What Are AmberPax™ Collections?

Simply put, AmberPax™ Collections are groups of five stories centered around a specific theme. Each story within an AmberPax™ is released individually, on the same day as the others, and can be purchased separately, but these five stories can also be purchased as a single unit (the full AmberPax™) at a discount, currently 25%. Generally, an AmberPax™ is similar to an "anthology" of stories, but instead of the titles being released in only a single volume (file), they are also available individually. These AmberPax™ Collections are sold exclusively through our website and only in electronic format.

THIS BLOG is for news about the Pax Collections - follow it to keep up with releases, find early news of the upcoming collections, and share Pax fun and chat with the authors!

All Amber Paxes can be bought at Amber Quill HERE.

Saturday 27 June 2015

Reeling Through the Years Giveaway Winner

Thank you to everyone who stopped by this month to share in our tales of time travel! Without further ado, the winner of our giveaway is...

Jen CW!

I have your address, so expect an email from us soon.

We'll be back on July 13 with blurbs and excerpts for Bedding the Beast, our very first superpax! Five novel-length stories all about creatures of the night, which comes out out July 19. See you then!

Friday 26 June 2015

Going Back in Time by Vivien Dean

I have been in love with time travel since I was eight and I read A Wrinkle in Time the first time. The concept that space and time could be infinitely flexible, that anything was possible as long as we knew how to manipulate it, set my imaginary worlds on fire. It probably helped that I might have over-identified with Meg Murry a teensy bit, but those books opened ideas to me that I'd never considered before. 

I never gave up on the genre. In college, I read Replay by Ken Grimwood, the story of a man who gets caught in a time loop where he relives his life over and over again. This was pre-Groundhog Day (wow, I'm really dating myself, aren't I?), and the questions it raised upended my life all over again. What would you change if you could? Who are we if not the sum total of our experiences? Is it really worth it? To this day, it remains one of my favorite books ever.

There are other, more popular time travel titles I've devoured. Outlander, with the amazing Claire and Jamie. The Time Traveler's Wife, which had me sobbing like a baby when I got to the end. The Langoliers, which scared the pants off me. Knowing my addiction, by sister recommended Blackout by Connie Willis, which I've never forgiven her for since I got obsessed with it for a while. And the list goes on.

Probably unsurprising, I find the notion that the love of our life could be somebody who was born before incredibly romantic. I jumped at the opportunity to write for this pax, knowing from the beginning I wanted to concentrate on that exact feeling. Unison is about Freddie, a transplanted Southerner making a life for himself in New York City where he's free to be who he is without retribution or recrimination. He's a dreamer with the imagination of a child running free, but in spite of his hopes, he hasn't been able to find the one man he wants to spend the rest of his life with. Except he has, in a way. When he finds himself in pre-Civil War Louisiana, he realized this is his chance to help the man in the portrait he considers his most prized possession.

What was your first time travel story? Do you have a favorite in the genre?

*_*_*

Unison by Vivien Dean is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Thursday 25 June 2015

Right Place, Right Time by K.M. Mahoney

I have a confession to make: I have a love-hate relationship with time travel. In fiction, movies, television shows, it’s a popular concept. Right Place, Right Time was the first time I’ve used the concept in my own writing, though. Strange, when you think about it. I have degrees in history, and I’ve written science fiction. Perfect combo, right? But I’m not of a scientific mind. Not. At. All. Trying to figure out the logistics of how/when/where, all that good stuff, it drives me nuts. Then there’s the ripple effect. You know, the whole ‘butterfly flapping its wings over China’ concept. One small action changing the course of everything. I get bogged down in the details. I can’t help it.

So when I began to write this story, I made the conscious effort to throw my normally detail-oriented personality out the window. It’s logical, really. I couldn’t tell you how a car engine works, but I know how to drive. My characters aren’t scientists, why would they know how time travel works? Just because they do it doesn’t mean they understand the process. Heck, even our beloved trench-coat-wearing Time Lord finds it complex. Wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff is guaranteed to confuse even the most scientific mind.

The history portion of the story was far easier. No science to confuse this Liberal Arts major! It also allowed me to explore some concepts and questions that I’ve pondered over the years. Most scholars who focus on a period would likely say they would love to visit that era. When Drake, my historian in the book, is approached to join The Oracle Group and travel into the past, he’s thrilled, like any good history geek. But as he quickly finds, there’s a difference between reading an account and living it. When the people in your book become real, when a faceless group becomes friends and neighbors, it changes your perspective. How hard would it be, to know the outcome of something, but be unable to do anything about it? Particularly when that outcome is devastating? It will take Jens’s love and support to get Drake through the reality of history.

*_*_*

Right Place, Right Time by K.M. Mahoney is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Wednesday 24 June 2015

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez

In a bit of serendipitous lining up of things, this blog post falls on my birthday. What better day for a post about time?

I’m rather dismayed to find that I’m over a half-century old now. It sneaks up on you when you’re still twenty-five in your head. Also makes me think about the relativistic nature of time, the speed of which refuses to remain constant depending on proximity, mass and whether you’re prepared or not for a presentation. It’s an odd way to measure anything, this unreliable way we move through the fabric of the universe, not really a constant stream, but a strange knot of things that exist sequentially and simultaneously.

You know, the whole ball of timey-wimey stuff, in the technical parlance of Time Lords.

