I've just put it back up - it's on Kobo and I will share the Amazon link as soon as they let it drop. I've included a nice long excerpt here, and there will be a smutty excerpt on Saturday!
Daddy, Daddy and Me
When Jeff agreed to be the sperm donor to his best friend Beth, he never expected a tragedy to leave his newborn and three-year-old motherless. Beth’s loss has totally thrown his life into chaos: his lover has left him, his house isn’t anywhere near childproof, and his boss feels the restaurant has been patient enough with Jeff’s time off.
Donny has always known he wanted to work with kids, and he just finished his degree in early childhood education. He didn’t count on the prejudice he’d face as not only a male nanny, but a gay one at that. Job-hunting has been frustrating to say the least, so when he knocks on Jeff’s door and is greeted by the sounds of things breaking and a pair of screaming children, he thinks maybe he can begin this particular interview with a trial by fire.
Becoming the nanny to Jeff’s children might be a dream come true for Danny and exactly what Jeff needs, but are either of them ready to really be a family?
Originally released by other publishers
Buy links:
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Excerpt:
Donny got off the bus and turned right, like his GPS was telling him to. The address was 3479
Blueberry Lane. Blueberry. He smiled and shook his head. When he’d first seen
the ad, he’d thought it was a joke.
It wasn’t, though, and so he was going to give it his best
shot. Since graduating with his degree in early childhood care, even his best
shot hadn’t been good enough. He was a man, after
all.
And a gay one at that.
He’d been interviewed for more jobs than he cared to count,
and the only silver lining he could find was that at least he was now an expert
at being interviewed.
When he got to 3479 Blueberry Lane, he’d expected it to look
like a clone of its neighbors. But it didn’t. This one looked like someone had
taken the time to do some planning before it had been built. It was beautiful.
He couldn’t see anything in the fenced-off backyard, but the flower beds
weren’t quite as neat and tidy as most on the block, and there was a little
shovel and a pail sitting in the dirt. Of course, kids would do that to your
lawn, leave you with no time to care about what was actually growing in the
beds.
He made sure he was all tucked in and that he didn’t have
anything stuck in his teeth before he headed up the walk and knocked on the
door. There was a bell, but if there were little kids, there was always the
chance they were sleeping, and he didn’t figure it would endear him to anyone
if he woke the wee ones up.
“Just a second!”
Someone inside screamed, “No! No! No! Daddy Jeff. No!”
Then there was a crash, followed by the wail of an infant.
Good Lord.
He hesitated for no more than half a second before he tried
the door; they clearly needed help in there.
A dark-haired little boy came squealing toward him, naked,
screaming, covered in what looked like marker, followed closely by a man
hopping on one foot, blood dripping from the hand wrapped around the foot in
the air. “Robin! Robin, are you okay?”
Wow.
Donny closed the door quickly and went to his knees to catch
Robin before the kid could streak by him. “Hey, buddy, slow down there.”
“No baths! No! No!” Bright blue eyes, filled with tears, met
his. “I drawed!”
“I can see that. You know what the problem with no baths and
using yourself as paper is?” The boy shook his head. “You run out of places to
draw too quickly!” Donny looked past Robin to the good-looking, bleeding man
and gave him an empathetic smile.
He got an exhausted grin, a mouthed “thank you.”
Robin frowned, chewing his bottom lip. “Daddy Jeff. Want
bath. Now!”
“Okay, Robin. Okay. Let me grab your sister.” The man let go
of his foot, and blood sprayed. “And a paper towel.”
“I can either get the little girl or help him with his bath,
if you want?” Hands-on help would be an excellent way to prove that despite the
fact he was a man, he could do the job and do it well.
“I-I don’t even know you. You—”
The baby started screaming at the top of her lungs.
“Watch the glass. The bathroom’s this way.”
“I’m Donald Gleason. I’m your three o’clock nanny
interview.” He lifted Robin up over the glass as he followed Daddy Jeff down
the hall.
“Jeff Roberts.” Jeff pulled a huge piece of glass from his
foot. “Oh, better.”
God, blood was getting everywhere.
“Sit,” Donny ordered when they got to the bathroom. It
wouldn’t kill the little one to cry for another moment as her father got his
foot wrapped.
“I need to get Kimberley.”
“Daddy Jeff, you got blood everywhere,” Robin said, eyes
wide.
The man sighed. “Yes, Robin, I know.”
“Sit and let me doctor that,” Donny said. “You’re not going
to calm her down if you’re flustered.” He grabbed a washcloth, ran it under the
water, and then wrung it out. He handed it to Robin. “I’ve got a really
important job for you—can you hold this against Daddy Jeff’s foot while I find
a Band-Aid?”
