Ellie Thomas: London in the Rain

This week Ellie Thomas is dropping in to talk about her new release, London in the Rain. Welcome, Ellie!

Thank you so much, Ally, for having me as your guest today! I’m Ellie Thomas, and I write Gay Historical Romance. In this blog, I’m chatting about London in the Rain, my story for the April Rain or Shine submissions call for JMS Books.

When I decided to pick the Rain option, I immediately thought of London (for some strange reason!) and, after exploring the city during the Elizabethan era in my Valentine’s story, The Spice of Life, it was fun to move five centuries forwards to the 1930s.

As I wanted my story to be atmospheric, I turned to the Lord Peter Wimsey books by one of my favourite Mystery Golden Age authors, Dorothy L. Sayers, to see the scale of early 20th century London through her eyes and get an ear for the language of the times. I have to say it felt like an indulgence to leaf through my well-thumbed copies of Murder Most Advertised and Strong Poison to get a mental map of 1930s London. 

In homage to the author, my main character, Raymond, lives in Bloomsbury (like Sayers herself and her mystery writer heroine Harriet Vane) and he also works in Southampton Row, where Pym’s advertising agency is based in Murder Most Advertised. Also, David, Raymond’s love interest is an Oxford graduate, like Lord Peter Wimsey, and if asked, he’d confirm he’s also a Balliol College man. 

As Raymond, although sexually active, lives an outwardly closeted life, I had already decided that David would be much more open in his attitude and was at least an observer of the vivid Berlin scene in the late 1920s and early 1930s, where anything went in terms of artistic and sexual expression. What I was fascinated to discover, was that by the mid-1930s, London had a vibrant LGBT (or to use the contemporary term, “queer”) scene of its own, despite draconian laws. 

Unsurprisingly, as it has been for many years, Soho was also the centre of this earlier hub. Although Charlie’s, the bar in my story, is a figment of my imagination, other clubs that I mention like the Shim Sham and Billie’s were real if relatively short-lived due to police intervention.

I discovered a fascinating virtual walking tour that rediscovers and celebrates this forgotten and colourful world and is well worth a look.

I also used references from the National Archives for my chapter set in Billie’s club, including descriptions of the spacious club room featuring a grand piano. Also, regular performers and some of the clientele mentioned in this excellent article.

Much of the writer’s observations are taken from the criminal and prosecution files, which is a desperately sad indictment of that period, but also contain fascinating details of the décor, acts, and the atmosphere of fun and escapism.

These sources inspired to me recreate that ambience in the concluding scene of my story, set in Billie’s Club. Here, at last, Raymond relaxes his inhibitions enough to dance in public with David, surrounded by an inclusive and vibrant crowd.

London in the Rain

Cover: London in the rain by Ellie Thomas

A life of set routine is the norm for Raymond Smith. Now in his mid-thirties, a fleeting wartime romance far behind him, he is an exemplary clerk at a London insurance firm where he’s perceived as dry and conventional.

But Raymond has a secret. Every month or so, he visits Charlie’s, one of the more understated bars in Soho’s flowering gay scene in the 1930s. There, he seeks relief with strangers to get him through the next few weeks.

On one of these visits, he encounters suave David Carstairs, a well-travelled linguist with the Foreign Office. Rather than a brief encounter, David offers him friendship and even affection. Despite Raymond’s misgivings, the two men, with their contrasting backgrounds and experiences, start to form a bond in the spring of 1936 as Europe inexorably begins to march towards war. Will Raymond fearfully reject this chance of happiness? Or can he unbend enough to allow David into his heart and life?

Read on!

