Guest Post | Mistakes Were Made by Holly Day

I’m here as Holly today!!! Yesterday, Mistakes Were Made was released, and I figured I’d share the first chapter with you.  

This is a little different from what I usually write. To begin with, it’s a contemporary story, with no magic or werewolves in sight. Second, there are no neurotic over-the-top characters, which is… unusual.    

We have two men, and I never specify their age, but they have a twenty-four-year-old daughter, so 50-55-ish. Seven years ago, Gael walked out on Ethan, and Ethan’s world crumbled. He believed they had it all, and to learn he not only had been fooling himself but also completely missed that Gael was unhappy shattered how he views himself.  

The story starts with Hazel, their daughter, getting married – we’re celebrating World Marriage Day – and for the first time since Gael left, they’ll stand united as fathers of the bride.  

Gael realized his mistake long ago, but he doesn’t know what to do about it. Seeing Ethan again changes things, though. He can’t live without having Ethan in his life, but how do you get someone to trust you when you’ve already betrayed them once?  

Mistakes Were Made

Seven years ago, Gael Moore, the love of Ethan Moore’s life, walked out on him and their daughter without a second glance. Ethan didn’t see it coming, and it made him question everything about himself. They were happily married, or so he’d thought. He believed they’d achieved their dream. Everything was perfect. Until Gael tore his soul apart in only a few seconds.   

Now their daughter is getting married, and as fathers of the bride, Ethan and Gael will stand united once again. It’s for one day only, and Ethan has worked hard on building walls around his heart and appearing unaffected, but he’s only half a person without Gael. He doesn’t know if he ever can trust him again, and when Gael begs for forgiveness, he’s not sure what to do. Will he ever be able to feel whole without him? 

Buy Links:

Gay Contemporary Romance: 30,338 words

JMS Books :: Amazon

Chapter 1

Gael Moore slowly spun the whiskey tumbler on the bar. The dark mahogany was spotless, the vintage leather bar stools surprisingly comfortable, and the dim yellow light from the crystal chandeliers created an almost magical atmosphere. He sighed.

The bartender, a young man in a black vest and a bow tie, gave him a quick smile. He didn’t think it was a come-on, but there was some warmth in his gaze.

“Dad.” Hazel slid up on the stool next to him. The bartender was there in an instant, but she declined with a head shake.

“Hi, pumpkin. How are you holding up?”

She gave him a baffled look. “Excited but tired. We’re heading to our hotel to sleep as soon as David gets back.”

Gael looked around. The bar was mostly deserted. “Where is he?”

“Getting Daddy from the train station.” There was a surge in the pit of Gael’s stomach at the mention of Ethan, but Hazel kept talking as if a sinkhole hadn’t opened up in his core. Maybe he should’ve prepared for his insides crumbling. He’d known Ethan would be here. The plan was for him to walk Hazel down the aisle after all, but he hadn’t believed he’d have to face him until tomorrow. 

“His car broke down, but he got hold of a last-minute ticket. It’s taken all day though, several changes of train, and there was one part of the trip where he had to go with a replacement bus because there was some trouble with the electricity.” She huffed. “We figured it best one of us were there to pick him up when he arrived, so there would be no more complications.”

“Right.”

“I bet he’s exhausted, poor thing.” She grinned at him. Had she ever said poor thing about him? He didn’t think so. 

“Hey, why didn’t you offer him a ride?”

“What?” Gael hadn’t been alone with Ethan since he’d walked out of the house seven years ago. He could still remember the stunned look on Ethan’s face. Would dream about it and wake up in a cold sweat. He’d hoped for anger, had been prepared for tears, but not utter shock. He should have been. 

“Since Mr. I-always-knew-I’d-marry-a-doctor isn’t here, you could’ve carpooled with Daddy, saved him the trouble of going by train.”

“How was I to know his car would break down?” He didn’t know what kind of car Ethan drove. Ethan had never been one to spend money on things like cars, so maybe he should’ve predicted car troubles.

She rolled her eyes. “No one could, I’m only saying you live in the same town. It’s not hard to pick up the phone and ask if you’re gonna carpool to the wedding. You knew he’d be here.”

“I assumed he’d go with Lisa.” He hadn’t. He hadn’t spared a thought to how Ethan would get there. His entire focus had been on seeing Ethan again, and how he should act when he did.

“No, she came directly from some conference or something.”

