous person in the world, a man who had recently brought Europe to the brink of an unthinkable war, a man who tonight would be flying back to Moscow to resume his duties as the President of Russia. …



…What Ransom was unaware of, what only the man in the front row knew of, was the tattered letter sewn in the hem of the nightgown of the nineteen-year-old Grand Duchess Maria; a letter from Maria’s grandmother to Maria’s father. And other than the man in the front row, neither Whit Ransom nor the Queen of Denmark nor anyone else present in the cathedral that afternoon could have guessed the contents of that letter, or the secret buried therein, a secret the man in the front row was determined to unravel. A secret that would allow the new Russian empire to rule all of Europe, with him on the throne.

About the Author


James P. Cain’s remarkable career has spanned the fields of law, business, politics, sports and international diplomacy. From volunteering on Ronald Reagan's first Presidential campaign, being featured on CBS's 60 Minutes at the age of 27, to becoming a partner in an international law firm, serving as President of the NHL Carolina Hurricanes, and later as U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, Ambassador Cain has operated at the highest levels of leadership and public service for over five decades.

A personal encounter with Islamic terrorism in 2016 became the catalyst for writing Reign of Secrets.

Reign of Secrets is the first in a series of Whit Ransom novels.

His first book, The American, written during the last few months of his diplomatic service, was a Bestseller in Denmark.

Ambassador Cain and his family live in North Carolina.


Contact Link

Website


Purchase Link

Amazon


RABT Book Tours & PR

Monday, February 16, 2026

PROMO: Forest Legend - The Tale of Ol' Split Toe

 




The Tale of Ol' Split Toe


YOUNG ADULT FICTION

Science & Nature/Environment Science Fiction/Time Travel Literature & Fiction/Action & Adventure

Date Published: 03-31-2026

Publisher: Mission Point Press



Mother Nature struggles to maintain equilibrium in a changing world while fire, disease, logging, human displacement, and war repeatedly destroy forests of centuries-old trees. Split Toe, a deer chosen at birth for a unique education, travels through time to understand the interconnected workings of a Michigan forest. He meets humans along the way: Ice Age hunters who trap and kill a mastodon; Mukwoh, a young Ojibwe hunter who stalks Split Toe through swamp and forest; loggers clearcutting Michigan’s white pines; Edra, a woman advocating for the trees; Angus and Grace, pioneers who become a first generation of family farmers; scientists from the future studying the impact of nuclear radiation.

Split Toe witnesses two hundred years of conflict building between modern humans -- who fight to control the natural world -- and Mother Nature, who repeatedly reaches for balance. He wonders whether human ways will ultimately overpower Mother Nature, until he meets a boy who changes everything.


Excerpt
Chapter 5 – The Sacred Circle – AD1409
Page 54

Copyright @ 2026 by Daniel S. Ellens

 

And here, within the ancient circle, the barrier between the physical world and the spirit pool was thin. He could hear them now, whispering to each other in the wind.

Waawaashkeshi breathed deeply, looked up into the tree foliage, and asked the spirits the question that was weighing on him.

“Was that really necessary? The hungry cougar? The human stalking me? This flea? The problem at the river? I nearly broke my neck. It is still sore.”

Waawaashkeshi stretched his neck upward and to the side in a circular motion, lifting his chin. He was speaking to himself. Listening for an answer that would come from within.

“Am I not a chosen deer? Why do you not protect me from such things?”

The spirit’s answer seemed to whisper through his mind like wind through the leaves.

“Waawaashkeshi, you know that physically, you are an ordinary deer. You learn from experience as any other living thing learns from experience. You are as big and strong as your kind can be. Your chances of survival are better than other deer because of your strength and the wisdom you’ve gained from your experiences. Your adversaries are mighty, which will only make you stronger … if you survive. Your judgment grows, like a river fed by many streams. You would never be able to understand what you must learn if you were not an ordinary deer who faces real suffering. You are not protected from the natural trials of life because trials are a part of life. Do you think you could understand the strength of the river without such a crossing? Do you think you would have found out about the living soil if you had not crossed the river? Knowing such things is important. Your experiences will guide you in the future. They will help you understand the natural world, the forest, and its inhabitants. They will help you survive. These are your lessons.”


About the Author

 

 Dan Ellens is an outdoor enthusiast who is passionate about connecting people with nature. He spends nearly half of each year in an isolated, electricity-free treehouse on Winterfield Pines Nature Sanctuary with woodstove heat, handpump water, and oil lamp lighting.

Dan has written four nonfiction books intended to inspire adventure, promote self-sufficient lifestyles, and connect people with nature.

 

While not in the wilds, Dan and his wife live in the small community of Salem, Michigan.


Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Goodreads

Instagram

LinkedIn: Daniel S. Ellens


Purchase Links

Amazon Paperback

Amazon eBook


RABT Book Tours & PR

PROMO: Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival

 




Kids Books / Young Adult

Date Published: 01-14-2026



Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival includes comedy and yet realistic life issues. Readers will laugh, giggle, worry, and cheer Amanda's attempts at growth. Amanda is a pre-adolescent girl who deals with body issues, middle-school drama, angst with new girls, coming of age issues such as seeing beyond the surface, handling responsibilities of leadership, and questions about faith. Set in a mid-size central Minnesota town, the story is told exclusively from Amanda's point of view. Amazing Amanda is a clean, family friendly story.


This is Abear's debut novel.


Coming soon: Book 2 Amazing Amanda and the Mystery of the Black Cat and Book 3 Amazing Amanda and Her Bright New Day. The series takes readers through Amanda's entire sixth-grade experience.