Raymond was almost breathless when he entered Charlie’s, the doorman lifting the curtain for him without hesitation. He paused in the inner doorway, taking in the quiet scene. As it was so early, very few tables were occupied, and the pounding in his head increased as he fruitlessly looked around the room. At last, his gaze locked on a familiar figure, sitting in the same position as Raymond had occupied the previous Thursday. 
Charlie, the owner, elegant in black satin with her brassy hair piled high, was leaning over the bar talking to him in a familiar way that indicated long association. As he approached, the man gave a welcoming smile and Raymond’s headache vanished.
“Scotch and soda?” The man queried before giving his order to Charlie. As he chatted with the proprietress, Raymond looked at him surreptitiously. He’s not out on the town tonight, he thought, as the stylish dress clothes had been replaced by a tailored Savile Row suit. He must have come straight from work in much the same way as Raymond, and he wondered if his gentleman was something in the city or even a cog in the wheel of government.
Placing down their drinks with a vermilion-lipped beam, Charlie moved down the bar to serve the next customer. The man smiled at Raymond, picked up his glass, and said, “Cheers!”
Braced for the first taste of harsh spirit, Raymond’s eyebrows rose when the contents proved to be far superior to what was normally served. He must be more than a vague acquaintance of Charlie’s, thought Raymond, as this is the good stuff. He took a long swallow, appreciating the fine flavours. 
“Bad day?” The man asked sympathetically.
“Oh, you know,” Raymond shrugged. “The usual ups and downs of office life.” Although his companion smiled understandingly, Raymond would have been astonished if the man had any familiarity with his humdrum routine.
The gentleman took a sip of whisky, and after hesitating, he began, “Well, whatever happened today, despite any inconvenience to you, I’m glad it brought you here. I was hoping I might see you again,” he finished with a shy smile.
Raymond said nothing, hiding his confusion with the rest of his drink. He must be joking. Why would someone like him give me a second glance? 
Embarrassed, he changed the subject, pretending to peer into the corners of the room, saying, “Your young friends not with you tonight?”
The man laughed, “Thankfully, no. One round of the delights of Soho was sufficient for my young cousin and his chums. From the amount and variety of booze they put back, I wouldn’t be surprised if they are still suffering from sore heads. Talking of which, would you like another?” 
He gestured to Charlie, who took away their glasses to refill them from her private supply, returning their replenished drinks with a conspiratorial grin. Raymond took a sip of his fresh drink, letting the fine whisky roll around his mouth. 
“By the way,” the man said, “I don’t know your name. How remiss of me. I’m David Carstairs.” 
Taken aback by such openness, Raymond paused before he shook the proffered hand, his own captured briefly by a warm, firm grip. 
“Raymond Smith,” he muttered in response. Meeting David’s amused, slightly disbelieving glance, he laughed and said, “No, it’s not a false name.”
“There are plenty of genuine Smiths in the world, I suppose,” David said lightly. “And not merely assumed for reasons of disguise.”
Raymond felt keenly aware of their surroundings and all the secrets this place of assignation held, including his own.
As though on the same wavelength, David said casually, “This bar is a pleasant place to unwind and not too far from King Charles Street where I work.”
So he’s in the Foreign Office, then, Raymond thought. I should have guessed. He’s got the looks and poise and, no doubt, the education too.  
He cleared his throat, “I’m not far away either. My office is in Southampton Row.”
It seemed oddly personal to trade such information here, where Raymond had exchanged greater intimacies with men, never knowing a single fact about their lives. 
David glanced at his watch. “I assume you haven’t had the chance to eat as yet? Perhaps after we’ve finished these, we might get a spot of supper somewhere?”
After gulping down his first drink, Raymond had been slowly sipping his second glass of whisky to remain as long as he could in David’s presence, convinced the other man would excuse himself at the first opportunity.  
Raymond blinked, taking in the import of the invitation. “I’d like that very much,” he replied. David’s shoulders relaxed as though they had held some invisible tension.

Buy London in the Rain

About Ellie

Ellie Thomas lives by the sea. She comes from a teaching background and goes for long seaside walks where she daydreams about history. She is a voracious reader especially about anything historical. She mainly writes historical gay romance.

Ellie also writes historical erotic romance as L. E. Thomas.

Website : Facebook

#AMA: Resonating with your characters

Ask me anything. Join my facebook group or newsletter for calls for questions!

This time’s topic is a question from Fee. Which of your characters, if any, do you resonate with most?

I suppose the easiest way to fudge this is to say well there’s something of myself in all my characters and be all highbrow about it. However, there are definitely characters I resonate with more than others. It tends to be the people who are lost that I find I chime with most, or the people who are unhappy with themselves. What does that say about me? I don’t know*. None of my characters are me, but a few of them have quite a few elements of me in them…so, I’m going to pick two. Laurie from Taking Stock and Walter from The Quid Pro Quo.

Laurie from Taking Stock

Laurie Henshaw, farmer. Recovering from a stroke. Age 33. Brown hair, brown eyes, sheepdogs Nell and Fly. Came to Webber's Farm in 1954. Taking Stock.

Laurie is in his mid-thirties and has had a stroke, which means he can’t work his own farm any more. Yeah, okay, I wrote this just after my Mama had her stroke, but actually Laurie’s emotions and feelings of powerlessness are right out of the Ally Lester Playbook. My own chronic disability is a seizure disorder paired with fibromyalgia and I loathe not being able to drive, or even go shopping alone in case I keel over. I hate not being able to have animals any more—I use to run the egg stall at the local farmers market and teach poultry-keeping courses and generally heave bags of animal feed and animals and animal housing around and I am now dependent on Mr AL and Talking Child to even take care of the handful of hens we keep ourselves. I put a lot of that frustration into Laurie—his feeling of losing his livelihood and his anger at the universe and I think it comes through. Bits of him were very therapeutic to write and bits of him were very upsetting.

