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Bastards and Pretty Boys
KZ Snow
(c) 2009
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Bastards and Pretty Boys
KZ Snow
Published 2009
ISBN 978-1-59578-618-0
Published by Liquid Silver Books, imprint of Atlantic Bridge Publishing, 10509
Sedgegrass Dr, Indianapolis, Indiana 46235. Copyright © 2009, KZ Snow. All rights
reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise,
without the prior written permission of the author.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Liquid Silver Books
http://LSbooks.com
Email:
raven@LSbooks.com
Editor
Devin Govaere
Cover Artist
Lyn Taylor
This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and dialogues in this book are of
the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual
events or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.
Blurb
Charles Larkin is finally happy with his life…for the most part. He’s happy with his
new summer getaway—a rustic cottage he just bought on a small Wisconsin lake. He’s
happy that his ex-wife, whom he divorced because he couldn’t play straight anymore, has
become one of his best friends. He’s happy he can breathe again.
It’s only Kenneth, Charlie’s boyfriend of five months, who makes this new life less
than completely satisfying. Charlie feels they’ve never been quite right for each other,
and Kenneth cements that conviction when he makes a disturbing confession. Charlie
knows their time together is quickly coming to an end. Problem is, Kenneth doesn’t know
it. And he tends to be rather possessive.
Planning to spend a quiet, relaxing two or three weeks at Cloud Lake—fixing up his
place, reading, even attempting to overcome his fear of water—Charlie is less than
thrilled to discover his next-door neighbor is one hell of a looker. He doesn’t need that
kind of distraction, especially since his issues with Kenneth haven’t yet been resolved.
But there’s a ninety percent chance the neighbor is straight, has a wife or girlfriend, and
could be leaving the next day. Charlie clings to those probabilities.
Only, Booker isn’t going anywhere, and he isn’t that easily ignored. And neither is
his unexpected, none-too-savory baggage. And neither, for that matter, is Charlie's. But
when two people care enough about each other, they figure out how to help carry each
other's baggage…or cast it aside.
Chapter One
One soiled, wet sock, frosted with duck squirt. Charred wood. A reeking heap of
weeds that served as a bier for two dead fish. More crud, and still more.
I felt like a crime scene investigator.
“Cabo San Lucas it ain’t.” Kenneth, who’d shuffled through the sand with me,
scanned the beach with a disapproving squint.
“Nope.” Sighing, I gave a desultory kick to a tangle of Christ-knows-what. Duct tape
and monofilament, mostly, although I glimpsed a few feathers and what could’ve been a
chipped lure. “But it’s mine.”
Kenneth glanced over his shoulder, casting more disapproval. “The house is rather
small.”
“It’s a cottage,” I said. “A dwelling on a lake is called a cottage. You should know
that. You’ve lived in Wisconsin long enough.”
“Well, those weren’t cottages I saw on Lake Geneva.”
“For all intents and purposes,” I said, “Lake Geneva is a suburb of Chicago.”
It was near noon, a Saturday. I’d just gone into town to meet Kenneth, have brunch
with him and his son, and then lead the way back to my new summer retreat. I’d driven
up yesterday to go to my closing and spent the night in a local motel.
Knowing I’d long wanted a modest piece of vacation property, Kenneth had told me
about this place. He’d found out about it through one of his coworkers, who also had a
cottage somewhere on Cloud Lake. Now Kenneth seemed to regret having passed along
the info. I’m sure he would’ve liked something more luxurious, but I was satisfied, and
he wasn’t the one paying the mortgage and property taxes.
Movement far off to the left caught my attention. Caught and momentarily held it.
My neighbor immediately to the south, or one of my neighbor’s guests, walked to the
lake and waded in. A tall, wiry man with tousled dark hair, he wore plain cutoffs. Not
Speedos, nothing tight and microscopic. When he was about hip-deep, he gracefully tilted
forward and slid beneath the water like a warm knife into butter. Resurfacing, he lapsed
into a strong, smooth crawl. I wasn’t sure why the sight transfixed me.
