After I wrote Love Means… No Fear, I really thought that was the end of
the series. I wasn’t coming up with any
more story lines and I didn’t want the series to become stale or for me to
write a story just to write a story.
However my readers had other ideas.
I’d been getting emails from readers asking for Len and Chris’s story
and I decided that it was time for me to write it. There wasn’t enough for a full novel, so I
decided on a novella. I already had my
characters and the setting, so all I needed was the situation that would bring
them together and it turned out that Chris was healing just as much as Len, but
for a very different reason. Chris has
just gotten out of the Marines after thirty years and he desperately wants some
peace and time to be himself.
I didn’t want this story to be just about how Len moved on from Cliff’s
death, but also about how he and Chris would find they had more in common than
they thought and how they could help each other heal.
Love Means...Healing by Andrew Grey
Available November 21st, 2011
Blurb
Seven months ago, Len Parker lost his partner of more than
twenty years, and he isn’t sure how to feel about his blossoming attraction to
Chris, one of his farmhands. Hesitant and still hurt, Len remains aloof and
distant until he’s goaded into teaching Chris to ride.
Fresh out of a thirty-year career with the Marines, Chris
can explore his sexuality openly for the first time in his life, but what he
needs more than anything is peace. He’s convinced Len doesn’t like him until he
digs a little deeper, and then, armed with hope, Chris sets out to prove that
love can provide the healing he and Len so desperately need.
Excerpt
“Couldn’t sleep, so I got up and went for a ride,” Len
answered and went right back to work. He really didn’t want to talk about it,
and Len knew Geoff would understand. The clomping of horse’s hooves on the
concrete told him Geoff had moved on, and Len continued filling the wheelbarrow
before wheeling the mess to the mulch pile. On his way back, he passed Eli
walking his horse out into the yard.
“Morning, Len,” Geoff’s partner of six months called
with a bright smile on his face.
“Morning, Eli,” Len answered with more energy than he
felt. “Do you have a class this morning?”
“At ten. I have most everything ready,” Eli answered
before mounting. Len pulled off his cap and waved it at the two of them as they
started their ride. He saw them both wave back and heard the conversation and
laughter fade as they got farther away. Placing his hat back on his head, he
went back to work. As he finished the stall, Len heard tires crunch on the
gravel drive outside, followed by the sound of truck doors closing and then
footsteps on the gravel and into the barn. The tractor started with a deep
rumble in the equipment shed.
“Morning, Len,” Lumpy called from the doorway of the
tack room, the list of tasks in his hand. “Pete’s gonna get those last
hayfields roll-baled before it rains. Where do you want us to put them when
we’re done? You said yesterday that we didn’t need it.”
“You can leave it in the fields. The Hansens are going
to take it all. They enlarged their dairy herd, and he said he’d be happy to
take whatever we have. I’ll call and tell him he can start picking up the bales
in a few hours,” Len said, and he saw a curious look on Lumpy’s face, like he
wanted to ask something, but wasn’t sure if he should.
“I’ll tell Pete and then get on the list.” Lumpy
looked the sheet over. “I’m gonna start with those fences, and I’ll let you
know if I find anything that needs fixing. See you this afternoon,” Lumpy added
before walking out of the barn and getting to work. Len climbed the stairs to
the full hayloft and opened the only trap door that wasn’t covered by hay. Lifting
a bale, he dropped it through the door to the barn floor below.
“Len, I can get that for you,” a voice behind him said,
making him jump. Len landed near the edge of the door and nearly lost his
balance. Big hands caught his arm, pulling him back from the brink and against
a hard, firm body before both of them fell against the stacked bales of hay,
with Len caught between the hay and Chris, the hand Geoff had hired a few weeks
earlier. The scent of fresh hay mixed with the smell of soap and man, and for a
second Len remembered what it felt like to be held and went with it until his
thoughts cleared.
“You scared the shit out of me,” Len said, pulling
away before storming toward the stairs.
“It was an accident. Christ, I only came up to help. There’s
no need to take my head off!” Chris retorted louder than was needed, and Len
heard the whap and thump as a bale was flung to the floor below. Len descended
the stairs in a huff. He wasn’t angry with Chris, not really. It was his
reaction whenever he got close to the man that kept throwing him.
At the bottom of the stairs, Len stopped. He could
hear Chris moving around, heavy footsteps stomping on the loft floor, the thump
of the bales as they fell with more force than necessary, but more than
anything he could see the man’s chiseled face and bright, intelligent eyes, which
looked as though they’d seen things Len could never understand. Chris also had
a body that had seen hard physical work for years. Chris appeared to be nearing
fifty, the way Len was, but Chris didn’t look like any other fifty-year-old Len
had ever seen. Not that it mattered. Len was not going to find out if the
muscles beneath Chris’s flannel shirt were as large as they looked, or if that
glimpse of dark hair that sometimes peeked over the top of his shirt extended
further. That was not going to happen. Len pushed the images out of his mind as
he stomped out of the barn toward the house, figuring he might as well make
breakfast. It would give him something to do, and everyone would be hungry in
an hour or so.
2 comments:
Very nice! Another one of Andrew's I have to buy - love stories about older men. Cheers, JP
Can't wait for this one Andrew. :)
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