Walter from The Quid Pro Quo

The same with Walter. Walter’s happy enough. He’s got his friends and his work and his travelogues. But he’s hiding his big secret from the world and no-one but his very closest friends know it. So he keeps that bit of distance from everyone else to protect himself.  I am not out as non-binary or pan to the little village I live in. Some people know—I don’t make a secret of it exactly, but it’s not something that comes up in the village jubilee committee meetings. I present as a short, round, grumpy, middle-aged, straight married lady. And so I feel quite a bit of kinship with Walter. He’s short, soft around the middle and a bit grumpy…and he hides his gender and sexuality. It’s not the same. But there’s elements of me in there and that resonates.

Walter Kennet. Born 1880, East End of London. Profession, army nurse (orderly). Smokes a pipe. Appearance. Small, running a little bit to fat, dark brown hair and eyes, London accent. Personality, sarcastic, loyal, competent. Pansexual, transgender. Can cook. Reads travelogues for pleasure. The Quid Pro Quo.

The fact I was able to give both characters happy endings means a lot to me. A lot of what I write is about people finding a home in other people—found family as well as a romantic happy ending—and I guess that’s what I desire for myself. I do have a large and supportive family of choice, so I draw from that in the real world and hope my characters can have that too. But these characters also carry the sense of dislocation I still sometimes feel when the world gets out of whack and that also makes them close to my heart.

Thank you, Fee, for asking the question and making me think about it!

*Dear Reader, ALLY DOES KNOW

Secrets on a Train – Nell Iris

Hi everyone, hi Ally and thanks for inviting me over. You’re always so kind and generous. ❤️ (Ally: BLUSHES)

Today, I’m here to talk about my newest release, Secrets on a Train.

A few months ago, JM Snyder of JMS Books was writing with Ofelia Gränd, Ally, and me in the morning office, and she told us about an idea she had for upcoming submission calls. One of them, “Sugar or spice,” caught my attention. The idea was to write a short story (between 6000 and 12000 long) and incorporate either sugar or spice as a theme.

That submission call idea burrowed itself into my brain and refused to let go, and even though there was another project that should have gotten my attention, I pushed that particular story back and threw myself into sugar or spice.

And I’m sure it’ll come as a surprise to no one familiar with my writing, that I gravitated towards sugar since my stories don’t tend to be hot and sizzling, but sweet and emotional. My sugar story, Secrets on a Train, is no different. In fact, I’ve repeatedly told Ally and Ofelia that I’ll probably be roasted for Secrets on a Train because there’s not even an on-page kiss.

Gasp.

I know, I know! That’s a bit extreme, even for me. I usually get at least one review with every book I release lamenting the lack of heat, and now my characters don’t even kiss? What were you thinking, Nell?

But let me assure you there’s plenty of flirting and heated glances and pin-striped crotches in this story. Okay, only one pin-striped crotch, but what I’m trying to say is that the lack of a kiss doesn’t mean a lack of chemistry because the sweetness of this story is of the literal kind. Sugar. It’s two strangers in the silent car on a train connecting when one of them pours not one, not two, but three packets of sugar in his to-go coffee. And who can resist the allure of so much sweetness? Not Runar, that’s for sure.

Secrets on a Train

Nell Iris, Secrets on a Train, cover

It’s the fountain pens that capture Valentin’s attention on the morning commute, not the perfectly imperfect man who spends his train rides using them. Not his pinstriped suits, his chin-length hair, or his perpetually raised eyebrow. But one morning when the man strikes up a written conversation, Valentin gives up all pretense. It’s not just the pens. It’s the man. Runar.

The conversations continue, and the men get to know each other better, sharing secrets they’ve never told another soul. The connection is powerful, growing stronger with every encounter, every scribbled conversation, every scorching look. But can secrets shared on a train be enough to build a forever?

M/M Contemporary / 9889 words

Buy links: JMS Books:: Amazon :: Books2Read

About Nell

Nell Iris is a romantic at heart who believes everyone deserves a happy ending. She’s a bonafide bookworm (learned to read long before she started school), wouldn’t dream of going anywhere without something to read (not even the ladies room), loves music (and singing along at the top of her voice but she’s no Celine Dion), and is a real Star Trek nerd (Make it so). She loves words, bullet journals, poetry, wine, coffee-flavored kisses, and fika (a Swedish cultural thing involving coffee and pastry!)

Nell believes passionately in equality for all regardless of race, gender or sexuality, and wants to make the world a better, less hateful, place.

Nell is a bisexual Swedish woman married to the love of her life, a proud mama of a grown daughter, and is approaching 50 faster than she’d like. She lives in the south of Sweden where she spends her days thinking up stories about people falling in love. After dreaming about being a writer for most of her life, she finally was in a place where she could pursue her dream and released her first book in 2017.

