Title: Get Up
Author: Reece Pine
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: December 25, 2017
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 69500
Genre: Contemporary, LGBT, MM, contemporary, wilderness, child abuse, mental illness, PTSD
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Synopsis
Recently dumped (again) for being cold, Guy gladly accepts his publisher friend’s request to go to a remote hut in wintry Nunavut to find out whether aspiring novelist Cam Campbell is a plagiarist. By agreeing also to help the eccentric ecologist survey wildlife for a month, Guy buys time to assess Cam’s innocence and hear stories about Cam’s late father–Guy’s favorite fantasy writer and the man whose book Cam is accused of stealing.Guy’s investigation is soon biased by his attraction to Cam and the growing concern about Cam’s odd behavior. At times, Cam dissociates and is icier than Guy could ever be, yet he’s the only one who’s ever recognized, at a glance, the emotions burning beneath Guy’s surface. Guy knows he’s the best person to help Cam abandon the dangerous wilds outside and address those in Cam’s head, but he also knows that he’ll lose the chance if he comes clean about his ulterior motives for getting close to Cam. How can he convince Cam to come in from the cold… and why are they both really out there anyway?
Excerpt
Get Up
Reece Pine © 2017
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
At least he wasn’t nervous about meeting
the kid anymore. He’d stopped feeling anything at all besides dread and the
wheels of the suitcase he’d slung over his shoulder bruising his numb ass with
every stumble. Finally, Guy glimpsed smoke wisping from a rustic pipe chimney a
hundred yards farther than the thousand miles he’d already come. His brogues,
so iced over they looked like glass slippers, skidded on the porch’s wooden
boards. The leather-gloved hand he threw forward to balance himself rattled the
doorframe with a thudding knock, sending ice shards showering behind him from
the rafters overhead.
“Hell-lo?” he croaked. “Cam-meron C—”
The alluring burst of firelight that
greeted him as the door opened was immediately extinguished by someone
squeezing the swollen wood shut behind themselves as they stepped forth. Guy
was suddenly too surprised to be awestruck over meeting Alessandro De Carli’s
son at last. He was glad his frozen eyelids couldn’t blink, because the guy—the
specter, presumably Cameron Campbell—might disappear if he did. For a second,
he wondered if he’d knocked on the wrong gingerbread house door, only there was
no other shelter for fifty miles.
Cameron Campbell was known to be even
more reclusive than his late father, but he wasn’t actually supposed to be
mythic. The tiny guy blocking the door with sturdy, unlaced boots looked like a
wood nymph. Eyes as blue as distant stars stared at him unabashedly. Maybe the
reason no journalists had ever snapped pictures of the kid, and why he had no
online presence, was because he couldn’t be caught on film.
“Incredible.” Cameron must have read
Guy’s mind, and he pressed rosebud lips together in exasperation. “Are you
alone? Did you hitch here? There’s no corpse in a cab parked on the highway I
need to go rescue? Insane.”
Guy respectively nodded and shook his
head, hoping the well-earned insult was aimed at the driver on his way west
who’d dropped him at the side of a barely used road, far from the highway. Guy
had considered himself lucky to thumb a ride at all out of the tiny settlement
of Ipasila, built around a gas station, which was the closest town to Campbell
and two hours’ drive from the Hudson Bay hamlet of Arviat in southern Nunavut.
In hindsight, the man had been almost as reckless as Guy himself had been for
not driving him straight to the police. Instead, Guy had been let out of the
relative safety of a truck armed with nothing more than the GPS tracker Guy had
brought with him and prayed was accurate.
“C-Cameron…” Not Cameron, Guy revised. A
Cameron was a strapping guy—like a Brad or a David—or a blonde woman. This
pixie prince was either a Cam or a question mark. His eyes looked magnified
behind the lenses of large glasses, the arms of which must have burned cold
against his temples because Cam removed them—only for his naked eyes to be
comically large. It was still possible he wasn’t even De Carli’s son, since he
looked nothing like him. Wrote nothing like him either, which was why Guy was
here. “You’re C-Campbell, right? De Carli’s s-son?”
It was Campbell’s turn to draw back in
surprise. “Are you from a newspaper?”
“Am I s-selling subscriptions?”
Traipsing from cabin to cabin after dark? “D-does it matter? Let me in.” Heat
from indoors infused the porch floorboards and bled into Guy’s damp soles,
announcing itself as pain in his brittle toes.
“I don’t do interviews about my father.”
Cam reached inside the hood of his puffy coat, just a shade lighter than his
luminous, creamy skin, to pull a long coil of black hair forward. It hung like
gossamer over the gray scarf around his shoulders.
He’d let down his hair, so now Guy could
enter, right? “Do I l-look like a journalist?”
“Nah, you look too honest.”
Guy’s brows were too frozen to frown at
the sarcasm. He knew damn well he had a poker face. That was the problem; now
that he was literally incapable of moving his face he probably looked normal,
not dangerously hypothermic.
“I’m with your p-publisher.”
“You’re from Ames? In that case, first,
tell Claire she should be fired and charged with attempted murder for sending
you. Secondly, and for the hundredth time, I canceled the submission for Close
to Home. I didn’t mean to send it to you guys in the first place. Third, stop
hounding me about it.”
“Fourth, f-fuck off,” Guy anticipated
his next order. “I c-can’t. And I’m from F-Fairbanks Press.”
“Ha! Are you guys even still publishing
me?” Cam swept his bangs behind an ear, which was slightly pointed at its tip.
Of course, it is. “You’re the one who
n-never answers emails.”