 

Excerpt

Amanda lurched down the hall, flapping her arms like a pelican trying to dry her armpits, and flew past the locker area and into her homeroom class. As sunshine streamed through open windows, she hoped a breeze reached her soon.
She shrank down when she got into her seat, the last desk in the middle row of five. Head and shoulders taller than most students and twice as wide, she preferred the back. That was better than hearing, “Amanda scrunch down so I can see,” or “Amanda, could you move a bit to the left?” and other—not so nice—comments.
When the bell rang, she punched out her left arm. “Yay! I made it on time.”
“Watch it,” Charlie Piggott said in the row to her left. His blue eyes widened. “Almost got me that time.”
“Sorry.” Amanda grimaced. “Really.”
“It’s okay. Better luck next time.”
“Huh?”
“To hit your target.”
She frowned. “I don’t want to hit you.”
He broke out in a grin. “Amanda, I’m just kiddin’ ya.”
Amanda grinned back. “You’re a pal.” After she dragged her science stuff from the book bag, she kicked the bag under the desk. Tucking her thatch of brown hair behind her ears, she wiped sweat from her forehead and closed her eyes to slow her breathing. She sensed the noise and chatter fading away…
“Before you get too settled, Amanda.” Miss Holter’s voice pierced through Amanda’s mist of serenity. “Please close the door.”
Amanda scrambled to her feet, smacking her thighs against the desk. “Ow!” She gritted her teeth and lumbered to the door.
As she started to close it, Miss Holter said, “Then come to the front of the class.”
Amanda jerked, slamming the door.
“Uh Oh’s” escaped from several students as heads swiveled toward her.
Confused, Amanda stumbled over a bookbag on her way to the front, mumbling, “One more thing and I’m going to scream.”
Standing beside Miss Holter made Amanda feel almost petite.
When the teacher turned, she whispered to Amanda, “Go ahead and sit in the chair there beside my desk.”
Amanda glimpsed the corners of her teacher’s mouth turn up ever so slightly and wondered what she wanted. If I’m not in trouble, why am I here? Miss Holter, her favorite teacher, had never done anything to embarrass her before.
The teacher motioned for their full attention. “In faculty meeting this morning, Principal Primson announced we’re having a carnival fundraiser. The sixth grade will be putting on the event. A student representative will help organize the students as we work on the carnival. The four homeroom teachers each nominated one student who must accomplish three challenges.”
“Sounds like too much work,” Mark Nelson said, scrunching his face.
The teacher nodded. “It will be. But a student with real leadership potential should not find the challenges too difficult. The tasks may even be invigorating for him or her.”
A zing of excitement crept up Amanda’s spine.
The teacher crossed her arms with a smug look. “My nominee—no, pardon me—our section 6B nominee is the very best.”

About the Author


As a teacher for almost thirty years, Beverly Abear enjoys writing for middle-grade and young adult readers. She has several stories in progress that she hopes to finish and get published. The Amanda stories are mostly set in a k-6th elementary school like the one the author attended in northern Minnesota. Because her faith has greatly affected her life, Beverly's passion for her readers is that they grow to trust in the Lord and enjoy an abundant life in Him.

Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival is Beverly's debut novel.


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https://mybook.to/AmazingAmandaCarnival

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Blog Tour: Do What You Love and Outsource Everything Else

 



Entrepreneurship 101: Start, Grow, and Succeed Without Burning Out 

Nonfiction - Small Business / Entrepreneurship / Workbook. 
Date Published: November 20, 2025
Publisher: Manhattan Book Group

Do What You Love and Outsource Everything Else® is a practical, no-fluff guide and workbook for new and growing entrepreneurs who want to build a sustainable business without burning out. Written for real life and small businesses, this book meets you exactly where you are, whether you’re launching from a tiny town, running a family-owned shop, or growing something scrappy in a big city.
Designed to be read and used at the same time, this Entrepreneurship 101 resource helps business owners gain clarity, create momentum, and reclaim breathing room. Readers are guided to read a little, do a little, and see results without overwhelm or jargon. The approach is grounded, actionable, and written by a fellow business owner who understands the realities of building while juggling life.

Who It’s For
●     New and newer entrepreneurs, solo or family-run, who feel stretched thin or overwhelmed.
● Small-business owners who want simple, real-world guidance, not theory or hype.


Why It Matters Now
●     The way we market, operate, and grow has changed. In 2025, overwhelm is common and delegation often comes too late. This book provides a clear, practical path to simplify sooner, outsource with confidence, and protect your energy as you grow.


What Readers Will Gain
●     Bite-size guidance you can act on immediately.
●     Encouragement from an entrepreneur who has built, led, and rebuilt through real-life challenges.
● A clear roadmap to build a business that supports your life, not one that consumes it.


Drawing on more than two decades of experience as an entrepreneur, CEO, and philanthropist, author Kelly Lorenzen, PMP, shares proven strategies for confident delegation, streamlined marketing, and systems that actually work. Her personal journey, including navigating health setbacks and professional rebuilds, shapes the grounded, compassionate advice throughout the book.


Each chapter concludes with simple, step-by-step momentum exercises designed to help readers implement what they learn right away. Inside, readers will discover how to:


●     Build a brand that sounds like you and connects with the right audience.
●     Create marketing systems that work on repeat.
●     Delegate without losing control or quality.
●     Build systems that keep running, even when you can’t.
● Reclaim your calendar, avoid burnout, and future-proof your business.


