Guest Post | Twelve Letters by Ellie Thomas

As always, it’s a pleasure to announce that we have Ellie Thomas on a visit today. Welcome, Ellie!

Twelve Letters Promo 2

Thank you so much, lovely Ofelia, for having me as your guest again today! I’m Ellie Thomas, I write Gay Historical Romance, and I’m here to chat about my new release, Twelve Letters, written for JMS Books.

When a submission call was announced to celebrate the Twelfth Anniversary of JMS Books, I was intrigued by the suggested concept. Given the celebration, participating authors were requested to write their stories to include the number 12 as an essential part of the plot – naturally enough! It’s always exciting to discover how inventive authors can be with such a prompt. I’m looking forward to reading a wide variety of stories, including Ofelia’s Keep It Down, featuring twelve post-it notes, which looks terrific!

However, although I was interested, my first reaction to this submission call was to hesitate. As I was in the middle of planning a few other stories with deadlines looming, I checked my schedule and thought I might be pushed for time to fit another new story. So although I was tempted, I sensibly decided to draw back from this opportunity.

Inevitably, I woke up the next morning with a fully-fledged story in my head, to the point where I could picture my main character Jo Everett, dashing down the steps of his London lodgings, brow furrowed, determined to stop his best friend Ben from fighting a duel. Muses can be so fickle!

I imagined this story to be set in the rarified West End of Regency London, as most, if not all my ensemble of characters, are gentlemen rather than ordinary working people. I found a fabulous online map of London from 1806 (since my story is set in 1814, that was remarkably close), and I spent far too long poring over it, working out where each of my characters lived, depending on their status and income. And crucially, how all those various twelve letters wended their way across town to intended and accidental recipients.

This is the world of gentlemen’s clubs, coffee houses, taverns and exclusive Bond Street shops that I first read about in Georgette Heyer’s books as a teenager. It was such fun to place my fictional characters in real historical locations, some of which, like the Golden Lion pub in St. James’, are still open for business!

The story might contain a comedy of errors but Twelve Letters is essentially a romance, so I relished pulling all the strands of miscommunication together for a romantic happy ever after, aptly finishing the story with the twelfth and final letter.

Blurb:

twelvelettersIn Regency London, Jolyon Everett is determined to dissuade his irascible friend, Captain Ben Harding, from fighting a duel. However, before commencing on the pressing business of defusing Ben’s misplaced anger, Jo writes two letters, one to Percy Havilland, his very demanding paramour and the other to his tailor, Daniel Walters. With those trifles out of the way, he can concentrate on persuading Ben to reprieve young Edward Stephens, a newly qualified doctor, who Jo suspects has a serious crush on Ben.

But the best-laid plans can go awry, as do the letters and, as well as a furious Ben, Jo finds himself at the mercy of an outraged Percy and an amorous tailor. Can he convince Ben not to shoot Edward after all? Will he soothe Percy’s ruffled feathers? And might Jo realise that true love can be found under the most unexpected conditions?

Extract:

