Showing posts with label The Christmas Throwaway. Show all posts

Twelve Days of Christmas, Day 3 - The Christmas Throwaway

Sequels & things

One question I always get is *Will there be a sequel to The Christmas Throwaway*?

My answer is always no, and I think I feel this way because even though I have an entire novel in my head as a sequel I find it impossible to imagine I would do it justice.

TCT is my best selling book, along with Texas 1, and I have so many emails about it, lovely beautiful emails that tell me that this is their favorite book. How can I even top that? Thing is maybe, one day, I'll feel like I can write it.

What do you think? Should I leave it? Or would you forgive me if I completely fucked it up? LOL.

The Christmas Throwaway

Christmas is a time for giving - what do you do when no one gives a damn?

For Zachary Weston Christmas means sleeping on a churchyard bench in the freezing snow with nothing better in his future. Thrown out of his home for being gay, he is left without money or, it seems, anywhere to go. Until a stranger shows him that some people do give a lot more than a damn.

Ben Hamilton is a rookie cop in his small home town. He finds a young throwaway, fresh from the city, sleeping on a bench in the churchyard on a snowy Christmas Eve. Can he be the one to give Zachary his own Christmas miracle?

More here on this book...


And don't forget...

... to check out the author visiting my blog today for more competition prizes! And enter the big 'twelve days' competition below... twelve separate competition, twelve prizes... all entries to this and the other eleven competitions will be entered into a *hat* and three winners will win gift cards... the more you enter the more chance there is to win!

Closing date 22 December, 10am GMT (London)

Focus On... The Christmas Throwaway


Cover Art by BitterGrace
The Book


Best Selling Book of 2010, All Romance Ebooks


Christmas is a time for giving - what do you do when no one gives a damn?

For Zachary Weston Christmas means sleeping on a churchyard bench in the freezing snow with nothing better in his future. Thrown out of his home for being gay, he is left without money or, it seems, anywhere to go. Until a stranger shows him that some people do give a lot more than a damn.

Ben Hamilton is a rookie cop in his small home town. He finds a young throwaway, fresh from the city, sleeping on a bench in the churchyard on a snowy Christmas Eve. Can he be the one to give Zachary his own Christmas miracle?


"....‘The Christmas Throwaway' is a charming, heart warming love story about second chances, overcoming obstacles, and the importance of a loving, supportive family. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone in the mood for a sweet story which will not only leave you feeling good, but will also remind you to count your blessings...."






Buy Links - eBook

Love Lane Books  |  Amazon (US)  |  Amazon (UK)  |  ARE  |  B & N  |  Kobo  | Smashwords  |  iTunes

Buy Links - Print Book


Buy Links - Audio Book

Amazon (US)  |  Amazon (UK)

Reviews

MM Goodbook Reviews  - 5/5 - "....I think this is one of the best Christmas stories I’ve read. Everything about this book screams PERFECT and it really made my day even if the start of the story was horribly sad...."

Bookwenches  - 4.25/5 -  "....Ms. Scott proves to have a deft hand with emotion, and she pulls our hearts into this story. Zach’s sense of abandonment and betrayal by his family, his fear, his moments of panic at feeling trapped lend an almost agonizing sadness. But there are also moments of warmth and joy, of lighthearted sibling rivalry and fugly Christmas sweaters that are sweetly funny. Sexual, or even romantic, tension takes a back seat throughout most of the story, because Zach is a child at the beginning and needs to both heal and grow up before he and Ben can have a relationship...."

The Hope Chest Reviews - 4.5/5 - "....From the moment I first read the synopsis and excerpt of The Christmas Throwaway, I was drawn into the story and wanted to know more. I was almost positive I would enjoy it, even though at the time I had never read a male/male romance, and I have to say it did not disappoint...."

Click cover to enlarge
Rainbow Book Reviews  -  "....The Christmas Throwaway' is a charming, heart warming love story about second chances, overcoming obstacles, and the importance of a loving, supportive family. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone in the mood for a sweet story which will not only leave you feeling good, but will also remind you to count your blessings...."

GLBT Bookshelf - 4.25/5 - "....Ms. Scott’s writing style is clear and descriptive. Her characters are believable and interact in a manner that feels quite natural, and her imagery is vivid enough to pull the reader right into the setting. In fact, the scene she sets at the beginning of the story brings the cold to such chilling life that although I was warm and comfortable as I read, I was tempted to shiver along with Zach. I could almost feel the ache in his body from the extreme cold...."