Do What You Love and Outsource Everything Else® is the practical playbook new and growing entrepreneurs wish they’d had from day one. It is clear, encouraging, and designed for sustainable success.

 



Excerpt


Starting your own business is equal parts thrilling and terrifying. It demands that you grow in ways you never imagined, that you face fear head-on, and that you learn to believe in yourself. I often compare entrepreneurship to learning a new language as an adult while riding that roller coaster ride; At the same time! The adrenaline rush and the steep learning curve are inseparable. One minute you’re flying, and the next you’re free-falling and questioning everything. And here’s what nobody talks about enough: how uncomfortable it really is.

But discomfort does not have to be a bad thing. The uncertainty, the trial and error, the self-doubt, it is all part of the process. You can use it as fuel. It’s through discomfort that you learn resilience. Every challenge sharpens your decision-making skills. Every misstep teaches you how to pivot. Every failure fuels innovation. And every time you rise again, you show the world what’s possible; not just for you, but for anyone watching.


About the Author

 

 My name is Kelly Lorenzen, PMP, and I am an award-winning entrepreneur and the CEO of KLM Consulting, Marketing & Management. I am also a podcast host, speaker, breast cancer survivor, author, wife, and mom. With more than two decades of experience building and scaling companies and coming from a long line of entrepreneurs, I am deeply committed to helping small and family-owned businesses succeed.
My team, often referred to as “business owner duplicates”, partners with clients as a fractional C-suite and project implementation arm, helping business owners simplify operations, hand off marketing, build systems, and scale sustainably. The goal is simple: allow owners to focus on what they love while confidently outsourcing the rest.

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PROMO: Night Eagle

 




Falling from space was just the beginning


Science Fiction

Date Published: February 16, 2026



Falling from space was a horrific end for a distinguished astronaut. Or should have been. Instead, it didn’t just change his life, it changed the world.

When a catastrophic explosion on an orbiting space factory hurls construction manager Rahim Johnson towards Earth, survival seems impossible. Using a section of debris as a shield, Johnson miraculously endures the brutal descent and crash-lands deep into the Amazon rainforest. Severely injured and far from rescue, he is taken in by an isolated indigenous tribe whose world feels both unfamiliar and strangely connected to the ancestral stories that have haunted his dreams for years. As Johnson recovers, the rainforest awakens memories of history, loss and true friendship.

But the forest is no idyllic escape. When illegal loggers threaten the tribe’s land, Johnson is forced back into the modern world, and compelled to return the tribe’s favor. His survival transforms him into a global symbol and powerful advocate, but that also brings unimaginable consequences. Years later, his family is drawn to the very place he landed, uncovering a legacy that binds space exploration, environmental destruction, and one visionary inspired by Johnson who will shape the future of humanity.

Are you ready for Johnson’s incredible story? Get your copy today and discover the true meaning of courage, sacrifice, and the fight to protect what matters.


About the Author

 

 KZ Shaw has loved science fiction ever since winning a copy of HG Wells short stories at school. And realizing its power to channel a fertile imagination into the written word. That fascination led to a life-long love of science and the English language, with a particular affinity for technofiction.

Today, KZ can be found immersed in far-off galaxies, or travelling with family in a more mundane world called Earth.

Or, if you’re lucky, solving world problems.

 

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Friday, February 13, 2026

Blog Tour: Killer Friends

 




Bloodstone Series #4


Historical Suspense

Date Published: 11-10-2025

Publisher: Books to Go Now




Henrietta Newell stormed into the detective bureau. She claimed her adult son was missing and feared for his safety. The detectives attempted to reassure her that the absence of a bachelor in his thirties, in a city like London, wasn’t extraordinary. Despite their efforts, she insisted an investigation be conducted, reminding them of her political connections.

Detective Rudyard Bloodstone and his partner were told to look into the matter. Their investigation reveals evidence of suspicious and unusual activity but no clues regarding the man’s disappearance. The few leads they develop take them from the world of wealthy families and into the secret society of sexual peculiarities.

The detectives discover the victim didn’t simply disappear. He was murdered. They have the evidence except for one problem, they’re missing is the victim’s body.




Excerpt

Archie and Clive stood to the side and quietly watched.

Ruddy slowly dropped down onto his knees next to the dog. “Snowball,” he said her name wanting to see if she reacted.

She flipped her tail one weak wag, lifted her head slightly, and then lay it back down. “Will you let me see your injury? I’ll be gentle.”

Snowball watched him as he leaned over her blood patch but she didn’t growl. Ruddy pushed bloody hair away from the spot he thought the source of the injury. He couldn’t tell much through the thick coat.

“Clive, bring me two clean towels. Wet one,” Ruddy ordered. “And bring a bowl of water. She’s probably dehydrated.”

Clive dashed off toward the kitchen.

“It looks like she’s cooperating with your ministrations. While you handle her, I’m going to start another search.” Archie went down the hall.

Ruddy stroked Snowball, offering soothing words while he waited for the towels. When Clive returned, Ruddy cradled the side of her head and positioned it so she could drink. She lapped up her fill. Once she stopped, Ruddy moved his hand so she could lay her head down again. Then he used the wet cloth to wipe the bloodiest area to get a better look at the wound on her hip. Snowball lifted her head several times in an attempt to see what he was doing. Her body flinched with every movement of her head and she began to tremble.

“Shh, lie still. Shh. Shh.” Ruddy covered her eyes with the dry towel. The tremors stopped and she didn’t try to raise her head again.

“How did you know that would work, covering her eyes and shushing her, considering she’s been through some kind of trauma?” Clive asked. 

