Tag Archives: LGBTQ Romance

Amused and Amazed (Box Set) Teaser

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Amused and Amazed cover

 

LGBTQ+ Romance

Date Published: July 10, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

Laughter and love go together like peanut butter and chocolate for men
in search of a tasty treat!

 

The Drag Queen of Faerie: The course of true love just won’t run
smooth for hunk-next-door Will Taylor, who’s in search of that special
someone. All that focused energy attracts the attention of Queen Mab’s
less-well-known cousin Mabbey, the Drag Queen of the Faeries.
Valentine’s Vow: Friends and casual bed buddies Thom and Ryan
don’t buy into the whole “true love” spiel. They have a good
time together. Why would they want more? Luckily for this clueless pair, St.
Valentine shows them how to appreciate a good thing when they’ve got it.
Independence Day: The boys are back — and they’re at it again.
Ryan and Thom have returned for some hot Fourth of July action, but their
newfound romance may just hit the skids when it comes to coming out as a
couple.
Straight Man and Coffee Guy: Straight Man is anything but. He just
doesn’t have a sense of humor. And in a city with so many superheroes
there’s no one left to rescue, his power is attracting the freaks —
like Coffee Guy from the diner across the road, who has the power of the
never-ending cup. Misfits in a mad, mad, mad world, they’re pretty much
perfect for each other.

Amused and Amazed tablet

Excerpt from Straight Man and Coffee Guy

Copyright ©2026 Will Okati

“So what would you say if I told you I was here to make every dream
you’ve ever had come true?”

SM didn’t even glance up from the magazine he was flipping through. Not
that he’d been paying attention to the glossy pages. The skin magazine was
designed for seriously lecherous and perverted types. Lots of pink, pouty
things that kind of made his flesh want to shrivel up and his brain run away
to hide. Still, better low-class reading material than none at all. Nothing
else to do on the graveyard shift, was there?

“I’d ask if you were either AWOL from the City Genie conglomerate,
wonder what you were selling, and pray you were the guy with the coffee I
ordered –” he checked his watch — “an hour ago.”

“One out of three ain’t bad.” A cardboard tray smacked down on the hotel
check-in counter. SM gladly abandoned his perusal of the so-called literature
to reach up and grab a paper cup.

On his way, he spared a glance for the delivery boy. Not bad. Not bad at
all. The kind of boy-next-door good looks that got his motor revving… or
would if it weren’t right around 3 a.m. Nothing short of an earthquake could
get him excited enough to do much of anything this time of day.

He raised the lid and took a sip — then choked. “This is cold!”

The delivery guy shrugged. “Well, you did it order a while back. Is it
my fault it took this long to get away from the late-night crowd to bring the
stuff over? And why did you order four cups, anyway? Have you got someone
stashed under there?” He leaned over the counter, as if to check.

SM hastily knocked his magazine off into a trashcan. “No!”

“Come on, a hunk like you? There’s someone under there.” The coffee guy
tilted up and over, resting his belly on the ledge, peeking. “Is that what I
think — no, just your shoe. Interesting. You dress like a wage slave drone,
but those are some snappy sneakers.”

“Sometimes I have to run to put out fires,” SM replied dryly. Which was
true enough. On more than one occasion, he had, especially when Combustion Man
got too worked up. Oh, he didn’t usually set more than the beds ablaze, but
someone had to be quick on the draw with an extinguisher.

The truth was he wore the sneakers because they were comfortable, and it
was one way of giving management the finger. Not that he’d admit it, of
course, to a diner jockey.

He paused. “A hunk like me?”

“Well, yeah.” Once he’d gotten up there, the coffee guy sat on the
ledge, swinging his own sneakered feet back and forth. “You’re a definite
hottie. At least an eight on a scale of one to ten. Why do you think I waited
to bring your coffee over myself?”

“To be annoying?”

“There is that,” Coffee Guy agreed cheerfully. SM didn’t see any harm in
calling him that. It was neatly printed on his diner nametag, pinned crookedly
on his tight-fitting T-shirt. “It’s one of my better attributes.”

“I’d hate to see the worse ones.” SM took another sip of the brew. He
blinked. “It’s hotter.”

“Thanks.” Coffee Guy flexed his muscles. “I kind of thought so, myself.”

“No, you dolt. I meant the coffee. It’s not as cold anymore.” SM took a
careful sip and almost burned his tongue. He looked up accusingly. “Okay,
give. How’d you do that?”

Coffee Guy shrugged. “It’s a city full of real comic book heroes, right?
Just about everyone and their brother has some kind of freaky power. I have
dominion over the almighty bean, blessed be the name of Java. Behold.” He
pointed at SM’s cup, which refilled the slight distance back up to the lid.
“Talk about your never-ending pot.”

“You’re kidding me.” SM drank again. “How’d you get a sweet talent like
that?”

“As if it’s special.” Coffee Guy snorted. He started to flick through
the check-in register. “All it gets me is the graveyard shift at a hotel
diner. Or is this a motel? I can never keep it straight.”

