A Marine Affair, book 13 of the Always a Marine series and the second M/M releases June 7, 2013
Commander Rick McConnell and Colonel Elijah Masters have
been secret lovers for years. They nurtured their very private relationship
with planned vacations and leaves, always meeting somewhere different—always
escaping off the grid. It worked for them—career officers with a desire to
serve their country and a passion for each other.
The repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell provides them with the
tremendous opportunity to come out to their friends and loved ones—Rick wants
to seize the day, but Eli isn’t so certain. His hesitation leads to a fight, an
ultimatum, and a breakup. Rather than confront their issues, Eli takes a
foreign assignment.
A year’s separation changes both of them. The last person
Eli expects to see when he steps off the plane is Rick, but the physician wants
another chance with the only man he’s ever loved and he has a plan. Will bitterness, recriminations, and loss
keep them apart or can these two officers rediscover the faith and loyalty that
bound them for so long?
And for a little more bang for your buck--here's an unedited excerpt!
“You’re late.” Eli greeted him with a dry
smile. The man looked better than the day before, if that were possible.
“Sorry, surgery ran longer than I
expected.” He took the chair next to him rather than the one opposite. “A beer
please.” The waiter took his order and left them alone. The best part of the restaurant were the
availability of private party rooms where diners could enjoy their meal and not
have to share their table with a family of strangers.
“I figured.” Eli gestured to the
sushi. “They just delivered it. Your favorites.”
The gesture struck him with its
kindness and compassion. Eli didn’t have a favorite kind of sushi, he didn’t
particularly care for it. Rick knew he only ate it when they were together
because Rick enjoyed it. “Thanks.”
Unwrapping his chopsticks, he tucked
into the Philadelphia rolls with their salmon, cucumber and cream cheese. He’d
spent nearly ten hours in the operating room. A light day by his usual
standards, but he hadn’t had time to eat since breakfast that morning.
“What happened?” The quiet question
drew him back to the moment.
“Just a long day.” The waiter
brought his beer and they both ordered. Steak and shrimp for Eli. Chicken and
fish for Rick. Fried rice for Eli, while Rick chose white. They both wanted
extra veggies and Eli added an order of shrimp tempura for himself.
So many little differences, from
food choices to the teams they liked. Rick loved the Mets while Eli was a dyed
in the wool Yankees fan. He exhaled a
humorless laugh and looked sideways at the Marine. “Red meat, fried rice, and
fried food—you going for the early heart attack?”
“My first real red meat in a year
and the last time I saw fried food it was a McDonald’s drive thru on the way to
the airport. I think I’ll survive. Besides I lived on rations more often than I
care to count—if that doesn’t kill you this sure as hell won’t.” Eli saluted
him with the beer. “What happened in surgery?”
The man possessed homing radar. He
always knew what bothered him. Weird how he was an open book while Eli remained
a mystery unless he chose to share.
“Lost a patient. Complications.” Acid churned in his stomach. “Kid
didn’t report some medication he’d been on. Too many bleeders, not enough
blood. It happens.”
“Sorry.” No platitudes, no coaxing
comfort, just a plain and simple word that encompassed so much more.
“Me, too. Anyway, how’s Christina?”
“She’s good. Recovering. Kid’s
cute—well—not really, he’s ugly as sin, but then most babies have that smooshed
look, so I figure he’ll grow out of it. Healthy.” Eli rubbed the back of his
neck. It looked like he wanted to say more, but their chef arrived and along
with Eli’s tempura. They ate in silence and watched the food preparation show.
“You have your new orders yet?”
Small talk gave them both an out.
Eli shook his head. “Marine
Barracks next Monday. Fitness assessment, and debrief. Probably get them while
I’m there.”
“You apply for anything?” With his
rank and credentials, he could open a lot of doors.
Shaking his head, Eli speared a
piece of meat onto his fork. “I thought about it, but I don’t want a desk job.
Colonel Spears asked me to consider a teaching position either at Parris Island
or OCR at Quantico.”
A position at either base would
keep Eli in country—Quantico would keep him in the region. Rick swallowed back
the urge to give him any advice. “Nice.”
“Maybe. What about you? Running
your department yet?”
“No.” Rick shook his head. “I
didn’t want to play those politics. I like my patients. I like training interns
and I like having something of a life outside the hospital. Department Chief
doesn’t give me much time for any of that. I am going to Amman in a few weeks,
but it’s a three week clinic to train some of the locals at the hospital.”
“Huh.” The bland grunt didn’t
reveal as much as the tightness flexing Eli’s jaw. He didn’t like it.
“I like keeping my hand in and they
need a cardio thoracic specialist. Too many of their cases have to leave the
country, they’ve got some good candidates signed up for the training and the
top two will return here for another six months of training that I’ll
supervise.”
“You ever think we’d be teachers?”
Eli finished all the meat on his plate. He didn’t like mixing his foods. He ate
methodically, one dish after the other.
“Not as a life goal, no. But it
makes sense. See one, do one, teach one. Learned that in medical school.” The
educational method described most of his internship, fellowship and his current
residency. He could have his pick of civilian hospitals, but preferred his
military service. Two years as a medic to a forward unit during the initial
incursions into Afghanistan taught him more than all his years at a hospital
combined.
“Christina tried to set me up with
another date.”
The unexpected bit of news sent a
shock through Rick. He chewed a piece of chicken thoroughly as he tried to digest
the information. He could handle this. “Yeah? Anyone I know?”
“One of her girlfriends from
college—thrice married. Apparently she thinks my prospects are limited and
wants to fix me up with my first divorce.”
If Eli tried to be funny, the humor was lost on him.
“She doesn’t know.” The revelation
stunned him. Rick’s family knew about him, his mother was more comfortable with
the information than his father, but both accepted it. Eli’s family didn’t?
“Nope.”
Why
hasn’t he told them? The thought
burned through him, igniting a dozen other questions. He clamped a lid on it.
In a decade together, Eli never indicated his sexual preference was a secret
from his family. Was that the problem? He chewed that thought over and over,
eating to try and cover his silence.
Two beers and half the meal later, Rick turned
sideways in the chair. Bit by bit Eli
relaxed while they ate. Maybe it was the
company, the day’s loss or the alcohol—or some combination of the three, but
wanted their cards on the table. He wanted Eli back. “I miss you Eli. I want us
back. What do we need to do make that happen?”
WOW! Sounds intense. I can't wait.
ReplyDeleteOOOOO, I can't wait!!!!
ReplyDeleteLooks great! Always fabulous covers for this series! :)
ReplyDeleteVery nice. I would totally read this to see the hotness take place between these two men.
ReplyDeleteYep another AWESOME cover !!! I love this series :)
ReplyDeleteOooo I agree. Very nice! Yum!
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds great! Going to go to her website and Amazon and catch up on previous books ;)
ReplyDeleteLove it! Huge congrats!
ReplyDeleteVery, very nice!
ReplyDeletewoo hoo more MM magic. Looking forward to it
ReplyDelete