“Hey, kiddo, there is still time to get out.”

Her frown was instant, and maybe it hadn’t been the smoothest change of topic. 

“Get out of what?” 

He weighed his words. Maybe she needed to hear there was still an out. “Are you sure you want to get married? You’re still young, and—”

“Unbelievable.” She straightened, and for a moment he was sure she’d slide off the stool and stomp off. He remembered a lot of stomping from when she’d been a teen. She looked straight into his eyes. “Don’t you like David?”

“David is great.” He was. Gael hadn’t spent a lot of time with him, but from what he could tell, he treated Hazel with respect, and he was always polite. “I only meant you don’t have to marry the first man who asks.”

Her dark eyes turned to flint. “I asked him.”

Gael held in a wince. Fuck, he knew that. They’d told the story. She had asked Ethan to bake a cake decorated with things representing special moments from their relationship. He’d seen the photos. On the sides, there had been beautiful images of dates and trips and hearts and most likely a million details he’d missed. On the top, there had been flowers so real-looking Gael had asked about them when she’d shown the pictures on her phone. They hadn’t been real. Ethan had made them. 

Then she’d brought the cake to the beach, where she’d spread a picnic blanket on the sand and served champagne. As the sun set, she gave the cake box to David.

“Right, the cake.”

It was cute. Way more romantic than when he and Ethan had decided to get married. They’d gone to the courthouse as soon as same-sex marriages had been legalized. They’d had a civil union before then. Ethan wanted children. It was his life-long dream, to be a father, so they’d done all the legal shit. 

Gael had signed all papers, had agreed to all unions and whatnot to make it happen. Ethan had dreamed about a large family, and the plan had always been to have more than one child, but when he brought it up a couple of years after they’d adopted Hazel, Gael had been too busy at work. 

He’d kept telling Ethan they would talk about it later, but when one year bled into two, Ethan had stopped asking. Gael had to look away for a moment.

“Yes, the cake.” Her tone was clipped.

“Honey.” He took her hand. “David seems like a great guy, but I don’t want you to make the same mistakes I did.”

He’d like to call the sound coming from her a shriek, but it was low enough not to earn more than a glance from the bartender, so maybe there was a better word for it. 

“Not likely, Dad.” The Dad was dripping with contempt. “I’m not easily manipulated by flattery or distracted by gold-digging sluts.” She pushed away and almost collided with Jamie. She caught herself in time and stared at him, then she scoffed before walking away without another word.

“Nerves?” Jamie closed the distance between them and kissed him. Gael leaned away before it could turn into more than a chaste peck.

“Hi. Did you get here now?”

“Yup.” He dropped a bag on the floor and motioned for the bartender. “An appletini, please.” Then he turned to Gael. “Do we put it on our room or am I paying now?”

Our room? “Eh… we have separate rooms.”

Jamie pouted. “Why? Is it Hazel? I’m sure we can have it changed.”

“No, I… thought it best.” He’d been with Jamie when the wedding invitation had arrived in the mail, so he’d RSVP’d, saying he and Jamie would come, but they’d been broken up for a couple of months now. He’d invited him to come along since they still were friendly toward each other—Jamie more than him—and he didn’t want to have to face tomorrow alone. 

Yes, he was a coward.

Jamie frowned at him. “Why?” This time the why was a bit more exasperated. 

“Jamie, we’re not—”

“Then why did you ask me to come?”

Oops, there was a little more hostility there than he’d been prepared for. “We’re still friends, aren’t we?”

Those green eyes that first had caught his attention widened. “Friends? Have we ever been friends, Gael? I was someone you fucked when you were bored.”

Maybe friends was the wrong word. Jamie was a good deal younger than he was, and they didn’t share many interests, and Gael didn’t have the energy for his buddies. He was pretty sure Jamie had only dated him because he was a doctor—telling Hazel he’d marry a doctor the first and only time he’d met her had clued him in. Shit, maybe this had been a bad idea.

“We get along.”

Jamie groaned and motioned for the bartender again. “Can I have a shot of tequila too, please?”

Gael looked over his shoulder and spotted David walking toward the bar. Behind him, he caught sight of broad shoulders and brown hair that would curl around the ears when damp. Ethan. Self-consciously, Gael ran a hand over his own hair. It had turned significantly grayer over the last few years.

The sound of Jamie’s shot glass hitting the bar had him glance away from Ethan.

