Pat Henshaw has a new MM holiday romance out: "Making the Holidays Happy Again."
Blacksmith Butch has secretly loved his best friend, science nerd Jimmy, since grade school. Now their shops in Old Town Seven Winds, California, are only doors from each other.
They’re about to turn thirty, and Butch refuses to wait another day to make a decision: propose to Jimmy and start the family he’s always wanted or forget his dream to avoid risking their friendship.
Why can’t the choice be as easy as creating decorative ironwork in his forge?
Excerpt
“Okay, what’s up?” I sat on the bench with my back against the bricks at the Old Time Pub. “You’ve been pissed since last week.”
My best friend and secret love of my life Jimmy glared but didn’t answer. We’d known each other for so long that I waited him out like usual. I crossed my pumped arms and sat back, smelling my sweat-soaked T-shirt in the AC blowing around us.
The past summer in Seven Winds, once a Gold Rush town in California’s northern Sierra Nevada mountains and now a tourist trap, had been brutal. A record number of days over one hundred degrees had turned a lot of the shop owners into snarling dogs.
As the resident blacksmith, I took the heat as business as usual. So I was hot and sweaty? I was always hot and sweaty. The day I ain’t I was either sick or dead.
I figured Jimmy’s problem was more than the heat though. He’d been acting funny lately. Like he had something caught in his craw but he couldn’t spit it out.
Jimmy wasn’t looking at me, but down at his hands. They was long and thin, completely different from mine. I had a collection of burns and scratches, scars from the forge and the tools and all.
His hands was pale white with a bunch of freckles that went with the freckles all over the rest of his body. When we was kids, the tiny red hairs on his arms stood out almost more than his carroty hair. The bright red had changed as he got older and was now more muted. Me? I’d stayed hairy brown all over.
I tapped his hand with my blunt fingers.
“Whatever it is, you know you can just spit it out.”
He stared at me, and I swear his green eyes got darker. He was making me uneasy. What the hell was wrong?
“You ever look at your life, Butch, and ask yourself, ‘Is this all there is?’” He sighed. What the fuck? What had gotten into him? “Don’t give me that look. You’ve got to know what I’m talking about.”
“Sure. But you know me. Something’s wrong, I make it right.” Takes me time but I figure it out eventually. “So, uh, what’s wrong with your life?” I wanted to make a joke and laugh, but he was too damned serious. And Jimmy’s never this serious.
“I mean, look at us. We work all day in our shops. We make good money. We got nothing to spend it on but ourselves. We go out drinking with the guys on the weekends. Or we go into the city to a game. Or we go fishing, camping, riding around.” He shook his head. “But in the end, what have we got?”
“Fun. Friendship. I don’t know. Life?” It wasn’t much of an answer. I knew where he was coming from. I figured it was because we was about to turn thirty after Christmas and it was time for us to grow up. I’d been thinking on it a lot lately.
“Don’t you want something else, Butch? Something more? Something better?” He sounded desperate, like he was drowning and I wasn’t saving him.
“Yeah, sure. I guess. I mean, I want a husband, a house, a dog, you know, stuff like we talked about when we was kids.” I’d had it mostly planned out. I’d been saving my money.
I was surprised Jimmy hadn’t already figured it out. He was usually two steps ahead of me in everything. “Okay, I gotta ask. What brought all of this on? What happened?”
He shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ve been sitting around thinking lately. And mom’s been on me to move out.”
His mother Hazel’s a character. She’s an old hippie with graying auburn hair and grass green eyes. Her face is a roadmap of lines cuz she spends so much time outdoors. And she worries. She thinks we need her to run our lives. We mostly let her think that even though it’s not true.
“She says she wants me to move out of the farmhouse.” Jimmy said it like it was a death sentence.
“So? Isn’t that what you always wanted to do?”
He shrugged, then nodded, reluctant like. “I guess.”
“Jimmy, you’ve always talked about living in your own place.”
Once I thought me and him would get together, and, you know, live happily ever after. But then he became a doctor of chemistry and natural medicine. I never finished high school.
“Yes, I know. You’re right. I’ve wanted to move out for a while now.” Jimmy sighed. “But this feels like her trying to push me out. I don’t like to be pushed.”
“I don’t get the problem. You know what you want already.”
He laughed. “I don’t like to be pushed by my mother.”