“Hotel. They have hallways and doors that open from the inside. Motels
open onto the street.”

“You learn something new every day.”

“Keeps the brain active.” SM peered at the cardboard tray with his other
three, now steaming, cups of coffee. “Do you have the ability to summon cream
and sugar as well?”

“Somehow I knew you’d be the kind of guy who had a sweet tooth.” CG
grinned at SM and reached into his pockets. “Wasn’t room on the tray, but I
came through in the clinch.”

“Oh, God. You’re an angel.” SM groaned in pleasure as he cracked open
two still-cool plastic cup-ettes of condensed milk and poured them in his cup.
The sugar came next: three packets. “Swizzle stick?”

“They’re not called swizzle sticks, moron.”

SM cut CG a sharp look. “Oh, yeah? What’s the right name, then?”

“Hell if I know.” CG swung his legs a few more times while SM fixed his
coffee to his pleasure. He even whistled a few bars of a tune, pretty badly
off-key. In the middle of a bar, just as SM was recognizing the melody, he
broke off to say, casually, “I kind of figured you to be the kind of guy who
likes cream.”

 

About the Author

Willa Okati (AKA Will) is made of many things: imagination, coffee, stray cat
hairs, daydreams, more coffee, kitchen experimentation, a passion for winter
weather, a little more coffee, a whole lot of flowering plants and a lifelong
love of storytelling. Will’s definitely one of the quiet ones you have to
watch out for, though he — not she anymore — is a lot less quiet these days.

Will on Facebook

Will on Instagram

Will on Goodreads

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

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Electric Boy Teaser

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Electric Boy cover

 

LGBTQ Romance, Romantic Comedy

Date Published: July 3, 2026

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In ‘80s London, the fantastical Julian Collier is a charismatic punk
rock band frontman. Everyone is drawn to him, including Rahul, his best friend
and bandmate, who has loved him for years.

When a mysterious upper-class stranger suddenly inserts himself into their
lives, it becomes clear Julian isn’t entirely straight, and the two men
struggle for Julian’s affections. But the best man might not win this
fight.

 

Electric Boy tablet

 

 
EXCERPT

 

Hoxton, London, UK

November 1987


The Barber & Pony
was a poor excuse for a pub, as far as Rahul was
concerned. The ancient booths held grime older than Rahul himself. The watery
draught was just this side of unpleasantly warm. The air was so thick with
smoke he could have cut it with a blunt butter knife and spread it on the
pub’s stale pork scratchings. Even an oblivious bystander could have
told you that Rahul Chaand detested The Barber & Pony; yet he had
patronised the pub every single week since he had moved back to London three
years ago. Sometimes more than once a week. Three, four times even. He came
because of him.


He
was at the bar tonight, as he was most nights, with his skinny elbows
propped on the pockmarked mahogany, and head hanging between the sharp
hillocks of his shoulders. Rahul came to The Barber & Pony because it was
his boozer. Rahul would have followed him to the ends of the Earth, let alone
a crummy pub in Hoxton. He knew it was pitiful. There was hardly anything
about their relationship that didn’t paint Rahul in a distinctly
desperate shade of pathetic. He’d come to terms with that long ago. It
didn’t matter to him anymore. All that mattered to Rahul was that Julian
Collier was upset. And he needed to be here for him, just as he always was.

“What’s this I hear about a row?” he said in a light,
unthreatening tone as he slid onto the stool beside Julian.

“What’re you on about?” He was already slurring. That
wasn’t a good sign.

Julian was, by nature, a sunshiny young man with few troubles to cloud his
unburdened mind. He wasn’t a rich man. He wasn’t famous. He
didn’t have a particularly successful relationship and his friend group
was distressingly small. But he was beautiful, fashionable, and well loved. He
was passionate about music, and the fact that he both sold records and played
in a band did much to nourish his simple soul. But Rahul suspected the main
reason that Julian was a happy person was because he was simply born that way.
He came into the world with a sunny disposition that life and circumstance had
often endeavoured to strip from him.

On occasion, however, a mood as heavy and dark as a storm cloud would settle
upon his narrow shoulders, usually brought on by the emotional vampire he
liked to call a girlfriend. Thankfully, these sulks tended to be mercifully
short, and Rahul found himself to be adept at pulling his best friend out of
them even quicker.

Having gotten word from Leroy about the positively massive row that Julian and
his girlfriend had engaged in, Rahul had come as soon as he was able.

“He’ll cost me customers,” Leroy, the bartender, had told
him after repeating some of the choice words that had been screamed. By the
time Rahul had arrived, Aisling, the “girlfriend,” seemed to be
long gone, though Julian remained at the bar, sullen and unmoveable as he sank
deeper and deeper into his cups. Time for the ol’ Rahul-man to shine,
eh? He fancied himself the Julian Whisperer. And it stood to reason. After
all, no two people knew each other as well or as deeply as they.

