Some families are haunted by tragedy. Some people are haunted by their pasts. Some men are haunted by who they are. Joe Peterson is haunted by all three. His parents' return from their mission, combined with a family reunion, forces Joe's kin to deal with his new life: out of the Mormon Church, out of the closet, and living with his lover Kabe. When a decades-old murder of a child lands on Joe's desk, digging into it dredges up long buried truths and festering secrets about folks Joe thought he knew -- including Kabe. Joe and Kabe must lay the ghosts of the past and bring closure to a family scarred by loss to move forward in their life together.Available now from MLRPress

Laying Ghosts
A Deputy Joe Novel
Author James Buchanan
ISBN# MLR-1-02013-0015 (ebook) $8.99
978-1-60820-7787 (print) $16.99
Release Date January 2013
Cover Artist Winterheart Designs
Length: (*) 123,000 words
Heat Rating: Graphic
Categories: Police Procedural
Contemporary
BDSM
Available At: MlrBooks (ebook)

Some families are haunted by tragedy. Some people are haunted by their pasts. Some men are haunted by who they are. Joe Peterson is haunted by all three. His parents’ return from their mission, combined with a family reunion, forces Joe’s kin to deal with his new life: out of the Mormon Church, out of the closet, and living with his lover Kabe. When a decades-old murder of a child lands on Joe’s desk, digging into it dredges up long buried truths and festering secrets about folks Joe thought he knew — including Kabe. Joe and Kabe must lay the ghosts of the past and bring closure to a family scarred by loss to move forward in their life together.

Chapter 1:

The insistent ring of my cell phone made me pull it off my hip and glance at the face. I knew that name, and, honest, seeing it…well it was like a sunrise after a rain. I hit accept as I got up from my desk and ducked back into the break room. “Joe’s Pizza.” Hadn’t clocked back in from lunch yet, so I could take a personal call, and not like I was all that busy right then anyhow.

Of course, I’da taken this call even if I’d been in the presence of Heavenly Father himself.

A lot of static cut across Kabe’s words. “Holy shit, dude, same suck-ass joke as always.” I didn’t care about the tease. I didn’t care that I could hardly hear him. That voice was the best darn thing to hit my ears in what felt like a million years. “You’re such a dork.” He might have razzed me, but I could suss out the slow, deep current of warmth under what he said.

I hadn’t seen Kabe in over a week. “Guilty as charged.”

I wondered if he could tell how big my grin was just by my tone. Lord I’d missed him, more than I really wanted to admit. I’d gotten used to the warmth and the smell of his body next to mine at night. I’d roll over and the absence of him would wake me up. Just coming home to an empty house, hearing my boots echo…I don’t know, it dropped my heart more than I ever thought possible.

“It’s been kinda, ah, quiet around without you.” Never, ever thought I’d have a life like this, with someone, and I liked it more than I believed possible.

“Hey, I haven’t even had time to jack-off,” he laughed, “so don’t tell me who’s missed who.”

Trust Kabe to take the conversation down to the lowest point in the stream. “So how much longer until the forestry service cuts you loose?” Mother bear, Ranger Nadia Slokum, prodded Kabe into applying for a fire crew back in February. My boy’d gone and landed himself a job – he finished up his EMT certification in early spring, got his fire-fighter’s ‘red card’ by completing a few weekend courses and passing the final exam: hauling fifty pounds of gear through three miles of wilderness in less than forty-five minutes. His probation officer, being on board with the whole idea, gave him a letter saying that he could travel outside the county, and the state, so long as he was working a fire and checked in by phone when he was able.

“Dork.” He repeated the barb, but added a laugh. “We’re in Milford.” Milford? That put him about an hour and a half away. “Stopped to gas up the truck and get something to drink.”

“You’re on your way home?” With his training, plus being an experienced rock junkie and back-country camper; yeah it qualified Kabe for a minimum wage job digging fire breaks, clearing dead wood, back-cutting brush and risking his life to fight wilderness blazes. Up until now he’d logged a lot of blisters, pulled muscles and about a dozen hornet stings. Then his crew got called out for the first real fire of the season up in Great Basin National Park. He got tapped and he went: brave, gung-ho and ready for action.

“Yep. They declared hundred percent containment at about two in the morning.” He sounded downright exhausted. “Started cutting crews loose just before dawn.”

“Well.” All of a sudden I got excited, and not just south of the boarder. “I’ll see you when I get off work then.” Boy, I sounded like a kid who found out they canceled school for the rest of the year.

“We got to put shit away in Cedar, but, yeah, our bed tonight.” Oh, Lord, that sounded like one sweet promise. “Got to run.” He huffed it out like he didn’t much want to get off the phone either. “See you.”

