Title: Sky Full of Mysteries
Author: Rick R. Reed
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: January 27, 2020
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 76700
Genre: Contemporary SciFi, LGBT, MM Romance, aliens, amnesia, reunited, tear-jerker, time travel, writer
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Synopsis
What if your first love was abducted and
presumed dead—but then returned twenty years later?
That’s the dilemma Cole Weston faces.
Now happily married to Tommy D’Amico, he’s suddenly thrown into a surreal world
when his first love, Rory Schneidmiller, unexpectedly reappears.
Rory has no memory of those years. For
him, it’s as though only a day or two has passed. He still loves Cole with the
passion unique to young first love.
But Cole has so many questions: where
has Rory been and what happened to him two decades ago when he disappeared
without a trace? He has never forgotten Rory, but Tommy has been his rock, by
his side since Rory disappeared.
Cole is forced to choose between an
idealized and passionate first love and the comfort of a long-term marriage.
How does one make a decision like that? The answers might lie among the stars…
Excerpt
Sky Full of Mysteries
Rick R. Reed © 2020
All Rights Reserved
After they made love, they were polar
opposites in how they reacted.
Cole, barely minutes after coming, would
be asleep, mouth open and snoring, body lax. A baby who’d just been fed. Rory
looked down on him as he sat perched with his back against the headboard.
Despite—or maybe because of—the spittle that ran out of one side of Cole’s
mouth, he felt a shock of warmth go through him as he gazed at Cole, wondering
how he’d gotten so lucky. Although Rory was a few years younger, he was a nerd
with glasses. He wasn’t bad-looking; he just wasn’t all that noticeable in a
crowd. How had he snared a guy like Cole, with his perfect runner’s build, his
dark brown wavy hair, and the perpetual five-o’clock shadow that accentuated,
rather than hid, the angular planes of his face and his sharp jawline. Rory
snickered in the darkness at Cole as a snore erupted from him, almost loud
enough to shake the glass in their bedroom window.
It was always like this—maniac in the
sack until he came, and then it was lights-out for Cole, as though he’d been
drugged.
Rory, on the other hand, always felt
energized, pumped up, alive, as if he should hop from the bed, go outside, and
run a mile or three. Or make a meal. Or write the great American novel. Or
catalog his collection of books alphabetically, and then by genre.
Tonight was no different. They’d just
moved into the one-bedroom apartment in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood. The
neighborhood, the Windy City’s farthest east and north before heading into
suburbia, afforded them a chance to live by Lake Michigan without the higher
rents they’d encounter closer to downtown.
They were young and in love, and
cohabitating was a first for both of them. Rory felt they were already having
their happy-ever-after moment.
The apartment was a find—a vintage
courtyard building east of Sheridan Road on Fargo Avenue. Their unit’s bedroom
faced Lake Michigan, which was only a few steps away from their front door. A
lake view, high ceilings, crown molding, formal dining room with a built-in
hutch, huge living room with working fireplace, and an original bathroom with
an enormous claw-foot tub were just a few of the amenities they were delighted
to find—all for the “steal” monthly rent of only five hundred dollars.
The apartment, which would eventually be
filled to bursting with a hodgepodge of furniture and belongings, ranging from
family antiques supplied by Cole to Lost in Space action figures from Rory, was
now a scene of chaos with moving boxes everywhere, almost none of them
unpacked.
They’d spent the whole day moving and
were exhausted when they were finished. Even though it was August, by the time
they were done dragging the boxes out of their U-Haul truck, through their building’s
courtyard, and then up to the tenth floor via the rickety but
thank-heaven-reliable elevator, the skies above the lake had gone dark. They
ordered stuffed spinach pizza from Giordano’s, just south of them on Sheridan,
and feasted on it, melted mozzarella on their chins, on a couple of beach
towels they found at the top of one of the boxes.
And of course, Rory being twenty-three
and Cole twenty-six, with their blossoming love all of six months old, they did
find the time and the energy to make love, once on the beach towels and once in
their bed. Rory knew there’d be more of the same come morning’s first light.
Ah, sweet youth.
But getting back to postcoital bliss,
Rory now found himself feeling restless as he lay beside the snoring Cole. The
moon was nearly full and they’d yet to put up blinds, so it shined in the
bedroom window, casting the room in a kind of silvery opalescence. Rory thought
the boxes and the furniture—Cole’s oak sleigh bed and Rory’s pair of maple
tallboy dressers, plus an overstuffed chair they’d found in an alley just
before moving—all had a kind of grayish aspect to them, almost unreal, as if he
were observing his own bedroom as a scene from a black-and-white movie. Maybe
something noir…with Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray. Rory smiled and turned
away from Cole. Just a half hour or so earlier, with the overhead light fixture
shining down on them, Rory thought the movie would have been a porno, with
himself cast as the insatiable bottom.
He chuckled to himself.
He tried to relax, doing an old exercise
he’d learned from his mom. Starting with his feet, he’d wiggle, tense, and then
allow that body part to go slack to relax. He worked his way up his whole body,
wiggling, tensing, and relaxing as he went, until he reached his head.
And—sigh—he was still wide-awake.
Behind him, though, as if he had eyes in
the back of his head, he noticed something odd.
It was like there was suddenly a waxing
and waning of light.
Rory turned and looked toward the
uncovered window. He couldn’t quite see the moon, but it seemed like it was
brightening and darkening, brightening, then darkening…
But the whole of this August day, it had
been clear, with nary a cloud in the sky. Rory wondered if a cloud bank had
moved in, obscuring the moon and then revealing it as the wind pushed it away.
He could see this in his mind’s eye but couldn’t quite believe it.
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Meet the Author
Real Men. True Love.Rick R. Reed draws inspiration from the lives of gay men to craft stories that quicken the heartbeat, engage emotions, and keep the pages turning. Although he dabbles in horror, dark suspense, and comedy, his attention always returns to the power of love. He’s the award-winning and bestselling author of more than fifty works of published fiction and is forever at work on yet another book. Lambda Literary has called him: “A writer that doesn’t disappoint…” You can find him at www.rickrreed.com or www.rickrreedreality.blogspot.com. Rick lives in Palm Springs, CA with his beloved husband and their fierce Chihuahua/Shiba Inu mix.
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