And The Beagle Makes Three
Geoffrey Knight
Genre: Gay Drama /Comedy
Length: 26,000 words
Release Date: 04.12.18
BLURB
When Stuart Summerfield finally realized he
was gay, he knew that telling his beloved wife Claire would be one of the
hardest, most heartbreaking things he would ever do. Unfortunately Stu’s coming
out wasn’t simply heartbreaking… it had the most unexpected and tragic
consequences imaginable.
Now, almost one year after the car accident
that took Claire’s life, Stu has buried himself in his work to push through the
pain and guilt while doing his best to raise, Atticus, their young son, who has
himself handled his grief in his own unique way. While getting by one day at a
time proves difficult enough, it never crossed Stu’s mind that the family’s
annual weekend away at the lakeside home of his sister-in-law, Bethany, would
still go ahead now that Claire was gone.
Atticus, however, has other ideas. With his
loyal beagle Digby by his side, Atty makes a phone call to Aunt Bethany in an
effort to keep the family tradition alive, no matter what chaos and calamity
might ensue.
And so over the course of one weekend
filled with commotion—and emotion—Stu and Atty are about to learn that healing
can open up your heart, that grief can sometimes be good, and that nobody
travels the road to recovery alone.
EXCERPT
Atty sat on a chair outside the
principal’s office. He turned his head when he saw a flash of daylight
reflect on the well-mopped floors as the door at the end of the corridor opened
and his father come running toward him.
Stu practically slid to his knees in front
of
his son, grabbing Atty’s arms, feeling his forehead, looking for any
bruises from bullies or red marks on Atty’s knuckles on the off-chance
he’d fought back.
“Atty? Buddy, you okay? What’s happened?”
Atticus gave his father a concerned look
and said quietly, “Dad, I made the whole class cry.”
“What do you mean you made the whole class cry?
Why? How?”
“I didn’t mean to. I don’t
think they liked my presentation.”
“What presentation? You didn’t
tell me you had a presentation.”
“You were busy, I didn’t wanna bother
you. I’ve
never failed an assignment before. What do you think it feels like to get an
F?”
Stu gave Atty a tight, long hug.
“It’s okay to get an F once in a while. Nobody’s perfect
all of the time, Atty.”
At that moment, the door to Principal Parsons’s office
opened.
“Ah, Mr. Summerfield. I thought I heard your
voice. Would you mind stepping inside?”
Principal Parsons gestured for Stu to
enter the office, but as Atty moved to follow his father the principal
held up his hand. “You can stay here for the moment, Atty. We’d like to have a
word with your father in private. We won’t be long.”
The door clicked shut and Atty took his seat and waited.
Inside Principal Parsons’s
office, Mrs. Tilbury was already waiting for Stu to join them.
“Mr. Summerfield, it’s nice to see you
again.” Mrs. Tilbury shook Stu’s hand but had
trouble looking him in the eye.
“Is this about the beagle again?” Stu asked,
taking the spare seat as Principal Parsons gestured to it.
“Yes, and we’re
concerned the problem isn’t going away,” the principal answered. “It
seems to be in complete contrast with the way Atticus appears to be working through
his issues creatively.”
Stu shook his head. “I don’t understand.”
Mrs. Tilbury sat
forward. “A few weeks ago, the children were given an assignment. They were asked to put
together a presentation in any medium or format they liked, so long as it
covered the topic of ‘The Story of My Life So Far’.” She took a breath
and lost eye contact with Stu once more. “Naturally, given the last year
that
Atticus has had—”
“Eleven months,” Stu interrupted quietly. “It’s been
eleven months.”
Mrs. Tilbury cleared
her throat and continued. “Given the last eleven months that Atticus
has been through, I gave him the option not to participate, but he insisted on
putting
together a presentation.”
“Was it bad? Did he do something wrong?”
Principal Parsons and Mrs. Tilbury
exchanged glances before Parsons said, “Why don’t you see for
yourself. If you wouldn’t mind turning your chair around.”
It was only then that Stu noticed the film
projector facing the back wall of the office. Mrs. Tilbury switched off the
lights and set the projector running, the rickety film of Atty’s
presentation jerking into motion.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Geoffrey Knight is the author of more than 30
gay fiction novels, novellas and short stories, ranging in genre from gay
adventure, gay romance, gay suspense and gay comedies. He is the recipient of
two Rainbow Awards including Best Mystery Winner and Best Overall Gay Fiction
Runner-up. His work has been featured in several anthologies including Best Gay
Erotica 2013, and he appeared as Guest of Honor at the inaugural Rainbow Con in
Florida, 2014.
Geoffrey has worked in advertising, politics and
journalism, but nothing is as fun as telling stories. He lives with his
partner, their baby daughter, two dogs and two cats in a rambling old house in
North Queensland, Australia, where the paint is fraying and life is good.
GIVEAWAY
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