Nell Iris writes gay romance, prefers sweet over angsty, short over long, and quirky characters over alpha males.

Find Nell on social media:

Newsletter :: Webpage/blog :: Twitter :: Instagram :: Facebook Page :: Facebook Profile :: Goodreads :: Bookbub

Excerpt from Secrets on a Train

He taps the espresso cup with a quirked eyebrow, and I shake my head. No, I didn’t put sugar in his coffee. He tears off the lid and tosses back the coffee, as though it was a shot of whiskey, making me shudder. 
“Bleurgh!” My exclaimation makes the old lady—who’s also traveling on this train every morning and has appointed herself the security guard of the silent car—shoots me a poisonous glare, and I mouth I’m sorry to her.
Laughter dances in Runar’s features and I make an exaggerated wince, my silent way of saying either “ouch” or “oops” or a combination of both.
Runar has written something in his notebook. 
Thanks for the coffee. It was great. But why?
I point at the window and fake a shudder, and he nods as though he not only understood what I was trying to say but agreed, too. He underlines the word thanks and I smile and give him a thumbs-up without taking my eyes off what he’s written. 
That purple ink. I can’t get over it. So far, he’s only used black or blue ink, serious colors to go with a serious-looking man, making his handwriting almost ominous. But the purple ink softens the sharp edges of his writing—turning the angry-looking slashes into swoops and swirls—and of the man himself. 
I grab my phone off the table and tap out a question. What’s up with the purple ink? 
He draws a big question mark on the paper, but his quirked eyebrow already asked the question. 
It seems so…bubbly. You don’t give me a bubbly impression, so it surprised me.
Bubbly?
I nod.
Ink can be bubbly? The corners of his mouth twitch, as though he’s holding back a smile. 
Today’s pen is as sleek as a samurai sword. Your usual black slashes would be more in style.
His eyes crinkle. You’re keeping track of my pens? 
I nod. You haven’t used the same one twice since I started sitting across from you. 
My admission—revealing that I’ve watched him every day for weeks—could’ve, should’ve, made him wary of me. Scared him even. But nothing in his demeanor suggests that’s the case. Instead, he relaxes back into his seat, crossing his legs over the knees, brushing out invisible wrinkles of his already immaculate suit, smirking as he catches my gaze following his every movement. He wiggles his foot, smirk widening as he gets the desired effect of my complete attention. 
I tear my gaze away to ask him another question. How many fountain pens do you own? 
He slides his calf down his shin, slowly. When his foot hits the floor, he lets his knees fall open and his hands land on his thighs. He might as well have drawn a huge arrow pointing at his junk and written LOOK THIS WAY! with his irresistible purple ink.
So I oblige him. I look at his long legs, his powerful thighs that not even the fabric of his pants can hide. And I look at his bulge, embraced and emboldened by pinstripes. Tantalizing, promising hidden wonders, making me want to fall on my knees and bury my face in the V of his legs and inhale him. Ingest him. 
I run a trembling hand through my hair and let my eyes wander up his body and meet his gaze.
He leans forward to pick up the pen, his eyes never leaving me. More than fifty, he writes without looking, his words veering off the lines. I have to read it three times before understanding.
Oh right. Fountain pens. 

Buy links: JMS Books:: Amazon :: Books2Read

Skye Kilaen: If I were a Weapon

Let’s welcome Skye Kilaen today, with a whole lot of amazing short stories for you to investigate. I’ve read some of these… An Offering of Plums is particularly striking… but a load are new-to-me and I am having to have some fun investigating.

Welcome, Skye!

Sometimes I want to read something I can be done with in one evening… without staying up way past my bedtime. (Don’t judge. We’ve all done it.) And as a romance reader and lifelong geek girl, I always love finding a short romance that’s sci-fi or has magic.

Here are some of my favorite picks for novellas and short stories in three categories: contemporary paranormal, fantasy and science fiction.

Contemporary Paranormal

The Haunting of Killian McKay by Leigh M. Lorien pairs a paranormal investigator with a genderfluid witch for a meet-spooky (did I just coin a new term?) that balances ghostly stuff, past pain being confronted, and attraction.

“In an effort to reinvigorate the paranormal investigation genre — and his career — Killian McKay makes the decision to livestream a ghost hunt in the house where he had his first supernatural encounter as a kid. To make sure things get interesting, he hires a witch to stir up the spirits in the house.

When the witch, Lady Ivana, turns out to be a handsome, muscular, genderfluid man named Ivan, Killian quickly realizes he underestimated just how interesting things can get.”