As of this writing, time travel seems unlikely, especially in the classic SF sense of inventor climbs into his machine and visits points centuries before or after his departure in his own timeline. Some scientists wonder if time travel would only be possible in an alternate timeline, assuming we could somehow slip through the walls between the endless universes existing in conjunction with our own.

Rather than write another story about external time travel where it’s impossible to reconcile the temporal paradoxes, I took a different route. Internal time travel. Travel of the mind. Hallucination? Alternate method of actual travel? Bad piece of pastrami? You’ll have to read for yourself. 


Offbeat Crimes 2
Gay Paranormal Humor


Vikash Soren, the perfect police officer except for his odd paranormal ability, never seems to lose his temper. Always serene and competent, he’s taken on the role of mediator in a squad room full of misfits. But on the inside, he’s a mess. Unable to tell his police partner that he loves him, Vikash struggles silently, terrified of losing Kyle as a lover, partner, and friend.

But life in the 77th Precinct doesn’t leave much room for internal reflection. A confrontation with a stick-throwing tumbleweed in Fairmount Park leads to bizarre consequences involving pill bugs, statues, and…time travel? If Vikash manages to survive the week and stay in one point in time, he might be able to address normal things like relationship problems. He just needs Kyle to have a little more patience. Maybe a few centuries worth.

About Angel Martinez:

Angel Martinez is the erotic fiction pen name of a writer of several genres. Her experiences as a soldier, a nurse, a banker, and an underpaid corporate drone give her a broad view of the world and a deep appreciation for the astounding variety of people on this small planet. 

She currently lives part time in the hectic sprawl of northern Delaware and full time inside her head. She has one husband of over twenty years, one son, two cats, a love of all things beautiful and a terrible addiction to the consumption of both knowledge and chocolate. 

For all of Angel’s work, please visit:
http://angelmartinezauthor.weebly.com

*_*_*

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Tuesday 23 June 2015

Cricket and Biscuits by A.J. Llewellyn

“I have a question for you sir, is time travel possible?” 

These were the memorable, often-quoted words from the romantic time travel movie, Somewhere in Time. They have prompted conversation, observations, essays, entire weekends devoted to the idea (yes, there are Somewhere in Time weekends, people!) and for me, they were the inspiration behind my new book, Cricket and Biscuits, one of five stories in the new Amber PAX™ Reeling Through the Years Collection.

When I signed up for this particular PAX I was so excited. I love time travel as a subject and have obsessed on it since I saw the movie Brigadoon as a kid. I loved that dancer Gene Kelly magically goes back in time to a Scottish town that only appears once every hundred years for a single day. I fretted as I watched it. How would Gene find the town again and the woman he’d fallen in love with if he returned to his daily life?

Even as a young girl I was a dreamer, a romantic, and I always wanted a happy ending. As time went on and I saw more time travel movies, some of them were scary and had a devastating impact. Remember the amazing Time After Time, in which H.G. Wells (who wrote the definitive time travel novel, The Time Machine, follows Jack the Ripper to modern-day New York City?

Jack was played by one of my favorite actors, the truly great David Warner, and in one scene Wells tries to convince him to return to the past asking if he realizes he’s out of time in the big apple. Jack scoffs at the suggestion, indicating the violence he sees all over the TV in his hotel room. “We don't belong here? On the contrary, Herbert. I belong here completely and utterly. I’m home.”

Chilling stuff. 

Midnight in Paris restored my faith in the utter romance of the genre. I loved that movie. Though I enjoyed the equally romantic Leopold and Kate, it was missing something for me. With Midnight in Paris, Woody Allen tapped into everything I cherish about the idea of time travel. Who among us wouldn’t love the chance to go back and visit with someone they love?

For me, I’d love to go back and see my mum though I don’t recall a time she wasn’t sick in bed, riddled with cancer. I wouldn’t want to see her suffering again because it still hurts my heart, but I’d give anything to hug her and kiss her and just be with her. I never got the chance as a child. She was so ill and never wanted me or my brothers to see her the way she was. She died in a Sydney hospital when I was six. I never got to say goodbye to her.

I’ve visited the subject of time travel in some of my books, including Out of Time, Balthazar Starblitz and some of Phantom Lover, Waikiki Wizard, Children of the Rainbow, and Waikiki Vampire stories. 

I have always wondered, and asked many friends, “If you could travel back in time, would you?” 

What if you can’t change the past?

What, however, if you could?

I am so in love with the idea of going back that I took inspiration from the lovely, haunting Somewhere in Time, playing the soundtrack constantly as I wrote Cricket and Biscuits. I have always loved the idea that love outshines and outlasts everything. Even death. I am reminded often as I write, of a wonderful line from Brigadoon when the old man tells Gene Kelly,

“I told ye, if you love someone deeply enough, anything is possible ... even miracles.”

I hope you check out Cricket and Biscuits and the other fine offerings in this collection of heartfelt stories. Don’t forget to leave a comment for the chance to win all five! 


Dance choreographer Michael Makris has the chance to go back in time to find his recently deceased husband, John. Encountering his lost love is magical and romantic, but Michael soon bounces back to the last place he wants to be—the present.

Clementime, the gifted witch who sent him back to the moment he first met his husband, tells Michael that John wants him to move forward, without him. Clementime also cryptically reports that John said, “Life isn’t all cricket and biscuits.”

But can Michael give up the love of his life, or will he find a way to go back and fight for it?