“Hold you to it, boy.” My way of saying, I’ve missed you more than I can really put into words. “Drive safe up the mountain.”

“You got it.” Kabe answered before clicking off. We never actually said good-bye. That’s what folks said when you didn’t expect to see the other again. As first responders, nobody ever wanted to jinx nothing.

The news, though, put a bit of bounce in my step as I headed back to my desk. Made everything just a little more bearable knowing Kabe’d be home before sundown. I sat down in front of the computer. A dozen old folders were stacked in front of me and I entered the data from the open one into the national data bases. Although I was back at work, Doc Snow had me on light duty. He didn’t want me chasing after deadbeats on foot or jumping off walls. I understood that he needed to make sure my knee was stable after my accident, but still, my Lord, this duty equaled boring. I did get that it had to be done. Clear old cases. Link some crimes to others out there.

Still, it made me feel like a secretary not an officer.

“Hey, Peterson.” The new Watch Commander came up behind me. “How are you doing on the cold cases?”

That was one of the main reasons I needed Kabe around to make things more bearable. I rolled my neck a couple of times before answering. “I’m almost caught up on what we have.” I’d like to say I rose above my situation, but I really couldn’t. Diamond had resigned, her kid needed twenty-four-seven home care after release from the hospital and she had to step up. I’d lost a year of pay and a rank over my relationship with Kabe. Before that, I’d been a sergeant, the Watch Commander, all of it got pulled from me when I’d consented to my boss’ discipline for messing with a guy on probation—legally in custody. But that meant they needed someone to fill my slot and I got Diamond’s job.

Lt. Jared Lowell, formerly of Orem PD, took a cut in pay, and gained a lot better hours, to take my job. “Okay, what year are you back to?” While it was my own damn fault that gave him the opportunity, it didn’t mean I had to like the man for it.

Even if I felt sore, I wouldn’t change the turn my life took when I met Kabe.

And while Lt. Lowell didn’t hit the top of my list of favorite people, I knew better than to piss in my own back yard. I made an effort to play nice. “Once I get these in,” I thought a moment, “we’ll have everything from about eighty-two on in all the national databases.” Not like we had thousands of cold cases. Most of what I’d been reviewing were old burglaries, assaults and property crimes where the statute of limitations had run out long ago. We had a few murders, where the officers knew who did it, but just couldn’t prove it. Then there were the nameless ones: the Johns and Janes buried by the county under the last name Doe who died alone in the forest or along the highway. Someone out there loved them, though, and deserved to know what happed to their kin. “Already cleared half a dozen or so cases with dental/tattoo hits and the like.” Most, so far had been through the missing persons clearing houses. I suspected that the likely matches I’d gotten back would resolve a lot more in time. Then there were the few felons serving time that popped on DNA hits.

Mostly, though, this duty gave me a lot of time with my own thoughts. I’d be playing hunt-n-peck on the keyboard and my mind would drift off to imagining what Kabe was up to. Cooked up a lot of ways to have fun with him, you know, like we tended. This past week rubbed really raw, me missing him more than usual. I couldn’t wait to see him, wrap him up in bed and forget the rest of the world existed. Well, except for tomorrow, ‘cause my folks were coming home after two years in Russia serving the Church and I had to go get them from the airport.

But before and after…yeah, a lot of nekkid consumed my dreams.

Lowell’s voice called me back to the here and now. “Only to eighty-two?” He settled his weight on the edge of the desk I’d been assigned to. Thick arms folded across a barrel chest, he stared down at me from beneath bushy white brows. Even his red-tinged, but grayed out, mustache seemed to twitch with irritation.

I’d pulled every old file outta the storage cabinets in our current building. “Well, that’s all I’ve found files for.” Honestly, there were a lot more boxes in evidence storage than I had files to match…most of them pressed up against the very back walls in dingy brown boxes. And look, I knew I needed to get to those, but the farther back you went, the cases meandered from slightly frostbitten cold-case to down right freezer burned. Twenty-five years ago meant locked in permafrost.

“The department goes back longer than that.” Lowell reminded me.

“Yeah.” I almost managed to not sound snotty with my response.

“There’s got to be older files.”

I knew he was right, but I protested all the same. “That’s more than thirty years ago.” I wanted to be out on patrol, making a difference, doing what I did best. This duty made me feel like some clerk. I hadn’t spent my life training for data entry.

“And if we can clear them though the Fed’s combined indexing systems,” he let a heavy pause settle down between us before he finished his thought, “it’s out of the unsolved and into the solved files.”

