Showing posts with label Gay love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gay love. Show all posts

Thursday, August 3, 2023

What Could Have Been

 Markwildyr.com, Post #245

 Image Courtesy of Freepik:

 

Last week’s post about an AI-created story didn’t generate much in the way of comments. I’m not as panicked about it as my buddy Don Travis. I understand his post this week is an AI story written to his specifications.

 

This week, I went nostalgic. We all play the “what could have been” game on occasion. Let me know how you like this one. (AI had nothing to do with this one.)

* * * *

WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN

I’d known Jason Muldavid forever. Through all the stages of my life: from Johnny Boy to Johnny to John. One of my earliest recollections is the two of us digging in a sandbox with toy shovels at the little park only a block from our houses… which sat side by side on Elderberry Street. In fact, that’s what the neighbors called us, the Elderberry twins, even though Jason was dark-haired and dark-eyed while my hair was sandy, and my eyes an uncertain green… hazel, I think they call it.

I’m not sure that, as toddlers, we knew which was our own home, the red brick or the blonde brick. Just to be clear, the red brick was the Hogan household—mine. But neither of us bothered to knock when visiting the other. We just barged in and expected to be welcomed in those halcyon days when no one locked the front door.

Looking back, I believe we were in love in an innocent way. I fretted when Jason—or Jase as he became to me—wasn’t at my side. I’ve heard his mother complain he was a different kid when he wasn’t with Johnny. I never grew out of that stage. I thought of him the first thing in the morning and the last thing before bed. In my nightly prayers, he was the first person I asked the Lord to take care of.

We were likely eleven or twelve when things began to change. I distinctly recall the first time we played softball on opposite teams. We’d been waiting for someone to drop out of a sandlot game, and when one did, Johnny was called. When the next kid had to go home, I ended up on the other team. At the time, I couldn’t put a name to my internal rage when Jase kibbitzed with his team’s second baseman and razzed me when my turn at bat came. I got a double and managed to kick the second baseman in the ankle as I slid safely on base. After the game, as we walked home, he threw his arm around my shoulders and blathered on like nothing had happened, but it sure did feel like something had gone awry to me. At midnight, my eyes popped open, and I identified my anger for what it really was. Jealousy.

That was the beginning of my ordeal.

Simply put, over the next few years, Jase matured physically and emotionally. I only managed the physical part of it. Emotionally, I remained tethered to my childhood buddy. That wasn’t fatal, unless I tried to hang on too tightly… which I did a few times. Jase always pushed back, tactfully, at first, but when I refused to adjust to the inevitable changes, he got a little firmer about it.

And I don’t think he was the only one who saw things. Jason, as I said, became Jase, and was always referred to that way, while I was Hogan. I know, it’s a little thing… but it says a lot.

Middle school was rocky but not unbearable, but when high school rolled around, the changes were so profound, my base, my foundation seemed to be crumbling beneath me. And all the trouble came down to one thing… girls. Or that’s the way it was in my mind, at any rate.

When Jase discovered them, I was left at home hurting. It got a little better when he suggested we double date some, so I found a girl I could muster a little interest in and tagged along when I could. We both lost our virginity one night when he parked his Chevy convertible on a country lane. I still recall the absolute shock—despite prior clues—when I realized I’d rather be up in the front seat with him doing what he was doing to his date than being in the back doing what I was doing with mine.

But nothing was as shattering as his wedding night. I was, of course, his best man, and it took every ounce of self-control I could muster to keep from running out on him in tears. But I went numb and held on. Shaking his hand at the conclusion and kissing the new Mrs. Jase on the cheek—instead of biting her—and tossing rice with the rest of the well-wishers got me through that hell. But that night was even worse. It put an end to the fantasy that one day we’d put all this foolishness behind us and discover—really discover—one another.

The agony continued through college. We went to the same college and roomed together for a couple of semesters before he moved into the dorm reserved for jocks—he was a decent halfback for the team. We both remained in our hometown, although we moved from the adjoining red brick and blond bricks to different neighborhoods. Both of us pursued successful careers… me as the owner of the local deli, and Jase as a banker. In time, I became Uncle John to his son and his daughter. Their bachelor uncle because I never married. Eventually, I learned to accept what part I had in Jase’s life and let go of the dream of what could have been.

Contrary to romantic fiction, I never met another “Jase” or Jase’s successor in my dream fantasy. Unfortunately, I’m a guy who mates for life—even if we never got around to mating. But eventually, I put my obsession in the proper place and learned to live with it.

Until last week.

Last Friday, we met for lunch and were joined by a couple of other friends, one of whom was a coach at the local high school. Toward the end of the meal, the coach told us of a situation at the school—without revealing names—of a couple of guys on the basketball squad were found masturbating one another in the locker room after they thought everyone had gone. The coach laughed at the boys utter embarrassment and humiliation, apparently deeming those appropriate punishments. I quietly shriveled inside.

After lunch, we walked up the street together, me to my shop and him to his bank, when he turned serious.

“You know, I didn’t really appreciate it how Coach got a laugh out of catching those two boys. They’re just going through growing pains. Everybody does things like that when he’s growing up.”

Jase stopped and stared at me. “I often wondered why we didn’t do anything like that.”

I must have reacted in some way, because he grasped my arm.

“I don’t know about you, but I thought about it at times. Lots of times.”

I managed to speak through a dry throat. “Why didn’t you do anything?”

He released my arm and shrugged. “Kept waiting for you to do something. But you never showed any interest, not even when we were rooming together. If you’d given me a clue, who knows?” He grinned. “Might have ended up marrying you.”

I failed to laugh the way he expected me to. I just glared at him. “Jason Muldavid, sometimes you can be one stupid son-of-a-bitch.”

In some perverted way, it felt good to walk away imagining the glories that could have been while he stood there with eyes like quarters and his mouth hanging open. Couldn’t help wondering if he even got it now.

Probably not. He’d have to think outside the box for that, and Jase wasn’t very good at thinking outside of boxes.

 *.*.*.*.

I don’t know about you, but this resonates with me. I vividly remember the guy I fantasized about for years. Wonder how he’s doing these days.

 Until next week,

 My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:

Website and blog: markwildyr.com

Email: markwildyr@aol.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr

Twitter: @markwildyr

Now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

See you later.

