Leather and Love: How Romance Helps Stamp Out Hate

Charity Sip Blog Hop

Those of us who wrote short stories for Torquere’s Charity Sip Blitz to benefit NOH8 have been asked to write a few words on how romance can help stamp out hate.

To me, that’s pretty simple. Where there’s love, there can’t be hate. And romance is all about love.

One of my favorite authors, Katherine Kurtz, was known for writing that humans fear that which they don’t understand. She was talking about the way “normal” humans feared the magically gifted Deryni, who lived, often in hiding, among them. I always thought there was a huge parallel between how Deryni were treated in her world and how homosexuals are treated in ours. Whether she intended this or not, I don’t know, but as a kid who didn’t fit in, I drew a lot of strength from her characters, who endured terrible prosecution before they finally began to find some degree of tolerance, acceptance, and finally, love from the humans around them.

I think that a lot of people in our world don’t understand homosexuality, and so they fear it because it represents something different from what they’ve always understood. And fear easily turns to hatred, which leads to violence and even more hatred. To me, one way to break this cycle is to help people understand that which confuses them. What better way to understand something than to get inside the heads of people who practice it? And where better to read about love than in romance stories?

And hence, romance can help stamp out hate.

The theme for this year’s Charity Sips was leather, to celebrate the ninth anniversary of the press. We Torquere authors ran with that theme in all directions.

I took it literally and wrote a BDSM tale about a king who risks everything to spend the night in the caves above his castle, where he can be himself for the first time in his life. It’s called Slow Awakening, and it can be purchased by clicking HERE. It’s a topic that I wanted to think a bit more about. If readers get into my character’s head and realize there’s nothing so really different about people who practice BDSM, I feel like my story is a success. I’m thrilled by the reviews and responses that it has been getting. (See some of the review links to the right.)

Anyone who leaves me a comment will be entered into a drawing on November 12 for a free copy of your choice of one of my published works, except for my Charity Sip. You can see a list of them to your right, as well. Stop back here on November 12, when I will announce the winner. Then if you send me an email, I will send you a book.

Thanks for reading!

New Cover for Ice

This entry contains NSFW material

I’m so excited! Ice has a new cover! All of us Torquere authors were given the option of having new covers designed for our older titles that had the old logos like High Ball and Single Shot that Torquere no longer uses. So I took them up on it, and this is what  artist Brandon Clay came up with. I love how cool and clean it is, with just the hint of the famous mist rising from the cubes.

And I must say, I really like this story. It’s my science fiction tale set in Acadia National Park. No dragons, but cool magic powers and two very hot men named Tace and William.  Here’s the official blurb:

Summer vacation in Acadia and a hot, seductive stranger in a gay bar — perfect. But a glass full of ice turns Tace’s vacation into a nightmare. Before the evening ends, Tace is locked into a chastity device and addicted to the rapture-inspiring vapors that dance out of the cubes known as Ice. Against his will, Tace falls into a secret and dangerous world.
Thirty years later and physically unchanged, Tace is on the other side of the glass of Ice, but it’s not as easy finding recruits as he’d thought. At least, not when he meets William, the ideal candidate, and Tace’s vision of the perfect man. How can he force Ice onto someone who is holding his heart?


And here’s a little bit from the beginning:


Ice
Chapter One
The hot, pulsing crowd swallowed him.
Tace pulled off his T-shirt and let it fall from his fingers, raised his arms to the ceiling, and savored the touch of other shirtless bodies against him, all moving to the numbing, pounding music, all lost in the flashing, rhythmic lights. This bar was everything he’d dreamed of — small, safe, and hundreds of miles from home, where he could be absolutely anonymous and utterly himself. Closing his eyes, he let the music pulse through him and make him its own.
After a while, Tace felt eyes on him. A gorgeous, blue-eyed man, very nicely shirtless and wearing a huge diamond ring on his right hand, moved in a circle around him. From behind, he laid his hands on Tace’s shoulders and began to massage to the beat.
God, this was so easy, Tace thought, leaning into the man’s hands as they slid down his sides and circled around his waist, pulling him back more firmly. Boldly, one hand went to Tace’s groin and massaged there, while the other hand went up Tace’s chest to his throat. Lips touched his jaw.
Tace moaned and closed his eyes, allowing this man to claim him without a single word.
The man led him to an empty stool at the far end of the bar and stood behind him. With one hand, the man pressed Tace’s head into a bare, muscular chest and kept it there. With the other hand, he signaled the bartender, a very young man who didn’t speak or meet Tace’s eyes. The bartender brought a single drink in a small, clear glass filled with ice, and left without any suggestion that payment was necessary. Tace thought that was a little odd, but didn’t give it another thought as the man who’d claimed him raised the glass. He brought it toward Tace, who started to drink, only to realize there was just ice inside it. No wonder the bartender hadn’t charged anything. When Tace looked up at the man behind him in confusion, the man smiled. His blue eyes were so beautiful that Tace lost himself in them.
Then he smelled something unfamiliar, a clean, sharp odor that made him think of skating on the pond on cold winter evenings, when he’d been a child with a family who still accepted him. It was the smell of ice, he thought, and realized the man behind him had brought the glass close to his face again. He glanced down and saw a faint, wispy mist coming from the cubes. They looked perfectly normal. It must be the warmth in the room causing them to vaporize. He breathed in the essence of ice, settling back more firmly against the solid man, letting his eyes close, dimly aware the music was pulsing in and out of his hearing.
He sighed in pleasure as the man’s hands began to work down his sides and across his stomach. Both hands. He opened his eyes and saw the glass resting on the bar in front of him now. They were strong, firm hands, hands that could shape and support him, the kind of hands he wanted on him so badly… Hands that slipped inside the front of his jeans and inside his shorts, grasping him firmly.
Vaguely aware that this probably shouldn’t be happening here, at the bar, even with only other gay men around, Tace thought about protesting, but he couldn’t find the energy, and oh, it felt so good… He moaned and arched backward against the man’s firm, solid body, thinking that this was better than anything he’d ever dreamed of, certainly better than anything that had happened the other few times he’d ventured into bars where his own kind congregated.
Ice and music and hands, ice and pleasure and the cold, crisp smell, and hands, and ice, and — he came. Silently, he collapsed forward against the bar, face on his left forearm, next to the glass of dancing vapors. He gazed at the shimmering cubes, entranced, while the man’s hands did something else to him inside his jeans and then withdrew. He couldn’t move, his body limp with release like he’d never felt before, his mind swirling like the patterns of mist coming from the ice. He kept breathing and breathing and a cool, tingling rush spread through him and held his body in its quivering embrace, every nerve in him humming with pleasure. Rising and throbbing and swirling and blissful.
It kept going even after someone removed the glass. After a while, Tace raised his head, still caught in the bliss of it all. The man was gone. Tace sat up and turned to look. On the dance floor, men were still dancing, but not so many. The bartender was busy at the other end of the bar. No one was sitting near him. Where had the man gone?
Tace wanted to thank him for the wonderful experience.
When he slid off the stool, he felt something pulling at him. Something wasn’t right inside his jeans. Quickly, he located the men’s room near the end of the bar, went into a stall, and unzipped. And found a metal device on himself. It had six silver rings that encircled his penis tightly, and one slightly larger one around the base of his scrotum. A solid silver strip connected the rings in the back. It looked like they were meant to be opened — he could make out a tiny line in the top of each one — and there was no way this was sliding off, it was so tight. He fumbled for some kind of release mechanism, only to discover a tiny, silver lock up close to his body.
Closed.
Shit.
Within a couple seconds, he knew the thing wasn’t coming off. Nor was he going to be able to have an erection with it on.
Okay, he thought. So he’d be seeing more of the man with the amazing hands. He hoped. Or else he would eventually have to make a very embarrassing trip to the doctor. No. No one outside this bar could ever know about this. Ever.
Though there was something kind of cool about it.