Joyfully Reviewed - "....The Christmas Throwaway is the Happily Ever After tale that everyone wishes for. There is a sense of compassion and hope against overwhelming odds – a teen that’s all but given up, holding on by a thread.  Told with a skilled and delicate touch, The Christmas Throwaway manages to give readers that ‘feel good’ story without falling into overkill or maudlin, unrealistic tripe.  Zach is the real deal with his emotions everywhere at once, while Ben is the knight in shining armor without seeming too good to be true.  The fact that there’s chemistry between them only adds to the tension and it too is tastefully handled here.  The Christmas Throwaway will give you that heartwarming glow, promise.  I Joyfully recommend The Christmas Throwaway!..."

Mrs Condit & Friends - 5/5 - "....The Christmas Throwaway by RJ Scott is a character driven story that highlights the all-too-common tragedy of kids being thrown out of their homes by their families for being gay. With a smooth plot flow, and a backstory that fills in the gaps, you can’t help but be pulled into this sad, yet ultimately hopeful tale. The author’s style is eloquent, insightful, and concise, and pulls back the curtain on a subject all too many people want to pretend doesn’t exist. This lovely Christmas tale has a HEA ending that I absolutely loved. So if you’re looking for a story that skillfully blends heartache and hope, then I definitely recommend this book to you...."

Boy Meets Boy Reviews - Natasha - 4.5/5 - "....The writing, in my opinion, was terrific. I felt drawn in, brought into a warm, welcoming place, and held there for the few hours I read the book. This isn’t my first R.J. Scott book, and it very likely won’t be my last either...."

Excerpt

Chapter 1: The First Christmas

"Hey! You can't sleep here."

Zachary Weston had closed his eyes and let sleep pull him under. The simple fact was that sheer exhaustion meant he couldn't physically stay awake any longer. Sleep came quickly, the sleep of the desperate man, despite the furious aching pain in his lower back. He had pushed on through the pain for the last week. Ironically the ice and frigid temperatures, whilst freezing his extremities, helped ease the aching.

Behind his eyes he saw a crackling fire in an iron grate, the red and gold flames casting a beautiful light throughout a room decorated for Christmas. A tree stood tall in the far corner, its sparkling fairy lights, colored tinsel, and baubles catching and glinting random colors.


"You can't sleep here."

Presents were scattered and piled, haphazard and thoughtless in their arrangement, for there were so many. Books and songs and warm clothes sat in wrapped paper, festooned with silver and gold bows, his name scrawled in gold on a fair share of them.

"Hey, you can't sleep here."

Outside the window it was snowing, not a blizzard, but soft fat flakes, which fell in a mesmerizing dance to join the soft shapes already hiding the mature garden from view. The cold meant the outside of the windows were frosted with creeping white tendrils that drew random patterns on the icy glass and reflected the colored lights from the tree.

"Hey…"

Zach bent down, picking up the first present, looking back at his mom. She was smiling and happy to see her son so excited, sharing nods of understanding with his dad. They both had so much love in their eyes.

"Hey!"

Someone was speaking to him from outside the room, but he couldn't see who. That didn't matter, because if he concentrated hard, he could focus on the gifts. He shivered, cold seeping into him, and unconsciously he moved himself closer to the fire, frowning when, if anything, the heat near him diminished. Stupid fire. He took his next gift, pulled at red and silver paper and uncovered the softest of sweatshirts, thick and warm and smooth, in a startling blue that his momma said matched his eyes. Despite the fire, he was still so damn cold, and quickly he pulled it over his head, the heat of the soft material on his frost-chilled skin comforting and warm. He smiled as he was as wrapped with affection and love and the sparks of a family Christmas as he was with the sweater.

"You can't sleep here."

Zach started. The voice from outside the room was suddenly right in his ear and the last vestiges of his dream nothing more than suggestions in his head. Abruptly, his eyes snapped wide open and, after a second, focused on the source of the words. Zach actually saw very little beyond the sudden blur of a silver badge and the navy blue uniform, and then focused on the speaker's eyes. They were flinty hard in the streetlight, and there were small puffs of white hanging in the air, created by the man's breath. Shit! Somehow someone had seen him and reported him, or the cop had spotted him. He was being moved on again. He pulled at the thin jacket that covered him, a memory of soft blue material flashing into his head and disorientating him momentarily.