“Animals are sensitive to our tone of voice. I learned that from my father, as a farrier, he knows a lot about working with animals. Plus, in addition to our own horses, we had goats, and chickens. He used them to show my brothers and sisters how they responded,” Ruddy explained. “The cloth over her eyes, keeps her from being anxious or agitated by my movements.”

Snowball lay quiet as Ruddy explored her injury. He used the wet towel to wipe as much of the blood from her fur as he could. He finally got through to the center of the wound and in a soft tone told her, “I thought for a moment you were shot, but you’re not. I can’t see where a bullet pierced your hip.” He followed a deep abrasion line from the small pool of dark coagulated blood to the skinned area where the bloodline grew spotty. Ruddy sat back on his heels. “I think she’s been shot but it only grazed her.”

“How can you tell it’s a graze?” Clive asked.

“I can’t be sure. A doctor will have to examine her further but I’ve seen my share of different bullet wounds. I believe this is a graze. Take a look. It will help you when the day comes for you to become a detective.”

Clive knelt down and his hand hovered over the injury about to touch it.

“Don’t touch the wound,” Ruddy warned and Clive pulled his hand back. “She’s had a terrible scare. Too many strange hands might overly excite her.” He smoothed the hair around the wound back so Clive could see the graze. “See the abrasion of dried blood streaks? That is more common with a graze. The darkest clot of blood doesn’t appear to be a bullet entry spot.”

“Interesting.” Clive tapped his finger on the pocket he kept a small book. “I’ll write this in my notebook.”

Ruddy stood. “Good idea. Right now, we need you to go to Mrs. Newell’s. Tell her about the dog and come here to tell us if this is her son’s Snowball.”

“Should I bring her in a cab? I don’t know if she has a carriage of her own.”

“Yes, bring her in a cab. Let’s not wait for her to get a carriage ready.” Clive reached into his pocket and took a peek at his change. Before he could say he didn’t have the money, Ruddy fished two crowns from his waistcoat and handed them to Clive.

“Thank you.” Clive left.

“Grazed by a bullet?” Archie asked, having returned from searching the house.

“Yes. Did you find anything else of interest?”

“Sadly, no.”

Ruddy pressed the wet towel to the scar, which still oozed blood. The flow had lessened from when the injury had originally occurred. There was no spreading into the patch of dried blood.

Archie started to sit in the nearby chair but stopped and bent down. He picked up a feather with a smudge of blood on it fallen near one of the chair legs. Kneeling he looked under the chair and slid a pillow out. “What’s this then?”

“What?”

Archie held the pillow out for Ruddy to see a blackened and seared material around a small hole. “I found this bloody feather too.” Archie brought the pillow up to his nose and sniffed. More feathers poked out from the larger hole in the pillow. “It smells acrid like burnt meat. Could be gunpowder residue.”

“Toss me the pillow.” Ruddy caught it and smelled the seared material. “I’m sure it’s gunpowder.”

“If Newell has gone missing, whether voluntarily or forced, what has he been involved in that got him into this situation? Why shoot the poor dog? Based on Mrs. Newell’s information, he didn’t-wouldn’t hurt Snowball, so who did and why?” The question wasn’t meant for immediate answers. From Archie’s tone, it was his thoughts spoken to the universe in general.

“Assuming we have a crime, three reasons for shooting the dog come to me. The person or persons who are behind his disappearance, shot Snowball to shut her up, if she was barking. Or, she might have tried to defend Newell from an attacker. Or, the attacker wanted something from Newell that he’d resist doing and they shot her to emphasize their seriousness, and he would be next.” Snowball whimpered, drawing Ruddy’s attention back.

 


About the Author


I was born and raised in Chicago. My father was a history professor and my mother was, and is, a voracious reader. I grew up with a love of history and books.

My parents also love traveling, a passion they passed onto me. I wanted to see the places I read about, see the land and monuments from the time periods that fascinated me. I’ve had the good fortune to travel extensively throughout Europe, the Near East, and North Africa.

I am a retired police detective. I spent twenty-five years in law enforcement with two different agencies. My desire to write came in my early teens. After I retired, I decided to pursue that dream.

I’m currently working on the Bloodstone Series, which is historical suspense stories set in Victorian London. I’ve also written two World War 2 romances: The Ack Ack Girl and Moonlight Serenade.

My past series include my historical/time travel romance series is called, Knights in Time. My romantic thriller series is Dangerous Waters.

Each series has a different setting and some cross time periods, which I find fun to write.

I currently live in the Pacific Northwest with my husband and three wild and crazy rescue dogs.

 

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Thursday, February 12, 2026

PROMO: Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival

 




Kids Books / Young Adult

Date Published: 01-14-2026



Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival includes comedy and yet realistic life issues. Readers will laugh, giggle, worry, and cheer Amanda's attempts at growth. Amanda is a pre-adolescent girl who deals with body issues, middle-school drama, angst with new girls, coming of age issues such as seeing beyond the surface, handling responsibilities of leadership, and questions about faith. Set in a mid-size central Minnesota town, the story is told exclusively from Amanda's point of view. Amazing Amanda is a clean, family friendly story.


This is Abear's debut novel.


Coming soon: Book 2 Amazing Amanda and the Mystery of the Black Cat and Book 3 Amazing Amanda and Her Bright New Day. The series takes readers through Amanda's entire sixth-grade experience.