“Okay, give me the script. Am I here to piss off the ex or what?”

Gael’s gaze wandered back to the lobby, hoping Ethan wouldn’t see him, but wanting to catch a glance of his face. He was mostly obscured behind a huge Swiss Cheese plant. He was hugging Hazel, wrapping an arm around her shoulders once the hug ended, and walking toward the front desk.

When he disappeared from view, Gael focused on Jamie again. “What?”

“The ex?”

Which ex? He was saved from having to answer by David reaching them. “Evening.” He nodded at them both. “I wasn’t sure you’d make it, Jamie.”

“Why wouldn’t I?” 

He sounded like a belligerent child, and Gael didn’t think it had anything to do with David.

“David.” Gael smiled and clapped his shoulder. “All good?”

“Yeah, poor Ethan was worried he wouldn’t make it. Luckily, the cake is already here.” David grinned and motioned to the bartender who poured him a beer.

“Ethan made the cake?” Of course, he had. No pastry chef would pass on the opportunity of making their only daughter’s wedding cake. It was most likely his wedding gift to them. Ethan didn’t come from money, and getting rich had never been something he’d been interested in. When he’d first told Gael he wanted to be a stay-at-home dad, Gael had believed he was joking. Who’d want to go from two incomes to one? When Gael had pointed out the economic consequences, Ethan had stared at him in confusion. Then he’d asked if Gael had wanted to be the one who stayed at home with Hazel. 

The question had thrown him. He’d figured daycare or maybe a nanny was the answer. But no. And Gael made more than enough to support a family, so it wasn’t a real problem. Even back then when he earned way less than he did now, they hadn’t lacked anything. Not a thing. He shook his head to rid it of unwanted memories.

“Yes. He refuses to tell us what it looks like, and we’re forbidden to peek.” David smiled. “Hazel cried when he said he’d make us one. He came over and asked us how many tiers we wanted.”

It was a two-hour drive to where Hazel and David lived. One way.

“I believe the number of tiers depends on how many guests you have.” Jamie leaned forward to be able to see David on the other side of Gael.

David shrugged. “I don’t think Ethan cares. If Hazel had said seven tiers, he’d have made seven tiers.”

“So how many will there be?” Gael didn’t care. Ethan’s cakes were breathtaking, but the point of the wedding wasn’t the cake, was it?

“No idea. Hazel told him he could do whatever he wanted.”

Jamie looked between them. “Does he bake a lot?”

David grinned. “Yeah.” Then he took a swallow of his beer. “Are you all set? No problems with the rooms?”

“I haven’t grabbed my key yet.” Jamie gave Gael a non-too-subtle glare, which David pretended not to see. 

“I better go check on Hazel.” David drained half the glass.

“Isn’t this the night for a bachelor party, strip clubs, and other escapades?” Jamie waved his empty shot glass at the bartender, indicating he wanted another. 

“No, no bachelor party. I wouldn’t want to be hungover tomorrow, and there is only one woman I want to watch take her clothes—”

“As her father, I beg you not to finish that sentence.”

David chuckled, took one more swallow of the beer, and left the glass on the bar with a couple of inches still left.

“See you tomorrow, gentlemen.”

* * * *

“He’s such an ass!” Hazel threw herself at Ethan. He hardly had time to drop his bag before her arms wound around his neck. He briefly met David’s gaze over her head. 

“Who is, honey?”

“Dad.” She didn’t lift her face from the crook of his neck, and he grimaced at David, who looked around and then veered off toward the bar.

“Don’t say that.” Gael was here? He did his best not to look around. “What happened?”

He rubbed her back, but it only made her cling to him harder. “He said he didn’t want me to make the same mistake he had, and I didn’t have to marry David.” Ethan suppressed a wince. Gael believed their marriage was a mistake?

Hazel lifted her head and looked around. “Where did he go?”

“Damage control.” David was a good man. Ethan couldn’t have wished for a better partner for his princess.

“Ugh.” She studied his face. “You look like shit.”

“It’s been a long day.”

“As long as you look pretty for the photos tomorrow.” She grinned.

“I’ll do my best.”

Her smile slipped. “He brought the slut.”

Ethan’s stomach clenched, but he did his best to hold on to a carefree expression. “Which one?”

She barked a laugh. “Please, tell me you brought a date.”

He tilted his head. “You know I did. Lisa. She should be here already.”