Zach had so hoped to avoid the law, cautiously optimistic that the churchyard might be a place of sanctuary on Christmas Eve.

"Sorry," he said quickly, scrambling to his feet as fast as he could manage, which wasn't entirely that fast considering the aching cold that seemed to split his very bones in two. He cursed as his blanket fell from his numb hands and landed in the snow at his feet. That was the only warmth he had, a threadbare piece of material he had stolen from Goodwill when the woman in charge turned her back. And now the damn thing was going to be wet.

Still, there was no time to worry about that; the cop wanted him moved on. He leaned down to pick it up, only to see the ground spinning up to his face at an alarming speed. Strong arms stopped him from face-planting in the snow, but he twisted out of them quickly. The man might be a cop, might wear a badge, but no one touched him. Zach knew what men could want from the child he still was. He wasn't stupid, and he had dodged enough of it in the city.

"How old are you?" the cop asked, looking concerned and very much in authority.

"Eighteen," Zach lied quickly. He took a step back until his thighs hit the back of the bench he had been resting on. The cop stepped with him, looming large despite being a few inches shorter than Zach, his face creased in a frown.

"How old are you really?" the cop persisted, his expression calm, his voice low and curious.

Zach bit his lower lip, feeling the hot blood against his tongue, the shivering inside him starting to manifest in shakes he knew even the cop would see. Carefully Zach lifted the blanket, damp and ice cold, trying to create a barrier between himself and the police officer with the intense gaze.

"Seventeen," Zach finally said, willing his teeth to stop chattering, "but I'll be eighteen in a few days." He added the last bit, giving the cop an out. He wanted to add just leave me alone, I won't hurt anyone.

"Ben Hamilton," the cop said softly, holding his hand out as if he wanted to shake Zach's. Zach was confused, waiting for the glint of cuffs, uncertain, and he dug his hands deeper in the wet blanket he was holding. The cop, this Hamilton, didn't move his hand, just held it firm and steady. Finally Zach thrust his cold hand out, the texture of the officer's leather gloves soft and strange beneath his touch.

"Zach," he introduced himself softly, remembering not to mention his surname. The cop didn't push him on it, just nodded and pulled his hand away.

"So, Zach, what's happened to you? Why are you lying on the bench at the Church of St. Margaret on Christmas Eve?"

The officer wasn't shouting; he was asking quietly, but Zach immediately started to go on the defensive. There was a concerned twist to the cop's mouth, and he had narrowed his eyes as he asked.

"I…" Zach stopped, assessing the lies he could spin, thinking of the stories he had used to persuade people to leave him alone. Nothing crystallized as right for this moment in time. There was something to this cop, a man who seemed not much older than he was, an officer who wasn't a city cop, but a small town cop. He wouldn't be part of the system the same way as the cops in the city who said he should go home. I don't have a home. Maybe… maybe he should tell him the truth?

"I can't be at home right now," he said finally, wincing as the cop's gloved hand traced the bruises over his left eye and down his jaw line.

"Who did this to you, Zach? Did this happen here in this town?" The officer's words spun a safe haven for sharing secrets, soft, insistent and not very cop-like. Zach shied away instantly from the gentle touch, an icy blade of uncertainty pinching his skin as he contemplated being in the dark church grounds on his own with this man. He seemed friendly enough, but what if it was just another act? Cautiously, and trying not reveal his intentions, he looked to his left and then to his right. If he was going to run, he needed a head start and being held or cornered would take that head start away. To the right, dense foliage blocked an exit, to the left was the gate to the churchyard and the shadowy grave stones. That was his best bet. He shifted his weight to his right foot, ready in a moment to push himself away and to vault the gate. His leg shook with the added pressure, and he knew he would probably fall at the first hurdle. Still, any plan offered more hope than no plan.

"I fell," he said firmly, the same line he had used for most of his life, the same line that earned him looks that ranged from pity to doubt. When he had said those words to people from organizers at the soup kitchen, to cops on the corner, to the owner of the homeless hostel, he had been sworn at, propositioned, cried at, or pushed away in disgust. He wasn't expecting much from another man in authority.

