
Frances Fox is sharing a little about Reluctant Rockstar which is out today! đ„ł It’s the first in a new contemporary M/M romance series about rockstars – in case you missed the rockstar part đ If you grab it today, you’ll get it for $0.99, but tomorrow the price will increase.
RELUCTANT ROCKSTAR
Book #1 of a new series
Author: Frances Fox
Editor: Lourenza Adlem
Release: 1st August 2023
Price: $2.99
ISBN: 9798223337904
ASIN: B0C4R8Y6ND
KU: No
Wide: Yes
Series: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C4Q8WZYZ
Amazon: https://a.co/d/dh2pc3b
UBL: https://books2read.com/ReluctantRockstar
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/152004756-reluctant-rockstar
KEYWORDS
MM, Rockstar, Contemporary, British, Hurt-Comfort, Opposites Attract, Spicy.
TAG LINE
The first book in an exciting new contemporary MM series! A tired rock star and a judgemental gardenerâŠwhat could possibly go wrong?
BLURB
The Purple Lizards are a rock world phenomenon, but lead singer Martinâs tired of his rock-and-roll persona. Heâd rather be at home with his garden. When he gets home from tour he finds his gardener has had a heart attack and Simon, his grandson, is helping him out. Simonâs different to Fred. He talks, for a start. Martin and Fred have a perfectly functional friendship based on long silences and discussions about heritage vegetables. Simon talks about personal things as well. It makes Martin prickly.
Simonâs at a bit of a loss. He stepped up to help his grandfather whilst he was in hospital despite his misgivings about the absent Martin. But Fred clearly likes him, which is unusual for a start. Fred prefers plants to people. That he actively likes a rock star who used to smash up hotel rooms is really strange. Simonâs reserving judgement. Apparently the band have a break in their tour coming up. Heâll see whether he can work for the man once heâs spent some time with him.
A tired rock star and a judgemental gardenerâŠwhat could possibly go wrong?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Frances Fox writes contemporary MM romance. The Rockstar series is a new eight-book series of novellas following the musicians, stage-crew and friends of Heggartyâs Bow. If you like to read spicy MM stories about vulnerable guys looking for love, sheâll have you covered.
Website: https://francesfoxbooks.co.uk
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/francesfoxbooks
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/frances-fox-e6fb0220-5282-4101-8467-cb11684c9176
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0C4SY2W4S
Newsletter: https://subscribepage.io/He2jKq
EXCERPT
Chapter 1: Martin
Martin was exhausted. Heâd been hoping the Green Room was empty so he could sit in the quiet for a while and not have to think or engage with anyone. He really wasnât up for any sort of argument.
However. The sound of a raised voice that penetrated into the corridor through the not-quite-shut door gave him the heads up that his solitary break wouldnât be happening. He stood with his hand on the door handle, listening. It was Ken, he thought. He couldnât make out the other voice.
He switched on his phoneâs record function and held it to the crack in the door.
âIâll go to the papers,â Ken was saying. âTheyâll be interested to know the great Pete Heggarty is fucking a bloke!â He was slurring a bit. He did that a lot these days.
HeggartyâŠMartin presumed it was HeggartyâŠsaid something too quiet to hear. Kenâs voice got even louder. âYouâll sign up if you know whatâs good for you. Iâve given you enough time to bring those dip-shit band members of yours round. Else everyone will know.â
Martin sighed and pushed open the door. âThatâs enough,â he said quietly, with as much authority as he could summon. He stepped into the small room. âKen. Youâre fired. Get your things and leave. Iâm emailing the agency now saying youâre no longer our manager. Iâm citing bullying and intimidation.â
Ken opened his mouth to reply, but Martin held up his phone. âI recorded you. Out.â He jabbed at the open door into the corridor behind him with a vicious thumb.
Ken opened his mouth to reply, took another look at Martinâs expression, and shot out the door, muttering under his breath.
Martin looked at Pete Heggarty, sat in one of the saggy armchairs of the Green Room. He looked irritated, but not distressed. âHow longâs that been going on?â he asked him, closing the door behind him and then flopping loose-limbed and tired into the neighboring armchair. He rested his head back against the chair cushions. God, that was good.
Heggarty sighed, brushing his hair out of his eyes. âA couple of months,â he said. âSince we started the tour, more or less.â He paused and then added, âThanks. I was getting to the stage where thumping him was beginning to look like the only way to shut him up. He wouldnât leave it.â
âMy pleasure,â Martin said, trying to cover up his exhaustion with the whole situation. Not just todayâŠbut the whole tour. His whole professional life. âArsehole. Iâve not been happy with him for monthsâŠheâs got a coke habit that would put a member of parliament to shame and I think heâs started gambling. I stopped trusting him when someone came round last year debt collecting for some online casino. No loss. Although now I need to find us a new manager. Iâve been putting it off, thatâs all.â
âHe wanted me to sign us up with them on a ridiculously prescriptive contract,â Heggarty said, coming alive a bit and sitting forward in the chair to put his elbows on his knees. âItâs not just me that makes choices for Heggartyâs Bow thoughâeven if I cared that heâd out me to the press as bi. Try that blackmail shit with Lindy and heâd end up with a broken nose.â
Martin stifled a snort. âI didnât think you were exactly closeted anyway,â he said.