“She’s not your plus one, she got an invitation of her own.”

Ethan shrugged. Lisa was always his date to whatever functions they went to.

“It’s not too late to bring a plus one. There is enough food and I can fix the seating.”

He frowned. “Lisa is always my plus one, you know that. You like Lisa.”

“I love Lisa, but she’s your business partner. No one will believe you’re dating her.”

He scoffed. “No, of course not.” Dating. Nope. He wasn’t dating anyone. All he had to do was to get through tomorrow, and then he could go back to baking cakes and other pastries. He and Lisa had opened a bakery shortly after Gael had left him. After having lived on Gael’s income for seventeen years, he hadn’t known what to do. He’d gone back to working part-time before the marriage ended, getting back into the routine of getting up in the middle of the night to bake after years of following Hazel’s schedule, but he hadn’t worked enough hours to support himself.

“I wish you’d brought a proper date.”

“Why?” He squeezed her hand. “It’s your day. Everyone will be watching you and David. They won’t care who I come or go with.”

“He would.”

“It would surprise me a great deal if he did.” He hadn’t had a proper conversation with Gael in years. It was crazy. He’d believed, truly believed, Gael would be with him till the end of days. Naive perhaps. Marriages ended, but he’d never for the life of him believed his would.

He’d had everything he’d dreamed of, so learning Gael had been unhappy had been like a kick in the gut. And learning he’d been having an affair with one of the nurses was worse. Ethan could understand longing for something different when in a rut, all relationships had their ups and downs, but cheating? He hadn’t believed it. Had been convinced Gael had said it to hurt him until he’d seen them together in the grocery store.

A lean, fashionably dressed man at least a decade younger than Ethan. He’d looked at Gael with adoration in his eyes, and Ethan, who’d never raised a hand to anyone in his entire life, wanted to gore his eyeballs out with a rusty spoon. Preferably dipped in salt.

He’d stood frozen on the spot, unable to breathe as his entire reality crumbled at his feet. Luckily, they hadn’t seen him. He’d practiced not showing any pain since then, but at that moment he couldn’t have hidden the agony if his life had depended on it.

“I know what his mistake was, and so does everyone else.”

He cooed and ushered her toward the front desk. He wanted to get his key, so he could go up to his room and take a long, hot shower. A day of traveling had left him rumpled and grimy. 

“He wanted something else out of life. Haven’t I always told you to follow your dreams? The same goes for him. I want him to be happy, and if this is making him happy, then so be it.”

She huffed. “I haven’t seen a more miserable man, but he’s too stubborn to admit it.”

He pinched her side. “Be nice. He’s your father.” Was he miserable? The few times Ethan had seen him, he’d looked happy. A strange kind of happy he didn’t recognize, but still happy.

“He’s an idiot.” She slipped her arm around his back.

“You know situations like these make him uncomfortable. I believe he meant well. If you’d had any doubts, wouldn’t you appreciate him being there to help you plot an escape?”

She looked at him for several seconds, and he couldn’t interpret her expression. “You never would’ve asked me.”

“It depends. If you had been about to marry someone I wasn’t sure you wanted to marry, I might have.”

“You just made the point. You know I love David. You know David. He said David seems like a nice man. Seems, Daddy. Seems!” 

“Well, he is.”

“Yes, but Dad doesn’t know because he hasn’t bothered to spend any time with him.”

“He has a demanding job, sweetie. You know that.”

She shook her head. “You’re up in the middle of the night. When the rest of us are sleeping, you and Lisa are in the bakery creating magic to make people’s day better. You drag yourself home at the end of your workday, when the rest of us are recovering from lunch, and you still make time to see us.”

“Of course. I never want to miss out on seeing you. You’re my greatest gift.” The lump in his throat was because he was tired, nothing else. She was his miracle, and there was nothing he wouldn’t do for her. Nothing.

Her eyes turned teary as if she could sense the emotional turmoil inside of him. “That’s the difference between the two of you.”

Ethan squeezed her. “He loves you, honey.”

She grimaced and blinked the tears away. “I know.” She let go of him and looked toward the bar where David had gone. Ethan didn’t look, instead, he walked up to the reception desk. 

Once he got the key to his room, he said goodnight to Hazel and rode the elevator to his floor. He unlocked his door, dumped his bag on the bed, and immediately stripped to have a shower.