 

About the Author


As a teacher for almost thirty years, Beverly Abear enjoys writing for middle-grade and young adult readers. She has several stories in progress that she hopes to finish and get published. The Amanda stories are mostly set in a k-6th elementary school like the one the author attended in northern Minnesota. Because her faith has greatly affected her life, Beverly's passion for her readers is that they grow to trust in the Lord and enjoy an abundant life in Him.

Amazing Amanda and the Crazy School Carnival is Beverly's debut novel.


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PROMO: Let's Talk Leadership

 




The Psychology of Power, Presence, and Purpose in Modern Leadership

 

Non-fiction — Leadership & Executive Psychology

Date Published: December 3, 2025

 


Let’s Talk Leadership is a psychological exploration of what truly shapes leaders and the cultures around them. Leadership is not a technique or a collection of frameworks. It is an inner journey, driven by personal history, emotional patterns, and the narratives that guide behavior. In this book, executive coach and C-suite advisor Arvid Buit reveals the hidden mechanisms that influence decision-making, presence, authority, and organizational impact.

Drawing on years of working closely with CEOs, founders and executive teams, the book uncovers how leaders are formed, why they act the way they do, and how they can grow beyond their limitations. It exposes the emotional architecture of leadership, explains why organizations mirror the mindset of their leaders, and shows why many development programs fail to create real change.

The book is divided into three parts.

Part I explores the psychological nature of leadership. It explains how early experiences shape adult leadership behavior, why leaders carry personal narratives into the workplace, how emotional signals travel through teams, and why strong leadership is often misunderstood or resisted.

Part II introduces five perspectives that allow you to understand and analyze leadership in any environment: the Collective, the Strategist, the Father, the Decision-Maker and the Creative. These perspectives help you see how leaders influence culture, make decisions, give direction, create safety and foster innovation.

Part III presents a practical seven-step development method. It guides you through assessing your current leadership identity, identifying blind spots, designing new behaviors, improving communication, building discipline, navigating change and inspiring others. The focus is on deep, sustainable transformation rather than quick fixes or surface-level techniques.

Let’s Talk Leadership is written for executives, managers, founders, HR-professionals, coaches and anyone serious about understanding the psychological reality of leadership. It offers a clear and honest approach to self-awareness, personal growth and organizational influence. Leaders who understand themselves create stability, meaning and direction for others. This book shows how to begin that process and how to develop a leadership presence that is both conscious and authentic.

 

About the Author

 


 Arvid Buit is a globally recognized leadership expert, strategy consultant, and author with over two decades of experience in transforming leaders and organizations. His work delves into the complex psychology of leadership, helping executives and professionals understand the true nature of effective leadership, beyond the popular myths and misconceptions. Arvid is known for his candid approach, blending deep insights from neuroscience, behavioral science, and attachment theory to offer practical, actionable strategies that resonate with leaders at all levels.

Having worked with a diverse range of clients, from top CEOs to international artists, Arvid brings a unique perspective on leadership, drawing from his early career in the entertainment industry where he toured with globally renowned performers. His observations of how successful individuals struggle both on and off the stage laid the foundation for his deep understanding of the pressures and vulnerabilities leaders face.

Arvid’s latest book focuses on debunking modern leadership myths and creating a culture where both leaders and employees can thrive. His mission is to guide leaders toward self-awareness, authentic connection, and sustainable success, providing them with the tools they need to navigate the challenges of leadership in today’s fast-paced, high-stakes environment.

Whether through his consulting work, keynote speeches, or published writings, Arvid Buit is committed to helping leaders break free from outdated models and thrive in their personal and professional lives.


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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

PROMO: And Call Me

 




Friends to Lovers Medical Romance


M/M Romance

Date Published: February 13, 2026


Need a prescription for love? Take two, and call me in the morning.


And Call Me in the Morning: Eli and Zane. Yes, they spend a lot of time together. That doesn’t mean they’re a real couple. When teased about it one too many times by their colleagues, Zane challenges Eli to set the record straight with a kiss to prove there’s absolutely no chemistry between them. Neither expected a spark to ignite between them. More than a spark. Truth be told, Eli’s not so sure they can set the record straight after all.

And Call Me in the Evening: Eli’s still not great at wearing his heart on his sleeve and Zane’s still got trust issues, but they manage just fine. It’s all good. Right? Yes and no. Eli’s ex-wife Marybeth has come back to town, bringing a heaping helping of hassle with her. There’s something to be said for setting the story straight, it’s true. Eli knows he and Zane have a good thing going even if keeping it that way is the hardest -- and best -- part.


Excerpt
Copyright ©2026 Will Okati

Falling in love with his closest friend had never been something Eli planned to do with his life. Wasn’t as if he could have stopped it, though.

Sometimes love just happened.

Even if it took him a while to figure that out.

* * *

“There you are.” Zane laid down the heavy, ivory-colored menu he’d been idly flipping through as Eli approached, making his way through the maze of tables at their regular bistro. “I almost thought you weren’t going to make it.”

Eli sat with a thump, running his hand through his dark brown hair, cut short but still quite capable of standing on end. He grimaced when he discovered he’d forgotten his stethoscope, still wound around his neck.

“Long night?” Zane asked, already waving their server over with the universal “coffee here” gesture.

Eli relaxed and let Zane take care of him. Some days, a man truly appreciated a friend who’d have his back when he needed a rock to shore up against. “Long, long night. Three-car pileup at an intersection. I didn’t want to leave before everyone was stable.”

“That’s my boy.” Zane shifted out of the way to let their server pour Eli’s cup. She was a pretty thing, well packed into her curves -- curves that she offered not so subtly for display.