 

 Mark

 New posts the first and third Thursday of the month at 6:00 a.m., US Mountain time.

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Jude Manchild (Part 3 of 3 Parts)

 Markwildyr.com, Post #212

 Image Courtesy of Dreamstime.com:


 Well, is Jude happy or in over his head. He’s clearly the junior member of this duo. So is he satisfied with the relationship? Let’s see.

* * * * *

JUDE MANCHILD

That phone call had been an hour ago, and the sympathetic side of me was beginning to fret while the cautious side relaxed a little. Bart just lived across town, no more than twenty minutes away. Ten, if he gunned his cycle. After a couple more hours, I tried calling him, but got no answer. So I started hiking to his house, expecting, hoping to see him coming toward me down the street. I reached his house. No one answered the door.

My “wanting” side clearly in ascendancy now, I headed downtown to see if I could locate his bike. No such luck. Maybe I should go back home and find him impatiently waiting to give me hell for not obeying his instructions.

On the way, I ran into a neighbor kid a year or so younger’n me, and I could tell he was busting to tell me some news.

“Hi, Fred, what’s up?” I asked.

“Did you hear about Bart?”

I hoped my startled reaction didn’t give me away. “No, what about him?”

“Got creamed by a car on Hobart Street.”

“Is he okay?”

“Hauled him away to the hospital. Broken leg or something.”

I thanked him and headed straight for the town’s only hospital. It took forever to find out he’d already been sent home. So I hiked back to his house and saw Mrs. Jewelson’s car in the driveway. She answered my knock and told me Bart was in his bedroom.

“You can go in for a few minutes, Jude but he needs to rest. He got knocked around quite a bit. Lucky it’s just his leg.”

I walked into his room and came to a dead stop. Old Bart looked like hell hit with a club. I always though “white as a sheet” was a cliché, but, man, was he white. And his right leg was encased in the biggest, heaviest-looking cast I’d ever seen. He sure as hell didn’t look like the swaggering semi-bully I knew. In fact, he looked vulnerable.

“Hi, Bart, looks like you’ve seen better days.”

He tried to muster a smile, but it didn’t work. “Yeah, thanks to old lady Tillotson. She just turned the corner and plowed right into me. My bike’s totaled. It’s gone, man.”

“Her insurance company will buy you a new one,” I said, drawing upon my deep inexperience with such matters.

Bart brightened. “Hey, yeah. Maybe I can get a brand new one.”

“Maybe. Uh, I waited like you asked me to.”

“Yeah, well, I didn’t make it.”

“Just wanted you to know.”

I only stayed about fifteen minutes, but it was enough to give me a different viewpoint on life. At least life with Bart Jewelson in it. As I tripped down the steps, his mom called to me and asked if I could come check on Bart around noon. I knew she worked at a lawyer’s office downtown and figured she needed to get back to work.

“Yes, ma’am. About ten be okay?”

“That’ll be fine, Jude. Maybe spend a little time with him. He’s going to get bored out of his skull before he’s getting out and about.”

“Be happy to.”

****

As soon as the Jewelson’s screen door banged behind me the next morning, I could see Bart was feeling better. Frustration at being tied down in a recliner in the living room clearly stamped his features. Geez, and this was only day two.

“Hi, kid,” he drawled, seeking to set things back the way they were. But that was behind us now, even though he didn’t know it yet.

“Thought you might need some relief,” said, walking over to his chair.

“Always, he said. “But I’m a little inhibited right now.”

“Leave that to me,” I said. “Your mom’s at work, right?” I hadn’t seen her car in the driveway, but a guy can’t be too careful.

“Yeah.”

Giving him a grin, I opened his robe and took a gander. He didn’t have anything on under it, so I had free access, except for that clunky cast on his right leg. It wasn’t a walking cast, so he was more or less confined to bed or a chair or hopping around on crutches.

Bart was pretty well built, not just in the manhood department, so I took my time touching and tasting things we hadn’t taken the time to explore before. He put up with it for a while and then started complaining I oughta get down to what counted.

“In a minute. What’s the hurry?”

He tried for his usual snarl, but it didn’t work. “What’s the hurry? You got my nuts to aching, that’s the hurry.”

“Patience” I said and returned to sucking on his nipples. But then I had mercy on him and went to work in a serious way. Before long, he delivered. And delivered. Afterward, I leaned over his chair and looked him in the eye. “Bart, how do you think of me?

“Wha’dya mean?”

“Just what I said. How do you think of me?”

“You’re my old lady.”

I shook my head slowly. “No, I’m not. I’m your lover.”

That thought shook him. “It ain’t that way. I just take my relief. Love ain’t got nothing to do with it.”

I knew I had him shook up because he was tearing up the rules of conversational English more than usual. I squatted on my heels beside him and stroked his forearm. “Think about that a little harder,” I said. “And when you figure it out, give me a call.”

“Like hell. You show up here tomorrow. Eleven o’clock. And right now, go fix me a ham sandwich.”

I stood. “I’m really fond of you, Bart. Might even say I love you if you wouldn’t have a conniption fit. Give me a call.”

I did the hardest thing I’d ever done. Walked out on the only guy who gave me a little action. But it was deeper than that. He was the guy I’d come to love. But the relationship was lopsided and needed fixing.

****

He didn’t call until the next afternoon.

“Where the hell are you?” he asked.

“Home.”

“Well, get your ass over here.”

“Can’t right now.”

“Why not?”

“Just can’t.” And I hung up.

He didn’t call the next day, but when my cell burbled the following day, it announced his call. “Hello.”

“Man, you know what’s good for you, you’ll be here in five minutes.”

“Why?”

“I wanna shag your ass.”

“You couldn’t even if I came over.”

“I’ll figure out a way.”

“Not one that’s comfortable for me you won’t.”

“Hey, man, I need company. Come on over, we can just jaw, if you want.”

“I dunno.”

“Jude, I been good to you, time to pay back the favor.”

Now we’re getting somewhere. “You’ve been good to me? How?”

Bart dropped his voice to a near-whisper. “I give you want you want, man. You know that.”

“You mean you take what you want, don’t you?”

“Come on, you like it.”

“Yeah, I guess I do. But what I don’t like is that I do all the giving, and you do all he taking.”

“What’re you saying? I get you off, don’t I?”

“Bart, when’s the last time you jacked off?”

“I dunno. A while, now.”