“C’mon, small fry,” he began with the familiar nickname, one
that was his alone to use. Julian, being of average height, was short to Rahul
only, who at any given moment was the tallest man in the room. “I know
you and Aisling have had it out again. What’s she think you’ve
done this time? Ruined the economy? Started the Cold War?”

“Can’t do anything right, as far as she’s concerned,”
he pouted self- indulgently.

“Tell me about it. It’s practically every other week she’s
picking a fight. I’ll never understand why you put up with her and her
nagging.”

“She’s not a nag, all right?” Julian contradicted.
“She’s just got a point of view. She’s a modern
woman.”

“All right, all right,” Rahul backed off, sensing they had not yet
arrived at the well-worn territory of slagging off his girlfriend before they
inevitably made up again. “A modern woman, sure. Do you want to talk
about it? What happened? Maybe talk about it back at your flat?”

“I’m not going anywhere,” he continued to pout, planting
himself more firmly at the bar just as Leroy passed both Rahul and Julian
fresh glasses of beer. Rahul shot the bartender an incredulous look to which
Leroy only shrugged helplessly and retreated.

Rahul sighed and tried again. “Fine. We’ll stay right here. As
long as we talk. You’re good at talking, Julesy. That’s what draws
people to you. The Talker Extraordinaire, that’s what they call you.
Silver-tongued. Couldn’t shut you up if I tried.”

“Wouldn’t let you try. I’d be too busy talking.” A
smile threatened to break free, like the sun peeking out behind clouds.
“You’d try to get a word in edgewise and bam, there I’d be,
gabbing away.”

“Gabby Gabber. Gabriel Gabber to your friends.”

Just as Julian seemed ready to add another rung in the ladder of nonsense, his
smile disintegrated like a sandcastle in the surf and the dark mood retook
him. “She hates it when I talk like this, you know? Says it’s
stupid. Maybe she’s right. I really am quite stupid.” His long,
pale fingers fumbled out a cigarette, and, failing to find a lighter, let it
hang limply from his lips.

Rahul sipped at his beer to cover his profound disappointment. He’d been
so close to lifting his friend out of this funk. His fight with Aisling must
have cut him deeper than he’d realised. They fought frequently, breaking
up every other week only to make up again, but the fights seemed to Rahul to
always be superficial things — who left the toilet seat up and who used whose
hair spray — and the rows were just as easy to overcome as a result. Rahul
blamed Aisling, mainly. Julian was as amiable as a fluttering butterfly unless
he was provoked.

“She never did,” Rahul exclaimed, aghast. “Did she really
say that?” And, in a softer, more serious tone, “You’re not,
you know. Stupid.”

“Must be. Else why would I keep making her mad?”

Rahul took pity on him and finally extricated his own lighter from his jacket
pocket, lighting Julian’s cigarette for him.

“Because she’s horrendous,” Rahul answered the rhetorical
question. “And nothing could ever make her happy. Even you. Now why
don’t you tell me what really happened, eh?”

“Wouldn’t you like to know.”

“Sorry?” Rahul’s face scrunched in confusion, pausing with
the glass halfway to his lips.

“S’your fault, innit?” Julian grumbled, pulling his own
lukewarm pint closer. “Me and Ash falling out. She was right. It’s
always your fault.”

Rahul knew he shouldn’t take it personally. These were the aftershocks
of his row with Aisling. But he couldn’t help the curiosity that welled
within him. “How is it my fault exactly?”

“Aisling and me’d be married already if it weren’t for you
being all… third-wheel. Always getting in the way.”

The words hit him hard and sharp in the chest, threatening to puncture his
heart. He doesn’t mean it, he tried to convince himself. He’s
smashed. Aisling’s upset him. He’s just having a bit of a tantrum,
that’s all
. It was with great effort that Rahul trampled the well of
emotion threatening to bubble over and plastered on a placid smile beneath his
moustache.

“You don’t mean that.”

“Do too. I use up all the good part of me on you, and then I’ve
got none left for her.”

“You’re talking nonsense, Jules. Obviously you’re upset. I
can see that. Let’s just get you home and we’ll talk about it like
adults.” He wrapped his fingers around Julian’s upper arm, but the
shorter man shook him off, swaying dangerously on his stool as he did so. He
turned eyes on Rahul that burned blue as an electrical fire.

“That’s just it. You’re always trying to control me. You
think you’re so much better than me, don’t you? Just ‘cause
you went to your fancy uni and I stayed back here. Just cause your dad owned
shops and I never even had a dad.”

“How could you think that I…” Rahul trailed off, shocked
into silence. He had never, since he’d met Julian as a child, thought
himself better than him. They both came from nothing. It was one of the
founding principles of their friendship. And they still had nothing. Nothing
but each other. Julian knew this, consciously. This wasn’t him talking,
it was the booze, and Rahul had to keep that in focus before he lost his
temper.