Alone and Palely Loitering by Julian Stewart is a fairy-tale feeling romance/romance-adjacent novella with an un-gendered main character, by an agender author. There’s a lot of pain in it, but a lot of beauty as well. I was absolutely captivated.

“Late one night, at a bar, two people meet over a cigarette. One of them is a cab driver. The other may or may not be real.

A tale of assumptions, expectations, bad habits, and the importance of listening to your instincts. And most of all, about love and the strange places you find it.”

A Duet for Invisible Strings by Llinos Cathryn Thomas checks so many of my favorite boxes: sapphic romance, middle-aged main characters, and gay pining. SO much gay pining.

“Heledd, leader of the first violins, has been in love with her irrepressible conductor Rosemary for years.

She’s keeping a secret that means she can never be with Rosemary, but the time they spend working and performing together is enough for her – until a near miss with a speeding car forces her to reevaluate everything she thought she knew.

When the orchestra is mysteriously summoned to perform in the Welsh village where Heledd grew up – a village she hasn’t returned to in decades – the life she’s made for herself begins to unravel, and her secrets threaten to escape.

A Little Village Blend by ‘Nathan Burgoine is a sweet little M/M romance novella about a tea shop proprietor with magical powers and the soldier he’s crushing on who’s running himself ragged trying to balance work and taking care of his best friend’s gorgeous husky dog.

“According to Ivan’s sister Anya, Ivan’s tea leaves promise his perfect match is out there somewhere, just waiting to be swept off their feet. Ivan knows Anya’s always right—an annoying trait for a sister if ever there was one.

Ivan’s own knack with tea might not deal with the future, but it’s pretty good at helping with the here and now. When Walt, a tall, dark, and grumpy soldier shows up at his store, NiceTeas, in obvious need of a hand—and a dog-sitter—Ivan rises to the challenge and offers blends to make Walt’s life a little easier. There’s just no way he can help falling for the guy. But Anya says Walt’s not the one for Ivan, and the tea leaves don’t lie.”

Fantasy

An Offering of Plums by J. Emery is a romance between a man and a non-binary demon starts with attempted murder. It’s not the demon who’s at fault! Or the man, Tristan, who just wanted to have a nice picnic with his boyfriend. (Is that so wrong?!)

“When Tristan’s boyfriend invites him to the Guardian Hill for a date one night he doesn’t know what to expect. Certainly not the betrayal he ends up with as his boyfriend tries to use him to summon the guardian demon. But the demon has their own ideas about what makes a fitting offering and a terrified man is not it. The demon frees him instead.

Angry and hurt after the ordeal, Tristan returns to the hill again seeking not just answers but solace. Over time he and the demon develop a tentative friendship that may help him heal in more ways than one.”

Disclosure: Emery is an online friend, who became a friend because I loved this story so much that I reached out to say hi.

Through Fire by Parker Jaysen is a magic + tech post-apocalyptic short story that jumped onto my fave f/f romance list the minute I finished it. It’s a series starter but each book follows a different couple.

“Vick and Alice are powerful mages – and estranged lovers. Their mission, get the cargo intact through flame, acid, and evil magic. That’s supposed to be the easy part.

But for Alice, a scab has been ripped off an old wound. Does she steel herself against a torment of frustration, or does she dare to bare her heart? Being wrong would break her.

Then the mission decides to be not so easy after all.”

Lord Heliodor’s Retirement by Amy Rae Durreson is a fantasy romance with older characters, and one of my comfort re-reads despite some scary parts. I think it comforts me because the main character finds the courage to confront his trauma, but he doesn’t have to do it alone.

“Lord Adem Heliodor might have survived the Screaming, a magical attack which slaughtered his friends and colleagues in front of him, but his struggle to recover his nerves sees him forced into early retirement. Returning to his childhood home in the countryside, he isn’t expecting to find missing information about the plot which caused the Screaming or to find himself once more face-to-face with the man he loved and lost decades before.”

A Better Fate by D.N. Bryn is either a fantasy romance or romance-adjacent fantasy, but I’m not sure it maters which because it’s lovely. It’s about forgiveness, in the end. Highly recommended especially if you like folklore and fairy tale inspired stories.

“Hal remains undead for one purpose: to seek vengeance for her own demise. But with her body falling to pieces, her memories nearly gone, and a magical storm on the rise, that’s a tough job.

When a dryad offers to help Hal retrace her steps to find her killer, it seems fate might finally be on her side. Forgotten pasts are not always friendly, though.”

Disclosure: I fell in love with this story as I was beta reading it for the author.

A Chain of Beads by M. Arbon is a fantasy short with a romance subplot, and one of the best short stories I’ve ever read. Intense cultural worldbuilding and deep emotions. Amazing work, amazing kindness and care shown by the characters for each other.