Genres: Gay, Contemporary / Time Travel / Paranormal / The Arts / Mystery 
Heat Level: 3 
Length: Novella (25k words)

Excerpt:

...“Michael, are you sure you want to do this?”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m very sure.” Six weeks I’d waited, and the stress and tension had almost killed me. I’d only discussed my plan with one person, my best friend, Howie. He was the one who’d told me about the witch in the first place.

My hands were still shaking, so I slid them beneath my thighs, sitting on them atop Clementime’s red velvet sofa. That thing was not as comfy as it looked. I tried not to stare at her bric-a-brac, or wonder about cooties on the sofa. Her place looked so normal outside. Like every other small beach cottage on Superba Avenue in Venice. Inside, it resembled the kind of jumble sale I’d seen on desperate people’s front lawns. The unmistakable stench of eau-de-cat-piss invaded the cramped space, but I saw no kitties in sight. In a gloomy corner over her left shoulder, I spotted a tree-shaped plant stand and felt a shiver of alarm. All the plants were dead.

Don’t look at them. Don’t think about it. You can’t back out now.

“I know you’re the one who can help me,” I said, as her lovely, almond-shaped green eyes seemed to bore into my soul. Howie said she had a massive ego, and I’d been stroking it ever since I first made contact with her.

Howie had a friend who’d been to Clementime and had experienced her promises of time travel. She had wanted to connect with her mom who’d died and was very happy with the results, according to Howie.

Clementime said nothing for a moment. I still couldn’t get over the whimsical aspect to her name and wondered if she’d changed it from “Clementine” to “Clementime,” but she always got mad when I asked too many questions. I held my breath, worried that she was going to send me away. After all, she’d been difficult to get hold of, and even harder to pin down to an appointment. She’d asked me to think about it, pointing out certain dangers in going back in time.

“You might not cope with what you find out,” she’d said on the phone. “Once you go into the past, I can’t bring you back to the present, unless you and I happen to connect and we repeat the process.”

“Is that likely?” I asked. “That I run into you in another place and time?”

“Oh, yes.” She’d sort of chuckled. “You and I have danced together before, Michael.”

I had no idea what that meant, exactly. I knew I wasn’t much of a dancer in this life. I suspected she wasn’t referring to actual dancing, but didn’t care. I wanted to be with the man I loved. Going on without him was no longer an option.

My soul was in torment. “I don’t care where I am in time, as long as I’m with him.” I fidgeted on the sofa, recalling our earlier chat. Having accepted me as a client, Clementime spent an awful lot of time trying to dissuade me from taking the plunge. I kept thinking about the movie Kate and Leopold. I got goose bumps every time I thought about the moment Leopold told Kate’s brother, “I am the man who loves your sister.”

John loved me like that. He really did. If he had survived me and could have found a way to go back in time so we could begin again, he would. I was sure of that. But since he was gone and I was here, and I could do it, I went for it.

“Oh,” Clementime had said when I told her what I wanted. “Going back in time is easy peasy for me, when the other person is alive. It’s a little trickier when they’re dead...”

*_*_*

Cricket and Biscuits by A.J. Llewellyn is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Monday 22 June 2015

The Consigner by D.J. Manly

I lost a nephew two days ago. There is no other way to begin this blog about The Consigner. I didn’t know that one of the most despicable diseases of our time would invade his body twenty years later and end his life. He didn’t want Chemo. It would have prolonged his life for a few months, and with great sacrifice.

I didn’t know that I was going to lose a nephew, a man too young to die, a man who was only a year or so younger than I am now. It’s a shock. It’s unfair. But it’s life. I grew up with the seven children of my eldest sister. We played together, shared holidays and attended family events. A piece of my childhood is gone with him. 

Jeff’s life was not a charmed life. He lived hard and died hard. What can I say? He lived the way he wanted to? Did he have regrets at the end of his life? I’m sure he did. The person he loved couldn’t live with him so they lived apart, still loving each other. The doctor told him they might have saved him if he’d attended his follow up appointments. He didn’t. He’s gone. He made choices.

So, The Consigner was a book I wrote a few months back to fit with Time Travel for Amber. I began by asking myself a question. What if? What if in another place and time, there were special people whose entire existence were devoted to granting one final wish to the dying? What if that they could take this person back in time to revisit one period in their lives, without being about to change anything. Maybe they could just dwell for a while in a moment where they were most happy. 

Regrets. When we meet the main character in The Consigner, we realize that he is an unhappy person. How can he be happy? His main purpose is to spend time with people just before they die, and he is saddled with their sad memories and their regrets. He internalizes their tears and moves with them to the time they most cherish. He has no identity and no life. People fear him, see him as “Death” itself and yet long for him in the final moments. 

When the Consigner is called to see another of his kind to his end, he is escorted to another place and time. For the first time, he is left with an identity and a purpose, a purpose he never imagined. 

Death is inevitable. We try not to think about it a lot because if we did, we’d have a hard time living. But when someone close to you dies, like my nephew two days ago, death steps right up and slaps you in the face. Hard.

The Consigner deals so much with death, he has never learned to live. He is given a gift, a chance to live, to love, and to affect change. None of us can do more than that.

Below I’ve included a few paragraphs from the Book.

*_*_*

Your life. Your existence. Your destiny. 

The problem with that is that the pronouns were all wrong. There was absolutely no ownership connected to my reality. I didn’t even have a name or a physical image that I could call my own. I simply existed, and that existence was a patchwork quilt reflection of everyone else’s lives.  It was not my existence. It was borrowed and temporary, always in flux.  I was envied by those who hated their lives, feared by those who dreaded their own demise, and desperately anticipated by everyone in their final hour. Do you need to ask why I was seriously disturbed and bitterly frustrated? 

