Title: Maui
Author: Martin Delacroix
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: January 22, 2018
Heat Level: 5 - Erotica
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 14100
Genre: Contemporary, in the closet, teacher, surfing, coming out
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Synopsis
When Ishmael Fanning is dumped by his Florida boyfriend, he relocates to the Hawaiian island of Maui. To heal his heart. There he quickly finds himself involved with two young men: Spencer, who works in a skateboard shop, and Corey, a professional surfer. Spencer is sensitive and a bit needy, while Corey is supremely confidant and could be mistaken for a fashion model. At some point, Ishmael will have to choose between the two, but it's not an easy decision for him to make.Excerpt
Maui
Martin Delacroix © 2018
All Rights Reserved
Martin Delacroix © 2018
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
I came to Maui to heal my heart.
My partner of
seven years, Christian, a pediatrician, had left me for another guy, a
professional tennis player who earned ten times my teacher’s salary and looked
like a fashion model. The breakup was nasty, too. We owned our home and bank
accounts jointly, our investments as well, and the whole thing ended up in
court, an embarrassment for us both. I walked away with a five-figure check, my
financed car, some clothing and books, and little else. After all, as the judge
pointed out, Christian had been the moneymaker in our household.
I couldn’t stay
in Melbourne Beach, or anywhere in Florida, really. Too many memories lurked
there, and I’d be close to Christian and his tennis player, something I
couldn’t handle.
I’d surfed since
I was a kid, and a friend and fellow shredder, Andy Barnes, told me about Maui.
“All kinds of breaks,” he said, “from gentle to monster barrels, and the
island’s a freaking paradise.”
I did Internet
research on Maui. With a population of ten thousand, the town of Lahaina seemed
my best choice. There were two public elementary schools and a Catholic
academy. And if I couldn’t find a teaching job, I could wait tables at one of
the town’s many restaurants.
My folks weren’t
happy with my decision.
“Ishmael,” my mom
said, “it’s so far away. We’ll only see you at Christmas.”
But I had to
leave.
Losing Christian
had devastated me.
I’d met him at
age twenty-two, shortly after I came out of the closet, and he was my first
boyfriend. Five years my senior, he seemed wise and stable, just the sort of
guy I wanted for a partner. And sex with him was unlike anything I’d
experienced. Each time he took me in his arms and every time we made love, it
felt special. I believed I belonged to Christian and he belonged to me. I
thought things would always remain that way.
When Christian
told me of his tennis player, and when he insisted we separate, I thought I
would lose my mind. How could he do this? After telling me he loved me, he
would cast me aside? He’d dump me because the tennis player was better looking
and enjoyed a measure of fame?
I told myself, I
could never do something like that.
“Christian’s a
selfish bastard,” Andy Barnes said. “You’re better off without him.”
I took a leave of
absence from my teaching job. After moving in with my folks, I spent weeks
doing nothing but sleeping and crying in my bedroom. I lost interest in food
and dropped twenty pounds; I looked like a scarecrow. Evenings, I sat before
the television, drinking rum-and-colas until it was time to go to bed.
Andy finally got
me out of the house and onto the water.
“Your life is not
over,” he told me, taking me by a forearm and literally dragging me out the
door.
We brought our
boards to the break at Ocean Boulevard, where the surf was firing. When I
caught my first ride and carved the face of a wave, my despair suddenly
lessened. The warm water, sunshine, and the roll of Atlantic swells soothed me,
and I knew—right then—I must settle someplace tropical, a location with surf,
but someplace far from Florida.
Maui was that
someplace.
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