“Goodman Stone fled tragedy at home to build a new life doing odd jobs at a school in Frael. When one of the students does something unthinkable, Stone comes to his aid. He is helped by schoolmaster Caerel, and as the relationship between the two men deepens, Stone contemplates a decision that will once again reshape the life he’s strung together.”

Disclosure: Arbon is an online friend, who became a friend because I loved their short stories so much that I reached out to say hi.

Science Fiction

The Cybernetic Tea Shop by Meredith Katz is a lovely, quiet novella about an asexual lesbian technician falling in love with the female robot proprietor of an old-timey tea shop. The domesticity they fall into is so warm and reassuring, and the mutual declaration of affection is so beautifully delicate.

“Clara Gutierrez is a highly-skilled technician specializing in the popular ‘Raise’ AI companions. Her childhood in a migrant worker family has left her uncomfortable with lingering in any one place, so she sticks around just long enough to replenish her funds before she moves on, her only constant companion Joanie, a fierce, energetic Raise hummingbird.

Sal is a fully autonomous robot, the creation of which was declared illegal ages earlier due to ethical concerns. She is older than the law, however, at best out of place in society and at worst hated. […]

When Clara stops by Sal’s shop for lunch, she doesn’t expect to find a real robot there, let alone one who might need her help. But as they begin to spend time together and learn more about each other, they both start to wrestle with the concept of moving on…”

Programming by M. Arbon is a fun little sci-fi M/M short story that pairs an ambitious television writer with a human-machine hybrid sex worker in a battle of wills in a charming spin on the fake dating trope.

“Introverted Lewis needs to increase his Social score for a shot at his dream job with his favorite serialized space opera. So he hires human-machine hybrid Cam to pose his boyfriend. But Lewis isn’t interested in a real relationship, and he takes steps to ensure that the liaison remains purely for show.

Cam dates people for a living. He enjoys his job, and he’s good at it. He’s not allowed to touch Lewis. But there’s nothing that prevents him from talking…”

Junk Mage by Elliott Cooper is a fun “meet cute with potential” story that does a great job with worldbuilding in a very short piece and bites off exactly the right amount of plot for the length.

“When technomancer Quillian Defote crash lands on remote planet Marutuk, he has limited time to repair his ship and get off world. If he fails, he’ll forfeit his position as professor of mechanical transmutation at the prestigious Ivy Arcanarium, and ruin his employment prospects in yet another sector.

Hunter, a cyborg guarding a junkyard that holds what Quill needs, is charmed by the wayward mage and wants to help him. But Hunter is bound by honor to dutifully guard his mistress and her possessions, no matter how cruelly she treats him.”

Necessary Repairs by Skye Kilaen… is by me, and it’s free when you sign up for newsletter, which is a hybrid of author news & queer romance and SFF recs. 

“Violet hasn’t seen her danger-loving business partner (and wife) Iona for months. They’re better off with at least two planets between them. But now a client’s offered them good money to retrieve an irreplaceable item from the man who stole it. Violet wants to say no, but their bank balance and ailing ship’s engine say yes.

It’s one day’s work and they’re both heavily armed. Surely they can get through one job together without breaking anything else?”

Skye’s Latest Book

If I Were A Weapon (All These Gifts Book 1)

First Chapter Preview & Content Warnings:

See the future. Set things on fire. Fall in love? A superpowered sci-fi romance.

When dying alien ships materialized across the Earth, their nanite cloud knocked Deneve Wilder out cold. She woke up with the ability to see the future. Determined to keep anyone from using her visions for evil, she took to the road. Giving up everything was a small price to pay for freedom.

The ship that hit Jolie Betancourt’s town gave her the power to set things on fire. It was safer to start over in a new city. Then one terrible mistake demonstrated far too clearly that for her, solitude is safer. For everyone.

So when Deneve shows up after a vision of Jolie being kidnapped, Jolie wants little to do with the frustratingly attractive drifter. Deneve’s surprised by how much she wants to thaw the pretty shopkeeper’s chilly attitude, but the idea of staying in one place sets off her alarm bells.

If they can’t evade whoever’s abducting people with powers, however, the growing connection they both feel in spite of themselves might be the least of their problems.

The first installment of a near-future science fiction F/F romance series, which is slow burn to high heat with a guaranteed HEA at series end.

Author Bio

Skye Kilaen writes queer romance, both contemporary and science fiction, that’s sometimes about polyamorous relationships. Even her contemporaries are usually at least a bit geeky. After all, she does some of her writing in her local comic book shop.

She’s bi/pan and she currently lives in Austin, Texas because of all the libraries and breakfast tacos.

Website & Newsletter Signup : Twitter : Goodreads : Amazon

The Amazing Year of Ofelia Grand and Holly Day

Hi! Thank you so much, Ally, for letting me drop by again 😊 (Any time!)