“Kid stuff, right?”

Bart paused like he knew trap bait when he heard it. “Yeah.”

“So how come I get the kid stuff while you get the grown-up stuff?”

“Because I ain’t queer, kid.”

“Didn’t know I was until you raped me in that garage out in the middle of nowhere last year.”

His voice went high. “Raped you?” He settled down. “You ate it up, man, and you know it.”

“Not at first. But you went on and took what you wanted.”

The line went dead for a moment. “What… what you want?”

“I want you to do for me what I do for you.”

The snarl came back in his voice. “Nobody’s gonna fuck my ass.”

“That’s not what I want.”

“You mean… blow you?”

“That would be great, guy,” I said. “Tit for tat, and you get the added bonus of laying it to me.”

Silence again. Then. “Don’t our friendship mean anything?”

“Means a lot. And I give mine right back. But when you want friendship with privileges, as they say, I oughta get some privileges back.”

“You’re being a son-of-a-bitch, Manchild.”

“But a friendly one. So what do you want me to do?”

His sigh held frustration, but there was no anger in it. And when he spoke, I heard resignation.

“Come on over.”

I scooted my tail right down the street and arrived at his house in record time. After a little more resistance, Bart accepted that I was serious, and that afternoon turned into something memorable. Something indelibly etched into my brain. For the first time, it seemed more like a love session than a fuck session.

 * * * *

Guess Jude turned the tables and became an equal partner. Wouldn’t it be great if all of us could work out a relationship that easily? Let me know what you think.

Please friend this site. Apparently, that matters in the internet world.

 JMS Books has contracted to publish an anthology of nineteen of my short stories under the title Wildyr Tales in April of this year.

 My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:

Website and blog: markwildyr.com

Email: markwildyr@aol.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr

Twitter: @markwildyr

Now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

See you later.

 

Mark

New posts the first and third Thursday of the month at 6:00 a.m., US Mountain time.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

Wastelakapi… Beloved

 markwildyr.com, Post #149

Cover Design by Written Ink Designs 


As regular readers know, last month, J M Snyder Books published an ebook version of the fifth book in the Cut Hand (now known as the Strobaw Family Saga) books. The print version is to follow soon. Now that I have the book cover to show you, I couldn’t resist giving you another excerpt.

 

In the following scene, John Strobaw (Medicine Hair) and his friend Winter Bird are spending the night on the range to settle down some cattle recently purchased and moved to land north of John’s Turtle Crick Farm. As they rest in twilight beside a small campfire, a lone rider approaches. It turns out to be Plenty Horses, the Lakota who shot an American army officer in the back. John’s brother-in-law Captain Gideon Haleworthy had only recently told the two of them that Plenty Horses was on trial for murder. Yet here he is. Read on.

 

* * * * *

 “I see you, Plenty Horses.”

“And I see you, Medicine Hair,” he responded in fair English. “Winter Bird.”

“Hau-we,” my friend replied.

“Climb down and share some coffee with us,” I said. “We probably have enough rabbit and some corn cakes left for a meal, if you’re hungry.”

The slender Brulé dismounted and led his horse into camp. “That would be welcome.” Then, like any good horseman, he set about taking care of his mount. He unsaddled the gelding and watered him in the nearby rill before hobbling him to graze. Apparently, we had a guest for the night.

Little was said as Plenty Horses ate. He was about ten years younger than I was and relatively tall for a plainsman, yet thin. And as pleasant looking as I recalled. There was a diffidence about him, an awkwardness, a shyness.

As soon as Horses finished eating and slaked his thirst from his coffee cup, Winter Bird spoke up.

“Thought you was in the white man’s jail.”

Horses ducked his head. “I was. They let me go.”

Enough light remained to see my friend’s brows climb. “They grab you for shooting a white soldier and then let you go?”

“Uh, huh.”

“Did they bring you to trial?” I asked.

He held up two fingers. “Two times. First time six farmers said I oughta be called guilty of murder and six other farmers said I oughta be called guilty of man …man-slaugh-ter. They called it a hanging trial.”

“A hung jury,” I corrected. Plenty Horses’ English was not as good as I’d expected after five years at Carlisle. “They couldn’t agree, so they couldn’t convict. Then what?”

He answered in Lakota. “They did it again, but this time, they tried to get Star Chief Miles to come down and sit in the witness chair. They wanted him to say it was murder. He didn’t come, but he sent a captain down in his place. They got the trial started, but then they shut everything down because of what he was gonna say.”

“And what was that?” Bird asked.

“That we was at war with one another. The white men who was my law-talkers” —I took this to mean his lawyers— “tried to tell me what difference that made, but all I got was they was letting me go. That’s what counted, ain’t it?”

I nodded. “The white people have a funny justice system. Most of the time, it takes care of their own, but sometimes the bullet blows out the wrong end of the barrel. That’s what your lawyers did to them. If they held you guilty of murder, then all those soldiers at Wounded Knee were guilty of it, too.”

“How?” Horses asked.

“You weren’t guilty because you—we—were at war. And soldiers killing soldiers or warriors killing warriors during a war isn’t murder. They were bound on hanging you, but their own law got in the way and saved you from the noose.”

“That’s what those law-talkers said.” He shrugged. “So when they let me go, I started for home.” He paused and looked in my direction. “But first, I wanted to come find you.”

“Why? How can I help you?”

Horses dropped his head onto arms folded over his knees for a long moment. At length, he straightened. “I didn’t want to go to the white man’s school over there in Pennsylvania, but they sent me anyhow. I stayed there for five years. I had thirteen summers when I got there and eighteen when they let me go. And when I got home, I found out I wasn’t Indian no more.”

“And you weren’t a white man, either,” I said. “You didn’t fit any longer.”

He snorted through his nose. “I knew I wasn’t gonna be no white man. But I didn’t expect my own people to turn me out when I come back from that school. I was an outcast just like if I’d raped a man’s wife. It couldn’t of been any worse if I had. Nobody trusted me no more. I fought with you and the others at Drexel Mission, but when I went to the Bench after that, it didn’t make no difference. Nobody wanted nothing to do with me.”

I nodded again. “That’s why you killed Lt. Casey.”

He pounded his knee. “I figured if I showed them I was a warrior, maybe they’d see I was still a Brulé.”