Jolyon arrived at the Piccadilly quarters of one of his closest friends, Captain Ben Harding. Despite the early hour, he was unsurprised to see that gentleman ready for the day, his long trousers and gleaming Hessians hiding his missing foot, the result of an injury at Badajoz, and wearing a ferocious expression. With his smouldering dark eyes and wayward curls, he could be compared to the notorious poet, Lord Byron, but Jolyon knew better than to voice that opinion to avoid being skewered by the poker within reach on the hearth.
“I know why you’re here, Jo,” Ben said to him, waving him into the other armchair at the side of the fireplace while he poured coffee for them both, “and you won’t coax me to soften my resolve.”
“I think this has all been a misunderstanding,” Jo replied patiently, as though he hadn’t spent hours of the previous evening, or rather early morning, trying to persuade an irascible Ben to pardon the unfortunate young man who had caused him such dire offence.
“That damned stripling belittled me,” Ben said, with a glare as hot and black as the scalding coffee.
“On the contrary, I don’t think that was his intention,” Jo corrected him gently. “The lad is quite new to town ways and was deeply in his cups. We’ve all been there,” he shrugged forgivingly.
Ben merely snorted his disagreement, and Jo wouldn’t have been surprised to see steam emanating from his nose. He had the mental image of Ben as a bull, a ring through his nose, pawing the ground in rage, raising a cloud of dust. He quickly stifled a smile.
“And anyway,” he continued stoically, “as you have appointed me as your second, I don’t need to point out how serious the consequences could be. Frankly, for a man of your military experience, this is no less than a deliberate execution.”
At that, Ben harrumphed but did not yell at him, which Jo felt was progress. Even hampered by his artificial foot, Ben was a dead shot and could still competently hold a sword. The poor young doctor was no match for him. The problem is, thought Jolyon, Ben’s spoiling for a fight, and this feckless young fellow simply blundered into his sights.
Since the siege at Badajoz, Ben’s attitude had become increasingly sour. Jo couldn’t be more sympathetic at his friend’s long months of recuperation, slowly learning to walk again, coming to terms with the fact he was no longer physically whole. Ben was fiercely proud, and only a few of his intimates knew what a harsh struggle this had been.
The other loss, that of his Lieutenant, his love, his faithful companion who had perished during the siege, was even more unbearable. After two years of grieving, rather than coming to terms with his bereavement, Ben seemed increasingly embittered and permanently angry. As he sipped his coffee, Jo reflected that although he loved Ben like a brother, even the most commonplace remark could set him off in a rage these days.
“It will take more than your blandishments to change my mind,” Ben said. Jo reckoned this was a retreat from thirsting for blood and spitting fire. He prepared to press his advantage when they were interrupted by Ben’s serving-man, Cribbins, another veteran of the Peninsula Wars.
“Excuse me, Captain. A letter has arrived for you by hand. I was told it was urgent,” he said, passing over the note to Ben before picking up the empty coffee pot.
As Cribbins left the room, Ben unfolded the letter, scanned it briefly then handed it over to Jo. “Is this your doing?” he asked suspiciously.
The note was written in crabbed handwriting eminently suitable for an aspiring doctor, but once deciphered, Jo saw with some relief that the meaning in the short paragraph was genuine enough.
If I have to face the consequences of my actions, I will do so as a gentleman, even if it causes my demise. I am writing not to abjure myself from bodily harm, but I bitterly regret offending someone who deserves only the greatest admiration and respect and so, whatever may happen, I apologise unreservedly.
“Nothing to do with me,” Jo said blandly as Ben stared into the fire, mulling over the letter, looking more than ever like a brooding Romantic poet. Jo observed Ben’s countenance with a glimmer of optimism. With those simple, heartfelt words, the lad had inadvertently appealed to Ben’s strong sense of fair play. Couldn’t have put it better myself, Jo thought with some satisfaction.

Book links: 

https://books2read.com/u/4AjyzA 

https://www.jms-books.com/ellie-thomas-c-224_420/twelve-letters-p-4391.html 

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0B5NYBM6Z/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i12 

Twelve Letters Promo 1

Bio: 

Ellie Thomas lives by the sea. She comes from a teaching background and goes for long seaside walks where she daydreams about history. She is a voracious reader especially about anything historical. She mainly writes historical gay romance.  

Ellie also writes historical erotic romance as L. E. Thomas. 

Website: https://elliethomasromance.wordpress.com/ 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elliethomasauthor/ 

Twitter: @e_thomas_author 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19835510.Ellie_Thomas 

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/ellie-thomas 

Release Day | Keep it Down!

It’s release day!!! Keep it Down! is out today. It’s a story about Post-its which should be enough for you to love it 😆 I have a thing for stationery, in case you didn’t know, and while Post-its aren’t what excites me the most (they’re not pretty enough) you can’t live life without Post-its.

Eason is a bit stuck-up, not annoyingly so, but he’s a little stiff. Nate, on the other hand, is a laid-back guy who rolls with the punches. They live next door to each other and… Well, Eason wants to strangle Nate or at least push him down the stairs.