It’s been quite a year, hasn’t it? I know many say that and mean it in a bad way, but that’s not what I mean at all. It’s been a really good year for me.

During a weak moment back in 2020, I decided that writing under two names was a brilliant idea, and Ally did absolutely nothing to talk me out of it. Quite the opposite, actually.

So we started this year by releasing Holly Day’s first story – Hop Hop, Carrot Top which is a low heat contemporary gay romance I wrote to celebrate Kiss a Ginger Day.

Then February came, well… I wrote a Valentine story – Be Still, My Heart, a contemporary M/M romance.

After February comes March, and with March comes aliens. Extraterrestrial Abduction Day is in March, and it was one I couldn’t ignore, so There Will Be Aliens came to be. While HHCT and BSMH are quite serious tales, this is silly through and through LOL

With April comes bad weather, and I wrote Blown Away to celebrate Big Wind Day. It might be my favourite of Holly’s stories… maybe. It has a bear shifter who constantly thinks of cakes 😁

Next up was Plant a Vegetable Garden Day which is in May, so I wrote The Hunger Gap. It’s low heat, dystopian, and it turned out darker than I’d first planned, but I enjoyed writing it.

In June, we have Best Friend Day, so I wrote Just to Breathe, which is a friends to lovers, contemporary, mystery sort of story.

After having written contemporary, I figured we’d need us some vampires, because why not? So I wrote Bring Him Back, Jack which has a main character with heterochromia since we’re celebrating Different Coloured Eyes Day

In August we have Be An Angel Day, so I wrote The Bear Claw which has a pretty obnoxious alpha character who thinks he acts like an angel – he doesn’t 😆 It’s paranormal and one of the characters is a baker who can put emotions into baked goods.

With September came the dragons – no real dragons in this one! The Dragon Next Door is a contemporary story I wrote for National Neighbour Day. It’s about a sunny guy and his grumpy next-door neighbour. This might be my favourite, I know I said Blown Away might be, and maybe it is, but who doesn’t like a grumpy neighbour?

Call Me Charles. October is a cold month, here at least, but October has Motorcycle Ride Day, so I wrote another contemporary story about a knight in black leather… who owns a candy shop 😄

When November rolled in, I figured it was time for real dragons, so I wrote How to Soothe a Dragon. Only… as so often, I started writing thinking I was gonna write a cool sci-fi story with scary aliens. I wrote a paranormal dystopian romance about dragons who are allergic to lemons. Yes, I know… lemons 🙄

And then here we are! In December, and you all know what December is all about. The Scent of Pine is a contemporary mystery-ish story I wrote for Christmas Card Day. It was meant to be cute; it isn’t. We have creepy Christmas cards and a stalker. But, there is a Christmas tree that smells of pine 😊

So that’s Holly’s year. I’m quite proud. (Ally: And so you should be!)

You’ll find blurbs and excerpts for all these stories here.

Holly Day's 2021 releases

While I’ve written stories for Holly, I’ve also written stories for me (the schizophrenia is rearing its pretty head). I won’t give a story-by-story list because I’ve had both new releases and re-releases, and to be honest, it’s all spinning in my head. If I could sleep for a month, I would 😊

But what I do know is that I have a release on Christmas Day. The Ruby tooth is a low heat, paranormal, holiday story that I wrote for an in-house call for JMS Books named Naughty or Nice. We were to pick one or the other and write a short story for it.

I wrote a Nice story.

There is a bar called The Ruby Tooth and it’s split in two – nice, pure, wholly good people go to one side, and bad people to the other. It’s a fated mates story, but Ilya is shown to the good side and Ulric to the bad. And it’s dress-up night.

I feel like I’ve talked forever now, so I’ll leave you with an excerpt. It’s up for pre-order over at JMS Books 😘

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

The Ruby Tooth

Cover, The Ruby Tooth by Ofelia Grand

Ilya Lewis is gonna kill his best friend Vera. She not only persuaded him off his couch and into the creepiest nightclub in the city, she also didn’t show. When Ilya learns the bar is split into two halves, and he’s been let into the wrong side, it doesn’t make things any better. Once the doorman determines which half to let you into, he won’t let you into the other.

Ulric Moon hates the Ruby Tooth. But as a bounty hunter, he must go where the trails lead him, and tonight it’s landed him in the worst nightclub in the universe. All he wants is to catch the vampire he’s hunting, but despite trying to convince the veritas doorman examining his soul that he needs to be let into the good side of the club, he’s shown to the bad. As if that wasn’t enough, his destined mate somehow manages to sneak into the bad side where he doesn’t belong. Ilya finds a way to the other side of the bar, but one look at the patrons there has him regretting ever leaving his apartment. When he tries to leave, a scary-looking man who does nothing but growl follows him.