“I can. I’m big.” Robin beamed, bounced over, and placed the
cloth on Jeff’s foot.
“The Band-Aids are in the medicine cabinet. There’s a lock
thing. On the top.” Jeff sounded utterly wiped.
Donny got the child lock undone and found the gauze and the Band-Aids,
then grabbed them and handed them over to Daddy Jeff. Jeff. He relocked the
cabinet. “Just keep holding that there, Robin. I’m going to get your sister.”
He heard Jeff telling him he didn’t have to, but he followed
the wails upstairs into a little room, half-painted, half-decorated, with the
most beautiful, tiny, dark-haired baby in a crib, screaming her head off and kicking
furiously.
“Well, hello there, beautiful.” He picked her up and leaned
her against his shoulder, bouncing her a little. “Don’t you have a good pair of
lungs?”
She hiccupped, sobbed a little, her baby head bobbing.
“Aw, sweetie, it’s okay. Things just got a little busy,
that’s all. You weren’t forgotten, I swear.” He kept crooning to her, bouncing
her as he headed back down the stairs toward the bathroom.
The bath water was running, Robin lecturing his father about
temperature very firmly. “You have to make it right. Mommy says not too hot.”
“I won’t make it too hot, Robin.”
Donny hid his grin in the little girl’s hair. “Looks like
things are almost under control here.”
“Yes. Let me get him clean and get her changed. I….” Tired
blue eyes met his. “I fell asleep.”
“Hey, man, it happens. That’s why you’re advertising for a
nanny, right? I’ll change her, and then you can hold her while I doctor your
foot. Then we’ll get Robin de-markered. In the meantime”—he turned to Robin—“why
don’t you get in and see how much water that tugboat can take on before it
sinks?”
“Boats! Daddy Jeff taked me on a boat!” Robin splashed into
the tub and almost fell, but Jeff caught him before he went down.
“Nice save.” Donny chuckled and set the little girl on the
changing table in the corner, making quick work of her diaper. “What’s this
beauty’s name again?” It was something with a K,
he thought.
“Kimberley.”
Jeff stood and limped to the linen cupboard to retrieve a fresh
washcloth. The bathroom was well-appointed, fancy and fabulous and marble, and
incredibly not kid friendly. All that marble would be hell on falls and bumps.
While there was a lock on the medicine cabinet, there wasn’t one on the toilet.
“What a lovely name for a lovely girl.”
He took the washcloth when Jeff gave it to him and cleaned
her up, got a new diaper on her. “Sit back down, man, and I’ll give her to you,
get that foot checked out. And Robin can tell me all about this boat you took
him on.”
Robin was laughing and splashing, making a mess and
generally ignoring him, which worked too.
Jeff sat on the toilet, held his hands out for the baby.
God, the kids looked just like him, both of them.
Donny handed Kimberley over and kept half an eye on Robin
while he took a look at Jeff’s foot; as long as Robin was making noise, he knew
the kid was okay.
“This looks pretty deep. You should probably keep off it.”
“Yeah. He broke a lamp, and it just shattered.”
“You probably don’t need stitches or anything, though.” He
smiled at Jeff. The man was good-looking.
“I don’t. It’ll heal. It has to—I have to work tomorrow.”
Donny decided the gauze would work best and started wrapping
Jeff’s foot. “What do you do?”
“I’m the head chef at Dejeuner.”
The restaurant was a famous enough Ottawa spot that Donny’d
heard of it, though he couldn’t afford to eat there. “Wow, that’s cool. What’s
your wife do?” He finished wrapping and used a clip to keep the gauze in place
before settling back on his haunches to look up into Jeff’s face.
“I’m not married.”
Not married. Well, no wonder he was exhausted. Toddlers were
hard work; throw in a baby and you could kiss a decent night’s sleep goodbye,
especially if you were doing it alone.
Jeff shifted Kimberley, and the baby gurgled. “This has got
to be the weirdest interview for you ever.”
“It’s more like a trial by fire than an interview, eh?” Donny
grinned up at Jeff, patted the baby on the butt, and turned his attention to
Robin. “And how about you—are you ready to help me show your daddy that I know
how to do bath time properly?”
“Yes!” Water went flying, the little boy as joyous as he had
been hysterical. It was a beautiful thing about that age: emotions were big and
swift, and bad moods were usually easy enough to take care of.
Even when the
“terrible twos” lingered into the threes.