There seemed to be confusion about just what I could do for those whose lives were draining away. Although everyone was supposed to have been well informed about the Consigner’s limitations back in grammar school, when push came to shove, many didn’t accept those limitations.

I don’t know how many times I’d had to say the words, “I can’t alter the past. I’m sorry.” 

The dying pleaded with me, attempted to bribe me, and eventually some even became abusive.  I could only do what was within my power. I couldn’t change the decisions they’d made in their lives. I couldn’t erase their guilt and regret. I hated that, and so did they.

Surely someone had the power to relieve me of this damn curse, give me a semblance of a normal life. I’d never asked for this burden. None of us had. And the answer I received was always the same. 

“It’s not a curse, it’s a gift, a special power given only to a few. And one day you’ll realize that the blessings far outweigh the sacrifices you make.”  

Bullshit.  I couldn’t give it back, and if I could have, I would have done it in a heartbeat. But there were few of us, and many of them.  Our reward was a lifespan twice the normal length, but what was the point of living long if you never really lived at all? Even when I slept, I dreamt of someone else’s life, so what was the point? 

“Please, Consigner. I need for him to know.”

The voice of the dying man riveted me back to the situation at hand. For a few moments, I watched the sheer white drapes float back and forth through the open balcony windows like a ghost who’d somehow lost direction. I brought a chair up to the canopy bed. The walls were bare, no photographs, nothing but the death bed, as was the custom. I took the man’s wrinkled, heavily veined hand in mine. The average lifespan was one hundred and twenty. He was only eighty. Young by all accounts and yet he looked far older, his eyes filmy, his face heavily wrinkled. I wondered why he hadn’t taken advantage of all the resources available now to preserve youth and life. He’d let himself go, permitting age to relentlessly layer on the years. “Why?” I asked him curiously. “Why don’t you want to remain in life? You don’t need to go now.”

He squeezed my hand. “Do you believe that there is a life beyond this one, Consigner?”

“No,” I said, “at least not on this plane.”

“Do you know that for certain?” He looked pained, his eyebrows drawn together. 

“We can’t know anything for certain but I can tell you I have no evidence of such an afterlife, my friend.”

“Do you have a name, Consigner?” His filmy green eyes bore into mine.

“No.” I knew his time was growing short. I could feel it in the air and in my bones. “What would you have of me, Stewart? Your time grows short. After you draw your last breath, it is too late.”

He smiled. “I’m glad you’re beautiful.”

“I believe you see me as you want to see me. I have no idea what I actually look like.”

“That explains it then, why you look exactly like him. What can you do for me? I want to see him again, hold him.”

“I can take you back to that place in your mind but you can not undo anything you did in the past. The past is unalterable. If you relive some moments, it will be exactly as you remember.”

He nodded. “I’m aware of that.”

I sighed in relief.

“But it is unfortunate, isn’t it, that we can’t change the past. If I could, I would have told him I loved him instead of hiding, instead of taking another as my partner to pad my father’s business interest. Am I allowed to know what became of him?”

“You have one wish, Stewart. I may take you to one place where you most want to revisit your past, or I can take you to a place you never visited and show you what became of your love. He will not be aware of your presence. Sometimes it’s better not to know where people went when they moved on from you.”

He nodded sadly, releasing my hand. “Very well, I want to be again with him. How does it work?”

“You think of that time, the time you most want to relive, and I’ll take you there.”

“How long can we stay?”

“Time has no measurement. We will remain until your wish is fulfilled, then it will end. We must do this now because time does have meaning here.”

Stewart nodded and closed his eyes. “I’m ready.”

I wasn’t surprised to be taken to another bed, to see Stewart, fifty years in the past, joyously humping his young, beautiful male lover. I could feel it as if it were me, my cock inside the other’s body, held in a velvety vise of pleasure, moving frantically in and out of Stewart’s young lover. I could see his eyes, feel his joy, his heart beat slamming in my ears, the sweat from his body acute in my nostrils. My body rejoiced as it shook with orgasm but there were no physical changes occurring in my body. The kiss on Stewart’s lips left no impression on mine and yet I could somehow taste it, sweet, and leaving me with a dull ache deep in my core. 

Frequently, the patron wanted to relieve their happiest moment. So I relived this happiness for them, knowing sadly it wasn’t truly mine, and that it was fleeting. Based on the patron’s memory, those feelings flooding through me were often sketchy, diluted with regret and pain. 

There was always pain. And when the time was over, the release from it was hard. The pulling away was like a suction or current. The patron would hold on until the scene began to repeat, and I’d have turn back. They’d struggle to stay. They didn’t want to leave knowing they were headed for oblivion. They would have been content to have me live it over and over again, but I couldn’t do that. They had one wish, not two. I understood why they wanted to stay, but I couldn’t allow it. Still, it didn’t make it any easier especially in the case of someone like Stewart, who gave away his happiness for something he knew now had very little value. In truth, it broke my heart each time, and it wasn’t meant to. I was supposed to be immune, impartial, remote and unmoved.

I could hear Stewart crying as we were again in the present, surrounded by those unwavering drapes. 
Why didn’t I? Why didn’t I tell him I loved him then in that moment? Please, let me…let me…tell him…why, why?