Zane ignored them. He’d taken Eli’s face in his hands and begun to assess him for signs of exhaustion. The guy had good hands, firm and dry and dexterous. They felt nice and cool against Eli’s skin. He let Eli go with a light slap to the cheek. “Your eyes look like burned holes in a blanket. You should go home and get some rest.”

“Like I’d miss a chance at a fine, elegant brunch?” Eli rolled his eyes.

“Heaven forbid.” Zane gave good deadpan. “Jeez. This is the kind of place I fear running into my family.” How moneyed Zane’s family was, Eli didn’t know. Coming from an ivory tower was a sore spot for Zane, who much preferred the life he’d chosen in a grittier world.

Eli segued to spare Zane any discomfort. What were friends for, right? “You were on last night too. How’d you manage to get away in time for a shower and a sharp morning suit?”

“Questions, questions.” The corners of Zane’s eyes crinkled when he smiled. “Unlike some of us, I leave when my shift’s done.”

“Since when? You’re as much of a workaholic as I am, if not more. A hospitalist’s work is never done, especially at Immaculate Grace. What was I thinking when I chose that as a career, anyway?”

“That you’re a glutton for punishment?”

“True enough.” Eli drank deeply of his coffee, almost moaning in appreciation. The influx of better-than-decent caffeine stimulated his brain. “Before I forget, I got those concert tickets you begged me for. Two, even.” He patted his dark brown shirt pocket. Plain clothes for a plain man, built tough to last, Chicago born and bred for forty-three years.

Unlike Zane, who looked as fresh as a daisy in a casual white linen jacket, pale violet button-down, and pressed slacks. Pretty as a picture, coming across as maybe five years younger than his forty-one. Zane brightened and made a grab. “Good seats?”

“I’m told they’re the best. Ah-ah-ah.” Eli tapped his pocket again. “I also got advance tickets for a Cubs game when the season starts. Fair is fair. I try not to fall asleep during the chorale or chamber music or whatever you want to call it, and you endure beer, umpire heckling, and giant foam fingers.”

“Done and done. You drive a hard bargain.” Zane clinked coffee cups with Eli. He hadn’t looked away once, but Eli liked that about Zane. When he gave you his full attention, nothing else seemed to matter to him. All part of the Zane package, and it made him the best doctor Eli had known. “I --” He stopped, interrupted by the chiming of his pager. When he checked the number, he grimaced. “Damn. Sorry, I’ve got to take this. Keep that warm for me.”

“What did I tell you? Workaholic. Hey! Do not let them talk you into coming back to the hospital today.”

Zane waved backward at Eli as he walked off. Eli watched him go, amused.

A different server, young and male, approached with the coffeepot. Eli suspected the waitress had gotten fed up with flirting and traded off. Fine by him. This kid had a good eye for refills. He held his cup up. “Keep it coming, but we’re not ordering yet. Still waiting for two.”

And they’d better hurry, if they know what’s good for them.

Eli wasn’t a huge fan of this bistro. Without Zane there to provide a buffer, the place was too rich for his blood. Made him feel like any second someone with a pedigree was going to jump out from behind a column and ask him what a working-class stiff like him thought he was doing here.

“Of course, sir. I’m sorry if I’m being rude,” the waiter said, deftly pouring. “If I could ask -- you two make such a handsome couple. How long have you been together?”

Not this again. Eli didn’t even have to ask what the kid meant. Wasn’t the first time he and Zane had been mistaken for a couple, and he’d bet his hard-earned MD it wouldn’t be the last. “Sorry to burst your bubble, but we’re not.”

The waiter’s coffeepot slipped. “You’re not -- oh. Oh my God, I’m so sorry.”

“No problem.” Eli waved him off before the kid could apologize again. He’d almost gotten used to the assumption. Whatever people saw in Zane and him, he had no idea. Felt like being on the shooting range sometimes, as many assumptions made about them as they had to dodge. Once corrected, strangers were mostly good about apologizing and moving on.

Friends of theirs, on the other hand, were not so accommodating.

“We made it!” Diana and Holly -- also doctors, both familiar faces at Immaculate Heart -- swarmed the table in a cloud of perfume and joie de vivre. With them, more hesitantly, came a fresh-faced kid Eli vaguely recognized as an intern. The ladies dove into the fresh baguettes and cherry jam their new waiter discreetly slid onto the table before exiting at speed, stage left.

Eli stayed well back from the carnage. Friends they might be, but Holly and Diana -- well, it was best to stay on your toes around them. “Who’s the boy toy?”

Holly, a pale, Nordic-type blonde, swatted Eli’s arm. “Be nice. Taye’s been at work for almost twenty-four hours. He deserved a break, so we brought him along to give him a treat.”

Eli didn’t doubt she spoke the truth. The intern was gray with exhaustion and had bags under his eyes big enough to carry the US mail. For all that, he wasn’t bad-looking. If you noticed male attributes, that was. A well-shaped face and a kind mouth, reddish gold hair cut short and sleek. Eli could tell he was probably handsome given the way Diana eyed him with impressively dirty intent.

“Really?” Eli nudged Diana under the table.

Diana, forty-two and unashamed, attractive in a gamine sort of way, wrinkled her nose at Eli. A damned fine cardiologist and an innovator in her field, she had the sense of humor of a collegiate and saw no point in growing old gracefully. She nudged back, and ouch, she was wearing pointy-toed shoes. “Bah humbug.”

Taye watched them with big eyes. “Is there something going on here that I should know about?”