“Look,” he began slowly, carefully metering out his words.
“You’ve had a long day, yeah? I know I’m around a bit more
than I ought to be sometimes, but that’s because I’m taking care
of you. You know that. Mel knows that. She asks me to take care of you.
I’m sorry that Aisling has a problem with it, but that can hardly be
helped. Next time you see her, tell her I’m sorry. Now. Why don’t
you come with me and we can forget all about it, yeah?”

He reached for Julian again but this time Julian’s hand struck first,
finger extended into a sharp point that thrust into Rahul’s chest like a
very entitled dart. He poked him. “No. No no no. You listen to
me,” Julian slurred. His blue eyes that had once burned were now melted
back into glassy puddles that couldn’t quite focus on Rahul. “You
don’t come in here like a… a… a jumped-up ponce with an
anaemic caterpillar on his lip and tell me what to do, yeah? I’ll leave
when I wanna leave. And you don’t control me, like Ash says. I’m
my own man. I do what I want.”

Rahul flinched from the poke as if he’d been pushed. Anger surged in him
like an ungrounded electric current. He chugged the remainder of his pint to
keep his ire from boiling over and slammed the empty glass down on the
counter. The resentment from years of Julian taking their friendship for
granted began to rise to the surface. It was with monumental effort — a
deeper tribute to his love for Julian than Julian would ever know — that he
reined that rage into a dull simmer, something that would burn but
wouldn’t scald. But even the bravest of wounded animals still lash out.

“You do what you want, eh?” Rahul snapped. “Or you do what
Aisling tells you?” It wasn’t fair, of course, but hurt people
hurt people, or so they say.

“Least I have somebody who tells me what to do.”

Rahul’s chest tightened. Julian clearly wasn’t playing fair
either.

“I’d rather be alone than shackled to that girlfriend of
yours,” he ground out.

“Or you’re just jealous.”

“Or you’re just an entitled little twat that can’t tell when
someone’s trying to help him.”

“Trying to help me? Some help. Who asked you?”

“No one. You know what? Absolutely no one.” Rahul threw up his
hands and stood, his heart pounding in his ear. He and Julian hadn’t
fought like this in… he could scarcely remember when. They hadn’t
even fought like this back when they’d… Well. Back then. Pulse
thundering, he donned his coat and took off for the cold, drizzly London
streets, not stopping to check if Julian was following him.

He still felt himself choke with guilt, however, when he made it halfway down
the street and realised his friend had stayed behind. He would be fine. Right?
Surely he would be fine. He’d been drunker than this on his own and made
it home all right. He’d be fine… Wouldn’t he?

No, it wasn’t Rahul’s problem. If Julian wouldn’t let him
help, then there was nothing for it. He couldn’t help someone who
refused to be helped. Until he begged Rahul’s forgiveness and of course
Rahul buckled like a flaccid accordion. Like he always did. Because it was
Julian. And he was Rahul. And that’s how they worked. Or didn’t.

 

 

About the Author

As a queer, nonbinary, person of color, Nicky Silber has made it their mission
to bring diversity into all of their creative outlets. Born in New York,
raised in Mexico, they studied fine art in San Francisco and have worked in
the video game industry since 2012. They currently live in the wilds of North
Carolina with their young son and too many pets. Their only two goals in life
are to continue to tell queer love stories and, to a lesser extent, finally
knit their own sweater.

Nicky’s Website

Nicky on Instagram

Nicky on Threads

Nicky on TikTok

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

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Zephyr Teaser

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LGBTQ Romance, Romantasy

Date Published: July 3, 2026

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A one-night stand changes Aaron and Zach’s lives forever.

 

Aaron Pryce has lived a reclusive life for centuries, content with his dogs
and his cabin. A one-night stand, however, sends his comfortable existence
into a whirlwind. He’s the best candidate to take over the former House
Zalis, but nothing is ever easy. When he visits the compound, he gets the
shock of his life.

Zach Cane couldn’t get the man he’d spent one night with out of
his head. So imagine his surprise when they meet at Saridan Tower weeks later.
As they work to navigate a new relationship, old secrets from Aaron’s
past come to light… none of them good.


WARNING: Depictions of domestic violence, child abuse, violence, and strong
language may be triggers for some readers. Reader discretion is advised.

 

Zephyr tablet

 

 
EXCERPT


“There is no way in hell I am going to take over an entire house.”

The words — my words — still rang clear in my head. Two weeks had passed
since that conversation with Raphael Santos. I had been very determined to nix
the idea completely, but a tiny glimmer of “what-if” lingered. I
also couldn’t fathom the work needed to run what was left of House Zalis
now that its founding leader, Ivan Zalis, was dead.

Raph had been right, though. The house needed a magic user to run it. I wanted
to kick myself for even thinking about it.

Swift on the heels of that came the reminder that it wasn’t just me and
the pups now. Although we hadn’t talked about the future during the past
couple of lunch dates we’d had since our unexpected meeting at Saridan
Tower, there was no denying Zach Cane and I were mates. I had known that first
night, when a few hours of insanely hot, quasi-anonymous sex had sealed my
damn fate.