"Uh huh." The officer didn't push for any more information, just nodded at the simple statement and took a step back and away. He spoke directly into his radio. "I'm heading home now. It was nothing to worry about at the church." Static broke the calm of the snow-deadened air, and a tinny voice acknowledged the radio message with a series of codes and a single name, Ben. The cop looked back at Zach, and Zach gauged that now the cop was two steps away from him, heading for the gate would be easier. "You can't sleep here. I'll find you a room for tonight, and we'll deal with the rest in the morning."

Zach's eyes widened. He wasn't going anywhere with any stranger, not unless he was under arrest. This cop was going to find him a room? Probably some out of the way no-tell motel. Shit. No way this side of never was that happening. He had barely got away with his life two nights before from a proposal far more wrapped in the suggestion of hope than what the cop was giving him. Zach was so past being gullible.

Pulling himself to his full height, he thinned his lips in determination. He was not swapping one hell for another, not a chance.

"No. Thank you, but, no, I have to… go to the station for the train." He tried not to let hopelessness into his voice, attempted to sound self-assured around the chattering of his teeth. He sounded out the words in his head, and he knew exactly what he was saying. He clearly had some sort of purpose for being on the bench in the snow on Christmas Eve and the cop should respect that. It was a free country.

"Okay, Zach," the cop sighed, "we can do this one of two ways. It's late, and it is the night before Christmas. I really want to go home to be with my family and you are kind of making this all very difficult. Now you can come with me, get a decent meal, a shower and maybe some warmer clothes and then you can sleep for the night in a warm bed. This can be all your own choice, or I can make it official and arrest you, then force you to go."

Zach heard every word, looked around desperately, at the small church, the graveyard, the bench, at the snow, and back at the really young-looking cop in front of him. He was so screwed. The ice beneath his feet had climbed his long limbs, bringing with it insistent pain. The strength in his legs was failing. He had run for so many days, managed to keep ahead of everything and everyone, and he only had two more days until he could stop running. Why was it that his body was choosing now to give up?

"So," the cop continued, "I haven't got all night. I really don't want to spend my Christmas Eve standing over your frozen body and explaining your death to the medical examiner. So your choice is?"

He didn't have a choice. This was a no-choice situation. He knew it, and the cop knew it. He straightened as best he could, the pain in his lower back burning back to its usual level, despite the cold of the bench that had started to numb the tenderness slightly.

"Okay," Zach said quietly. After all this was a cop. How could it be wrong to want to be warm for just one night? "Not a cell?" he asked cautiously.

Officer Hamilton turned on his heel to start walking away from the bench.

"Nope, not a cell."

"You promise?" Damnit! Could he sound more like a kid? Way to come off as a responsible adult who had control of his life. Not.

The cop stopped and looked back at him, pushing his hands into the pockets of his thick jacket. Zach found himself looking at it enviously.

"I promise." He turned, clearly expecting Zach to follow, which he did. He stumbled on the icy path, in the same thin sneakers he had been thrown out with only one week ago. He cursed under his breath that the cop's boots afforded him a grip on the snow and that he had to scrabble to keep up. It was humiliating to stumble-trip his way like a pathetic lost puppy behind the cop. At the same time, Zach admitted to himself that he couldn't outrun the cop if he decided to act on the impulse to just get the hell away from the man in uniform. So he followed as best he could.

They walked in silence for little more than ten minutes on the cold empty streets, past a town square and a clock built into the wall of a small library. It told him the time was eleven-thirty. The cop stopped at the small convenience store with the Closed sign in the door, checking the door and peering into the emptiness inside. Zach just watched, scuffing his sneaker against a ridge of ice on the sidewalk. Then the cop led Zach towards a house at the end of a row of similar houses. The drapes had been left open and Zach could see the tree standing in the window, its Christmas lights welcoming them as they tramped up the cleared pathway. Officer Hamilton let himself in, stamping snow off his boots by the front door and gestured for Zach to follow.

Zach hesitated. He could feel the warmth inside, see the soft lights, the homeliness of a Christmas-trimmed home. Still, this cop was asking him to enter a house. No one would know Zach had gone into the house. With the cop. With a stranger.

"Ben?" The voice was soft, and a woman appeared from somewhere inside the brightly lit hall, stopping at the cop's side. She was small and neat and wore a concerned looked on her face. She reminded him of his own mom, without the whipped, exhausted look she always seemed to carry. "What's wrong?" The cop stripped off his jacket and hung it on a peg, taking off gloves and pulling off heavy boots.