Bird took off his hat and slapped it on the ground beside him. “How come you shot him in the back? If you wanted to show you were a warrior, you shoulda faced him.”

Horses shrugged. “Wasn’t sure I was gonna do it. But when he turned around and got on his horse, I panicked about him getting away before I could stop him.”

No one said a word for a full minute. Then Horses roused as if waking.

“Anyway, I heard all these stories about Medicine Hair, and how him and his brother came to help their people.” He looked my direction again, although it was hard to tell because the light was virtually gone now. The campfire was small and gave little relief.

“And I heard he was raised with the whites and acted like a white. But nobody pushed him away. How come?”

I rubbed my nose to give me time to think. “I guess we went about it differently. My spiritual grandfather was the Red Win-tay, a white man named Billy Strobaw. When our tiospaye was massacred in the autumn of ’50, he took in my father and raised him as his own son. Billy was accepted by the Indians. Hell, he was an Indian in everything but blood. He paved the way for Dog Fox—that was my father’s name before he became Cuthan Strobaw—and the rest of us. River Otter, who was also a spiritual grandfather to me, made sure I understood the tribal side of myself. So I was lucky. I was able to walk in both worlds.”

“But that ended, too,” Bird said. “The army burned your farm and arrested you.”

“They only did that when a Cheyenne shot one of them at my farm. Still, what you say is true. My red blood is the cause of the greatest loss of my life. If they hadn’t burned my farm, Shambling Bear and I might not have gone to Pine Ridge.”

“You woulda,” Bird said with conviction. “Bear woulda gone, and you wasn’t about to let him go alone when trouble was coming.”

“Has anything I told you helped?” I asked Plenty Horses.

He shook his head, making his eyes glow in the feeble campfire light. “I don’t have big friends to make a way for me. I have heard of this Red Win-tay and River Otter, too. They walked tall among the people. I have to make my own way.”

“And you are man enough to do it,” I said. “This I feel in my bones. Stay with us tonight, and tomorrow we will go to our farm just a short ride to the south. You can rest up there a few days and then resume your journey. Bird and I will see that you have provisions for your trip.”

 * * * *

I have just finished editing the first book in the series Cut Hand for Snyder Books, (scheduled out soon) and was struck anew by how involved I was with these books. This series is my favorite. I had fun researching. I enjoyed writing. I even get drawn into the stories as I edit… and most writers will tell you that’s a “clinical” undertaking. Cut Hand and Billy Strobaw and Otter and John and Matthew are living, breathing friends of mine… or at least they seem that way. I hope you will accept them as such, as well.

 Again, my sympathy to my compadre for the loss of his son. He seems to be handling it as well as can be expected.

 My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:

Website and blog: markwildyr.com

Email: markwildyr@aol.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr

Twitter: @markwildyr

 Now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

 Until next time.

 

Mark

 New posts the first and third Thursday of the month at 6:00 a.m., US Mountain time.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Interregnum, A Curt Huntinghawk Story, Finalé

 markwildyr.com, Post #132

 


Are things getting out of hand? Is Hawk getting in too deep? Will Grove return, and will the two of them be okay if he does? All questions will be answered below.

 

* * * * *

INTERREGNUM, A Curt Huntinghawk Story, Finalé

 Hawk backed off a little the next morning; he understood last night had been different for Luis. He was getting in too deep with this handsome teenager. Unable to get out and mix with his peers, the boy was attaching himself too closely. Hawk recognized their relationship could not be sustained unless he could give himself over to the boy unreservedly. And he could not. He hoped, prayed…knew that Grove would return, and Grove held Hawk’s heart in his hand. Even so, his feelings for the boy were growing to the point that he was beginning to feel a sense of betrayal. His and Grove’s agreement was for relieving stress, not developing an intense new relationship.

As a defensive measure, Hawk found a chore Saturday afternoon to take him away from the house. When he returned he knew immediately that something had happened. The boy looked sullen, almost angry.

“You have a call on the answering machine,” Luis said bitterly. Hawk understood immediately. “Your girlfriend.” Luis spat, stalking from the room.

Hawk listened to the recoding with a mounting sense of dismay as Grove’s beautiful voice gave him a progress report. Mother still stabilized. Looking better. See the light at the end of the tunnel. Then the declarations of love, the description of intimacies. The boy had heard it all.

Luis did not answer his knock, so Hawk entered the room without an invitation. The boy lay on his side facing the wall. “Sorry you heard that,” Hawk said softly in his deep voice, “but now you know.”

“Your girlfriend is a man,” came a muffled voice.

“Yes, he is. And a hell of a man.”

“You…you are a maricon…a queer?”

“I suppose,” Hawk agreed, “although there are a lot of women who would disagree with you.”

The boy turned to face him. “I knew it. You like the girls, too?”

“Until I met Grove. I love him, Luis.”

“But you still betrayed him with me.”

“No, I didn’t. I told you there were limits to what I could do. That was my agreement with Grove. We knew we couldn’t do without indefinitely, and we didn’t know when he could come back. So we set the rules.”

“You…you have a picture of him? The picture over the fireplace!” he said in sudden comprehension. “¡Aieee! He is handsome. As handsome as you. Was he the first time with a man for you?”

“No.” Hawk sat on the side of the bed and explained about Ramon and Wolverine and Grove.

“And now me,” the boy finished for him. “I love you, Hawk.”

“And I’m fond of you, Luis Carlos Delgado y Ortiz. If I’d met you first, I’d probably have fallen in love with you. But I didn’t, and Grove holds my heart.”

“And this Grove, you do everything for him?” Hawk nodded. “And does he do it for you?” Hawk nodded again. "And it is good with him?”

Hawk closed his eyes for a moment. “Yes. Very good. He opened his eyes and looked at the fetching youth. “This is getting too intense. Tomorrow I’ll drive you back to the border and escort you across, so you won’t be caught by INS.”

“Not yet!” Luis begged.

“You can’t hide out in my house indefinitely. You have to leave sometime. This way you won’t have a record, and maybe you can come back legally.”

“I understand that, mi amor,” Luis said, looking as if the words of endearment surprised him as much as Hawk. “I mean, I know I have to go, but I need to make plans. Give me one more week, no?”

In the end, Hawk agreed. That night Luis came to his bed. The boy crawled naked beneath the sheet and draped himself across the Indian.