“Not a thing,” Diana said. Butter wouldn’t have melted between her cherry red lips. She stole Eli’s coffee and sipped demurely.

Holly petted Taye’s hair. “It’s all right, Taye. No one here’s going to bite.”

Taye cracked a grin. “Right. It’s just -- three doctors and me. All of you have been in medicine since I was in grade school. I’m a little nervous.”

“Shows what you know,” Eli said, jumping back into the conversation. “I just finished my residency last year.” He shrugged. “My midlife crisis came early. What can I say?”

“Seriously? But you seem so… I mean, you’re… The way you take charge, I’d thought you were an old pro.”

“Thank you. It’s never too late to teach an old dog new tricks. And before you ask, I’m forty-three.” Eli took his cup back from Diana, only to find it empty. “Wench.”

She smirked at Eli. “And don’t you forget it. So where’s your wife?”

“Right now, specifically?” Eli checked his watch, a gift from Zane when he’d been hired on as an attending. “Hell if I know. Either in Nepal with Paolo or in Paris with Neo. I lost track.” Either way, she was doing adventurous things with a man who isn’t married to his job. He couldn’t blame Marybeth. Cops made terrible husbands. When he’d decided to switch to medicine, that’d been the last straw, and he wished her well with… whoever was on the menu this week. “Enough about me.” They knew damn well he didn’t like to talk about personal business in public.

Holly and Diana exchanged glances, the secretly amused and utterly female method of communication Eli had never learned to interpret, God help him.

“Good for her. I was talking about your other wife,” Diana said around a bite of ruby jam and baguette.

“Beg pardon?”

“She means Zane,” Holly said.

That, in Eli’s opinion, was taking it too far, especially in front of a colleague Eli didn’t know. “Enough, the both of you.”

Holly ignored him serenely and put her chin in her hands. “Come to think of it, this might be the first time I’ve seen you without him in weeks.”

Eli could feel Taye watching them, fascinated. “My private life is not up for scrutiny, but for the last time, Zane and I are not together. How many times do I have to say this, and to how many people?”

“Wait, what?” Looked like Taye had forgotten his nerves. He turned to Diana instead of Eli. “Zane is Dr. Novia, right? They’re not…”

“No,” Eli said, annoyed. A flicker of motion in his peripheral vision filled him with relief. “Zane, for the love of God, would you get behind me on this?”

Diana and Holly dissolved into giggles. Zane shrugged, untroubled as ever, and took his seat. He tucked his pager away. “What are we being ridiculed for today?”

“Same old, same old,” Eli said. He passed Zane the bread and jam. “Apparently we want to jump each other’s bones.”

“An oldie, but a goodie.” Zane lifted his chin at Taye. “What are you looking at, junior?”

Taye coughed. “Nothing. Sorry.” He retreated behind a mouthful of fresh-from-the-oven baguette.

Eli had to admire Zane at work. They could have used a laser stare like Zane’s on the force back in the day. He’d have had perps pissing their pants with nothing more than a look.

Zane turned it on Diana. “Look at you, Mrs. Robinson.”

Diana possessed not the smallest trace of shame. “You wish you had my cojones.”

“True.”

Their byplay didn’t stop Holly. Nothing did, as far as Eli could tell. Hell, her husband egged her on; Eli held it in private opinion that the pair of them enjoyed more kink than a Slinky. She folded her hands beneath her chin and gave Zane her best you-can-trust-me psychotherapist face. “It just seems obvious to everyone but the pair of you.”

“It’s true,” Diana said. She started to pick through the packages of fake and real sugar, searching for Splenda. “You go to the symphony together. Ball games. Brunch, for God’s sake. And when was the last time you went out with a woman, the pair of us aside?”

Eli opened his mouth, closed it, and rubbed the bridge of his nose. “So it’s been a while. I don’t have time for playing the field when I’m trying to get ahead with my career.”

“But you have time to spend with Zane,” Holly said sweetly.

Eli gave up. For the moment.

Diana didn’t. “Take, for example, the way you two are sitting. Shoulder to shoulder.”

“The table is crowded,” Eli protested. “Four-person table, five people jammed in. You’re plastered against Taye.”

Diana smiled like a cat who’d just gotten her first taste of the cream and said nothing.

Fine, that hadn’t helped. Frustrated, Eli looked to Zane for support. No luck; Zane was busy waving for more coffee all around.

Eli wasn’t an idiot. When he examined Zane through objective eyes, he could see the appeal. Zane looked closer to thirty than forty, excepting the smile lines and small sprinkling of silver in his hair, and it was a trim, fit thirty with a body he kept in tip-top shape with rigorous exercise.

Not that Eli had anything to be ashamed of on that count, either. Zane’s enthusiasm for biking and boxing had chivied Eli out of the threat of middle-aged spread and back into better shape than he’d been on the force. Handsome, fit, successful.

So yes, he noticed these things. Didn’t everybody? And so they spent most of their time together. Mankind wasn’t made to be alone. Big deal.

Zane’s beeper shrilled. He rolled his eyes to the heavens. “I’m going to take this in my car. If the waiter comes around, order for me, but no meat. As soon as we’re done here I’m going back to Immaculate Grace and carving myself a filet of intern. Not you,” he said as an aside to Taye. “You’re doing great. Keep up the good work. Eli, tell them I want the usual, okay?”

Eli didn’t let Diana or Holly ask. “Yes, I know his usual. Belgian waffle with cinnamon sugar and whipped cream, the real stuff, and a fruit salad. No strawberries.” He swatted Zane’s hip as Zane scooted behind him and away. “Don’t worry; I’ve got it covered.”