"We have a guest for Christmas, Mom," he replied softly, beckoning Zach through the front door and, as if in a dream, lulled in part by the woman's voice, Zach stepped over the threshold. The warmth against his frozen skin was prickle-hot and painful, and he blinked at the sudden change in his body as the door shut behind them. A momentary twist of fear made his stomach ache. He hadn't been shut inside by doors for a week and being there felt like a prison as quick as you could say cozy interior.

The cop, Ben, guided him into a side room where a fire hissed in the grate, the tree stood near the window, and presents lay in casual disarray at the foot of it. Zach got his first real look at the man who had pulled him in from the churchyard. He was a slight bit shorter than Zach, solid and muscled with dark hair and hazel eyes. His uniform looked good on him, fitted him close and neat. Zach hated uniforms. The cop didn't look official like the security in the city parks or the shadowed doorways he had been sleeping in. He didn't look harried or suspicious or hard. It unnerved Zach to be faced with this contradiction in his mind.

"This is Zach. He needs some clothes and somewhere to sleep tonight." Ben's voice was deep and certain. He didn't make excuses for bringing a stranger to his momma's house, and in return, she didn't seem all that angry. What kind of Stepford soap-opera house was this?

"Hello, Zach." He winced at the soft words from the cop's mom. "Go and clean up and I'll warm up some soup." She didn't wait for his yes or no, but at that point, the thought of a clean bathroom, an actual toilet, and maybe a shower was enough to make Zach weep. "Ben, show Zach to the bathroom, get him a razor and some towels, and maybe dig out some of your sweatpants, dear." She smiled at him then, but Zach was disorientated, exhausted, and in pain. It was all he could do just to stay on his feet, let alone form words or even return the smile.

The next hour was a daze of heat and water in the shower, the door locked against anyone who might attempt to push their way in. The razor scraped away the thin straggly stubble on his face. He hadn't used a toothbrush in a week, and the new toothpaste and brush cleaned up his teeth as he stared into the small fogged mirror over the sink. Zach finally felt sanitary for the first time in at least seven days.

The last time he had managed to clean himself up was two days ago in the bus station waiting room, and the water in the basin had been suspiciously brown. He'd had a ticket out of the city in his pocket, as far as his eighteen dollars and twenty cents would take him. For his own safety, he had needed to get out of Harrisonburg. God knows where the road would take him, but as he had traced a finger along the I81 on the large map on the wall, he had hoped that he could maybe get as far as Winchester. That is where his second cousins lived, and maybe they would take him in until after New Year's.

The assistant behind the glass hadn't actually laughed at him, but she made it clear he would be lucky to get halfway in that casual way only adults selling tickets could manage. He had taken what he could get. Ended up here in God-knows-where, Virginia, halfway to safety.

He stared at himself dispassionately in the full-length mirror on the back of the bathroom door. His body always verged on too skinny, as he grew tall so quickly, but now his frame was just gaunt. His tired eyes and gray-tinged skin made the thinness even more noticeable. At least his hair was clean, the blond dark with water and combed back away from his face. His blue eyes seemed to be popping out of his face. They were bloodshot and smudged underneath with gray, and the purpling bruises along the edge of the sockets didn't help matters. He looked pathetic. He felt pathetic.

The cop had left him sweats that were a little short for his long thin frame, but they were warm, dry, and felt wash-worn and soft on his clean skin. He pulled on a t-shirt, then a sweatshirt over his towel-dried hair and finally looked back again at the mirror in the bathroom, tears unbidden in his eyes. For the first time in days, Zach was really seeing himself in something other than a shop window. He knew he had lost a lot of weight, could feel it in jeans that refused to sit right, but in the mirror he saw a shadow of himself, beaten, exhausted, and so damn skinny.

He looked like a stereotypical street kid, and it scared him that in such a short time he had gone from normal teenager struggling with studying to this broken image in front of him.

He knew he had to go and face the cop and the cop's mom because he sure as hell couldn't stay in the bathroom forever. Cautiously he opened the bathroom door, some small part of him expecting the cop to be standing outside waiting with cuffs. He wasn't there, but it didn't make Zach feel any less nervous. He picked his way down the hall, following the voices in the kitchen. Apparently they had been talking about him, because when he walked into the room, the silence was immediate and somewhat uncomfortable. The cop was sitting at the table, a mug in his hands, looking impossibly young for a cop in the bright light of the kitchen. His —Ben's— mom stood at the stove stirring something in a pan. Her clear hazel eyes warmed as she looked over at him, her lips curving in a smile. He would have to be careful here, measure his words, not give too much of himself away.