After he was done, it was tempting to crawl into bed. Despite knowing it would be a long day tomorrow, he put on a pair of threadbare jeans he’d packed for the single purpose of having something to relax in, and a T-shirt. Then he took the elevator to the first floor.

He smiled at the woman at the front desk and headed toward the restaurant. It was mostly empty, and he gave one of the couples sitting there nursing a glass of wine a nod as he passed them. 

The reception would be in a different room. Ethan had seen it. Hazel had wanted him to come along when they looked at it before booking, and it was beautiful. Light colors, one of the walls was whitewashed bricks, and the hardwood floor was also done in a light, almost gray color. 

Since it was a winter wedding with decorations in white and gray jade, the reception hall was perfect.

He pushed the swing door to the kitchen open and looked around.

“No guests allowed.” A young black-haired man glared at him.

“I’m here to check on the wedding cake for tomorrow’s—”

“No guests allowed.”

Ethan held on to his smile. “I’m only gonna check so it arrived okay and everything is in place.” There wasn’t much he could do if something had happened to it, but if it had, he’d damn well try.

“No guests—”

“Ethan Jish?” 

Ethan turned in the direction of the new voice.

“Oh my God, you’re Ethan Jish.” A woman in her early forties looked ready to squeal.

Legally, he was still named Moore, but Lisa and he had named their bakery Jish Baker since Jish had been his last name until he’d married Gael, and Lisa, funnily enough, was named Lisa Baker. Now, most people in the baking and restaurant business in their area believed his last name was Jish. Maybe he’d switch back after tomorrow when Hazel no longer would be named Moore. There was no reason to be a Moore when she wasn’t.

“I only wanted to check on the cake.”

“Of course, this way.”

* * * *

Gael ordered one more whiskey after Jamie had left. It was mostly to have a reason to stay until he was sure Jamie was tucked in his room, so he wouldn’t risk running into him in the hallway. It had been a bad idea to bring him.

The bartender kept glancing at him and after a while he grew tired of it and stared right back at him. The bartender winced. “Sorry.”

“Anything on your mind?”

He grinned. “Nah, I’m only appreciating the drama.”

“The drama?” Fuck, had he turned into one of those people?

He shrugged and wiped the counter behind the bar. “You have a daughter who’s getting married tomorrow—”

“How do you know?”

“She’s talked to most of us on staff, and she called you Dad.”

Right. He nodded and took another sip.

“And at first, she’s happy to see you. Hurried over here when she spotted you—” She had? “—but a few sentences into the conversation, she’s hurt and angry, and right as I suspect she’s gonna snarl at you for real, the other man shows up and kisses you. So now I’m wondering if you’re one of those men who didn’t realize they were gay until they already had a wife and children or if you’re fucking her ex.”

Had Gael been drinking right then, he’d most likely swallowed it wrong. “He’s not her ex. She has better taste.”

“Ha!” The bartender laughed. “I suspected as much.”

What was that supposed to mean?

“So she’s not angry because you stole her boyfriend or someone in her friend group.” He tapped a finger against his lip. “You must’ve fucked her mother over then.”

“My husband and I adopted her when she was a wee baby.”

For a second, the bartender didn’t move. “Not the guy who was here, right? He’s not old enough to be her father. Her brother, yes. But then he wouldn’t have kissed you the way he did.”

He wouldn’t call the emotion welling up inside shame, he wasn’t ashamed of having dated Jamie, but… He hadn’t turned into one of those pitiful men who left their partner for a person half their age without realizing how pathetic they were, had he? Fuck, had he? No. He’d left Ethan because they’d wanted different things.

Ethan wanted a family, and Hazel was growing up. She’d been about to move away for school when Gael had walked out. Ethan would no longer be a dad. Or he’d always be a dad, but his dream of a house full of kids would be no more. Hazel would have moved away, and Ethan would have been all alone in the house since Gael worked all the time. He’d be miserable, and Gael never wanted to see him miserable.

Ethan was warmth and happiness. Or he had been.

“Is he still your husband, and the guy you brought your sidepiece?” There was a sparkle in the bartender’s eyes.

“No, we divorced some years ago.”

The bartender waited.

“What?”

“This is where you tell me how he screwed you over and stole all your money.”

“Ethan? No, he didn’t want a dime. He got half of the house, of course, but…” He should’ve gotten half of Gael’s money as well, but he’d signed the divorce papers without a word, and Gael’s attorney had said it meant he didn’t have to give him anything. The house they owned together, so they’d split the money they got from the sale fifty-fifty.