“Internet’s intermittent out here. And
there’s nothing wrong with that manuscript that isn’t Fairbanks’ fault.” Cam
pursed his lips, which were tinging blue before Guy’s eyes, and nuzzled his
chin into his scarf. Guy was torn between thinking it served him right to be
cold and wanting to offer his firstborn as passage to the gatekeeper who halted
Guy’s shuffle forward by holding up a gloved palm. “Uh-uh, no way. You ought to
know the drill, New Yorker. You are, aren’t you?”
Guy was as native a New Yorker as anyone
who’d moved there in adulthood and would never live elsewhere. A load of the
population was in the same burned boat as him, so yes, he could claim to be
from New York, but that was irrelevant while the heat fleeing his eyes stung.
“S-so?”
“So the same rules apply here as there,”
Cam continued, as though this were a holiday home in Connecticut. “You know, I
met a hiker from Texas here who’d never even seen snow before, but he knew
enough about it to come in September, not March. Why do you think I can’t get
any volunteers to assist me at the moment?”
Because not only did this waif conduct
questionable wildlife research in the middle of nowhere while purportedly
editing a novel, but he also lived at the end of a spur trail a mile west of an
icy road to nowhere.
Cam stamped his feet, blowing into hands
he cupped over his mouth. “Come on.”
What did the little sylph want? For Guy
to roll a seven? Produce a magic key?
“For God’s sake, guy, you need to
strip!” Cam finally twisted the door handle behind him, spilling back into an
amber glow. Guy tumbled in after, out of the deadly night air.
Instantly, his coat became the warmest
bath Guy had ever had the pleasure of sinking into. Flames in the hearth curled
into come-hither licks Guy’s jellied legs couldn’t obey. There was enough
ecstasy to be had where he wilted against the closed door. The sensation
wrenched him from numb to overwhelmed in a blink, and thrust him the closest to
an imminent powerful orgasm he’d been since…he didn’t want to know.
Cam busied himself over at a kitchen
counter, ignoring Guy, who stood, shaking in the doorway, suddenly struggling
with a boner that had sprung from pure physical shock, surprising and
mortifying him. He had to admit he could see how post-hypothermia blood rushing
around could cause such a phenomenon, but man, did it have to? Thankfully,
melting into a hunch helped hide it when Cam reappeared in front of him wearing
only a few layers of sweaters and brandishing two steaming mugs of coffee.
Its intoxicating aroma further confused
his senses by going straight to Guy’s cock. Now, there’s a new kink. He failed
to convince himself his hand quivering was an aftereffect of the cold, not the
sight of the now gloveless, pale hand offering a chipped mug with the handle
out for Guy to grab. Cam raised an eyebrow at Guy’s taking it with his left
hand.
“Oh, you’re a lefty?”
“I guess,” Guy said, distracted by just
how fine Cam’s fingers were…and how Cam’s palm was apparently immune to the hot
ceramic he held courtesy of calluses, frostbite, or immortality. “Looks nice….”
“Not too strong?” Cam asked, a smile
curling the corners of his mouth.
“N-no such thing.” Guy slurped half the
treacly concoction before gasping, “Thanks.”
“Sit.” Cam nodded to a couch piled high
with blankets resembling a laundry pile. There was nowhere to sit except on top
of them. “And I wasn’t kidding before. You need to strip, like, five minutes
ago. Show me some skin.”
“What?” Skin?
“And a business card.”
Shit. Guy had no such thing—he should
have made Huw make him a mock-up one before coming. If Cam was astute enough to
ask questions like that, it might be hard to deceive him as planned. Plausible
excuses whirled in his mind, but were as hard to grasp as the snowflakes he
ruffled loose from his hair, stalling for time. He was surprised they hadn’t
melted, since his scalp was beginning to burn….
“Of course, I’d prefer skin first. And
so would you,” Cam said.
“I’m here to work,” Guy retorted,
reinforcing the lie to himself.
“How do you know De Carli was my
father?”
Guy blinked. “Isn’t he?”
“My pen name’s Cameron Stewart. I know
my real name’s on the contract I signed with you guys, but that’s Cameron
Campbell.”
“That’s De Carli’s son’s name.”
“It’s also as common as mud. How do you
know I’m him?”
“Because…” Heat surged through Guy’s
veins, and flashes from the fireplace in his periphery blinded him. Flames shot
up his spine, turning his thoughts to smoke. His erection stirred as he willed
it to subside. Instead, his heartbeat faded, which was a lot more alarming.
“Because…”
Struggling to balance his tilting mug on
the surging, damp footwell he slumped down upon, Guy bit at his glove to peel
it from his roasting hand. It dangled from his lip, and he batted it away to
better claw at his collar, trying to escape its stranglehold. Sweat made it
slippery in his shaking hands, and he panted more feverishly than he had while
staggering outside, where everything was white—as white as everything was
turning now.
“Hey, stay with me, guy.” Cam rose from
his slouch against the back of the sofa, surrounded by a blizzard of stars that
swarmed Guy’s vision. He was warmth personified, the most enchanting thing in
the dreamscape Guy had navigated to get here, and he was still miraculous, even
now that everything had become a nightmare. His own sharp intake of breath
echoed from afar as Cam lunged toward him through the static.
“I hoped you were him,” spilled in a
murmur from Guy without his control. Strangely, Cam seemed to slip farther away
the closer he got, as Guy sensed himself falling. It looked like he wouldn’t
manage to save De Carli’s son after all. Well, he thought as all light
vanished, at least he’d managed to meet him. And he got to die in the arms of a
beyond-beautiful man.
No, forget that, his consciousness broke
through. De Carli’s son was stunning, strange, and fascinatingly all the way
out here. Never mind the fact Guy couldn’t write, he was going to live and find
out what made Cam tick if it was the last thing he did.
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