"Chicken soup okay with you, honey?" she asked him gently, carefully.

"God yes," Zach said quickly, wincing at his loss of control and then realizing what he'd said. He may have turned away from God for leaving him to be beaten and rejected by his father, but it didn't mean that others didn't have belief. He should watch his mouth. "'M sorry, ma'am," he blurted quickly, "I mean, yes, I would like some soup."

The cop snorted his amusement, and his mom smacked at her son's shoulder with her hand, admonishing him for his inappropriate sniggering. She poured what smelled like heaven into a bowl, telling Zach to sit and then proceeding to watch him like a hawk as he ate. He couldn't bring himself to care that she watched him or that the cop hadn't moved from his seat and still looked at him. In fact they were probably both sitting and judging him for how he looked and where the cop had found him.

"Ben, dear, are you off shift now?"

"Until tomorrow."

"Go change out of your uniform. There are still some of your clothes upstairs from last weekend. Maybe you can give me and young Zach here time to talk." Zach lifted his head at this, bread halfway to his mouth. The talk. Shit. He was so screwed.

"Back in ten," Ben said clear and firm, and Zach looked at him, at the warning in the cop's face — Don't mess with my momma. He nodded slightly to let Ben know he got the message, watching as the broad-shouldered man left the kitchen.

"So, Zach, I'm guessing you aren't here by choice?" She started innocently enough, pouring another helping of soup in his bowl and passing him more bread. She watched him intently. He wondered what she saw when she looked at him and he was ashamed. The old and new bruises on his face, half covered by still damp blond hair he had pulled down to hide them. He knew he looked younger than his near eighteen and could be easily mistaken for much younger. Zach was aware of every little sensation in his body, the warmth, the peace, the quiet, the acceptance, but it was all so wrong at the moment. He didn't deserve this, and he didn't know quite how to handle it.

"No, ma'am," he finally said, biting into bread so crusty that crumbs sprinkled his soup as he ate. If he had a mouthful of food, maybe he could get away with not saying anything at all. He had listened to enough lectures in his life to be able to tune them out.

"Ben tells me you're nearly eighteen, but that he knows nothing except your first name."

Damn. His surname, she wanted to know his surname. He guessed it didn't matter much now, as there was no way he was going home. There were only two more days until he turned eighteen. It was too late for the cop's mom to track down his family. He swallowed the mouthful of bread and soup and wiped at his face with the back of his hand, caught up in the reassurance in the woman's eyes.

"Zachary Weston, ma'am," he finally offered. "I'm eighteen on the twenty-seventh of December." She nodded thoughtfully, and he quickly scooped up another spoonful of soup, the heat of it sliding down his throat velvety warm. She didn't speak straight away, just looked at the mug between her hands before asking the next question.

"Can you tell me why you're not at home with your family?" She hesitated, tilting her head to one side. "I guess I shouldn't be assuming you have a family."

"No, ma'am, I have a family. A mom, dad, and a sister. They —my dad— didn't want me in the house any more."

"What did you do to deserve that? Was it the wrong crowd? Drugs? Drink?"

Pain shot through him at the options she was giving him. The reasons why young people were generally homeless. She thought he was an addict? He had never even touched a cigarette, let alone drugs, and as for drink… He closed his eyes briefly. Why wouldn't she think he was at fault? He knew he looked ill enough for people to suppose he was on something that was harming him. He averted his gaze, as if fascinated by his soup, his hair falling again to hide from her far too perceptive gaze. Should he tell her the whole story? Would she want to hear all the real details? Other people had asked but they didn't really want to hear.

Should he give her the details of the strict ex-army father who felt lessons were learnt through corporal punishment? Or of the home schooling and the fact he had no friends? Maybe he should just go for the easy option, the truth at the base of what had happened to him. He didn't want to lie to her. It wasn't in him to lie. He looked up and directly at her, the soup unsteady on his stomach.

"It happened because I'm gay," he said simply and so softly she had to lean forward to hear, then she frowned as he pushed the chair back from the table.