I didn’t know if Zach had any clue what we were. Surely, as an alpha, he
did, but he hadn’t shown any indication that night or any time since. I
certainly hadn’t told him either. I was still struggling with it myself.
I’d spent my entire life torn between hoping for my fated mate and
praying I never found him. I put the blame squarely at my parents’ feet,
too. My alpha father, Stefan, had been a narcissistic asshole who’d used
his magic to cause trouble for just about anyone he met, and my omega
stepfather, Martin, had despised him for it. I’d been hidden away by him
in hopes that my own magic would never be an issue. Hell, Martin had forced me
to live as a laicas, a commoner. When he died, though, all bets were off.
That’s when I began honing my skills as an Incantas. But watching my
folks’ marriage deteriorate, magic or no, soured me on relationships.

Then Zach waltzed into my life.

Barking from inside the house snapped me back to the present. I realized
I’d been sitting in the truck for longer than intended. I got out and
grabbed the bags of dog food. As soon as I stepped into the house, all four
pups swarmed me as if they’d been starving.

“It’s only been an hour, you idiots,” I said with a laugh.

I set the bags down and sat on the floor to get kisses and tail-smacks in the
face. I never really intended to have this many pets. I’d started with
one, then came another. Then I rescued two more. Now I couldn’t imagine
life without my furbabies.

“Okay, okay,” I said as I stood. “Let’s get you
nutcases fed.”

I picked up the bags and headed for the kitchen. The cabin wasn’t huge,
but it suited me perfectly. I spent the majority of my life here after Martin
whisked me away once they split up. Growing up, I hated the isolation, but,
over time, I soon preferred it to the city and being around other people. I
still had an apartment at Saridan Tower, but this was home. Just me and the
pups.

My phone rang as I started filling the four food dishes. I answered it and put
it on speaker.

“Hey.”

“Got a minute?” Deacon Saridan asked.

I glanced over at the phone and inwardly sighed. I had the feeling I knew what
this was about. “Sure.”

“I’ve been in talks with Javier Torneau. We agree that, while the
former House Lorthaen should be dissolved completely, what remains of House
Zalis is simply too important, magic-wise. That said, they need a
leader.”

“Fuck,” I grumbled. I sat down at the dining table and sighed.
“Deacon…”

“I know it isn’t something you really want, but you’re the
most obvious choice,” my half-brother said. “You’re one of
the strongest Incantas in this area.”

“I don’t want to lead.”

“That’s precisely why you’re the best choice,” Deacon
countered. “You’re not the type to let any sort of power go to
your head.”

I grimaced. “That’s what Raph said. Have you two been
talking?”

Deacon chuckled. “Perhaps, but we’re right.”

“You’re also an asshole,” I muttered. “Both of
you.”

“So I’ll see you this afternoon then for a meeting? Say…
two?”

“Ugh. Fine. Jackass.”

Deacon laughed. “See you then.”

We hung up, and I dropped my head to the tabletop, tempted to bang it a few
times for good measure. Yes, I knew they were right. Ivan Zalis had been a
Spiritori, but his death left a lot of good magic users in limbo without a
leader. Magiens, Incantas, even a few Spiritori made up what had once been
House Zalis. That much firepower, so to speak, couldn’t be unchecked and
left to float around without direction and someone to watch them. An Incantas
could also weed out the undesirables from the ones who just wanted to live
without trouble. Much like myself.

When my phone pinged with a text, I half dreaded looking at it. I did, though,
and couldn’t help but smile. Despite the mates issue lingering like an
elephant between us, seeing Zach’s name pop on my screen made me ache
with a hunger I hadn’t felt for anyone before meeting him.

Got any plans this evening?

 

 

About the Author

 

Mychael Black has been writing professionally since 2005. He writes gay
romance and erotica, but also het romance as Carys Seraphine and queer fantasy
as Katherine Cook.

He’s an avid PC gamer with a love for RPGs, a horror fanatic, and a fantasy
nut. He also has a weakness for anything relating to skulls, dogs, and
Spongebob Squarepants.

Mychael lives on the Eastern Shore of the US with his family. He loves to hear
from readers, be it via email or Facebook.

 

 

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

 

 

 

 

 

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Medically Necessary Blitz

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Medically Necessary cover

 

LGBTQ Romance, Dark Fantasy, Steamy

Date Published: October 10, 2025

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

 

The threat to all werewolves draws Amir and Oliver together, even as
their wounds threaten to rip them apart.

 

Trust is Earned (Medically Necessary 1): Amir is a General Practitioner
for magical creatures, particularly werewolves. When the leader of all
werewolves comes to him with a problem that presents like psychosis, Amir
needs help. Oliver’s nursing a grieving heart and a chip on his
shoulder. Still, when Amir asks for his help, he jumps at the chance. The
submissive wolf is beautiful.

 


Trust is Fraught (Medically Necessary 2):
As the leader of the werewolves
sinks further into insanity, Amir and Oliver fight prejudice and time to
rescue their alpha. As Oliver and Amir are pulled deeper into the dangers of
the psychic world, their love may be the only thing keeping them sane.


