Eric and TJ Update Jan 12

TJ Writes: We have been in the hospital for one month as of today. Eric asked if he could wear the engagement ring I got him. How could I say no to that?

Even better news today to mark the first month. If all goes well the next two days with his breathing, they are going to change the traech on and he will be able to speak aloud for the first time since December 12. I can’t wait to hear his voice.

Taste of Rhys Ford’s Dirty Deeds

Dirty_Deeds_CoverExcerpt from Dirty Deeds

We went to bed that night and lay on opposite sides of the bed for about fifteen minutes. Then, I rolled over to reach for him and Jae was already there, folding his arms around my body and kissing my face. I’d needed to touch him, to know he was there, and I’d moved without even thinking about it.

“I’m sorry,” I murmured into his neck. “I don’t want to hurt you.”

“Cole-ah, some days you hurt me simply by breathing.” His words were quick, short jabs, but they found their mark, leaving me bleeding out through a thousand shallow cuts. “And then there are days when I love you so much I don’t mind the pain.”

His kiss healed anything left over after the initial volley, and I cuddled him close, reveling in the feel of his skin on mine. We often slept naked, a risk sometimes, especially if one of us forgot to trim Neko’s nails, but he felt damned good on me, a satiny length of sensual comfort on my rough emotions.

Clockwork Tangerine Excerpt

Clockwork TangerineExcerpt from Clockwork Tangerine (Standalone steampunk novella) by Rhys Ford
Release Date: Feb 19, 2014 by Dreamspinner Press

The stink of St. Francisco crept into Marcus’s nose and stayed there, an unwelcome sensory vermin plaguing him at every step. Fog hung in the alleyways, catching on the corners of buildings and shrouding Little Orient’s arcane-fueled street lamps. The faint orange glow they cast was barely enough to see by on a clear night, and once a heavy soup rolled in off the bay’s murky water, the ill-maintained orbs were dimmed to a pale tangerine wash.

Definitely not enough light to see anything other than dark, slinky shapes at the edge of his vision but certainly bright enough to warn off any cutpurses lurking in the pea-soup thick shadows beyond. He’d been a fool to come down to Little Orient near dusk, but his grandmother had begged, something she rarely did.

Well, unless she thought she could get away with it.

“I thought I had enough.” Her soft, round face sported few wrinkles, and her cotton-floss hair was suspiciously bright gold, but the elderly woman wore her age well. “Please, Marcus. It would be such a disappointment if it wasn’t served.”

She’d been his only maternal influence after his own mother fled the Commonwealth to head back to London, and Marcus hated disappointing her. Hosting afternoon breakfasts for the West Commonwealth’s society were the highlight of his grandmother’s week, and if she needed a particular jasmine tea for it, he would damn well get it for her.

Now in the misty shadows of the district’s spice and sewer perfumed air, Marcus wondered if he’d not made a mistake, and he would have been better off popping down to Woolworth’s Tea Emporium for a more mundane leaf.

“She would know,” he reminded himself, hefting his sword cane up and checking the fill of his pocket where his pistol hung heavy in his overcoat. “She always knows.”

The package of tea was light enough in his other pocket, not enough of a weight to trouble him, but it seemed to weigh him down with every step. Obligations. Family obligations. That was what the tea represented. The need to produce… to succeed in order to further the family line. Even if he was only the third son and a poor representation of the dukedom.

A chance quirk of filial bloodlines gifted him with a title, a viscount to put in front of his name, but it felt awkward hanging on his shoulders. He felt more at home in the boxing ring, schooling lesser men on the proper ways to defend themselves, or even riding with the hounds, chasing after a metallic gewgaw covered in rabbit fur rather than the traditional Reynard.

The industrialists made their mark in odd ways, filling the skies with bloated tick-like balloons strong enough to carry a man across oceans or steam-driven contraptions loud enough to frighten a sensible horse on the roads, but strangely enough, it was the faux fox that angered arcanists the most.

“It’s a violation of the natural order! They’ll be the death of us. The death of the British Empire!” His father harrumphed more than once as he read the Post at the breakfast table. He’d been a walrus of a man, bristling with a thick mustache and even thicker eyebrows, his ever-increasing belly popping more than a few buttons on his waistcoat when he blustered his opinions at the Commonwealth’s House of Lords.

In the end, the duke was right in his own way. It’d been a skitter that killed his father, a hand-sized mechanical leftover from the Society’s attempted coup against the newly crowned Queen. Hidden in the Lords’ Hall voting chambers, the spindly legged mechanism somehow activated and attacked the man nearest to its hiding place, his blustering but large-hearted father. The Duke’s last words as he lay dying on the House floor were of his family and to curse the industrialists who brought doom to the British Empire.

TJ and Eric Update

TJ writes: Good day today. In fact, I might even say it’s a great day. Eric‘s breathing numbers are the best they’ve been since he was admitted to the hospital almost a month ago. We may stumble a bit, but we’re never knocked off our feet. We are making huge strides.

Yeah, it’s a great day.

TJ and Eric Thoughts

If there is one thing I’ve learned through this whole ordeal with Eric, it’s that people as a whole are kind and good. Specifically people that don’t know us personally.