Tilting his head to the side, the bartender smiled. “Why so gloomy then? Your ex didn’t fuck you over, your daughter is happy, and your boyfriend is waiting for you upstairs.”

“Who said I was gloomy?”

A head shake was all the reply he got. Was he gloomy? A little melancholic perhaps. He drained the whiskey.

“Thanks for the chat.”

“Anytime, man. I’ll be working tomorrow too.”

Gael headed for the elevator, more tired than he’d been in ages. He stepped in and pushed the button to the third floor where he had his room while the doors slowly closed. Before they were fully shut, a hand pushed in between them and halted their process. 

Then Ethan stepped inside.

He ground to a stop, his entire body stiffening for a second, then he dropped his shoulders and smiled. “Oh, hi.”

The smile wasn’t Ethan’s normal smile. He’d always smiled without reservation, but this was hesitant, almost a little shy.

“Hi.” Gael nodded as the doors slid into place, closing them in. Ethan glanced at the button panel. “I’m on the fifth.” He pushed the button. Gael didn’t say he was on the third, the circle with a three on was glowing, so it was pretty obvious. Or maybe Ethan believed someone on the third floor was waiting for the elevator to arrive.

It moved in slow motion. Gael tried not to look at Ethan, but his gaze kept sliding over to him. The jeans looked soft and worn, the T-shirt hugged his torso, and damn if he didn’t look better now than he had before. He was a big man. Tall and had broad shoulders, and while there were no chiseled abs, he was fit. Strong. Safe. Warm.

Gael yanked his gaze away. “I heard you had car troubles.”

Ethan made a sound that could’ve been a snort or maybe a laugh. “Dead battery, which is crazy since I switched it for a new one only two weeks ago. I’ll have to see what the mechanic has to say about it.”

Gael could fix a human heart, but he was lost when it came to cars. Which was why he bought relatively new ones and switched them out before the troubles started.

“Did you drive here?” Ethan sought his eyes. Maybe the laugh lines were a little deeper than when they’d been together. Did Ethan laugh a lot? Gael missed his laugh. Which was a crazy thing to miss, but Ethan’s laugh could create goosebumps. No one laughed like he did.

When silence stretched, he realized Ethan had asked him something. “Sorry, what?”

“Did you drive here?”

“Yes.” Was he looking for a ride home? Should he offer? He should, right?

The door slid open on the third floor, but Gael didn’t move. Ethan raised his eyebrows, but Gael shook his head, pretending he didn’t stay on this floor. When the elevator moved again, Ethan tilted his head to the side and watched him without a word. They passed the fourth floor, and his gaze was still on him. Gael could hardly breathe. 

The elevator slowed, then stopped, and Ethan stepped out. “Right, sleep well.” Then he walked off, and Gael was left standing there to watch him walk away. Something close to panic tore free in his chest. Ethan was walking away from him.

 

Read Around the Rainbow | What I’m Looking Forward To

It’s Read Around the Rainbow time!!! On the last Friday of every month, we’re a bunch of authors who get together and blog on the same topic. Since it’s a new year, we figured we should focus on something positive and talk about what we’re looking forward to in 2025.

At first, I thought I’d skip this month because with the world falling apart, I’m not really seeing anything worth looking forward to. Bleak, I know, but I feel like we’re balancing on the edge of the precipice of something truly horrendous. Remember the feeling when covid rolled in? That’s how I feel right now.

But I gave it a few days, and do you know what? I look forward to the gardening season. Where I live, I have an estimated 138 frost-free days. It’s a challenge 😅 When Mum passed away, I promised myself I’d buy a greenhouse for the money I inherited when everything was done with the estate. At first, I imagined a fancy one, but we’re not sure we’re gonna live here for more than a few more years (hubby is a military man, and his contract is running out), so I bought a polytunnel.

This will be the second season I’ll grow anything in it, so yeah, I’m excited about that.

My second thing… There is no evil that does not bring something good. We had a mink, weasel, stoat, or something along those lines, get into the chicken coop a couple of months ago.

Several days in a row, I came out to find headless chickens. Not fun at all. Quite traumatic, I have to admit. Both for the chicks and me. I have now moved my chickens to the first chicken coop we built when we moved here. It’s smaller, but they’ve been fine ever since, so we must’ve done a better job building it.