Kenneth, of course, was.
I could feel him watching me watch the man. “Something grab your interest?” he
asked.
“Seems my neighbors are here this weekend.” A casual observation, meant to
undercut his archness. I was tired of Kenneth thinking he owned my eyes. Still, good
boyfriend that I was, I laid a hand on his lower back.
He stepped away. “Don’t do that out here,” he muttered under his breath.
“Why? Nobody’s watching. And even if someone were—”
“Charlie!”
“See?” Kenneth said.
“Oh, come on. Like Carolyn doesn’t know. Besides, my hand was on your back, not
your ass.”
I turned toward the deck at the rear of my humble cottage. Carolyn was gesturing for
me to join her. Kenneth’s son hovered at her back. I didn’t mind Carolyn being there—
she was one of my best buddies—but the boy, Kris, made me uncomfortable. Kenneth’s
secrecy was to blame for that. He didn’t like his son seeing us together. At all.
Funny that I would prefer the company of my ex-wife to that of my lover’s kid.
Actually, not so funny. Unfortunate.
“She probably wants me to look at curtains or some damned thing,” I said.
As I ambled back to the cottage, Kenneth stayed on the trashy beach. I knew why.
He was going to keep scoping out the swimmer, assessing the man’s threat level.
I’d never understood that about Kenneth, that prickling suspicion. The odds were
heavily in favor of swimmer-guy being straight, with a wife or girlfriend, and even more
heavily in favor of him being altogether ordinary. That wasn’t a combination to inspire
lust. Not in me, anyway. I’d worked long and hard to stop being an ordinary, married,
straight guy, so the type didn’t interest me in the least.
As soon as I mounted the deck, Kris scurried down to join his dad. I got the
impression the poor kid saw me as a rival. He probably still hadn’t adjusted to his
parents’ divorce, and now his father had a new “best buddy.” Trying to include him in
our activities only seemed to make matters worse. I felt sorry for the boy.
“He was following me around like a shadow,” Carolyn said, watching Kris jog
awkwardly across patchy grass to littered sand. “I realize the kid has insecurity issues or
something, but it still gets on my nerves.”
I chuckled. “Where’s your maternal instinct?”
“I traded it for objective judgment.” She looked at me, eyes shaded with one hand.
“And don’t laugh. You know I’m not a fan of Daddy Dearest, either.”
“Yeah, yeah, I know. Can we drop it?” I didn’t need to be reminded that I’d been
growing disaffected with Kris’s father as well. “This is the start of my vacation. No
grousing allowed.”
“Sorry,” Carolyn muttered. “I just think—”
“I know what you think. So I don’t need to hear the mantra again. Okay?”
Carolyn had never liked Kenneth. We’d been divorced for nearly two years, but she
was still protective of me. It was as if I’d gone from being her husband to her little
brother.
I steered Carolyn through the deck’s sliding double doors before she had a chance to
expound on her opinion. The cottage had a tolerable false-fresh smell. I figured it was a
bridge between the sour, musty staleness that had greeted us earlier and the true breath of
nature that seeped through the open windows—sluggishly, for it was a hot, humid day.
Although the cottage came furnished, it didn’t come in move-in condition. I had to
supply all the household accoutrements. Unloading boxes from my minivan was all I’d
done after leaving the realtor’s office yesterday. It wasn’t until early this morning, after
Carolyn arrived, that the set-up of my getaway home began in earnest.
“Well? See if you like it.” Carolyn swept a hand toward the bedroom I’d claimed as
mine, the one closest to the bathroom. I walked into it and made my inspection.
I saw more than I’d anticipated. Not only were the curtains hung, the bed was made,
lamps stood on nightstands, and grooming aids dressed the dressers. Everything
appropriately understated, with a hint of rustic. A modest, Midwestern version of
Adirondack chic.
“Is it masculine enough?” Carolyn asked uncertainly.
Laughing, I turned and gave her a hug. “If it were any more masculine, my voice
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