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Status Update
#gaymers # 1
#gaymers # 1
By: Annabeth Albert
Releasing December
7, 2015
Carina Press
Carina Press
Adrian Gottlieb is winning
at life. He’s a successful video game designer with everything a man could ask
for, including a warm comfy ride to Denver and a date for his sister’s wedding.
But he finds himself in need of a total reboot when he's left stranded at a
snowy campground in Utah. Holiday plans? Epic fail.
That is until Noah Walters offers him shelter for the night and a reluctant cross-country ride. Nothing about the ultraconservative geoarchaeologist should attract Adrian, but once he discovers Noah’s hidden love for video games, the two connect on a new level. Soon, a quiet but undeniable chemistry sparks.
Something doesn’t add up, though. As the miles accumulate and time runs out, Noah must face the most difficult choice of his life. Meanwhile, Adrian must decide whether he’s ready to level up. Is their relationship status worth fighting for, or has this game ended before it's even begun?
That is until Noah Walters offers him shelter for the night and a reluctant cross-country ride. Nothing about the ultraconservative geoarchaeologist should attract Adrian, but once he discovers Noah’s hidden love for video games, the two connect on a new level. Soon, a quiet but undeniable chemistry sparks.
Something doesn’t add up, though. As the miles accumulate and time runs out, Noah must face the most difficult choice of his life. Meanwhile, Adrian must decide whether he’s ready to level up. Is their relationship status worth fighting for, or has this game ended before it's even begun?
Noah knew the dog
was trouble as soon as he and Ulysses entered the campground’s off-leash dog
area. The little guy—some sort of Chihuahua/mini-pin mix in a yellow-and-green
checked coat—stood in the center of the scrubby grass, barking his fool head
off. The only human in the dog area sat at the picnic table on the far side,
completely absorbed in his shiny phone, oblivious to his dog strutting around
like all eight pounds of him would be enough to keep potential threats out.
Ulysses gave Noah a
look, like “you really expect me to ignore that?”
Noah tightened his hold on the tennis ball chucker. Ulysses never did well
competing with smaller dogs for his toys. He unclipped Ulysses with a stern
look.
“Be good.”
Still yapping, the
little dog rushed over to inspect his new enemy. Predictably, Ulysses wandered
away to do his business. He was too old for these sorts of games.
Noah gave a
halfhearted wave in the direction of the owner, but the guy didn’t look up from
his phone. The young guy was a typical hipster tourist—thick tortoise-framed
glasses, artfully messed-up dark hair, with a thick purple streak, falling over
his forehead. Slim build, but his wide shoulders stretched his too-thin jacket,
making the shiny fabric ripple with his motions. He wasn’t any more prepared
for November in Utah than his designer dog. Still, he was a cute guy, if one
was the type to notice things like that, which Noah was not.
Noah looked away,
studying the sheer cliffs that surrounded the Capitol Reef National Park.
Didn’t matter how much time he spent in Southern Utah, he never got tired of
the view. Phone guy was missing the light shifting into one of those perfect
late fall sunsets that made the early dusk worth the loss of daylight. Pink streaks
mingled with gray sky to cast a rosy glow over the scrubby grass and low fence
of the dog area.
Rowwwr. Ulysses
flopped at Noah’s feet, a deep beseeching whine rattling out of his barrel
chest. He was eighty pounds of unhappy. He’d waited patiently all afternoon
while Noah worked, and now he was missing out on his ball time thanks to the
teacup gatekeeper.
“Okay, but play
nice.” Noah threw the ball hard with the chucker toy, going for enough distance
to outstrip the tiny dog’s ability to keep up with Ulysses. Not surprisingly,
the little guy was tenacious, cutting off Ulysses’s path to the ball. Ulysses
gave a warning woof, and Noah broke into a run, heading
after the dogs.