One of the problems Eason has is that while he’s furious at Nate, Nate thinks they’re flirting, and it’s driving Eason crazy. It isn’t until he fractures his leg, that he allows Nate close and realises there is more to him than the constant parties he’s hosting in his apartment. 

In the last Read Around the Rainbow post, I shared a video from Falkenberg, where I grew up. If you hop to 2.29 in the video, you’ll see the Bathhouse Park, where Nate takes Eason on a date, though before they can get to that stage, they need to get through ten Post-its.

And this is Post-it number 4

It had been a long week, but luckily Eason only had one day left to work before it was weekend again. The July heat had the clothes sticking to his body most uncomfortably, and he couldn’t wait to get out of the suit.

As he walked up the last flight of stairs, a pink Post-it caught his eye. It was fastened to his door right above the keyhole.

Sighing, he grabbed it and read: Your cat is under my bed.

Eason’s heart banged hard. Loki. He rang Nate’s doorbell, and when the door opened, Eason pushed past Nate.

“Loki? Loki, come to Daddy.” He looked around. Nate’s apartment was neat and clean—not at all what he’d expected. He located the bedroom and dropped to his knees. As he looked in under the bed, he heard the rustle of clothes from behind him and looked back between his knees at Nate’s feet.

“You paint quite the picture, Eason. Mind if I take a photo?”

“Stop it! Where is he? Is he hurt?”

“Love your suit. I’ve always had a thing for flight attendants.”

Eason growled but spotted Loki’s greenish-yellow eyes in the dark in the corner. “I’m a ticket agent. I never board the planes.”

“Oh… Your ass still looks mighty fine in those pants.”

Eason shook his head. “Can’t you be serious for once?”

Nate’s voice dropped an octave or two. “Oh honey, if you had any idea how serious I am.”

The shiver was back. “Nate.” Eason put as much warning as he could into that one word.

“Fine, but I am serious. You’re hot, Eason.”

“Focus.” Eason crawled closer to Loki. “Why is he here?”

“I came home from work not too long ago, my shift ends early on Thursdays, and I went to open the balcony door. It was sunbathing on the chair cushion, but I think I spooked it—”

“Him. His name is Loki.”

“Right. Anyway, he ran past me, fast as lightning, so I searched for him, and he’s been cowering in there for the last forty minutes or so. Hisses as soon as I try to grab him.”

Eason hummed. Loki wasn’t normally a cat who hissed, but it was an unfamiliar apartment.

“Come on, baby.” Eason reached in under the bed, stretching his hand out to Loki. He didn’t want to pull him out, but he would if he had to.

“There was a hole in the net or not in the net, you had fastened it to the wall with some double-sided adhesive rubber strip or something, and it was torn.”

“It’s the kids you hang with. Someone tore it to be able to throw the beer bottle on my balcony.” Anger surged inside again. He hated the kids Nate hung out with.

Nate hummed. “Have you had him long, the cat, I mean?” Nate was still behind him, which made Eason aware of being on all fours with his ass up in the air. The shiver slithering through him had to be because of the temperature difference between the cool bedroom and the sweltering heat outdoors. Same with the flush climbing his cheeks, and the way heat was building in his groin. For fuck’s sake, he didn’t like Nate. He might be hot, but he wasn’t nice.

Loki bumped his nose against Eason’s knuckles which had him smiling. “There you go. Come on. You’re such a good boy. Come to Daddy.”

Nate groaned behind him, but Eason did his best to ignore him.

Loki crawled closer, and Eason got his hand around his bum and pushed him forward, backing away as he did. When Loki came out in the light of the room, Eason embraced him and nuzzled his neck, the black fur tickling his nose. “There you go.”

Nate cleared his throat. “Can I get you a beer?”

Eason scrunched his nose.

“Coke?”

He guessed accepting a drink was the polite thing to do. “Sure, thanks.”

The smile was nothing Eason had seen before, for lack of better word, he’d say it was genuine. It made him nervous, almost as nervous as the heat in Nate’s eyes did. Eason didn’t want to be attracted to Nate.