Ulric knows he’s freaking Ilya out, but Ilya has inadvertently caught the interest of the vampire Ulric is hunting, and he has to protect him. How will Ulric keep Ilya safe when he doesn’t believe Ulric is a bounty hunter? And how do you tell someone they’re your mate when they don’t believe you’re a werewolf?

Preorder The Ruby Tooth from JMS Books Preorder Elsewhere

Excerpt from The Ruby Tooth

Ilya stepped away from the table before Vera could talk him into staying. If he stayed, he might crawl up on the man’s lap—so unlike him.
He needed to leave, and he wanted pie. Maybe he could buy a slice of pie on his way home and eat it once he’d gotten out of this ridiculous outfit.
“Ilya!”
He ignored Vera’s call and took aim at the door he believed was the exit. Now that he was moving, he didn’t want to get pulled back in, and Vera had a knack for making him do things he didn’t want to do.
Right as he reached out to push at the door, it was yanked open from the other side. He came face to face with a fine-limbed man with sharp features and skin so pale it looked like he hadn’t left his house in a decade.
“Oh, sorry.” Ilya stepped out of the way only to bump into someone. “Shit, sorry.” He tried to turn to see who he’d collided with, but a strong arm crossed his chest pulling his back against a warm, strong body. For a second, he struggled, then he recognized the worn leather sleeve and the scarred hand. It was… the man.
The heat of him made Ilya’s heart speed up—not good.
“No problem.” The pale man gave him a predatory smile which had Ilya suppress a shudder. “Can I buy you a drink?”
Before Ilya could decline, the man—who he needed to ask the name of if he was gonna keep hugging Ilya—growled. It had the hairs on Ilya’s neck stand on end, not only because he growled straight into his ear, but because it sounded real. Had he heard it when out walking in a forest, he’d have assumed he was being chased by wolves.
“Why is it always you ending up in a man sandwich?” Vera rolled her eyes which made the pale man grin—or maybe it was her words making him grin.
“I’m sure we can all play, pet.”
“No!” Ilya pushed at the arm around him. “No. I’m leaving.” Three pairs of eyes were watching him. “You have fun. Man-sandwich her—” He gestured at Vera.
The doorman poked his head in. There was nothing strange about his eyes, and yet it was as if they could see into his soul. “You’re on the wrong side.”
The pale man’s gaze whipped around to Ilya, making him flinch.
“I’m leaving.” He spoke as much to the doorman as he did to the others before focusing on Vera. “I’m going to bed. Alone.”
“Ilya.”
“No.” He held his hands up. “This was a bad idea. I want to go home, I want to have pie, and I want to put on my pajamas and watch some TV.” He tumbled out the door, ignoring the doorman’s narrowed eyes, and hurried out into the December cold.
He walked with rapid steps, unable to shake the unease building in his chest. The Ruby Tooth was the creepiest bar he’d ever been to—not that he went out often.
“Ilya.”
Ilya jumped as the man with the weird contact lenses appeared by his side. “I meant it; I’m going home. You should go back to Vera.”
“You want pie?” The man smiled, and it looked genuine.
“I… eh… What’s your name?”
“Ulric Moon.”
Ilya frowned. “Ulric Moon? Are you joking?”
“Nope. It’s a family name.”
“Ulric or Moon?”
Ulric grinned. “Both.”
Ilya shook his head, not sure if he was being played or not. “I’m sorry, but I’m not good company. I lost someone dear to me recently, and I’m still mourning. Vera dragged me out tonight because she thinks trips to random bars will cheer me up, but they never do.”
“I’m sorry.”
A lump formed in Ilya’s throat. “Thank you. He meant the world to me, and now the apartment is so empty, you know?”
A frown settled on Ulric’s brows. “A boyfriend?”
“What? No! My cat.”
The way Ulric stopped mid-step for a few seconds had Ilya regretting telling him.
“You’re mourning your cat? Vera… is living with you?”
Ilya shuddered. “Living with Vera? No, I love her, but no.”
“Love her?”
“Of course. She kept me safe through school, not an easy feat, considering.” He gestured at himself and realized how true it was. He was walking the street in an elf suit. Wouldn’t his bullies love that? Groaning, he sped up his steps.
People never understood why he and Vera were friends, but they didn’t know her as he did. She might come across as harsh and reckless, but there was no one he trusted more to have his back.
“Ilya.” Ulric grabbed his arm. “Listen.”
Ilya stopped, but Ulric didn’t let go of his arm. “This is gonna sound insane.”
Ilya waited. He didn’t know if he had the energy for insane, but he waited anyway.

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