âWell no. I just do my thing,â Heggarty said. âYouâre rightâŠhe must have been permanently high as a kite not to notice it wasnât the lever he thought it was.â
He paused.
âI havenât had the chance to thank you for picking us up as your support on this tour,â he finally went on slightly more awkwardly, rubbing his hands on his jeans-clad knees. âEr. IâŠweâŠwe really appreciate it. Itâs our big break.â
Martin shook his head, uncomfortable with the thanks. âNo,â he said, âthatâs all right. Donât thank me. Itâs mutually beneficial, after all. Lots of fans are buying tickets to see you, rather than us. Another couple of years and youâll be headlining and weâll be supporting you.â He grinned at Heggarty reassuringly. âThatâs the way these things go.â
Heggarty nodded, accepting the brush-off gracefully. âYouâre right,â he said. âBut still. Weâre having a great time. Itâs a whole new world for us; weâve not worked with anyone as big as the Lizards before. Quite the eye-opener.â He grinned at Martin. âEven if the wild-boys reputation doesnât seem to be all itâs cracked up to be.â
Martin laughed. âMaybe when we were younger,â he said. âBut these daysâŠafter we lost DaveâŠthe rest of us decided to rein things in a bit.â
Heggarty nodded. âI can see that,â he said.
Martin shivered, remembering. Dave had like to party. Drowning in a swimming pool whilst high had made him a footnote in the annals of rock history and landed the Purple Lizards with a reputation for wild behaviour that still followed them fifteen years later.
âThese daysâŠâ Martin said. âThese days itâs a job more than anything. Weâre all about the music. And in between, I like to go home and look after my garden.â He shot Heggarty a tired sideways grin. âDonât tell the press, though,â he said.
Heggarty laughed. âYour secretâs safe with me,â he said. He looked at his watch. âI need to go and find the others,â he said. âI suppose we should actually talk about getting a manager at this point, rather than sorting things out ourselves.â
Martin sighed. âYeah,â he said. âI did find it freed up quite a bit of space in my head when we handed the booking and admin over to someone else. Thatâs a conversation I need to have with Ginny and Pin and Crow as well now.â He pulled a face. âWe were already kicking a change around⊠I was going to get Steve Petrie over for a chat at some point. No time like the present. Do you want a chat with him too?â
âSteve Petrie? Heâs a bit high-powered for us I should think.â
Martin shook his head. âNah, mate. Donât sell yourself short. No harm meeting him and sizing him up. Heâs a nice guyâheâll tell you straight whether he thinks youâre a good fit.â
Heggarty nodded. âIf you donât mind, then yes please,â he said. âIâll go and tell the others. Hopefully Ken will have got enough of a head start that Lindy wonât be up on charges for assault.â
Martin chuckled quietly as the other man left the room. He hadnât spent much time with the members of Heggartyâs Bow, but they seemed like nice kids. They did appear very much like kids to him thoughâŠa good fifteen years younger than Martinâs colleagues, mid-twenties at the most. Not the crazy rock-and-roll stereotypes the Purple Lizards had been at that age. He shuddered. He didnât ever want to go back to that. It hadnât been a good time.
He was looking forward to this break in the tour before they did the Japanese leg. Three weeks home with his garden and the soothing company of Fred his elderly gardener was just what the doctor ordered to get over his irritation with Ken and the impending exhaustion that inevitably came with a long tour. And this was a big one. It was true what heâd told Pete HeggartyâŠHeggartyâs Bow were crowd-pullers, with a large and growing fan base. The Lizards had been lucky to get them as a support band. In another couple of years theyâd be headlining this sort of tour.
Martin wished he wasnât so permanently fed up with it all. All the time he was on tour he craved the peace and quiet of his home; and when he was at home he dreaded going out on tour again. Anyway. It was what it was. He just needed to put one foot in front of the other. He got out his phone and messaged his fellow band members concisely. Just found Ken blackmailing Pete Heggarty. Sacked him. Shall I ring Steve Petrie? Iâm in the Green Room. Want to go for a coffee somewhere and discuss?
There, that should put the cat among the pigeons. He stood by for the first irate text, but Pin beat Ginny to it and rang him. He grinned as he picked up the call. âCoffee?â he said.
âYeah, you bet,â Pin said. âThat man was always an arsehole and heâs only got worse over the last couple of years. Crow and I are in the coffee shop over the road from the venue. Want to meet us there? Iâll message Ginny.â
âSure,â Martin said. âIâm on my way.â
No solitary time for him today.
Thanks so much, Ofelia!
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