Trust is Sacred (Medically Necessary 3):
Oliver’s terrible secret is
eating him alive. Amir thinks purging and confession are medically necessary
for spiritual and physical well-being, but Oliver will stop at almost nothing
to hide his scars.

Can either of them learn to trust?

 

Medically Necessary paperback
 

 

EXCERPT

 

 

Excerpt from Trust is Earned

He had tended to different members of the Tilthos and Merle werewolf packs
over the years. Being positioned in southern Erie County, located in Upstate
New York, had been the best thing he could do for his medical practice. Once
he’d finally convinced Nicholas Black of the Merle pack in Buffalo, New
York, to work with him as the werewolf equivalent of a midwife, his office was
often full to bursting with pregnant female werewolves.

And it didn’t matter one bit that he spoke Werewelsh, the native
language of most werewolves, with an accent or as only his fourth language.
For Dr. Amir Othman, the prejudice he might have encountered because of his
unusual parentage and his even more unique upbringing was all overshadowed by
one truth. He was good at his job.

That didn’t make him less nervous to meet the alpha above all alphas.
Tilthos Charles, alpha of his own pack and leader of the wolves of North and
South America, was supposedly intimidating. All of which pointed to this
truth: while Amir had healed every magical creature from djinns to kelpies,
and even two dragons, he still worried about doing or saying the wrong thing
in Tilthos Charles’s presence.

What bothered him even more was that he almost qualified as a lone wolf. A
“packless loner,” in werewolf-speak, and that was not a
compliment. He had a technical pack, run by Kreisha Alexander. When that
particular alpha threw his weight around, everyone obeyed. Thankfully, that
pack was in Washington, DC, nearly two hundred miles away. So, unless Alpha
Alexander gave him an edict directly over the phone, as opposed to in an email
or via snail mail, Amir could basically do as he chose.

Except, now the alpha above all alphas was coming to his office and would
surely demand to know why he hadn’t switched his allegiance to a pack up
here in New York. “It doesn’t have to be mine,” the most
powerful werewolf on the planet would say, “but it can’t be you
operating under your own aegis.”

So, when his assistant, Carly, sent him a message that Tilthos Charles was
here, Amir’s pulse picked up. He responded to her message, saying
he’d be in Exam Room Three in under five minutes. Then he did a deep
breathing exercise, using the five senses trick he’d learned as a young
wolf when he first realized he wanted to become a doctor and would be around
blood and anxious magical creatures.

Five things he could see. His fidgety hands. By crossing his eyes, he could
see his nose. His computer screen, which held everything his clinic had on the
alpha above all alphas. Trying to look farther away in an attempt to slow his
racing heart, he looked at the carpet in front of his desk. It was a boring
brown that didn’t hold his attention. Finally, he looked at the door
where he’d hung a poster of a Great Pyrenees, which was the closest
breed to his family’s wolf forms, which were usually white.

Four things he could hear… The thudding of his heart. The rush of blood
in his veins, which meant he was really keyed up still because even though he
was a werewolf with acute hearing, he didn’t usually pay attention to
the sounds of his own or others’ bodies. He struggled hard to refocus
and heard the buzzing of the fluorescent light in the ceiling. He needed one
more thing, so he made his chair creak. Oddly, the sound of something he could
completely control helped him breathe a little easier.

Three things he could touch… The pen in his hand, which he’d been
nervously twirling. He set it down. The feel of the chair under him, with his
suit coat slung over the back. He could also feel his toes in his shoes. He
breathed in more deeply than he’d managed so far and felt still a bit
better.

Two things he could smell… He could no longer smell adrenaline. That
was a good thing. He lifted his hand to his nose and smelled the soap
he’d washed with maybe ten minutes ago.

And one thing he could taste, which was his cold lavender matcha latte.

Glancing at the clock icon on his computer, he saw it had been almost three
minutes. Well, it was now or never. He doubted he’d be calmer if he sat
here longer. So, he stood, straightened his white medical coat, and left the
office. He listened to people talking quietly in the waiting room as he
passed. He smiled at Carly, who mouthed, “Good luck.” Then he
knocked on the door of Exam Room Three.

“Please come in.”

The voice that had responded was lightly accented, and he wondered why no one
had ever told him Tilthos Charles was Hispanic. Then he was in the room, and
he saw there were two people inside. The werewolf was certainly Tilthos
Charles and the psychic vampire… Oh, yes. Tilthos Charles’s mate
was a psychic vampire.

The alpha wolf sat on the exam table and his mate stood at his side. It was
actually the psychic vampire who moved first, holding out his hand. “Dr.
Othman, I’m Luis McLaughlin.”

Amir shook with him and then offered his hand to the burly werewolf. He saw
the wolf’s eyes flicker quickly down to his hand and then away. Then his
hand was taken and Tilthos Charles said, “Please to meet you, Dr.
Othman.”

