Today we’re so pleased to welcome the writing team of Joseph Lance Tonlet and Louis Stevens. Enjoy their guest post, and then check out the Rafflecopter giveaway for the chance to win a whole slew of great prizes.
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My dad used to stutter. I don’t remember him ever stuttering as he outgrew it in his mid-twenties, but the psychological scars of it remained with him, as it tends to do. Looking back, I suppose that is why he was so adamant to squash the stutter in me and my brothers and sister from a young age. I remember driving in the car with him alone, me seated in the back with my seatbelt tight and secure, and waving my hands in dramatic fashion as I regaled him with some awesome tale of something amazing.
I was getting into the story and became really animated, gesturing wildly and enjoying having my dad’s raptured attention. Boy, how I lived for those stolen glances in the rearview mirror and the smiles he’d give when I cracked him up. But then I stuttered. It was on a simple word, I am sure, but I repeated the consonant a few times. It might’ve been an S, now that I think of it. That rotten S always tried to trip me up growing up.
My dad’s expression changed instantly. No longer was he interested in my grand tale of fantastic exaggeration. He didn’t care what happened at the end of the story. His eyes grew bigger and he spoke in his deep chest voice and told me to cut it out. I rarely got the chest voice, so the few times it happened, I took notice.
From that day on I made a point of it to think of what I wanted to say before I started speaking. Like imagining what I needed to say and form the words in my mind. I still struggled some, growing up. But not nearly to the degree my dad had, or suffered the ridicule he had because of his stutter.
Maybe this is why I love this moment between Martin and Marty in Quillon’s Covert so much. It might be the way I would’ve liked my dad to help me deal with my squashed stutter. Or it’s just the intense intimacy of the scene. Either way, I hope you enjoy the excerpt, and get to enjoy the unconventional romance that the insanely talented Joseph Lance Tonlet and I came up with.
Excerpt: The irritation in his son’s demeanor quickly faded. And when his eyes met Martin’s, he could already see the apology in them.
“Duh-duh-dad, I duh-duh-didn’t mean…”
Normally there wouldn’t have been anything that would have kept Martin’s calming finger from his son’s stuttering lips. Today he stood firm as Marty broke off, trying to stifle the stammer on his own. Marty took a few steps, closing the distance between them, and hooked Martin’s hand into his. Before he understood what was happening, Marty brought Martin’s calloused index finger up to his own lips. Holding it there, he closed his eyes and stilled himself. When he opened them again, he stood close enough that Martin could see the gray flecks that gave his son’s eyes their extraordinary color.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean it like that. I never meant to be disrespectful,” he said quietly against Martin’s finger.
There wasn’t a single question in Martin’s mind about his son’s sincerity. That, combined with what Marty had done with his finger, left Martin’s throat tight and his eyes tingling with emotion.
Marty released Martin’s hand, stepped around him, and, with some effort, managed to unhook the paddle from the wall.
Handing it to his dad, he said firmly, “Seventeen. If it’s okay with you, I’d like to get this over with, unless making me wait is part of the punishment. And, if it is, I accept that too.”
Martin never looked forward to delivering punishment. But what had just passed between them made this time even worse. No, he had no desire to prolong this. It was best to get it over with and enjoy the rest of their time together.
He nodded briefly. “Now is fine.”
Considering his son’s condition, his casts, he doubted Marty would be able to brace himself against the counter.
With a tilt of his head toward Marty’s arms, he asked, “Over my knee, or can you support yourself standing?”
Marty scrunched his eyebrows in thought. “Knee.”
Blurb: Martin is a guy’s guy, one who enjoys the simple things in life: baseball games with his son, family days, barbecues, and date nights with his lovely wife.
Once a year for two weeks, Martin takes his son, Marty, to Quillon’s Covert, a rustic family cabin secluded in the beautiful California mountains. Since before those long days of learning to play ball, Marty has loved his dad, but as Marty matures, Martin starts to see something else settle in his son’s uncertain gaze. What’s there lingers a little more than it should, and it seems far more appraising than it once was.
As Marty shows every sign of taking the lead, Martin is faced with the tough choices most parents never see: lose his son by being a father, or try to balance what’s best for their relationship by being something… more.
But with another trip to Quillon’s Covert on the horizon, has the point of no return already begun?
Note: This book contains incest.
Tags: GAY, EROTICA, ROMANCE, TABOO, INCEST
Buy Links: Payhip (Preferred) || ARe || Smashwords || Paperback
ABOUT THE AUTHORS: JOSEPH is a born and raised Southern Californian—with a twenty-year stint of living in the Midwest. He loves the laid-back lifestyle of San Diego and considers himself lucky to live where people dream of vacationing.
A lifelong reader of m/m fiction, he began his writing career one night sitting at his MacBook and has never looked back. He writes to bring the characters he dreams about to life.
LOUIS is a gay romance author born and raised in South Africa. He was a shy outcast who had few friends in school; generally feeling excluded and on the fringe of society. However, when he discovered gay romance and erotica in 2007, at the age of seventeen, his mind and world opened up.
He wrote his first story, A Better Life, longhand in a 197 page spiral notebook, on his bed every night with a pillow curled under his chin. Although the book wouldn’t be published until 2011, with the now defunct Silver Publishing, he found the experience entirely liberating. He’s considered himself a writer ever since.
JOSEPH’S SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS: JosephLanceTonlet.com –Facebook –Twitter (18+) –Ello – Google+ –tsū –Pinterest –Tumblr (18+) –Goodreads –YouTube
LOUIS’ SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS: Amazon – Goodreads – Facebook – Website – Blog – Youtube
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Thanks so much for hosting us, Lisa!
JLT =)
It’s my pleasure, Joseph! :)
How I adored this book <3
I do stutter sometimes. Not very often, actually very rarely but when I do, I noticed, I usually am excited about something or very agitated. I feel like my brain does 1000 rpm/h and I want to say so much in such a short time that my mouth just can’t keep up with the thoughts. Now that I live in a foreign country with two languages under my belt, it is even harder, as I do translations in my head. I also have to admit that after an article I read about stuttering I try to avoid finishing the sentences for other people. I know it can be sometimes frustrating to get things out but I am glad that I stopped a bad habit.
As for the book I am looking forward to read it. It is definitively on my TBR pile. I also might have found my first real taboo book. (How I hate that stepchildren relationships are called taboo, especially when they are not even blood related).