“Do not be mad at me, Hawk,” Luis begged. “Let me give my love while I can.” Without waiting for a reply, the teen placed his mouth on Hawks and kissed him deeply… desperately. He permitted Luis his way.

Later, Hawk woke when the boy fingered him. When he was rampant, Luis dsy up and peered through the darkness.

“Do it to me, Hawk. Please! Let me feel what it’s like from someone I love!” The boy trembled with anticipation.

Hawk rolled them over and kissed the boy deeply. Then he excited the slim body with his mouth, touching, sucking, tasting everything. Finally, when Luis said he couldn’t stand it any longer, he parted the boy’s legs and began a slow insertion, talking and cooing Luis through the initial pain, pausing only when he was all the way in. He rested, caressing the boy’s face and wiped beads of perspiration from his smooth, young brow.

“Are you sure?” he asked.

Luis loosed a smile and locked his legs around Hawk’s waist.

Hawk moved slowly and gently at first, gradually increasing the intensity and velocity of his thrusts.

Luis cried his amazement and bucked against him enthusiastically. Far too early, the boy cried out in the throes of an orgasm. Hawk almost lost it, but by force of will, he continued to pump his hips, helping the boy through his orgasm. And then, he achieved his own.

“Oh, Hawk!” Luis cried. “That was incredible! I love you, mi amor! You do it so good! I didn’t know it could be like that. I didn’t know. I… didn’t… know.”

 

 Hawk wasn’t certain he would live through the week. Luis looked down his patrician nose and claimed his body every night. Hawk started going to the Mesa with some of the guys so that the kid wouldn’t try to slip in a matinee performance. He could have put a stop to it at any time, but he didn’t. He understood that the boy was in love… probably for the first time in his life. He knew that Luis recognized it was a doomed affair but hungered for what he could get in the short time they had.

One night, Hawk came home from the Blue Mesa to find Luis gone. The boy’s spare clothes were still there, so he hadn’t run off. Thirty minutes later, the illegal appeared, looking sheepish. He’d gotten cabin fever and sneaked out to meet a few kids his own age. Hawk didn’t lecture his young friend, but he explained that if Luis were caught, there was nothing he could do to help.

As the weekend approached, Luis became morose. Hawk understood. Friday night, they made intense love, the boy giving it everything he had.

The boy grew jubilant when Hawk’s boss asked him to work Saturday because of a rumored drug run from Flora Tulipán. Hawk knew that meant they would drive to El Paso on Sunday rather than Saturday, but he held his tongue.

The rumored drug run turned out to be just that…a rumor. Nonetheless, Hawk was late getting home because they’d stayed in place well into the evening. The house was dark and silent. There was no sign of Luis. Hawk cursed silently, disappointed that his warnings had gone unheeded. The boy’s clothing was still in the bedroom, so he’d show up. But he did not. Around midnight, Hawk drove around town vainly looking for the boy.

Sunday came and went without any sign of Luis. Sunday night, Hawk accepted the obvious. Luis had been caught. The Indian was surprised at the depth of his depression. The kid had gotten under his skin. Monday morning on the way to work, Hawk drove by the INS confinement quarters. There in a corner, hugging the fence and staring out at freedom, stood a forlorn Luis. Hawk parked briefly at the curb about ten feet away. It was a mistake. The despair filling the boy’s big eyes tore at his heart. With a barely raised hand, Luis acknowledged everything. He hadn’t listened. He’d made a mistake. He was sorry. He knew he was on his own. He loved Hawk. The Indian nodded imperceptibly, threw the truck in gear, and pulled away.

He was a bear that day. His usual unruffled calm slipped to the point that he spoke sharply to Robert once while they were on the trail of a mule. Hawk finally acknowledged that he had suffered a loss. It would have been different had he been able to deliver Luis safely back to his own country. The boy would get home, but on INS terms. Hawk wondered if he’d made the possibility of rape more frightening or more acceptable to the handsome young man.

That night when the phone rang, he snatched it up, half hoping it was Luis; knowing it would not be.

“Hello, Hawk!” came the beloved voice of Grove Whitedeer. “How’d you like a roommate?”

Hawk’s heart soared. Luis was a part of the past now, made that by circumstances and the boy’s careless actions. Hawk’s present, his future, was speaking now, excitedly making plans to return.

‘I’ll have to room with you from now on,” Grove said. “Gotta send a good part of my paycheck back here for mom’s care. Don’t know how long it’ll go on, but as long as it does, I’m gonna have to mooch off you. I’ll carry what load I can. Probably have to get a second job, but—”

“Shut up, Grove! Stop talking about mooching, and start talking about sharing. What I have is yours so long as you get your skinny butt back here. I still remember it from the day you left.”

“God, it’ll be good to get back! But you were right. I had to come. It’s been better between me and my family. Thanks for understanding.”

“Well, I’m gonna have to ask for some of yours,” Hawk said.

“Oh, shit! What was he, a wetback? Did…did you…”

“No, I kept our agreement, but I let him worm his way into my life more than I expected."

“He still there?”

“No, got himself caught. He’s gone, but you had to know. Uh…”

“I’m gonna shock the shit outa you, Hawk. But there hasn’t been anybody. I’ve stored up a load for you, and I’ll have you crying for mercy within twenty-four hours!”

“Don’t pick up a pail you can’t carry,” Hawk said with a broad smile.

“I’ll carry it, but I hope you can.”

“God, I love you, Grove!”

“I love you, too, Hawk. And I’ll prove it in a week!”

A week! A whole damned week! Maybe he could survive until then… just barely, he decided.

 

* * * * *

 

A little long, but I hope you waded through it. It seems things came out okay in the end. We’ll take a rest from Hawk and Grove, but one day, maybe we’ll see what comes next.

 

I will now revert to my usual schedule of posting on the first and third Thursday of each month. And before you ask… I have no idea of what comes next.

 

My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:

Website and blog: markwildyr.com

Email: markwildyr@aol.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr

Twitter: @markwildyr

 

The following are buy links for CUT HAND:

 

DSP Publications: https://www.dsppublications.com/books/cut-hand-by-mark-wildyr-420-b

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Cut-Hand-Mark-Wildyr-ebook/dp/B073D86RWV

iBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/book/cut-hand/id1256084273

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/cut-hand-2

 

And now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

 

Until next time.