He sounded it too, but there was something bothering him. Well, and
didn’t that make sense? Folks who were completely healthy rarely came to
the doctor’s office.

“The pleasure is mine,” Amir returned, smiling at both of them.
Then he retreated until he could sit on his stool. He watched Tilthos
Charles’s eyes try to focus on him. “Forgive me, but while I have
some information about your general health, I know very little about your
visual impairment.”

He saw his guess had been right, that the alpha above all alphas indeed had
something wrong with his vision.

“I told you he’d know,” said Luis as his mate brought out a
folded white cane from behind his back.

“Forgive me the test, Dr. Othman,” said Charles, “but
I’ve been seen by too many doctors who miss the obvious until I point it
out to them.” He settled the cane on his leg, keeping one hand on it so
it wouldn’t fall. “We’re here today, not because of my
visual impairment, which has been unchanged since I was born, but because Luis
is convinced there’s something…” He hesitated.

Luis said, “He’s distracted and agitated.”

Amir watched Charles’s nostrils flare and his pupils dilate.
“I’m on edge because Agent Sowerby’s… Shit. I must be
off-balance somehow if I’m about to spill state secrets.” He
smiled ruefully at Amir. “Forgive me. Luis is right. I just can’t
figure out how you’ll help me or if there is any help for the mess
we’re about to be in.”

“May I examine you?”

Charles nodded.

Amir went through all the basics, including sending the alpha werewolf out to
give him a urine sample. When the door closed, he turned to Luis. “How
long has he been on edge?” He could smell the wolf’s almost panic.

“About three weeks. “

“Did anything precipitate his anxiety?”

Luis sighed. “I’m not sure what’s really private. I assume
you’re bound by medical confidentiality?”

“I am.” He could see the psychic vampire hesitating. “Please
tell me everything you can. I cannot be effective while only possessing half
the facts.”

“My mate holds the belief that the head of SearchLight is going to
expose all magical creatures.”

Amir’s mouth went dry. “I know Tilthos Charles probably has the
ear of SearchLight. Is he correct?”

“Absolutely not, but I can’t convince him of that.”

“Has he talked to…” He couldn’t remember the name of
the new head of SearchLight, only that Agent Weinberg had stepped down.

“I’ve tried getting Jack Sowerby to talk to him. No dice. Not that
Agent Sowerby wouldn’t, but Charlie didn’t believe him.”

Amir held up his hand. The bathroom door had creaked open. He turned his head
toward the exam room’s entrance for good measure.

Tilthos Charles entered. “Your assistant took my sample.”

Amir said soothingly, “Please, Alpha, sit down.”

He saw his words had the opposite effect to what he’d intended. Instead
of resting on the table again, Tilthos Charles drew himself up. He was taller
than Amir by half a foot and intimidating as hell.

Sitting on his stool, making himself as nonthreatening as possible, Amir put
his hands palms up on his thighs. “I mean you no harm.”

 

 

About the Author

Emily Carrington is a multipublished author of male/male and transgender
women’s speculative fiction. Seeking a world made of equality, she
created SearchLight to live out her dreams. But even SearchLight has its
problems, and Emily is looking forward to working all of these out with a host
of characters from dragons and genies to psychic vampires. And in the
contemporary world she’s named “Sticks & Stones,” Emily
has vowed to create small towns where prejudice is challenged by a passionate
quest for equality. Find her on Facebook at Shapeshifter Central or on her
website.

Author’s Website

Emily on Facebook

Emily on Twitter

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Spellbound Blitz

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LGBTQ Romance, Vampires

Date Published: October 3, 2025

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

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A ritual decades ago leads Beau to the one person he never expected to
meet: his fated mate.

 

Detective Beau Kirkland has to work directly with the local vampire house to
find a murderer, but that’s the easy part. The difficult part? His attraction
to Garrett Dawson’s, one of House Saridan’s top hunters.

Garrett Dawson’s methods are brutal but very effective, even for a vampire.
When a mortal detective begins working with House Saridan, Garrett finds
himself unable to ignore the attraction between them.

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EXCERPT

Garrett

There were few things I truly loved in this world, and one was currently in my
hand as I took the elevator up to the fifteenth floor of Saridan Tower. No one
else shared my addiction to the most amazingly sweet coffee concoction
currently sending copious amounts of caffeine through my system. I stepped off
the elevator on the top floor and headed down the hall to the usual conference
room. I didn’t get any farther than the doorway, though. I simply froze, body
alternating between hot and cold.

Normally, these meetings were just the three of us lead Venari and Deacon.

Not today, apparently.

Beau Kirkland looked up at me, eyes wide for a moment. No one said a word —
not even Deacon. Somehow, I got my feet to move and sat opposite the omega
cop. It took more effort than I really had this morning to focus on work and
not the stupidly hot human across from me.