TJ Writes: When I came home the first time a few days after Eric was taken to the hospital in Richmond, I found flowers on our doorstep. Our next door neighbors, a middle aged couple with kids, had left them there with a note saying they had seen us leave in the ambulance a few days before and they hoped everything was okay. I was very touched and wrote them a small thank you note.

I got home from work today, and as I was going in the house, the father was coming out. He asked if Eric was okay, and I ended up spilling more than I planned to. He listened and when I was finished, he said “Everything is going to be okay. God has blessed you both.”

I don’t know if I believe in God, but I will forever believe that people are good. It’s that gesture and the ones made by all of you with your words and donations that have kept us afloat during all of this. I will never be able to thank you enough.

TJ and Eric Update!

From TJ:

Eric is safe and sound in the new hospital. His blood pressure dropped a bit as did his breathing, but they have it under control and getting it back to where it was this morning. Time for the hard work to begin, but he’s come this far already, and I know in my heart he has no plans in stopping.

Let’s go, let’s go, let’s go.

Piper Vaughn is in Da House! And She’s Brought a Merman!

LoveRising - Anne Cain - 300x450The Allure of Mermen

So, as I was talking to Rhys about our upcoming joint takeover of Dreamspinner’s Twitter account, she asked me a question about Love Rising. “Why mermaids?”

Well, there’s a short answer to this question—and a longer one.

The short answer is: one of my closest friends, Melanie Tushmore, posted some prompts last year before her birthday asking people to write stories for her as gifts. Since I happen to love my dear Ms. Tushmore, I decided I would write one. The prompt that appealed to me the most was her request for mermen, of which she is a huge fan. In fact, that’s something we have in common, and so Wick the merman and Love Rising were born.

See, I’m a bit of a fairy tale and folklore junkie. I’ve read plenty of stories about mermaids and selkies and the creatures that live in the depths. There’s a certain appeal to a creature that is part of both worlds at once—land and sea. And then there are all the stories, dating all the way back to 1000 BC. The first mermaid was supposedly the goddess Atargatis, who loved a mortal man and accidentally killed him. She jumped into the lake in remorse and took the form of a fish, but her beauty was too great to be hidden, so she became a mermaid—woman above the waist, fish below. But hers was far from the only tale about mermaids. Stories about them have appeared in numerous cultures throughout the world, and you have to wonder where they all came from. Could these types of creatures actually exist or are they purely mythical? No evidence has ever been found to the positive, but the romantic in me wants to believe.

I rooted for Ariel in Disney’s version of The Little Mermaid and lamented the fact that she was trapped at sea while all she wanted was to live on land and experience life as a human. I debated whether or not to write this story in the merman’s point of view, to show him yearning for a land dweller. But as soon as I started writing, the words started flowing from the perspective of my human main character, Francis. See, his story was a more tragic one, full of loss and longing. Wick, although he remains a bit of mystery in Love Rising because of the language barrier and the limited POV, is a much happier, carefree creature. In his natural habitat, he’s playful. Don’t get me wrong, Wick feels deeply, too, but it was Francis I could relate to—his fascination with this creature and how it can exist, his protectiveness, his awe. I think if I ever saw a merman/mermaid face to face, one like Wick, I’d feel much the same way.

I might dabble with mermen again. Wick has numerous siblings, in fact, and one of them has been whispering in my ear. Maybe such a creature is out there somewhere, right now. Most of our planet is made up of water. Who knows what lurks in the depths?  😉

~*~

Love Rising is available now. Buy it from Dreamspinner or wherever else your favorite ebooks are sold.

Blurb:

 

In the 1700s on the island of Sagrario, men who love other men find safe haven. For Francis Holland, an escaped indentured servant, Sagrario offers nothing but loneliness. His life begins to change when he finds Wick, a merman, washed ashore.

When Wick awakens under Francis’s care, Francis returns him to the sea at his request. Soon after, they begin to meet in secret, and gradually, Francis blossoms under this new companionship. However, a merman is a difficult creature to entrust one’s heart to. With one trapped on land and the other at sea, the differences in their species threaten to keep them apart forever. It may not be long before Wick is gone, taking Francis’s reason to smile with him.

Want to know more about Piper? Visit her at: http://pipervaughn.com, where links to all her social media accounts can be found.

Don’t forget to Join Piper and Rhys on their Twitter Takeover!

Voting On Now For PRG’s Reviewers’ Choice Awards!

2013 Awards header

The Paranormal Romance Guild has their 2013 Reviewers’ Choice Awards up! Go vote for your faves!

They were kind enough to include me in a couple of categories but oh, SO MANY GOOD AUTHORS!

Thanks guys!

Go Vote Here!

Eric and TJ Update!

Tj Klune writes: The good news we have been waiting for! Eric is being moved out of the ICU and to the sub acute ICU in the new hospital. His breathing has been so good that the doctors feel confident that the work can now begin to get him off the ventilator. 25 days in and the next big hurdle has been cleared. I am so very, very proud of him. Let’s go, let’s go, let’s go!!