"And you ran away?" she asked simply.

"No!" Zach's reaction was instant. "They tried to fix me, but it didn't work. I didn't want it to work. They told me to go."

"I see," was all she said. He didn't hear disgust in her voice, but it wasn't like she immediately jumped up and gathered the gay throwaway in a hug.

"Thank you for the soup, ma'am. I appreciate your help, and your son's." He stumbled to stand, pins and needles in his legs, and moved into the hall, only stopping because the officer was blocking his way. The man was fresh from the shower with his dark hair spiky and his hazel eyes focused intently, looking less like a cop and more like a normal guy.

"Where do you think you're going?" he asked, his head tilted in question. Zach saw the puzzled look in the guy's eyes then looked deeper, to a compassion such as he hadn't seen in a long time.

"I'm leaving, Mr… Officer. Look, thanks for your help. I'm sorry." Zach's words were shaky, but he made sure his intent was obvious. He was determined to leave. They wouldn't want him under their roof either now. At least he'd gotten a hot meal in his belly, and he was damned if he was going to give back the warm clothes. He only had to find his shoes, and he would be gone. He could probably outrun the cop if he had a good enough head start since the other man was standing in the hallway with bare feet. Zach lowered his gaze and shuffled to move past, but he was stopped by a strong grip on his arm.

"Momma? Did he do something? Are you okay?" Ben ignored Zach, who was nearly hopping from foot to foot trying to loosen Ben's grasp, anxiety and panic building inside him. He hadn't done anything to the cop's momma; he wouldn't. Weakly he pulled his arm, but the damn cop had a grip of freaking steel.

"It seems Zach's parents threw him out because he's gay," she offered simply. Zach yanked away to gain maneuvering room. Ben's face suddenly twisted in anger. Shit, Zach thought immediately, here it comes, and as the cop brought up a hand, Zach found himself cowering from the imminent hit. Instead, the cop laid his hand gently on Zach's shoulder and appeared to choose to ignore the fact that Zach had slunk back in fear.

"That happens a lot," the cop said simply, his face clear of any kind of telling expression, "but in this house, it isn't a problem. Momma has a straight son, married with two kids, and a daughter with two boyfriends at any one time." He paused, clearly letting the first part sink in. "Then she has me, her gay cop son."

"Oh," was all Zach could say, rubbing the arm Ben had grabbed to relieve the pain.

"You being gay isn't going to be one of the things that might affect your stay with us. Okay?"

Zach twisted to look at Ben's momma, still sitting at the table. She was nodding in agreement. It felt odd. It was some kind of surreal afternoon chick flick with exceptionally pretty people being nice to extremely lonely young throwaways. He blinked, eyes then widening as it all sank in, too good to be true, but somehow very real.

"I'm going to go to bed, Ben. Why not sit a while with Zach, and then maybe show him to Jamie's old room. There's fresh linen in the closet." She rose gracefully, placing bowls in the sink and crossing to pull her son into a hug, "Ellie will be in by two. She promised. So keep an eye out for her for me."

The Christmas Throwaway

I may have just written a really small birthday memory from Zach, from The Christmas Throwaway, over on Amber's Birthday blog...

Leave a comment there, and I may just send one lucky person a signed copy of the book!

Go see...

https://amberkell.wordpress.com/2015/11/08/welcome-birthday-guest-rj-scott-2/

Do you review Audio books?

Bloggers / Reviewers

I have the following books available in audio:

Guarding Morgan (Sanctuary 1)
The Only Easy Day(Sanctuary 2)
Face Value (Sanctuary 3)

The Christmas Throwaway

For a Rainy Afternoon

Coming soon - New York Christmas (late November)
If you are a blogger/review site and you'd like to review them, please email rjscott.team@gmail.com and we'll send you a code for a review copy.

Christmas Throwaway and Guarding Morgan in Audio


Guarding Morgan made the best sellers list on Audible *yay*. Something that completely slipped me by until an author friend of mine, Jay Northcote, pointed it out to me.

So far I have two audio books, Guarding Morgan, the first in the Sanctuary Series (with The Only Easy Day - book 2 - coming soon) and The Christmas Throwaway.

Both are narrated by the insanely talented Sean Crsiden.

The links for each are as follows:

The Christmas Throwaway


Christmas is a time for giving - what do you do when no one gives a damn?

