Another beautifully solid short from this author. Tight prose with excellent wordcraft, as I've come to trust from Kirkcauldy. He has such a rare gift, and I live in hope that we will get more from him, one day.
This was so, so beautiful!! I loved the awesome attention to detail in the author's writing (and the beautiful and hot sex scene). Obviously I would have loved a hea (or even hfn) but no matter, the writing was stunning.
I loved this very unique story. It’s quite short but so sweet and fun and full of feels. And while I would have loved a solid hea I absolutely love that Colin left the experience much better both emotionally and mentally. Thanks again for the link Nicole ♥️ The book is located here:
“Ahh. Good. I had hoped.” “Hoped what?” “I hoped you liked me. I hoped you’d remember me and come back to get me. I guess I hoped the handsome prince would invite me up to his grand castle suite on the top of Arthur’s Seat and fuck me until morning.”
Set in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Colin McIntyre, 28, is an American who’s in town for a relative’s wedding. Colin is freezing (it’s winter time) and dying to try the Scottish whisky. He goes to the first bar he’s able to make it to—and it just so happens to be a gay bar.
God, it had been a long day. Wedding rehearsals were a punishment to all good, godly men; and he wasn’t even either one of those.
Macallan Speymalt is the whisky that the bartender, Fergus, provides It’s incredible. Colin’s never had anything like it.
Ian is British, of Pakistani descent. A professor at the University of Edinburgh, Ian is a 5’7” stunner.
Colin is a Marine Sergeant. He is 6’1” and he wears a prosthetic leg. His own leg was blown off in a Taliban attack, two years ago, back in Afghanistan. And his wife left him for a “whole man.”
Colin has always been bisexual, but much too scared to act upon it…and then after his leg….
Anatomy, physiology, verbiage…all perfection. Well-written and hot action.
The prose, as ever, is stunningly beautiful. This author randomly publishing amazing stories and then disappearing is sad af.
Seth has an innate ability to not only create spellbinding stories, but also make them incredibly emotional. Sad—but wistful—ending.
“I won’t mention it again. I just want you to know that I’d like it. If you stayed.”