“Well, I’m having trouble with some of the older stuff because we have the old style info on it and not the new format. And a lot of it is backlogged at the OME’s office.” The Office of the Medical Examiner for the state, well new cases took six to nine months to process. Ice cold cases, yeah, they got shelved towards when there was a bit of time when nothing much else was happening. Like maybe when Hell froze over. “It’ll be a while before anyone can enter final details on those.”

“Okay, but the department has existed more than thirty years.” He repeated it with a little more aggravation than the first time he said it.

I tried not to let my own issues mess with trying to live with my new boss. “Yeah, and?” Cain’t say I was too successful.

Again, Lowell insisted. “Where are those records?”

“They ain’t here.” I huffed and pushed back from the computer. “I ain’t found them yet.”

“Well.” He stood, tapped the desk and leaned over me. “Find them.”

I couldn’t quite let it be. “Why? Thirty plus years…everybody’s dead or long gone.” I wasn’t like this normally. But this was not doing. This was just waiting.  Cooling my heels while someone else to decided if I could go back to working at what I loved. It drove me nuts.

“Because your purpose right now,” he glared, “deputy on disability, Joe Peterson, is to enter all of our cold case files into the databases.” He rapped a meaty set of knuckles near my keyboard. “I will drag this department, kicking and screaming, if I have to, into the twenty-first century. Where do you think old files might be?”

“Ah.” I backed down a little, sorta. “Okay, up until, maybe twelve years ago, the sheriff had the old offices and county jail had cells in the new county courthouse.” I probably sounded as bored as I was. “That was built in the early eighties. Maybe at the old cells in the courthouse. I think some stuff was moved into storage there along with a lot of the old county records.”

“You got a phone, deputy, get on it.” He ordered as he started to walk away.

There’s protesting and then there’s banging your head against brick walls. This argument, for me, headed towards the latter. “Yessir.” I muttered, not quite giving up my attitude even if I abandoned the fight. Took me five or six different times striking out with folks who had no more clue than I did before I really thought about it. Picked up the phone one last time and dialed the maintenance office over at the county building. If anyone would know what lurked in the musty, dusty corners of the courthouse, it’d be the janitors.

Had a nice long talk with the head maintenance guy. Took a bit of cajoling to convince him why my boss’ do now should become his problem. I finally got him to ask around his crew while I waited on hold. When he came back on the line, I got a definite maybe on whether they knew where those files were. It equaled better than a sharp stick in the eye.

By then it was time for me to clock out. I’d never been much of a clock watcher before I got injured. But, honest, this current assignment couldn’t hardly get more boring. A few cases I reviewed caught my attention, got me lost in the reading of them, trying to think ‘em through. Besides being few and far between, they tended to be solved when I entered the right data in the right place. That gave me a momentary thrill. A few others, well, I could see likely as clear as the officers handling them had as to who done it…those though, they just needed the technology to catch up to the evidence. Waiting a few more months for the old blood and other fluids to run through the DNA wringer weren’t going to make ‘em any colder.

The rest of the lot seemed only slightly more interesting than watching grass grow.

I shut down the computer, stacked the files on the edge of my desk, before I headed over to where Lt. Lowell sat filling out some sorta paperwork. I knew he saw me. I’d come up on him just so he could see me. He didn’t, however, seem to be in any rush to acknowledge that I existed, much less waited on him. Shuffled my feet a bit, picked at a bit of lint that somehow attached itself to my sleeve and basically fussed, without really fussing, while he seemed bent on ignoring me. I’da never done that to one of my men…make ‘em wait without even the courtesy of asking for a moment. And I know that what I worked on didn’t rate too much on the scale of urgency, still a little courtesy never hurt.

Probably pay back for my bit of lip earlier.

Finally, he scribbled his name on the bottom of the paper and grunted out a, “Yes,” as he stacked it with the other sheets in his out box.

Took a couple deep, but not obvious, breaths before I figured I could say anything without coming off all bitter and put out. “Talked to some folks at the courthouse, they think they might have some old boxes and such belonging to us.” The lieutenant nodded like he listened, so I figured I’d just rush it on out. “They ain’t sure, but someone seemed to recall coming across them.”

“Okay.” That came with him starting to write on the next form. “Head over there and see what you can find.”

I didn’t even rate a look. I guess neither of us was too keen on the other. Still, he outranked me and I had to explain myself. “The head maintenance guy’s going to meet me day after tomorrow.” When I saw his lip tighten up, I cut Lowell off. “He’s got guys out sick. It’s his schedule not mine. I’m going to come in part of my day off to go take care of this.” Figured reminding him that I usually wasn’t a thorn in folks’ sides might not hurt right then. Wouldn’t quite make up for some of my attitude from earlier.