 

Mark

 

New posts at 6:00 a.m. every first and third Thursday of the month.

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Interregnum, A Curt Huntinghawk Story, Part 3

 

markwildyr.com, Post #129

 Still no Grove, and Hawk’s already had to fight off temptation. Maybe his new partner being winged in a gunfight with drug traffickers will give our hero time to cool off. Unless, of course, temptation comes his way from a different direction.

 When we left Hawk last week, he had turned over the drug smugglers to Amadeo and the rest of the Red Rezes and seen Robert on the way to the hospital. Then he set out to check out something he’d seen while approaching Dragon’s Back before the interdiction. Let’s see what caught his eye.

 * * * * *

INTERREGNUM, A Curt Huntinghawk Story, Part 3

           An hour later, Hawk found what he was looking for. At least a dozen people had been heading for the Dragon when the gunfire scared them off. Illegals. Not his business, and he would have dropped it after notifying the INS except that they’d been chased away from the only water in the area. They might need help. He raised Amadeo and asked him to notify La Migra before taking off after the group.

          Hawk rounded a bend in a broad, sandy arroyo at a trot and suddenly halted. A man stood in the middle of the gully. It was seldom anyone took Hawk by surprise, and after a moment he understood why. The man, a boy really, was motionless, mouth open, lips burnt, hands shaking. He was on his last legs. For one giddy moment Hawk thought it was Ramon, but this one was taller and there was something more of the man in him.

          “¿Agua?” the youngster gasped. “You have water?”

          Deciding the Mexican youth posed no threat, Hawk led him to the shade of a scrub at the side of the gully and gave him a modest drink.

          “¿La Migra?” the boy gasped, wiping his chin to save a precious drop.

          “No, but I’m a peace officer. Where are the others?”

          The youth motioned with his head down the arroyo. “Not far. Bad shape. You give them water, no?”

          “How many?”

         “Twelve of us. The coyotes ran off after we got across the border. Women, children…one baby.”

          “Shit!” Hawk cursed. “You stay right here! Don’t move. I’ll be back for you.” The boy sagged against the gully as Hawk hurried down the arroyo.

          They were in such bad shape nobody even tried to run. Hawk rationed his water carefully, trying to ease the suffering until INS arrived. The agent in charge, someone Hawk had worked with before, soon had them loaded in vans and headed for the detention center and medical help. The vehicles had pulled away before Hawk remembered the kid back up the arroyo. Oh, well, he’d take him to the center himself. But there was no one in the shade of the scrub.

          Hawk took off his hat and rubbed his head. The son-of-a-bitch had more spunk than he’d thought. Wearily, he followed the tracks out of the arroyo expecting to find the prostrate form of a sunstroke victim. Nothing moved over the desert that he could see. The little shit had lit out as soon as Hawk was out of sight!

          Without hesitating, Hawk made for his vehicle and drove in a big circle back to Dragon. They’d been headed for water, so the kid probably knew about the spring. He kept his foot light on the accelerator to hold down his dust plume. If the illegal spotted it, he might shy away from the spring and die out there.

          As he had once for Ramon, Hawk settled himself against a shadowed rock wall and waited patiently for his quarry to come to water. A tiny stream trickled out of the pool and straggled down the wash, evaporating in something less than a mile. If the kid tried to drink out there, Hawk would see him.

          He did not. He made for the cover of the rocks and fell to his knees at the edge of the pool without spotting Hawk in the shadows. The kid took a desperate drink, ripped off his shirt, soaked it, and doused his head to bring down his body temperature. He swayed on his knees from his efforts.

          “Hola, amigo”, Hawk said quietly.

          ¡Dios, mio!” the boy gasped, staggering into the small pool.

          “I told you to stay put. You don’t listen very good.”

          “Please,” the boy said, backing away and muddying the water.

          “Get out of the pool, idiot!” Hawk said. “A lot of animals water there.”

          “¡Lo siento! Sorry!” the youth said, scrambling out of the water on the far side of the little pool. “You won’t hurt me, will you?”

          Hawk recalled Ramon’s fractured sentences. “You speak good English.”

          “Thank you. Please, don’t hurt me.”

          “Why do you think I’m going to hurt you?”

          The boy swallowed hard and tried again. “Don’t rape me!”

          “Rape you? Why do you think I’d rape you?”

          “My friend, he was caught. He… he got raped in detention.”

          “Maybe,” Hawk acknowledged, “but not by INS. He was probably raped by his own people, especially if he looked as good as you.”

          The boy’s eyes bugged. “I know you’re an indio, but please don’t—“

          “You think I’m going to rape you because I’m an Indian?” Hawk asked half in surprise and half in anger. “You think we’re savages?” Suddenly Hawk laughed. Half of Mexico was mestizo, but they got their idea of “real” Indians from John Wayne movies. “Think I’ll scalp you after I’ve fucked your ass.”

          The boy squared his shoulders. “You joke with me, no?”

          “Yeah, I joke with you. What’s your name?”

          “Luis. Luis Carlos Delgado y Ortiz.” That chore completed, the boy swayed and dropped to his knees. Hawk made it to his side in half a dozen steps and pulled him to his feet.

          “Okay, Luis Carlos Delgado y Ortiz, let’s get you some help.”

          “Please, mister. Don’t take me to detention.”

          “What you want me to do with you? Turn you back out on the desert?”

          “No! Not the desert!” the boy cried weakly. “Town. Let me go.”

          “I might as well take you straight to INS. They’ll pick you up within a couple of hours. All right, I’ll tell you what, Luis. I’ll take you home, feed you, clean you up, let you rest some, and then we’ll figure out what to do, okay?”

           “Thank you,” the boy said faintly, slumping against Hawk.

          Hawk picked up Luis’ soaked shirt and half-carried him to the four-by wondering what in the hell he was doing? He'd taken Ramon home and it had worked out, but Hawk worked for the federal government—indirectly, at least—and they frowned on breaking their laws. He radioed that he was going straight home. In view of the skirmish this afternoon, Amadeo made no objections.

