DOWN BY CONTACT (The Barons #2):
Simeon Boudreaux, the New York Barons’
golden-armed quarterback, is blessed with irresistible New Orleans charm and a
face to melt your mama’s heart. He’s universally adored by fans and the media.
Coming out as gay in solidarity with his teammate hasn’t harmed his reputation
in the least—except for some social media taunting from rival linebacker Adrián
Bravo.
Though they were once teammates, Adrián
views Simeon as a traitor and the number-one name on the New Jersey Predators’
shit list. When animosity between the two NFL players reaches a boiling point
on the field, culminating in a dirty fist fight, they’re both benched for six
games and sentenced to joint community service teaching sullen, Brooklyn teens
how to play ball.
At first, they can barely stand to be in
the same room, but running the camp forces them to shape up. With no choice but
to work together, Simeon realizes Adrián is more than his alpha-jerk persona,
and Adrián begins to question why he’s always had such strong feelings for the
gorgeous QB…
DOWN BY CONTACT is out January 16, 2018.
Subgenres: m/m contemporary sports
romance; enemies-to-lovers.
Teaser
I extended one arm so I could lightly touch the
corner of his mouth. “You’ve got something right there.”
The dark wings of his brows crashed down in
consternation, and a flood of conflicting emotions danced across his striking
face, but none of them was indignant or annoyed or disgusted—the reactions I
was used to getting from straight men when I touched them and they weren’t
interested. Or sometimes even when I touched them because of interest that was
obvious to me and not to their own selves. Denial was powerful in most men, but
Adrián Bravo settled on intrigued.
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
I brushed the pad of my finger against his lips,
wiping the syrup away even though it left the remnants of sticky residue.
Touching his mouth sent my thirst into hyperactive overdrive, and my mind
betrayed me. Filled with images of dragging him closer for a messy kiss where I
used my tongue to get him clean right before dragging him to the bathroom to
get really nasty.
Where was my common sense? My inner angel to
tell me to stop craving this bastard just because he had a pretty face and,
according to him, a talented dick? Hadn’t I learned my lesson? My dick going
from half-mast to fully risen proved otherwise. I would absolutely go down on
him in the bathroom if the opportunity arose. I could hate him even while he
was in my mouth.
He wasn’t reacting as much as I wanted him to,
so I dropped my hand next to his and upped the ante.
“You got some on your fingers too.”
“Yeah? You gonna get all mother hen on me about
that too?”
He thought he was so cool and collected. It was
kind of cute how much he underestimated my competitive spirit.
“Not quite mother hen, but . . .”
I grabbed
his hand after a quick scan of the diner, and brought it to my lips. His arm
locked up briefly, a spasm going through his fingers, but he didn’t fight. Not
when I parted my lips, and not when I enveloped the syrup-covered digits with
my mouth. I sucked the syrup off, suctioning harder than I needed to for the
current situation, and flicked my tongue.
“Oh fuck.”
We locked eyes. There was no hiding how dilated
his had become. The way his breathing had picked up, or the bouncing of his
knee.
I slid my mouth off, leaving his fingers coated
in saliva, and grinned.
“I won this round, Bravo.”
Adrián grabbed a napkin with trembling hands and
roughly wiped his fingers.
“Yeah. I guess you did.”
About Santino Hassell:
Santino
Hassell was raised by a conservative family but grew up to be a smart-mouthed,
school cutting grunge kid, a transient twenty-something, and eventually
transformed into a grumpy introvert and unlikely romance author with an
affinity for baseball caps. His novels are heavily influenced by the gritty,
urban landscape of New York City, and his desire to write relationships fueled
by intensity and passion.
He’s been
a finalist in both the Bisexual Book Awards and the EPIC Awards, and was
nominated for a prestigious RITA award in 2017. His work has been featured in
BuzzFeed, Huffington Post, Washington Post, RT Magazine, and Cosmopolitan
Magazine.
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