Laughing, he wiped the water off his face. It was too bad he
hadn’t brought along a change of clothes. He would next time. If there was a
next time; he was hoping like hell that he was proving his worth right here and
now.
Between the two of them, they got Robin clean, dry, dressed,
and sitting at the kitchen table with a snack of apples and cheese. Jeff fixed
Kimberley a bottle and then offered him a tired smile. “Would you like some
coffee? Water?”
“I’m good, man. I can feed her if you want, while we do the
interview.”
“It’s okay. You’ve helped a ton already. Come on, let’s sit
at the island, and you can tell me about yourself.”
“Sounds good. This is a gorgeous kitchen,” Donny added as he
sat on one of the stools next to the island. Of course, Jeff was a chef—it made
sense he had a great kitchen. This one was bigger than most kitchens Donny had
seen, though. A table big enough for six sat next to a large window that opened
onto a covered porch, which held another table with four chairs around it. The
island was fabulous, but the corners hadn’t been covered and would probably do
some damage to a little head if it careened into them.
The counters were light marble, and the cupboards were dark
with gold knobs. A double oven sat next to the stovetop, and the fridge had one
of those ice dispenser things. There was a door out to the porch. The whole
thing was bright, and while it was fancy, it was inviting to sit in, and he’d
bet to cook in as well.
“Thank you. I had it built just last year.”
“Must have been hard with a little one underfoot.” He gave
Robin a grin, the little boy munching away on his apple slices.
“Oh, they just moved in… three weeks ago? Kimberley was only
nine weeks old.”
“I thought she looked little-little.” This was clearly not
your standard family here. The kids were definitely Jeff’s—they looked too much
like him not to be—but Jeff wasn’t married, and they’d only moved in a few
weeks ago. “I’m not prying, but I do need to know the family situation if I’m
going to work for you.”
Jeff sighed. “The kids were…. God, this is complicated. Beth
wanted babies, and she was my best friend. I… I was the donor for both.”
“Okay.” That was a pretty big thing, no matter how good a
friend the lady was. He gave Jeff an encouraging look.
Jeff looked down at the baby, rocking her. “She was doing
great, was getting ready to go back to work, when….” He stopped, cleared his
throat. “There was a fire. She got the kids out. But….”
Oh God. Oh damn. That was… God. “I’m so sorry, Jeff. Man,
that’s… I’m so sorry.” What could he say?
“Yeah. It sucked. And I’m their godfather. They came to live
with me.” The godfather and the actual father. It made sense, given the
circumstances, but at the same time, wow.
“So how long have you had them?”
“Since March twenty-third. Three weeks. My sister, Jillian,
she came for ten days at the beginning, but….” Jeff suddenly looked desperate.
“My leave at work is short, and what if one of them gets sick? And potty
training. He’s wet the bed since he came.”
Someone needed a nap. And it wasn’t Robin. Or Kimberley.
“Sounds like you really need a nanny. Good thing you put an
ad in for one.” He gave Jeff a grin. “How many people have you seen?” Was he
still in the running? How many of them could have displayed the hands-on skills
he had right now? That had to put him in the running, right?
“Twelve.” Jeff sighed. “Ten people who told me I needed to
give them to their grandparents, one who wanted to be my live-in lover, and one
who lectured me on the evils of butter.”
Donny frowned. “People suck, man—how you decide to raise
your children is your business, and dude, butter is awesome.” He thought he
definitely had a chance here. For the first time since about his twentieth
interview, he had hope that he might get the job. “I’ve got my degree in early
childhood care, but no practical experience, unless you count being the coolest
uncle to my sisters’ kids. I can start tomorrow—well, even today, I guess. What
kind of hours are we talking?” If Jeff was a chef, he was going to work
afternoons and evenings, right?
“I work from two in the afternoon to midnight, Tuesday
through Saturday. I know that’s like a lot of hours for you, but I’ll provide
room and board and a good salary. You’d have Sunday and Monday off, and….” Jeff
trailed off. “Do you have references? I should probably ask for those.”
Oh, room and board—he wouldn’t have to bus it in every day,
which was a relief if he was going to be here until after midnight on a regular
basis. It meant he could bank most of his salary too.
“I do. I have written references in my bag, which I left in
the hall, and you can call them too, if you want. It is a lot of hours, but if
I’m living in, I’m saving transit time.” And money paying for his own place.
“I’ve met the kids and like them, and they don’t seem allergic to me.”
“No. No, they don’t.” Jeff offered him another half smile.
Robin was falling asleep in his snack, and the baby was sleeping again. “I’ve
never done this before. She wasn’t supposed to die.”