“You’re off tomorrow and the next day?”

“Yessir.” Reminded him about that too. “It’s the end of my work week. My folks are coming home from overseas. I got to go pick ‘em up in Salt Lake.” Just for good measure, I threw in an excuse. “Since I’m not on patrol it’s not like I’m leaving y’all hanging.”

“Don’t have to explain.” He grunted. “You’re finished with your shift. I don’t expect you to live here.” What little of his attention I’d had up ‘till then pretty much evaporated. Felt it like a slow fizzle of heat being wicked off my chest. Guess that meant I was dismissed, so I didn’t even bother to say good-bye as I headed out.

I think you’ll all like it: Kinky Ever After: Kinky Kiss and Tell – Joe Peterson from The Deputy Joe Novels by James Buchanan

At the Popular Romance Project. It was shot at Authors After Dark in Philadelphia last August and I talk about myself and gay romance.  You can find it at http://popularromanceproject.org/category/interviews/, where you can comment and share ideas about what what I have
to say. Then I encourage you to stick around and explore the rest of the site
while you are there: there are videos and stories about the making of
the film “Between the Covers,” in the BEHIND THE SCENES section of the site, interview
excerpts in INTERVIEWS, and short interesting blogs from scholars,
romance authors and bloggers in TALKING ABOUT ROMANCE.

This is all part of a film project by an experienced documentary crew who did Tupperware! and A Midwife’s Tale.

Brief, but I’ll take it

I took your question to award-winning gay-erotica author James Buchanan, whose audience is largely female. “The men are free to explore their roles and enjoy each other without this omnipresent sound track of what society ‘expects,’” Buchanan said. “And female readers can choose to identify with either, or both, protagonists in the story.”

You can read the full post at Salon.com

Leather and Chains and Whips, Oh my…

Talking about BDSM again (surprise)and about the prevalence of props and swanky dungeons in BDSM books. Come stop on by and comment.

An Evening of Gay Men’s Romance at Giovanni’s Room

Philadelphia, PA (August 12, 2011) Join MLR Press at Giovanni’s Room for an up close and personal book signing featuring the award winning authors of some of the best in contemporary gay fiction.  The evening will include readings by: Victor Banis, Ally Blue, James Buchanan, Z.A. Maxfield, William Neale, and Rick R. Reed. Selections from their current releases will showcase a variety of heat, from sweet romance to scorching erotica, and genre ranging from horror through mystery, BDSM, humor and more. 

Giovanni’s Room, founded in 1973, is the oldest gay bookstore in the US. Housed in historic buildings from the 1800s, Giovanni’s intimate setting and comfortable ambiance allows readers and authors to connect one-on-one, providing a unique experience. Attendees can mingle with their favorite author or discover new books and authors.

Owned by best-selling, award-winning author Laura Baumbach, MLR Press offers the highest quality stories to readers of gay fiction and erotic romance. MLR Press titles include multiple award-winning and Lambda nominated books such as the Donald Strachey Mystery Series by Richard Stevenson and The Golden Age of Gay Fiction edited by Drewey Wayne Gunn, a Benjamin Franklin Award winner. Books from MLR Press take readers on amazing adventures through the creative minds of a small, select group of bright, uniquely talented authors and artists.

Friday, August 12, 2011
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Giovanni’s Room
345 S. 12th Street, Philadelphia, PA

Also attending and signing books: Laura Baumbach, Kimberly Gardner, Ethan Day, Jet Mykles, Diana DeRicci, Taylor Donovan, Liz Strange, DH Star, David Juhren, and Karenna Colcroft.
 

Authors After Dark 

Join 116 + authors, and Yours Truly, for three ours of awesome books and merriment! The
booksigning is free to the public (Ormandy Ballroom).


Spin Out
a Deputy Joe Novel

The sequel to Hard Fall is out.  Right now it’s available through MLR Press Direct in eBook.  I’ll post links for Amazon and other distributors as they go live.

Right guy. Wrong time.

Deputy Joe Peterson understood the risks when he got involved
with ex-con Kabe Varghese. He didn’t, however, see fit to warn Kabe.
Now, in the middle of searching for the killer of a local boy, he
has to contend with his career and his relationship spinning out
of control. Solving the case may be easier than repairing broken
trust.


Ain’t nothing like
the mountain air first thing in the morning. As I swung out of my new
department issue Explorer, I could almost taste the first touch of
snow on my tongue. Wouldn’t be long before winter hit. That meant
skiing, Christmas and snuggling up next to my Kabe’s fine body under
a layer of quilts. Not that I needed much excuse to do that. Three,
sometimes four, nights a week he spent over at my place…and boy
didn’t the gossips like to pass that bit around.