I had no answers for him except to say that hindsight was twenty-twenty or that the act of living was fraught with regret. Both were lame expressions I’d come to detest so I wouldn’t say them. I wouldn’t answer at all because that wasn’t my role. 

The burden and struggle of life was deserving of one reward only, and that was a visit by me, a Consigner. In my opinion, the compensation sucked. The patrons were told to choose their wish well, to consider it long before the time came. But most didn’t bother. The prospect of several minutes of supreme happiness was bittersweet when combined with the ultimate end of ones’ existence. Most people didn’t want to think about it until the end, when it became suddenly most precious.

Stewart knew all along where he wanted to be in the end, in the arms of the one man he’d always loved. But he, like countless others either didn’t read the fine print or thought maybe he could convince the Consigner to change the rules. But the Consigner couldn’t take them back in time to repair the damage once it was done. The past had to remain in the past because tampering with it created chaos.

Stewart was fading but the question was still on his lips, a question he was asking himself over and over until those lips stilled. Now the answer would be forever mute. Stewart was gone. I felt his spirit leave, heavier than most, floating like the curtains for a few seconds before spiraling away.

*_*_*

The Consigner by D.J. Manly is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Sunday 21 June 2015

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Reeling Through the Years

Genres: Gay (M/M) Erotic Romance

The titles listed below comprise the Reeling Through the Years AmberPax™ Collection. Buy all five together and receive a 35% discount! To purchase any of the titles individually, click on the covers below to go to the books' separate pages. 

The Consigner
The Consigner
by D.J. Manly
Novella
(Gay)
Cricket and Biscuits
Cricket and Biscuits
by A.J. Llewellyn
Novella
(Gay)
The Pill Bugs of Time
The Pill Bugs of Time
by Angel Martinez
Novella
(Gay)
Right Place, Right Time
Right Place, Right Time
by K.M. Mahoney
Novella
(Gay)
Unison
Unison
by Vivien Dean
Novella
(Gay)

 
In conjunction with our newest release, we will be having a giveaway! Any comment made from today throughout the week (6/21-6/26) will be eligible to win the entire pax collection. A winner will be picked at random on Saturday from all comments received.

Friday 19 June 2015

Unison by Vivien Dean

Freddie Valek is a dreamer. He dreams about the fantastic as a means to escape, about finding the perfect man, about anything his imagination can conjure. When he falls asleep after work one day and finds himself in pre-Civil War Louisiana, he can’t say that he’s surprised. The only part of the dream that shocks him is that it’s taken him ten years to have a dream about the history of his most prized possession—a water-logged portrait of a man named Ezekiel.

All he knows about Ezekiel is what the woman who gave it to him said. That Ezekiel was the son of a plantation owner and a slave. That nobody ever found out what happened to him. Freddie’s dream thrusts him into the parents’ lives and their demands that he’s been brought to them to find their runaway son, a mission he is more than happy to accept.

But the closer Freddie gets to finding Ezekiel, the more he’s convinced that none of this is actually a dream...

Genres: Gay/Contemporary/Time Travel/Interracial
Heat Level: 2
Length: Novella (20k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...When he’d graduated from high school in 2005, he’d expected to do what most of his classmates did—find work somewhere local, live with his parents until he could afford his own apartment, then take it from there. The fact that he was gay and nobody knew it was a wrench in the works, sure, but times were changing. Ellen was out. People loved her. Nobody he knew watched Will & Grace, but it was still a popular show. People somewhere watched it. By the time he found somebody to love, he figured even his small Kentucky hometown wouldn’t care that it was a guy and not a girl.

Then Hurricane Katrina hit. He watched in horror as all those people down in New Orleans lost their whole lives. When his church organized a relief group to go down and help muck out their homes and start rebuilding, Freddie was the first to sign up. He stayed long after they went back home, switching his efforts to the Red Cross and any other charity that would have him. At his size, with his youth, he was a valuable commodity. He worked tirelessly, without complaint. He might not have grown up with much, but he had a roof over his head and never went hungry. It about broke his heart seeing all these good people who hadn’t done a damn thing wrong and had still suffered so much.

One of the people he helped was an older woman named Miriam Mattingly. Her house had been left standing, but everything inside had been ruined. He worked alongside Miriam and her three grandsons to clean it out, sleeping in a tent in the blocked-off street, eating with the rest of the neighborhood when everyone would take a break from the work. At Miriam’s request, the last room they tackled was a tiny space upstairs that she called her thinking space. Not everything there was entirely destroyed. Birth certificates and family portraits still graced the walls, water-damaged and swollen, rippled in time forever.

One arrested him. The first time he walked into the room, Freddie stared at it for a solid ten minutes. He never even heard Miriam come in behind him.

“Handsome, isn’t he?” she said softly.

Freddie nodded. “Is that a real person?”

“He was as real as you or me. He was the illegitimate son of my grandfather, six or seven greats ago. My grandfather never officially acknowledged him, but he had that portrait commissioned anyway. How he explained dressing up a slave so fancy, I’ll never know since white plantation owners didn’t do that in the 1830s, but there it is.”

Indeed. The young man in the picture wore a stiff suit and gazed away from the artist with a dreamy half-smile Freddie more than identified with. Though he was obviously African-American, his skin and eyes were lighter, testament to his white paternity. Sharp cheekbones sliced across his face, drawing focus to his over-full, solemn mouth. The hurricane had ruined the lower half of the framed painting, but it made Miriam’s ancestor more real to him rather than a figment of some artist’s imagination. It was like he was fighting against utter destruction, rising proud above the distorted images.