“No strawberries?” Taye asked.

“He’s allergic,” Eli said. Medicine fell outside the personal-business umbrella, and Zane considered nothing taboo anyway. Still grated Eli’s nerves a bit to answer. “I’ve never seen how allergic, but he carries an EpiPen. No sense taking chances.”

Hoping the subject would be dropped, knowing there was no way he’d get that lucky, Eli studied the menu until he could no longer ignore the women clicking their tongues at him. Approximately thirty seconds. “What?”

The women exchanged Highly Significant Looks. “Doth the gentleman protest too much?” Diana asked.

“He doth,” Holly agreed. “Let me ask you a question, Eli.”

“Since I’m well aware that I can’t stop you, please, proceed.” Eli crossed his arms and waited for it.

“How much time did you spend with your ex-wife before she took off for -- where was it again?” She shushed him before he could answer. “It’s Austria with Pieter, by the way. I actually know this, and you don’t. Now tell me: how much time do you spend with Zane?”

Eli scowled and said nothing.

Holly pounced. “You see? I’ll bet you can even tell me where Zane was night before last.”

There was no way he would win here, was there? “My place,” Eli admitted. “Takeout and Die Hard. What’s your point?”

“I think their point is that you’re all but married,” Taye said. Apparently he’d chosen sides. Good to know. For that, he would pay. “Look, I know a few things about what it’s like to love your own gender. It’s strange as hell at first.”

Diana’s face fell in a way that would have been heartbreaking if it hadn’t been ever so satisfying instead. “You’re --”

Taye blushed but kept his chin up. “Yes.”

“No disrespect to you personally intended, Taye, but can I just say ha?” Eli pointed at Holly and Diana in turn. “Your gaydar needs a tune-up.”

Diana didn’t take defeat graciously. She narrowed her eyes at Taye. “Prove it.”

“Hey.” Eli straightened. “Nobody around here has to prove anything. Diana, leave him alone.”

Taye’s color heightened. “I can fight my own battles, thanks.”

Eli held up his hands in mock surrender. “Suit yourself, tough guy.”

Maybe it was the lack of sleep followed by the powerful coffee, or maybe Taye was one of those fortunate fools who didn’t hesitate to jump in where mortals feared to tread. “Excuse me.” Taye touched the waiter’s arm as he approached, coming in on the third round of coffee refills. “Would it be all right with you if I kissed you?”

The waiter stared at him. Eli waited for the “No!”

Instead, their waiter did a quick check to make sure no managerial eyes were on him, slid his carafe onto the table, and pressed in close to Taye. “I thought you’d never ask, handsome.” He stood on tiptoe and --

Eli sighed. Holly made cooing noises that unfortunately didn’t cover up the noises of a highly enthusiastic kiss. A darker mood still shadowed Eli’s thoughts when the sound of the smacking prompted a stir in his groin.

He tapped his foot thoughtfully. All right, so maybe it’s been a longer dry spell than I’ll admit to this crowd. I’m a busy man. That doesn’t mean listening to two pretty boys make out turns me on. Or Zane. It just means I need to get laid, or at least spend a quality afternoon with my right hand.

“Is that what we’re leaving instead of a tip?” Zane made his reappearance without fanfare or notice from anyone except Eli. “If that’s the case, we should take Taye out with us more often.”

Eli chuckled. “I was just enjoying the sight of Diana proved wrong.”

Diana scowled at Taye. “He’s your boyfriend, isn’t he? No wonder you were willing to brunch instead of crash.”

“Can you blame me?” Taye kissed the waiter again, this time on the tip of his nose. “See you later, handsome.”

Was he? Eli couldn’t see the appeal, himself. Waiter-boy was shorter than Taye by at least half a foot, wiry, curly dark hair, a button nose… Okay, maybe he could see it a little. Discomfort at PDA aside, Eli was man enough to admit the pair of them were almost cute. He knew he’d be just as fidgety with a hetero couple. The last time Holly’s computer-something-or-another-engineer husband, Keith, had come along to brunch, he’d almost wanted to crawl under the table.

Not even Diana could stand up against that. She sighed and shifted fully from tigress on the hunt to full-fledged fan club member. “Worth it.”

A faint touch at his elbow drew Eli’s attention to Holly. “You see?” she asked, quiet as a mouse. A far-too-knowing mouse. “That’s the way you and Zane look at each other. You’re the only two who can’t see it.”

“Be that as it may. We’re not interested. Not homophobic, Taye, so no offense to you. You two ladies, stop going there. This is the last time I’m going to ask. We’re friends. That’s all. Leave it alone.”

Diana clicked her tongue against her teeth. Eli didn’t like the look on her face. Too suspicious by half. “Let me ask you this. How do you know there’s nothing more to it? Have you ever tried?”

Even Holly tried to shush her at that, but the damage was done. “I think we’re done here.” Eli dropped his napkin on the table and stood. “My private life is just that: private. I’ve had about enough of defending myself.”

“Like I said. Protesting too much,” Diana said. She wasn’t one to back down. Normally Eli liked that about her. Normally. Not so much now. “Look it up.”

 

About the Author

Willa Okati (AKA Will) is made of many things: imagination, coffee, stray cat hairs, daydreams, more coffee, kitchen experimentation, a passion for winter weather, a little more coffee, a whole lot of flowering plants and a lifelong love of storytelling. Will's definitely one of the quiet ones you have to watch out for, though he -- not she anymore -- is a lot less quiet these days.

 

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