Anyway, my flock is smaller than I want it to be, which means baby chicks!!! I think I’m gonna buy myself some eggs from fun breeds and put in the incubator. Soon. I might hold on for a few more weeks since January and February are the coldest months in Sweden, and baby chicks don’t do well when it’s too cold and they don’t have a mama to look after them.

Then I have a parental failure I feel I have to fix. My youngest is quite fascinated with sharks. We watch Jaws, The Meg, and films like that quite often. She asked me one day if I’d ever seen a living shark. I chuckled a little and told her ‘Yes, and so have you.’ Then I realised, she hasn’t. When we lived on the West Coast, we took the kids to Gothenburg quite often, and there is an aquarium with some sharks. And while I’m against animals in cages, we went there a few times. We moved here when I was pregnant with her.

Then we went to Copenhagen to their aquarium, but she was just a small toddler, so we left her with my MIL over the day and took the three oldest. Then covid hit, and we went nowhere. Then my MIL passed away, and then my mother passed away only two months later, and we’ve had no one to look after the animals to go on any trips since, so… Perhaps not something I look forward to as much as a goal I have. To get my daughter to a shark.

That’s about what I have now. There are always books I want to read, stories I want to write, series to watch, things to do with the kids, and so on, but the garden and the chickens are the ones I look forward to.

I’m sure the other have much cooler plans, so check out what they have to say!

Fiona Glass

Ellie Thomas

K.L. Noone

Nell Iris

Guest Post | Dressing for the Occasion by Ellie Thomas

The lovely Ellie Thomas is back on the blog! This time she’ll tell us about her latest release, Dressing for the Occasion. Welcome, Ellie!

Thanks so much, lovely Ofelia, for having me as your guest again! I’m Ellie, I write Gay Historical romance and I’m here today to chat about my brand-new release, Dressing for the Occasion, a short addition to my Town Bronze series.

This 8k word short story continues the romance of Barney and Ross/Rose, the couple from Pantaloons and Petticoats, the second novella in the Town Bronze trilogy. It was wonderful to return to this most loving connection and steer these two towards a definite HEA.

This story is about Barney introducing Rose (as she’s now become) to his parents with a view to becoming betrothed. As Rose gets ready for this very special and nerve-wracking occasion, she recalls her transition from her previous daytime persona of Ross. Particularly, how she prepared for her first formal occasion as Rose, at a dinner party hosted by Sir Mortimer Cleverly, who has his own love story with Jasper in Town Bronze.

When writing about this transformation, I had planned to have Mortimer’s good friend and business partner Blanche help Rose in dressing for a formal party. Until now, Blanche has been a very minor if sympathetic character in the series. I suddenly realised I had an already fully-formed character who would be perfect for this role.

I’d already made the link in my mind between Blanche (known to her friends as Dulcie) and Lucy Pengelly, Abe’s wonderful mum in my An Unlikely Alliance series. Blanche now runs her own establishment in Covent Garden Piazza and Lucy is a retired courtesan, but given they spent Abe’s formative years working together in the same superior brothel, it seemed likely that they would remain friends.

As we know from the three MMM An Unlikely Alliance stories, Lucy is entirely unshockable. She accepts that Abe is gay and positively encourages his romance with Clem and Humphrey. She’s kind, motherly and wise and I couldn’t think of a better person for Rose to take into her confidence as she makes her first visit to buys her first custom-made dress, especially as they only live a few streets away from each other in Soho.

As Rose gets ready for her important evening, she recalls all Lucy’s advice over the past year, their many shopping expeditions and the poise that Lucy’s support had given. Naturally, Lucy dashes round to help Rose into her beautiful new dress and also arranges her hair.

In this way, Rose is surrounded by love and support as she faces an evening which could change her and Barney’s future plans, hopefully for the better.

Blurb:

After two years of a loving relationship with Barney Marshall in Regency London, Ross Webster has gradually transformed into Rose on a permanent basis.

Rose has planned her transformation carefully, with the help of her redoubtable landlady Grace, and is now able to live an independent life free from male trappings.

But there are still challenges to face before Rose and Barney can reach their happy ever after. Their dream is to live as man and wife, but Rose dreads reconciling Barney’s wealthy parents to the idea of their betrothal.

Can the young lovers overcome this final barrier to their lifelong happiness?