“Down,” he called
out. Ulysses wouldn’t attack the smaller dog, but he wasn’t above a major
tantrum. And despite the smaller dog acting as instigator, people would see the
huge black dog and toss out the “aggressor” label. Noah preferred to exercise
him late in the day—Ulysses simply didn’t enjoy playing with other dogs, and
Noah wasn’t one to force his dog into uncomfortable situations.
The little dog
stood over the ball, yapping up a storm while Ulysses barked and growled,
ignoring Noah’s command to sit.
Finally, the owner hefted himself off the picnic
bench.
“Pixel, baby, what
are you doing?” the owner called in a melodic voice that didn’t inspire Noah’s
confidence in the man’s ability to control his dog. “Did the big doggie scare
you?”
Hah. Typical.
Noah snorted. “Can you grab the ball?” He didn’t trust those little dog
breeds—too quick to snap. He’d nearly been bitten trying to retrieve a ball
more than once.
“Oh sure.” The guy
reached under Pixel—typical cutesy name for an annoying dog—and delicately
plucked the ball free, but instead of handing it to Noah, he gave it a toss, sending
both dogs running.
Oh great. Noah
let out a slow breath, little puffs of vapor in the crisp evening air that did
nothing to defuse his tension.
“It’ll be okay.”
The way-too-handsy guy patted the sleeve of Noah’s parka. “They just need to
work it out. Pixel loves to play.”
Noah took a step to
the side. Who did that? Touched complete strangers? But the guy kept up his
friendly grin, not unlike his dog, who kept gamely chasing Ulysses. Ulysses won
the race to the ball this time and hightailed it back to Noah. Not releasing
his prize, he whined softly.
“Hey, boy. You got
a toy?” The guy knelt to dog level and extended a hand, but instead of
sniffing, Ulysses shook his head.
“Sorry. He’s not
much on new people.” Neither am I.
Noah’s voice sounded rough to his own ears—too many days with only Ulysses to
talk to.
“It’s okay.” The
guy straightened, then extended a hand to Noah. “I’m Adrian Gottlieb. You been
at Capitol Reef long?”
“Couple of weeks.”
He returned Adrian’s handshake, hating it when a little buzz shot up his arm.
Unlike his own gloved hand, Adrian’s hand was bare, a hint of a tattoo playing
peekaboo with his cuff, his grip strong and firm. And Noah had absolutely no
business noticing anything more than the guy’s relentless friendliness.
Adrian smiled
expectantly as he released Noah’s hand.
“Oh, I’m Noah. And
that’s Ulysses,” he added, because dog people always wanted to know all about the dog. No doubt the guy was bursting to
tell Pixel’s life story.
“Add-dreeee-an,” a heavily accented voice called from the gate. A beefy guy close to
Noah’s age leaned on the fence, bald head gleaming in the setting sun. “I’m lonely. When are you coming back?”
“Coming,” Adrian
shouted, then gave Noah a shrug with a “what can you do?” expression on his
face. He grabbed Pixel and jogged across the field.
Noah nodded like he knew anything about handling demanding
friends. Adrian greeted the mammoth dude with a quick peck. Okay then. Not a friend. He should have
guessed, but he was a bit slow about relationship stuff. The country was
changing, even way out here, but no one would dare try even that much PDA in
his tiny West Texas college town. His stomach gave a weird flip—not quite
discomfort, but something else he refused to name. Time to return his attention
to Ulysses. He hurled the tennis ball as hard as he could.
Annabeth Albert grew up sneaking romance novels under the bed
covers. Now, she devours all subgenres of romance out in the open—no
flashlights required! When she’s not adding to her keeper shelf, she’s a
multi-published Pacific Northwest romance writer.
Emotionally complex, sexy, and funny stories are her favorites
both to read and to write. Annabeth loves finding happy endings for a variety
of pairings and is a passionate gay rights supporter. In between searching out
dark heroes to redeem, she works a rewarding day job and wrangles two toddlers.
Represented by Saritza Hernandez of the Corvisiero Literary Agency
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