          Luis had lost his possessions, so Hawk found something for him to wear. Still uncertain of Hawk’s intentions, the kid had to be talked out of his pants. He washed the young Mexican’s filthy clothing while the kid showered. Then Hawk studied the youth as they ate green chile stew. When the swollen, blistered lips and sunburned face healed, he’d be one good-looking son-of-a-bitch, as handsome as Ramon, but with a difference. The nose was thin and patrician. The big, brown eyes, even exhausted, held an air of insolence. Ramon had been a beautiful peon, a peasant. This one came from the middle-class, if not the upper crust. What the hell was he doing crawling across the desert? The kid was larger than Ramon too. He stood as tall as Hawk and carried around a hundred and seventy pounds when he wasn’t dehydrated, Hawk figured. Good, broad shoulders, long torso, slim hips and legs. Educated too, probably.

          “Do you take me to the detention center now?” the kid demanded after two bowls of stew and a quart of milk.

          “Luis,” Hawk answered. “I’m too damned tired for that, and I think you are as well. I’ll put you up in the spare bedroom so you can get some rest, but I need your word you won’t sneak off in the night. And I’m an indio, remember? We’re like cats…see in the dark and hear things that aren’t there.

          Luis looked down his nose with as much of a sneer as he could manage with his swollen lips. “I give you my promise.”

          “Can I trust it?”

          This time he managed the sneer even if it cost him some pain. “The word of Luis Carlos Delgado y Ortiz is good with any man in Mexico.”

          Hawk tapped him on the chest. “This ain’t Mexico, old buddy.”

          They retired to separate rooms after Luis showed some concern that there was no lock on his door. The kid would probably sleep in his pants tonight, Hawk surmised with a secret smile. As his groin tingled, silently acknowledged that might not be a bad idea.

          Hawk sipped his coffee on the front porch the next morning by the light of the morning star and came to the conclusion he would leave the boy alone while he worked. Luis would more than likely be gone by the end of the day, solving Hawk’s dilemma.

 * * * * *

Offhand, I’d say fate’s laying a trap for Curt Huntinghawk, but maybe he’s right. Perhaps Luis Carlos Delgado y Ortiz vacated the premises while Hawk was at work. After all, the young hidalgo was worried about being raped by a wild Indian. Until next week.

 My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:

Website and blog: markwildyr.com

Email: markwildyr@aol.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr

Twitter: @markwildyr

 

The following are buy links for CUT HAND:

 

DSP Publications: https://www.dsppublications.com/books/cut-hand-by-mark-wildyr-420-b

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Cut-Hand-Mark-Wildyr-ebook/dp/B073D86RWV

iBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/book/cut-hand/id1256084273

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/cut-hand-2

 And now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

 Until next time.

 

Mark

 New posts at 6:00 a.m. every Thursday until the story is completed. Then we’ll revers to the first and third Thursday of the month.

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Hawk—Otra Vez (Part 3 of 3 Parts)


markwildyr.com, Post #116

Complications, complications, complications. Last week, Hawk found Ramon and whisked him into hiding. Now what happens? Ramon is a fugitive now, so that places Hawk in danger, as well. How can this possibly end?

Next week, I’ll return to publishing every first and third Thursday.

*****
HAWK—OTRA VEZ
Part 3

The next day was merely routine patrol. Hawk, never as talkative as his buddy, kept his silence. Around midday, Grove glanced at Hawk and growled in exasperation. “Shit, you went looking for the Mexican kid last night, didn’t you? You musta looked all night because you’re asleep on your feet. Lean back and catch forty. I’ll keep my eyes peeled.”
Hawk did just that.
Hs kept delaying a decision over what to do about Ramon. At first, because the boy needed to recover from exposure and dehydration. Then he found other excuses to delay a decision. Ramon had been cooped up in Hawk’s house for almost a month when Grove pushed Hawk into a corner.
“Let’s go across the border and visit the cat house.”
“Man, I’m running short this month.”
“Yeah, me, too. Okay, tell you what. Let’s call Sheila and Berry for a couple of rounds at the Mesa and then take them back to your pad.”
Fearing a refusal would excite suspicion, Hawk agreed. They reported in and made ready to leave.
“Pick you up at your place in a few, bro!” Grove said on the way out the door.
Hawk had his mouth open protest when the boss called him inside the office to ask his opinion of two new applicants Amadeo had been interviewing. After Hawk put in his two cents, he worried about Grove showing up at his place before he got home. Using the phone on the desk he and Grove shared to dial his house, he let it ring once, hung up and dialed again. Ramon answered.
“Gotta talk fast. Got roped into going to the Blue Mesa with my partner this evening. Couldn’t get out of it. And  Grove wants bring the girls back to the house later. I hate to ask this, but when we pull up can you go to the barn and wait in that emergency hideaway we fixed up?”
“Sure. Ramon hide in barn while Hawk fuck puta.” Hurt and distaste laced the boy’s voice. “Sorry, Hawk. Ramon know you have to put up face for others. He hide.”
“Thanks. Grove is coming to the house to pick me up, but I oughta get there before he does, okay?”
Hawk hung up the phone and headed out the door to find the Dodge sitting at an odd angle. He’d picked up a nail somewhere on the way to work this morning. It took twenty minutes to change the tire. When Hawk pulled into his own driveway, Grove’s pickup was sitting at the curb. He got out and explained about the flat. Grove didn’t seem interested.
“You got company?”
“No, why?”
“Got the impression somebody’s in there.”
“Look, I’m a mess. I need to clean up. Why don’t you meet the girls, and I’ll be there as quick as I can. We can’t all ride in your pickup anyway.”
“Berry wants to show off her new Taurus. She’s picking us up here.”
Hawk mentally cursed as he stomped across the porch and made a show of unlocking the door. There was no sign of Ramon when he entered.
“Damn, you keep a clean place,” Grove commented, looking around the spotless living room and wandering the rest of the small house. No doubt he was checking the place out. Hawk was pulling on a clean set of jeans when the women arrived in a bright red Ford. He scrambled to get outside before they could come in.
Grove was his usual lively self, and it proved infectious. Hawk tried calling the house with his special ring a couple of times, but there was no answer. The party accelerated. The four of them stopped just short of being blasted but escaped the place without getting into a fight, although Grove almost managed it a couple of times. Hawk breathed a silent prayer of thanks when Berry took them to her apartment.
The girls dropped them off at Hawk’s place well after midnight. Grove asked to come inside and use the restroom, although normally he wouldn’t have been bashful about watering the azaleas, if there had been any azaleas. Probably wanted to see inside of the house again. Grove left the bathroom door open while he pissed, sounding like a garden hose filling a galvanized bucket.
After his friend left, Hawk found Ramon hiding in the barn, cold and unhappy.
La Migra come for Ramon now?” the boy asked.
Hawk frowned. “No. INS isn’t coming. Why’d you ask that?”
“But Ramon have to go now.” The boy’s voice broke.
“Sooner or later you’ll have to, we both knew that,” Hawk said soothingly.
“Hawk no understand. Hawk compadre, he see Ramon.”
“What!”
“Ramon hear truck. He go to window, pull back cortinas, and look right at this Grove. He look back at Ramon.”
“Shit!” Hawk swore.
“Ramon sorry.” He paused. “He muy handsome, that Grove. Pretty like Hawk, but not so big. Hawk do things with him?”
“No.”
“But Hawk like to do it with him, no?” Ramon blurted, striking uncomfortably close to the truth.
“Ramon. I have a little savings. We can get you a place across the border. I’ll come be with you when I can.”
The look in the boy’s eyes went straight to Hawk’s heart. “Ramon no be Hawk’s puta.”
“Be reasonable, Ramon. Tomorrow Grove’s going to ask me about you. He thinks you’re an old girlfriend’s little brother. He’ll understand me helping you, but not living here indefinitely. It’s different now, kid. You’re a wanted fugitive. You escaped from custody. When they catch you, you’ll be sent to a federal prison. But if you’ll let me get you a place across the border—”
“No! Ramon no sit home and wait for Hawk. Ramon love Hawk. If no be in Hawk life, is better go back home to Durango.”
Hawk blinked as he saw something precious slipping away. “Look, we don’t have to do anything right away. Let’s think about it and do the rational thing.”
“Ramon leave while Hawk work tomorrow. Best.”
“Promise me you won’t do that. If you have to go back, I’ll take you myself. I don’t want you on that desert.” He tried to lighten the mood. “Let’s go to bed and talk again tomorrow.”