“So the Apple Festival is coming up, and I’m making some changes,” I said, moving on to another subject.
“Yeah? What’s up? Whare are you doing?”
“I wanna make the shop more family friendly.”
He looked at me weird.
“I don’t get it, Butch. This isn’t like you.” He ran a hand through his shaggy hair. “You’re making me nervous. First my mother, now you. Why is everybody so hot to change suddenly?”
“It’s like you said.” I hunkered down, putting my elbows on the table and spreading out my hands. “I took a look at my life. I figure if I don’t do something to get settled, it ain’t gonna just fall in my lap. The Big Three Oh is the first step to the rest of my life. If I don’t get my shit together, nobody’s gonna hand my life to me. I may not know everything, but I know it’s up to me to do it myself.” I shot him a frown. “And you know it too.”
He nodded and looked like dog meat.
I may not have solved his problem of moving out or nothing like that, but maybe we was finally on the same page. Maybe.
I was making changes. He had to decide on his own life.
Author Q&A - Pat Henshaw
Name the
book you like most among all you’ve written, and tell us why.
This is a toss up between two books: “Behr Facts”
and “Frank at Heart”. I love “Behr Facts” because the protagonist/narrator Abe
Behr has so many of my dad’s traits. They share the love of family and concerns
over family members’ well-being. They also both love sweet desserts, and I
borrowed many of my dad’s favorites and made them Abe’s too. “Frank at Heart”
also shares traits with a real person in my life, a favorite uncle. Because of
their ties to men who own a part of my heart, the lead characters make these my
favorite books.
Who did your
cover, and what was the design process like?
AngstyG has created almost all my covers for
Dreamspinner books. She knows me so well that with this holiday book, “Making
the Holidays Happy Again,” she created the one that became the final cover in
one try. All she was working from was my written description of the perfect
cover that I turned in right after the story was accepted for publication.
Although we’ve gone back and forth on some of the other covers, the process is
always quick and painless. I’d recommend her to any author looking for a cover
for a book.
What
secondary character would you like to explore more? Why?
I think there’s a character in every book that I’d
love to explore in his own book. In the case of “Making the Holidays Happy
Again,” I’d love to write about Leonard’s uncle, Jason, or the other blacksmith
in Butch’s shop, Jax. Both are single and looking for the kind of love Butch
ends up with at the end of the story. Both also have family issues that will
make it difficult to find his one-and-only. Jason has a bitter, homophobic
mother who doesn’t approve of his “choice” of being gay. Although he’s
successful in his own right, he doesn’t want to abandon Leonard to her care and
disapproval. Jax, on the other hand, has moved back into the area to take care
of his aging parents. Although they totally accept him, Jax still will have to
contend with them getting older and refusing to move out of the family home
that is too dangerous for them to live in. Can either of them date enough to
find someone special and when they do, will that love of their lives be able to
hang on while Jason and Jax free themselves of family concerns? While I’d love
to write about both of them, I’ve got other projects in the work that take
precedence.
Can you tell
us a little about what you’re working on now?
Currently, I’m working on a paranormal gay romance
novel. Into the Dark Night is the story of how accountant Gregory dies and
finds happiness as a ghost guide who leads lost souls into the afterlife. Even
his love life is better in death than it was in life when he meets his ghostly
boss Ford, who died as a medieval crusader. Together they must find a way to
defeat a ghostly menace that targets children while getting used to new
additions to Ford’s ghostly staff. I’ve planned it as the first of a three book
series of paranormal gay romances.
Do you have any questions for me? If so, leave
them here, and I’ll answer them. Thanks for reading this!
Author Bio
Pat Henshaw:
- Is a she, not a he.
- Writes MM romances.
- Has interviewed Arlo Guthrie, Big Bird, Fred Rogers, Liberace, and Vincent Price.
- Has lived and worked on all three US coasts and in the middle of the country, too.
- Has been a reviewer, costumer, librarian, and teacher.
- Has ridden an elephant, touched the pyramids, and stood at the edge of a volcano.
- Believes love is essential to everyone's happiness.
Author Website: http://www.pathenshaw.com
Author Facebook (Personal): https://www.facebook.com/pat.henshaw.10
Author Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/phenshaw
Author Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6998437.Pat_Henshaw
Author QueeRomance Ink: https://www.queeromanceink.com/mbm-book-author/pat-henshaw/
Author Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/e/B00BPDEDEA
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