Excerpt:

Barney paced restlessly up and down, as if determined to wear a hole in the carpet that lined the entrance hall to Mivart’s Hotel.

This is worse than any business meeting.

The prospect of the meal ahead filled him with dread. Admittedly, he wasn’t the most patient of men, except when influenced by his dear Rose, whose calm sweetness always had a beneficial effect. Waiting for her arrival was painfully frustrating.

He almost regretted taking Julian up on his kind offer to collect Rose, although it seemed a blessing at the time.

I should have gone myself. Anything’s better than hanging around here.

He caught sight of himself in the hall mirror and smoothed out his ferocious scowl.

That would be a fine welcome for Rose.

He appeared respectable enough for the hotel dining room, understated but unmistakably a gentleman. He had long eschewed the kicks of fashion he had adopted in an attempt to keep up with his social superiors when adjusting to life in London.

It’s certainly a good deal more comfortable, he thought, regarding his modest cravat.

Nowadays, without exaggeratedly high shirt points, Barney was able to turn his head without any restriction. His gaze fell on his white piquet waistcoat, and he automatically pulled in his stomach. He couldn’t help his naturally stocky build, which was skilfully disguised by his tailor.

I’m lucky that Rose loves me as I am, paunch and all.

Barney smiled in the mirror like the lovesick fool he indubitably was. He had no fear that Julian, liberally endowed with good looks and charm, was closeted in a coach with Rose. They were both unflinchingly loyal in character. And anyway, Julian, Barney’s childhood friend, was the first of their intimates to learn Rose’s secret. Since then, he had done everything in his power to further the romance.

Barney thanked heaven that tonight coincided with one of Julian’s rare visits to London, when he inevitably stayed with Barney. Julian had rallied to the cause, even digging out his seldom-worn evening togs.

When he accompanied Barney to the hotel, Julian had resembled his former self. Every inch of his athletic six-foot frame embodied the pink of the ton he used to be, rather than the provincial school teacher he had more recently become.

Barney had been by Julian’s side in the first painful months when he had deliberately eschewed his rank and privilege to pursue an uncertain course. His attire must be a reminder of that period of struggle and uncertainty.

So Barney wasn’t remotely envious of Julian’s trim physique, displayed perfectly in his evening wear. In fact, he was encouraged that Julian had made such an effort on his and Rose’s behalf.

I suppose we’ve all changed with time, Barney mused.

After Julian’s departure to pastures new with his constant companion Rafe, their other friend Jasper had retired to the country. Subsequently, Barney’s pursuit of London high life had palled considerably without his closest cronies.

With Rose firmly embedded in his life and his heart, Barney had no inclination to seek amorous entertainment elsewhere. So when his father, the proprietor of a Leicestershire hosiery manufacturer, suggested liaising with a London wholesaler, Barney jumped at the chance to try his hand at something new.

He was sufficiently established in society that his business interests didn’t tarnish his reputation. Also, perhaps as his long-headed father had intended, Barney had become aware of the hypocrisy of those who might disdain his birth but gladly helped him spend his fortune. He found he was no longer swayed by their opinions.

Barney had the support of his closest allies who, in their different ways, had become men with occupations and responsibilities.

I’m surrounded by teachers and farmers, Barney thought with a snort of amusement.

A gust of cool air from the hotel door announced the new arrivals.

At last, Barney thought as if Julian had been gone an hour rather than a matter of ten minutes. He smiled absently at his friend but Rose commanded his full attention.

She was always beautiful in Barney’s eyes. Tonight, she was simply magnificent.

Her dress was a slender column of pale turquoise, with subtle embellishments at the hem and sleeves, exhibiting her figure superbly, crafting a false impression of subtle curves beneath.

The glowing silk complemented the red tints in her hair, gathered on top of her head with a few loose curls allowed to frame her oval face. Barney caught the gleam of the aquamarine earrings he purchased for her last birthday.

Rose looked elegant, ladylike and quietly assured.

Julian stepped aside with an indulgent smile as Barney took both her satin gloved hands in his, bringing them to his lips.

“You look wonderful. Dinner is about to be served. Let’s go through to the dining room and join my parents.”

Buy Links:

JMS Books :: Amazon :: Books2Read :: Add to Goodreads :: Add to Bookbub

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 reader group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/8308047409266947

Twitter/X: @e_thomas_author

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/elliethomas.bsky.social

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

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