No sense ruining my
day thinking on that.

I headed on into the
oldest dinner in Panguitch, nodding as I walked into the café and
getting a round of grunts and, “Hi, Joe.” in return .
A few other folks I said howdy to even though I knew I’d get nothing
but glares back. Didn’t mean I still shouldn’t be polite. Slid into
my usual booth in the back corner so’s I could watch everyone coming
and going. I didn’t bother to order nothing. Jane, at the front
counter, just always seemed to know what I was in the mood for and
brought it on out to me.

A knot of men
clustered around the big table, all of them with heads down and
trading low whispers. If’n I didn’t know every last one of them and
what they were up to, I’da been suspicious. But they all either made
their living off the big hunts or liked to pretend they did. Hunting
season meant stingy strategy sessions rivaling those of warring
nations. Everyone trying to figure what each other knew about where
the game was and each trying not to let spill what he’d figured
already.

After a few bites
into my pancakes, I caught Carl Haley standing up out of the group of
hunting guides and wannabes. He stretched. He hemmed and hawed a bit
about going. Then he pulled out a few bills, tossed them on the table
and…

…walked out.

I actually dropped
my fork. Slipped right out of my hand. I think the big table, well,
all them just froze in place halfway through whatever they was at.
See, ’cause all that play outta Carl, at this time in September,
usually prefaced him sauntering on back, sliding into the opposite
side of the booth and grinning out, “So, seen any deer lately,
deputy?”

Going on five
seasons of that-me being something of an informant of sorts. Came
with my job and being up and around long before the butt crack of
dawn driving my patrol route along the highways and roads in a county
that didn’t have hardly one person for every square mile of land.

Elk, deer, moose;
saw ‘em all the time, everywhere. And I kept it in my head and gave
it off to Carl from about start of fall on through hunting season.
For that, I always had a little bit of something in my freezer ,
and if I got a permit in the local lottery then Carl would take me
out.

I cain’t say how it
even hit me right then. My mind just kept backfiring on how he’d
pretty publicly snubbed not only me, but a decent professional
association. And Carl wasn’t even a member of the Latter Day Saints,
just a cowboy, one who apparently let his prejudices rule his wallet.
Sorta set me down into this whirlpool of really black thoughts. Most
times something like this happened-you know after everything hit the
fan about me liking guys and shacking up with an ex-con pretty boy
and getting excommunicated-I managed to just stick it in my pocket.
But there’s those you expect it from ,
and then those that hit you blindside.

Carl caught me off
guard.

As I’m all wrapped
up in that, staring at a plate of pancakes that are getting less
appetizing by the moment, I heard somebody’s butt slide into the
booth. “Morning, Joe.” Rough voice, paved like country road
asphalt and varnished with years of smoke-Randy Small. I looked up.
He saluted me with his coffee mug. “Mind if I join you?”

“Sure you want
to?” Yeah, I was right ready to dive into a little pity party.

“If Carl’s
going to let his uptight ass keep him from good info…” With a
roll of his eyes, Randy let the rest of that thought slide on by. He
took a few swigs of his coffee. Me, I just tried to remember how to
breathe again. Finally, Randy grunted, “Your flapjacks are
getting cold.”

I pushed them away.
“Not all the hungry right now.” The whole thing soured my
stomach even if Carl didn’t say nothing. Didn’t have to. I’d have had
to be dead to not hear that unspoken disgust loud and clear.

Randy chewed on my
words for a moment, his mouth almost working with the thoughts, then
he grunted again. “Don’t let it ride you too much, Joe. Not
everyone is as limped dicked as that son-of-a-bitch.” He grinned
and leaned in. “The moment we all realized that Carl weren’t
headed over here…well I thought we’d have ourselves a good old
fashioned brawl right here over coffee to see who could get over here
first.”

“What,” I
grumbled, not at him but at the whole darn mess, “you stared ‘em
all down?”

“Naw, I just
stood up and walked on over.” The laugh that started ended up as
a hoarse wheeze. Once he’d caught his breath, Randy finished, “Lazy
dogs don’t get fed.”

I almost managed a
smile at that. “Guess not.” Eased the hurt a little knowing
that not all of them felt like Carl.

Randy grinned back.
“So, seen any deer lately, deputy?”

1234

working on a cross-posting gadget, but it uploaded a boatload of old posts.

Sorry…

working on a cross-posting gadget, but it uploaded a boatload of old posts.

Sorry…

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