Freddie stole glances at it all day. When it was time to go, Miriam took it off the wall and held it out to him.

“Take it.”

He balked. “I can’t. He’s part of your family.”

“You think those boys out there give two hoots about someone who lived almost two hundred years before they were even born? They see all this as a sign Granny should’ve moved on ages ago.”

“But you must still want it. He’s still important to you.”

Her weathered face softened. “He’s a legacy I don’t need anymore. My grandfather might not’ve recognized Ezekiel as his son, but he held onto that painting for a reason. I used to think it was to teach future generations to learn from his mistakes, but maybe not. Maybe he did it so Ezekiel could have a life beyond the little one he had.” She smiled at him, soft and knowing. “Maybe Ezekiel can show you what kind of life you can have beyond the one you’ve got waiting for you back home, too.”

Though he’d only talked about Kentucky in vague terms, instead regaling Miriam with dramatizations of his favorite daydreams, Freddie got the feeling she saw through it all. His fingers shook when he took the painting from her. “Whatever happened to Ezekiel?”

“Nobody knows. So give him a happy ending with one of your stories, you hear me?...”

Thursday 18 June 2015

Right Place, Right Time by K.M. Mahoney

London, January 1349. One lone apothecary engages in a futile battle against the rising tide of death brought on by the Great Pestilence. But there is something different about this man. In fact, Dr. Drake Stilson is there for a very specific purpose: find Henry and ensure he survives the worst of the epidemic sweeping the Western world.

Now if only Drake knew which Henry. This is far from the first time Drake—an employee of The Oracle Group, a military and scientific organization dedicated to correcting the damage done by people messing around with time travel—has been sent to a distant time and place, expected to do the impossible. Yet this is the first time he’s felt as if the battle is lost before it has even begun. Surrounded by fear and loss, Drake is on the verge of surrendering to the inevitable when disaster strikes.

Despite being partners in work and life, Jens rarely sees Drake. He would love to ask Drake to quit his job, but can’t bring himself to be that selfish. This latest assignment, though, is stretching them both to the limits. And when Drake runs into trouble, Jens’s world begins to crumble. Now he has to figure out how to get himself to the right place and time to save Drake and bring him safely home.

Genres: Gay/Science Fiction/Futuristic/Time Travel
Heat Level: 3
Length: Novella (23k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...“I feel stupid,” Drake declared. He tugged on his brown and tan doublet. It felt too tight and short, and these shoes…gah. He’d always thought the men looked like idiots in the pictures, and now he had to wonder what insane person invented this particular style. It was fop met clown met God-only-knows-what.

“Stop yanking on it,” Jens admonished.

Drake stuck the accompanying hat on his head. It was too big, and that damned feather kept flopping into his eyes. “I can’t—”

“Don’t do that.”

When Drake would have bat at the feather again, Jens snagged his hand. “You look great.”

“You could say that with a little more conviction.”

“No, really. The Reproduction Department does marvelous work. If they say you’ll blend in, then you will.”

“Then every man in 15th Century Spain looked ridiculous.”

“Do you have your emergency kit?” The technician interrupted their budding argument to ask his question for the third time. Drake resisted the urge to punch the squirrelly little fellow.

“Yes. And my order packet. And an extra change of clothes. And everything else that the lady in Quartermaster shoved into this handy little bag.” Drake held up said bag and shook it in the direction of the irritating tech. The Quartermaster Department apparently doled out supplies for each mission from a detailed manifest that they wouldn’t let him see, and they stubbornly refused to divulge who put said manifest together. Drake would have insisted, but Jens had shoved a hand over his mouth, gave a huge fake smile, and hustled him out. Apparently no one argued with the Quartermaster—or QD as Jens called it. He insisted Drake “make nice because they hand out the chocolate.”

Jens laughed. “Go easy on the poor guy, Dray.” He draped one arm over Drake’s shoulders. “They always hover first time out.”

Drake got a little thrill at the nickname. He’d never had one before. “Sorry. I’m nervous, and I always get snippity when I’m nervous.”

“Snippity is for eighty-year-old virgins. Relax, they break you in easy around here. A couple hours and you’ll be back. Think of it like a test run.”

“A test run thousands of years in the past.” Drake bounced a little on his feet.

“Not going to Australia, so let’s not imitate a kangaroo, eh?” Jens pulled him to one side for a little privacy. “You’ll be just fine.”

To Drake’s shock, Jens tugged him against that solid body and kissed him. It wasn’t a little peck, either, but a long and steamy encounter.

Drake lost himself in the touch and taste. The pack dropped to his side unnoticed as he tucked his hands around Jens’s neck. “Damn, you taste good.” He broke the kiss, licking his lips.

“Hmm. Keep that in mind.” Jens rubbed Drake’s back with his big palms. “I’ll be waiting...”

Wednesday 17 June 2015

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez

(Part of the Offbeat Crimes series)

Vikash Soren, the perfect police officer except for his odd paranormal ability, never seems to lose his temper. Always serene and competent, he’s taken on the role of mediator in a squad room full of misfits. But on the inside, he’s a mess. Unable to tell his police partner that he loves him, Vikash struggles silently, terrified of losing Kyle Monroe as a lover, partner, and friend.