I didn’t go for twinks like the others. I liked my men older, more
experienced. Beau fit that requirement with ease. His short brown hair bore a
little bit of gray here and there, and his dark chocolate-colored eyes studied
me whenever I glanced at his face. He was a few inches shorter than my own
six-three, and unlike most omegas, he was a bit muscular due to his job.
Dressed in his dark navy uniform, he presented the most fucking delectable
package on the planet. I cursed silently and tore my gaze from his when all
blood began rushing south.

Deacon cleared his throat and looked at each of us. “I’m sure you all know one
another, but for protocol’s sake, I’d like to introduce Officer Beau Kirkland.
He’s our liaison within the police department. He’s also the one handling this
latest case on their end. Officer Kirkland, these are my head Venari: Nikolai
Hart, Victor Pace, and Garrett Dawson.”

Beau nodded. “Good morning, gentlemen.”

We exchanged the usual pleasantries before Deacon continued. “I’m stepping
back for now,” he said, glancing at me briefly, “but I’m here if needed. To
that end, the table’s yours, Officer Kirkland.”

“Thank you,” Beau said. He handed each of us several folders. “Eight victims
so far, all completely drained. Eyewitnesses have seen the perp in passing,
but no one can agree on a description.”

“Could be a Lupyn,” Vic said as he flipped through the contents of one of the
folders.

“That was my assumption, but you all know far better than we do if that’s the
case.”

I went through the first folder in front of me. Crime scene photos, pics of
the victims post-mortem, notes, and statements. I scanned over everything and
couldn’t disagree with the shapeshifter idea. It would make sense.

“What do you need from us?” Nik asked Beau. “We’re more than happy to work
with you and your folks.”

I’m not sure I would’ve gone that far, but we did need to get this monster off
the streets. I might not have been particularly nuts about humans, but that
didn’t mean I wished them dead. My methods were saved for my own kind.

Beau passed out papers to us. “These are the last few places he was sighted.
He’s a vampire, so we humans are outgunned here. We can help corner him, but
capture is a different story altogether.”

Nik nodded. “Agreed. Well, we’re here and ready to go hunting.”

I didn’t miss the slight grimace on Beau’s face before he managed to school it
into something more neutral. Apparently, neither did Deacon, but the man just
remained silent.

“Thank you,” Beau said. “Please keep me updated on everything. In the
meantime, I’ll be at the station downtown, trying to narrow our possible
location leads.”

“Thank you for coming to us,” Deacon said. “I guarantee we will be in touch.
These guys are my best hunters, and I have no doubt they’ll find this son of a
bitch.”

Despite the situation, Beau smiled. “Thank you very much.”

The others left the room, though Beau shot me a cryptic look before stepping
out the door. I stayed seated, knowing Deacon had something to say. Sure
enough, as soon as we were alone, he leaned back in his chair, arms crossed.

“Is this going to be an issue?”

I could’ve played dumb, but he already knew everything. There wasn’t any
point. “No. I’m fully capable of working with him.”

Deacon raised one eyebrow. “Really? Because pheromones say otherwise.”

I managed to avoid scowling at him. Lupyns were more sensitive to things like
that than Venari. “Unlike Nik, I’m perfectly capable of keeping my dick in my
pants, Deacon.”

He didn’t say anything for a few seconds. He was far older than us, and being
under his scrutiny made even me feel like a scolded kid sometimes. “Don’t let
it get the best of you, Garrett. His job involves danger, and you can’t
protect him from that unless you’re mated and bonded completely.”

“Who said I was –” I snapped my mouth shut at his glare.

“I’m old, not an idiot.” Deacon leaned forward and put his arms on the table.
“Either fight this until the perp is in custody or fucking claim Beau. I can’t
have you out there distracted. Understood?”

“Yes,” I replied, biting back a growl.

“Good. Dismissed.”

I stood abruptly, grabbed the folders and paper, and left the conference room.
I made it halfway down the hall before Nik and Vic both cornered me. Fuck.

“That didn’t go well, did it?” Vic asked.

“No,” I snarled.

I continued walking, and they followed me to the elevator. I stabbed the DOWN
button and had to unclench my fist before I gave into the urge to hit
something. In the door’s reflection, I saw Nik and Vic exchange cautious
glances.

We all stepped into the elevator and took it to the lobby. Without another
word said, it was a given where we’d wind up. Colby’s was the city’s best
diner with the most amazing coffee blends. Maybe the combination of carbs,
sugar, and caffeine would calm me down because just the thought of claiming
Beau sure as fuck wasn’t doing it.

Quite the opposite, actually.

I was hard as a fucking rock.

 

 

About the Author

Mychael Black has been writing professionally since 2005. He writes gay
romance and erotica, but also het romance as Carys Seraphine and queer fantasy
as Katherine Cook.

He’s an avid PC gamer with a love for RPGs, a horror fanatic, and a fantasy
nut. He also has a weakness for anything relating to skulls, dogs, and
Spongebob Squarepants.

Mychael lives on the Eastern Shore of the US with his family. He loves to hear
from readers, be it via email or Facebook.

 

 

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

 

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