Quietness

I just came inside from sitting on my swing between our house and the edge of the woods, looking down the valley to Mt. Mansfield. The sun had set and the perfect first quarter moon seemed to sit just above the ridge in a luminous blue sky. My dog lay at my feet, and everything was perfectly still.

So still that I heard the approach of a flock of Canada Geese as though they were flying over the beaver ponds just down the road. But when I finally got my eyes on them, they were high, very high, a single line of maybe a hundred, moving quickly, probably aiming for the fields along Lake Champlain for the night. I wondered where they would be tomorrow at this time, and what would pass beneath their wings before they saw Vermont again.

Then a tiny bat skittered across the air before me. It came right over to me, close to my face for just an instant, just long enough that I could see its eyes looking at me. Then it flicked away. I thought the days were too short and the air too cold for bats — they hibernate in deep caves for the winter. We’ve already had several frosts and even snow flurries in the air. But this lone bat was not yet ready for sleep. I watched it diving for the last of the bugs until it got too dark to see it any longer.

Then my dog and I came inside.

The Jump From almost Space

Yesterday, Josh came back from the mall with the baby in time to see Varian and Justin sitting on the couch, absolutely glued to the television. Wells sat in a chair, leaning back with a slight frown. They were watching Felix Baumgartner jump out of the capsule beneath his balloon from the very brink of space.

The moment Josh realized what they were watching, he flung himself onto Varian’s lap, clutching him in terror.  “No!” he cried. “Dragons can not go that high! They absolutely can not!”

“Shh,” Varian said, holding Josh, but not taking his eyes from the screen.

“He’s down,” Justin said a few minutes later as the man landed gracefully in the desert, ran a few steps, and then fell to his knees.

“Wow,” Varian said.

“No!” Josh said again, shaking Varian a little. “Don’t you even think it! Are you kidding me? You have bodily fluids that will boil! You need oxygen! You need air beneath your wings! And it’s too cold!”

“Yeah, but did you see the view?” Varian breathed.

“No!” Josh wailed.

“I actually think we were fairly close to that point,” Justin said quietly. “The first time we flew together.”

Varian nodded slowly. “I’m thinking that, too.”

“Are you insane?” Josh whispered.

“No,” Wells said quietly. “They have one thing no human will ever have.”

“Wings?” Josh asked.

Wells smiled. “Magic.”

Rocks

I love rocks, and water, and fall foliage reflections. These have all three. (And I love Vermont, too!)

Fall Sky

Here’s some more photos that Josh took — who could resist going for a fly into a sky like this over Vermont in full foliage? He and Varian sure couldn’t!

Hummingbird Update

Evening Update:

She’s still here! She kept coming every little while right up until dark. What a sweetie! I hope she finds many more feeders on her way, and that she has a safe trip south.

And I just finished writing a rough draft of a wicked strange story I’m calling Webs. If you thought Slow Awakening was weird…

Last Hummingbird?

Keep your hummingbird feeders out a little longer, at least if you live in New England!

The last of my regular summer hummers left last week, but just now a beautiful little female dropped in. She is clearly a migrant coming down out of Canada — she fluttered around the unfamiliar feeder for a moment, trying to figure out how it worked, and then she settled on a perch and fed for about three solid minutes without fluttering a wing. The only things moving were her tongue and her throat. I didn’t move, either, so as not to scare her.

When she was finished, she zipped over to the nearest apple tree and preened for a little while, getting her feathers in order. She’s come back twice to the feeder in the last fifteen minutes. I cracked my window open even though it’s chilly out, just to hear the magic hum of her wings. It’s got to last me through a long, cold winter.

She may stay here a few hours, or a day, to replenish herself before continuing on to Mexico, or her last few sips may have been enough and she’ll head on south this afternoon. If I could transform into a hummingbird…

Oh, that’s right! Dragons are my thing.