But life in Philadelphia’s 77th Precinct doesn’t leave much room for internal reflection. A confrontation with a stick-throwing tumbleweed in Fairmount Park leads to bizarre consequences involving pill bugs, statues, and...time travel?

If Vikash manages to survive the week and stay in one point in time, he might be able to address normal things like relationship problems. He just needs Kyle to have a little more patience. Maybe a few centuries worth...

Genres: Gay/Contemporary/Paranormal/Time Travel/Romantic Comedy/Action/Adventure/Series
Heat Level: 2
Length: Novella (24k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...Between one word and the next, Kyle’s voice cut off. The park vanished and Vikash stood blinking in a place of blinding light and strange sounds.

“Kyle?” he called out in helpless anguish, choking on his fear. Something had happened. He was hallucinating as Vance had been. Stand still. Just stand still and let Kyle come and collect you. Don’t panic. This has to be temporary.

“Greets. Do you need help?”

Vikash startled and spun toward the voice. A vision in a loose flowing robe stood beside him, smiling, green eyes gazing at him with guileless compassion. Long red hair tumbled over the vision’s shoulders and though Vikash found himself unable to parse gender, the person’s face was achingly familiar. “Kyle?”

“No. I’m Cirrus. But I could be Kyle if you wanted me to be.” Cirrus laughed, and even the low, sensual sound was like Kyle’s when he was flirting. “Are you a reenactor? Did you get separated from your vid crew?”

“Ah. Hmm.” Vikash took in his surroundings now that his eyes had adjusted, feeling stupider by the moment. They stood on a gleaming white porcelain-like surface that moved smoothly under their feet. Huge spires of glass and chrome soared overhead, occupying most of the sky. What little sky he could see was an unrelenting blue even more painfully bright than the winter sky he had just left behind in the park.

“You’re really lost, aren’t you?”

“Lost. Yes,” Vikash murmured as they passed a window display of colored, porous blocks.

“Oh, you’re hungry! That explains the glassy-eyed look.” Cirrus’s laugh was brighter this time, happy and uninhibited. He…she…grabbed Vikash’s hand and hurried down the moving sidewalk. “You don’t want to eat there. The prots are way too chalky. I know a place where the food is to die for.”

Unable to come up with a good argument, Vikash allowed the towing. Other pedestrians stared, but they seemed more intrigued than hostile and their attention focused on his uniform rather than the joined hands. “I…where?”

“Where are we going? Just around the corner. It’s not far.”

“No, where…” I don’t want to ask this question. I really don’t. “Where am I?”

Cirrus stopped and considered him a moment. “You mean what street?”

“Am I still on Earth?”

The next laugh cut off on a shocked exclamation. “You’re serious, aren’t you?” Cirrus turned his hand over, stroking the skin of his wrist carefully. “Did you take something new today? You really shouldn’t take drugs from strangers.”

“No…” Vikash took in the people rushing past, some in simple robes like his guide, many in no more than what amounted to shiny Brazilian thongs. “I think I’ve been…displaced somehow. Philadelphia. That’s where I was last.”

“This is Philadelphia.” Cirrus’s eyes narrowed. “I bet I know what this is. You’re doing a historical piece. Twentieth, twenty-first century maybe? And they have some new skin tabs that’ll get you all the way in character. But you got away from your crew. Poor thing. No wonder you’re all disoriented.”

“Historical.”

“That’s right.”

“What century is this?”

“Twenty-third, silly. No, I’m sorry.” Cirrus took his hand again and resumed their hurried pace. “That’s not fair. You don’t know that right now. Look, I’ll stay with you and if it doesn’t wear off in a couple of hours, we’ll get you to a care center. Look, you don’t have an emergency contact on your implants somewhere?”

“Implants?”

“They were thorough, I’ll give them that. I’m going to have a few words for your crew when we find them.” Cirrus flashed him another unnervingly Kyle-esque smile before tugging him toward what appeared to be a solid pane of glass.

Vikash balked, pulling back until Cirrus’s leading hand and shoulder passed through the barrier. “How…” But how did you know that was a door seemed too ridiculous a question to ask, so he shut up in favor of observing. If he truly had slipped through time somehow, he needed to learn quickly, to cling to small familiarities, or go mad...

Tuesday 16 June 2015

Cricket and Biscuits by A.J. Llewellyn

Dance choreographer Michael Makris has the chance to go back in time to find his recently deceased husband, John. Encountering his lost love is magical and romantic, but Michael soon bounces back to the last place he wants to be—the present.

Clementime, the gifted witch who sent him back to the moment he first met his husband, tells Michael that John wants him to move forward, without him. Clementime also cryptically reports that John said, “Life isn’t all cricket and biscuits.”

But can Michael give up the love of his life, or will he find a way to go back and fight for it?

Genres: Gay/Contemporary/Time Travel/Paranormal/The Arts/Mystery
Heat Level: 3
Length: Novella (25k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...“Michael, are you sure you want to do this?”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m very sure.” Six weeks I’d waited, and the stress and tension had almost killed me. I’d only discussed my plan with one person, my best friend, Howie. He was the one who’d told me about the witch in the first place.

My hands were still shaking, so I slid them beneath my thighs, sitting on them atop Clementime’s red velvet sofa. That thing was not as comfy as it looked. I tried not to stare at her bric-a-brac, or wonder about cooties on the sofa. Her place looked so normal outside. Like every other small beach cottage on Superba Avenue in Venice. Inside, it resembled the kind of jumble sale I’d seen on desperate people’s front lawns. The unmistakable stench of eau-de-cat-piss invaded the cramped space, but I saw no kitties in sight. In a gloomy corner over her left shoulder, I spotted a tree-shaped plant stand and felt a shiver of alarm. All the plants were dead.