Donny nodded. “Yeah, life has a way of throwing punches. I’d
really like to take the job. I could stay the rest of the afternoon as a trial
while you get some rest, if you want.”
“You don’t want to see your room or anything?”
“I’ll be honest with you, Jeff. I’ve been to a lot of
interviews, and most of the time I barely make it past the first two minutes
because I’m a guy. And if I do, well, then I tell them….” He took a deep
breath, hoping like hell Jeff wasn’t a homophobic prick. “I tell them I’m gay,
and they can’t get rid of me fast enough.”
“You’re family?” Jeff’s eyes went wide.
His own mouth dropped open at Jeff’s words, and then he
grinned, nodded. “How about that?”
“I…. Seriously? Are you fucking with me, man?”
“Daddy Jeff! Bad word!”
Donny had to bite his lip, hard, to keep from laughing.
“That was a bad word, wasn’t it?”
Robin nodded, then teared up. “Mommy says no bad words.”
Jeff’s eyes closed. “I hate four in the afternoon. He acts
like it’s nap time, but then he won’t be able to sleep.”
Shifting his chair closer to Robin, Donny took the little
boy’s hand in his. “Sometimes people forget they aren’t supposed to say bad
words. That’s what Daddy Jeff did. He’ll try very hard not to say it again,
okay?”
He got a solemn nod from Robin, the little boy still
sniffling.
“You have any DVDS of the Teletubbies
or anything like that? Something he can settle with and chill for forty minutes
or so?” If Robin was resisting naps, he would still benefit from some quiet
time.
“I bought a bunch of sh—stuff. They lost everything. It’s
been crazy.”
“Okay, it’s all good. Why don’t you go put Kimberley down
and then put your head down yourself? You look like you haven’t had a decent
night’s sleep in a while. Robin and I will check out your DVD collection
together.”
He’d bet this job that Robin would fall asleep in front of
the TV if they found something gentle to watch. He would also bet that if Jeff
got some sleep and relaxed, it would help Robin relax as well.
He really felt for them all, and suddenly he was glad he’d
not gotten a job yet. These people needed him. He knew things always happened
for a reason; he shouldn’t have stressed about it so hard.
“We’ll all come rest together.”
That was fair—Jeff didn’t know him from a hole in the wall.
Donny had no problem with his needing a little more than a bit of help in an
emergency to leave the kids alone with him.
Jeff led him to a huge great room, the furniture heavy and
leather and masculine, the little child’s beanbag chair next to the dark brown
couch looking incongruous. There were shelves full of books and DVDs, a coffee
table, and a couple of little tables next to the each of the recliners that
bracketed the couch. Knickknacks were all chest height and above, but Donny
knew how easy it would be for them to tempt Robin into climbing the shelves to
get to them.
He would have to sit down with Jeff after he had managed to
get some sleep and talk about some of the things that needed doing to properly
childproof the place. Clearly an attempt had been made, but it was amazing how
much more was needed. Especially when the baby got old enough to be mobile.
Jeff sat on the couch, the baby on his chest. Before Donny
could get a movie on for Robin, the man was sound asleep.
He found a Max & Ruby DVD
and put it in. “Where should we sit, Robin?”
“I…. That’s my big boy chair.” Robin pointed to the beanbag.
“Oh, it looks comfy. Is it?”
Robin nodded, chewed his bottom lip. “You can’t fit.”
“No, but I could sit next to you? Or we could sit on the
couch together.”
“Okay. With Daddy Jeff?”
At the sound of his name, Jeff twitched.
“Yeah, you can sit between us.” Donny sat on the other side
of the couch and patted the space between him and Jeff.
Robin crawled up and settled beside him, little hand on his
father’s knee. His thumb popped into his mouth.
Donny held his hand out by Robin’s thigh. “Hold my hand?”
The little boy stared at him for a long, long time; then the
thumb came out, fingers placed in his. Donny smiled gently and curled his
fingers around Robin’s, then turned his attention to the TV, to getting the DVD
going.
Soon the gentle sounds of Max & Ruby
filled the room. It took seven minutes before Robin cuddled into Jeff’s side
and fell sound asleep. Donny nodded—nap time.
Donny looked at the three of them. The family he was here to
take care of. He felt like this was meant to be; they were his family.
Pretty fu—no, not fucking—pretty darn cool.
Sean
smut fixes everything
I'm in love with these guys already. I can't wait for it to come out on Amazon!
ReplyDeleteSo sweet! Looking forward to reading this book.
ReplyDeleteAny changes or a straight re-release?
ReplyDelete