“Go sit on the balcony, and I’ll be right out.”

“I’ll go leave Loki in my apartment and change clothes.”

“No, leave them on.”

Eason stared at him. “Have you any idea how hot this suit is?”

Nate’s eyes gleamed. “I do.”

“I meant; I’m sweating.”

Chuckling, Nate shrugged. “Fine. You dressed in a suit, crawling around on all fours on my bedroom floor will forever be burnt into my memory.”

Eason rolled his eyes and headed for the door. Nate’s laugh followed him out.

 

keepitdown

One day, Eason Wickham will push his next-door neighbor down the stairs. Nate Allen might be hot, but he’s the most annoying person Eason has ever met. He has no respect for the people living in the building, and night after night, he has a party. Whenever Eason rings his doorbell and tells him to keep it down, he flirts and tries to get Eason to come inside. 

Calling the cops does not affect Nate’s behavior, and neither do Eason’s angry Post-It notes. But when Eason is hit by a car and fractures his leg, Nate sends his friends packing and makes sure Eason is okay. He cooks for him, shops for him, and does his laundry, but he’s still the most annoying person Eason has ever met. Right? 

The cute Post-Its Nate leaves for him to find doesn’t mean he’s a different person, and while Eason longs for when Nate gets off work every day, it doesn’t mean they should be more than friends. Does it? 

 Buy links 

Contemporary Gay Romance: 14,878 words 

JMS Books :: Amazon :: books2read.com/KeepItDown 

Guest Post | Devil Meets Necromancer by Alexa Piper

Alexa Piper is back! This time she’s gonna tell us a little about her Hellbound series. Welcome, Alexa!

Hellbound series

As romance writers, we are taught to give our readers a HEA, a happily ever after. What this means is, we bring our characters together, watch them fall in love, struggle a bit, but then, eventually, take a casual stroll into the sunset together.

As a reader, I never liked that. Sure, when you have two people you like, you want them to end up in awkward situations, bantering at each other, which is to say, in love. But I want more than that. I want to know what fun stuff they get up to when they have each other, which their preferred method of killing zombies is, and how they make their relationship continue to work. In my own books, I can have that.

For that reason, I am four books into a series that follows the same couple. It took one of them a while to get on board with the whole relationship thing, but the Devil and his necromancer are on the same page when book four, The Devil’s Wings, starts. Of course, relationships aren’t always that simple, not even in fiction, and with a necromancer in the story, you need to have corpses in among some relationship drama.

But you know how it goes: you find a handsome devil who will wrap you in his wings, you hold on to that immortal and tell him just how much you love his hair. And then you de-animate all the zombies together, like any couple would.
If you haven’t met either Lucifer or Lionel yet, please pick up The Devil’s Necromancer! You will get to spend a lot of time with those two while their tale continues on where fairy tales would stop.

Alex_Hellbound4_XXL

The Devil’s Wings (Hellbound 4) 

Just when loving the Devil started to look easy, Lionel will have to learn that true love never is. 

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B39MBLFS 

Universal book link: https://books2read.com/u/mKd2jZ 

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-devils-wings-alexa-piper/1141622956 

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-devil-s-wings 

Apple: https://books.apple.com/us/book/id6442949919 

Changeling Press: https://www.changelingpress.com/the-devil-s-wings-hellbound-4-b-3373 

The Hellbound Series: 

The Devil’s Necromancer: https://books2read.com/u/3y17Ep 

The Devil’s Boyfriend: https://books2read.com/u/mV8gB5 

The Devil’s Demigod: https://books2read.com/u/m0vwgP 

#paranormalromance #romancereaders #paranormalbook #devil #demonromance #bdsm #LGBTQromance #urbanfantasy #mmromance #gayromance #demonromance #necromancerromance

 

About Alexa Piper:

Alexa Piper writes steamy romance that ranges from light to dark, from straight to queer. She’s also a coffee addict. Alexa loves writing stories that make her readers laugh and fall in love with the characters in them.

Follow Alexa on social media: linktr.ee/AlexaPiper