Don’t look at them. Don’t think about it. You can’t back out now.

“I know you’re the one who can help me,” I said, as her lovely, almond-shaped green eyes seemed to bore into my soul. Howie said she had a massive ego, and I’d been stroking it ever since I first made contact with her.

Howie had a friend who’d been to Clementime and had experienced her promises of time travel. She had wanted to connect with her mom who’d died and was very happy with the results, according to Howie.

Clementime said nothing for a moment. I still couldn’t get over the whimsical aspect to her name and wondered if she’d changed it from “Clementine” to “Clementime,” but she always got mad when I asked too many questions. I held my breath, worried that she was going to send me away. After all, she’d been difficult to get hold of, and even harder to pin down to an appointment. She’d asked me to think about it, pointing out certain dangers in going back in time.

“You might not cope with what you find out,” she’d said on the phone. “Once you go into the past, I can’t bring you back to the present, unless you and I happen to connect and we repeat the process.”

“Is that likely?” I asked. “That I run into you in another place and time?”

“Oh, yes.” She’d sort of chuckled. “You and I have danced together before, Michael.”

I had no idea what that meant, exactly. I knew I wasn’t much of a dancer in this life. I suspected she wasn’t referring to actual dancing, but didn’t care. I wanted to be with the man I loved. Going on without him was no longer an option.

My soul was in torment. “I don’t care where I am in time, as long as I’m with him.” I fidgeted on the sofa, recalling our earlier chat. Having accepted me as a client, Clementime spent an awful lot of time trying to dissuade me from taking the plunge. I kept thinking about the movie Kate and Leopold. I got goose bumps every time I thought about the moment Leopold told Kate’s brother, “I am the man who loves your sister.”

John loved me like that. He really did. If he had survived me and could have found a way to go back in time so we could begin again, he would. I was sure of that. But since he was gone and I was here, and I could do it, I went for it.

“Oh,” Clementime had said when I told her what I wanted. “Going back in time is easy peasy for me, when the other person is alive. It’s a little trickier when they’re dead...”

Monday 15 June 2015

The Consigner by D.J. Manly

Selected at birth, the Consigners, with their extraordinary powers, have no choice but to live their lives vicariously through the final wishes of the dying. But this one Consigner feels too much, internalizing their pain and their regret, lamenting the fact that he can’t change the past, only revisit it. Then one day, everything changes for the Consigner, the one without name or identity, when he visits another of his kind, prepared to grant his final wish.

But something unexpected happens, which leaves the Consigner trapped in another time, in a house of pain, where the world has somehow gone terribly wrong.

There he meets Number 1, a pleasure slave being primed for the man who has purchased him, and the Consigner is named “Jace,” a murderer sentenced to servitude in a sex slave training facility. Awakened by feelings of love and bewilderment, the Consigner is about to find out that his presence in this strange time is no accident, and will lead him to his true destiny.

Genres: Gay/Fantasy/Time Travel/Ménage (M/M/M)/Group Sex/BDSM
Heat Level: 3
Length: Novella (29k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...I had no magic in this place, no ability to travel through time. And I was fast learning that this planet Earth was devoid of magic. People didn’t call for a Consigner when they died, they called an undertaker. I was here for a reason. My former life, such as it was, seemed to be lost to me. I’d wanted a life, an identity, and now I had one.

Mr. Bright, the master, seemed as perplexed as I was by my presence here. “Just who in the world are you?”

I’d been confined to my room, like a child, waiting hours for my angry father to appear and lecture me. It felt strange to be sitting on the single bed in the small room off the kitchen, awaiting my fate.

“I’m Jace.”

“The Punishment House said you were docile.”

“Docile?” I looked at him.

“That when they found you wandering on the road, you seemed dazed.”

“Um…well…I don’t remember.” I didn’t because I suspect it had never happened. Had my last client planted some suggestion in people’s minds? I hadn’t existed in this world before arriving here. Better to leave it this way.

“Where are you from?” He eyed me.

“I…ah…don’t remember.”

“Jace, I think you’re special,” he said. “And for that reason, I’m prepared to be lenient. You must learn your tasks, to set a table, to serve food, to demand sexual favors.”

Demand sexual favors?

He tossed a manual at me. “You didn’t study hard enough back at Punishment House. They told me you’d passed the exams. I think someone lied.”

I glanced at the manual. Instructions and Rules For Servant Clients.

“Or,” he said, “it was the shock of committing the murder. Why did you want that man’s identity?”

“I’m not sure. Maybe I just wanted to be someone else.” That had come out easily.

He fixed me with his gaze. “Good enough. But now you are who you are, and you will do your job. Understand?”

I nodded.

“Read the manual tonight. Tomorrow, you will be expected to do your job properly.”

“Yes, sir.”

Mr. Bright left the room. I lay back on the bed, opened the book and began to read.

Congratulations. If you are reading this book, it means that soon you will leave your miserable life here at the Punishment House and get a chance to redeem yourself by servicing one of our many prestigious Pleasure Houses as a client servant.

You should be very proud to be chosen and must never dishonor your assignment. You have been chosen based on your beauty, sexual allure, and genital appeal.

“What the fuck?...”