Grove was waiting for him in the parking lot the next morning. “You get rid of the Mexican kid?”
“Damn, Grove, I can’t just throw him to the wolves.”
“What’s the matter with you, Hawk? You’re jeopardizing your job, maybe even your freedom. Why didn’t you ask for my help? Don’t you trust me?”
Hawk stopped dead in his tracks. “That hurt, Grove. I didn’t to involve you because it might jeopardize your career? Helping Ramon is something I gotta do, but I can’t ask you to risk yourself.”
“That’s what friends are for. Anyway, you know you’ve got to do something, don’t you?”
Hawk sighed and accepted the reality of the situation. “I’ll take him back across tomorrow.”
“Better drive to California and take him across at Tijuana. Busier there. Nogales is too close. Word might get back to someone here.”
Hawk worked the day in what was just short of despair. Grove seemed to understand, because he kept talk to a minimum.
He was half-afraid Ramon would be gone when he got home that evening. Instead, the boy had cooked a good dinner, but Ramon’s eyes were puffy, and Hawk suspected he’d been crying.
Now, the kid tried to man-up. “When we go?”
“Early tomorrow. I’ll drive you to San Diego and we’ll cross at Tijuana. Where will you go, Ramon? What will you do?”
“Go home. Get job. Ramon damn good man, he find job.”
After dinner they cleaned the kitchen together and watched a little TV. Long before Hawk’s customary bedtime, Ramon looked over at him and put together a complete sentence in flawless English. “Will you make love to me?”
Without a word, Hawk led the youth to bed and mounted him gently, face-to-face, and with a smile his lips. Soon the joy of the occasion overtook the gravity of Ramon’s mood, and the boy returned the smile. The orgasm, when it came, was no less forceful because of the tender nature of their loving. Ramon stayed Hawk’s hand, keeping him from drawing the boy’s seed from his body. Ramon clasped him to his breast for a long time, neither speaking nor moving. At length, he released Hawk to go clean up.
While Hawk was in the shower, Ramon opened the curtain and stepped inside. Taking the soap from Hawk, he lathered his lover from pate to sole. He shyly asked Hawk to turn around and laved the deep cleft, soaping all the way to the sphincter. After he took a rag and rinsed away the soap, he spoke.
“Ramon never forget Hawk. He see bird high in air, he think of Hawk. He see falcon in tree, he ache for Hawk.”
Hawk leaned into the wall and parted his feet as Ramon hugged his back and thrust his groin at Hawk’s buns without penetrating them. The boy’s breath in his ear became ragged, his words unintelligible. Hawk understood his young lover was seeking a moment he could savor forever. Without thinking about it, he relaxed his muscles, parted his cheeks and endured the pain even as he savored the startled expression of disbelief and wonder escaping Ramon’s throat. Hawk sensed the boy becoming the man.
The beauty of Ramon’s parting gift bled Hawk’s strength away. Without warning, the boy exploded, shuddered, and withdrew. As Hawk turned to him, Ramon slid down the side of the shower all the way to the floor, his legs splayed in front of him, a look of utter joy on his face. Hawk joined him and held him close, allowing the spray of clean water to shower them anew.
Without understanding how, Hawk knew he’d made the future better for this beautiful Mexican youth. His mind centered on the boy’s name. Aguila… Eagle. This night, Ramon had become an Eagle for his Hawk.

*****

Heartbreaking but tender ending, and one that is safer for Ramon… and incidentally, Hawk, as well. They government really does put some return offenders in federal prisons for stays of six months or longer. And often, young ones like Ramon are used violently by their older and stronger fellow inmates.

But what about Grove? What in the world’s going to happen there? And can you imagine the impact when… and if… two strong men like Curtis Huntinghawk and Grover Whitedeer get together? Maybe one of these days I’ll get around to posting that story.

Please consider ordering Cut Hand and Johnny Two-Guns from Dreamspinner Press. I’d like to convince them to publish the rest of the Cut Hand Series, including the unpublished manuscript Wastelakapi… Beloved, It’ll take some help from readers to get Dreamspinner interested.

My contact information is provided below in case anyone wants to drop me a line:
Website and blog: markwildyr.com
Email: markwildyr@aol.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/mark.wildyr
Twitter: @markwildyr

The following are buy links for CUT HAND:


And now my mantra: Keep on reading. Keep on writing. You have something to say, so say it!

Until next time.

Mark

New posts at 6:00 a.m. on the first and third Thursday of each month.