For Zachary Weston Christmas means sleeping on a churchyard bench in the freezing snow with nothing better in his future. Thrown out of his home for being gay, he is left without money or, it seems, anywhere to go. Until a stranger shows him that some people do give a lot more than a damn.

Ben Hamilton is a rookie cop in his small home town. He finds a young throwaway, fresh from the city, sleeping on a bench in the churchyard on a snowy Christmas Eve. Can he be the one to give Zachary his own Christmas miracle?

Amazon (US) | Amazon (UK) | AudibleExcerpt at SoundHound

Guarding Morgan

Morgan Drake witnesses a murder in an alleyway. He is the only person who can give evidence in prosecuting the cop responsible for the crime. When the FBI safe house where he’s being held is compromised, he follows the instructions of his agent in charge and runs.

Nik Valentinov works for Sanctuary, a foundation that offers witness protection when FBI security is questionable.

When Morgan's handler sends him to Nik for safety, neither Morgan nor Nik could imagine that two weeks alone in a cabin in the woods could start something more. Something way more than just trying to keep Morgan alive. Something that makes their heart race more than danger...... Love.

Amazon (US) | Amazon (UK) | Audible| Excerpt at SoundHound

And Coming Soon... 


The Only Easy Day - Sanctuary Book 2

One dead girl, one scared witness, and two men trained as Navy SEALS. Whether searching for justice or revenge, the final showdown between them is the same—explosive.

Dale MacIntyre, former Navy SEAL, works for Sanctuary. He’s close to obtaining the evidence he needs to prove Elisabeth Costain's death was ordered by them… until someone gets in his way.

Joseph Kinnon, active Navy SEAL, is back on U.S. soil for the first time in months, and he’s told the tragic news that his stepsister is dead, gunned down in an alley by an unknown assailant. He’s determined to find out who murdered her…until someone gets in his way.

They both want the Bullen family brought to account, but one wants justice and the other wants revenge. What happens between them, however, has nothing to do with either.

Oops - my bad

That moment you go to Goodreads and see you have 11 pending questions you never even realised were there... I also had a couple of emails this week so I thought I would post the answers to the main questions here:

Yes, there will be definitely be a Texas 7. I will write *Texas Wedding* as and when Texas recognise same sex marriage... and there will be an offshoot set in the future dealing with Jack and Riley's son... and of course Hayley (and her cousin... winks)...

Oh and I have a whole three book series idea offshooting from the kids in court in Texas Fall :)

Sorry, but I wont be writing a sequel to The Christmas Throwaway (well, i don't think so, but there again, i have all these ideas, and Christmas is soon... and ...)

The Rancher's Son, book 2 in the Montana series will be with you January 2016. I'm sorry for the delay on this but I am taking back creative control of Crooked Tree Ranch and this means the delay is inevitable until I have CTR back with me.

Yes, there will be more End Street with Amber Kell... lots more. Again we are taking back creative control and re-releasing along with lots of new stories... watch this space for news...

I hope this helps, and I am so sorry to those that asked these Qs over on Goodreads that I missed (for the past six months)...

HUGS YOU ALL
XXXXXX

The Christmas Throwaway

Cover Art by BitterGrace
The Book


Best Selling Book of 2010, All Romance Ebooks


Christmas is a time for giving - what do you do when no one gives a damn?

For Zachary Weston Christmas means sleeping on a churchyard bench in the freezing snow with nothing better in his future. Thrown out of his home for being gay, he is left without money or, it seems, anywhere to go. Until a stranger shows him that some people do give a lot more than a damn.

Ben Hamilton is a rookie cop in his small home town. He finds a young throwaway, fresh from the city, sleeping on a bench in the churchyard on a snowy Christmas Eve. Can he be the one to give Zachary his own Christmas miracle?


"....‘The Christmas Throwaway' is a charming, heart warming love story about second chances, overcoming obstacles, and the importance of a loving, supportive family. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone in the mood for a sweet story which will not only leave you feeling good, but will also remind you to count your blessings...."






Buy Links - eBook

Love Lane Books  |  Amazon (US)  |  Amazon (UK)  |  ARE  |  B & N  |  Kobo  | Smashwords  |  iTunes

Buy Links - Print Book


Buy Links - Audio Book

Amazon (US)  |  Amazon (UK)

Reviews

MM Goodbook Reviews  - 5/5 - "....I think this is one of the best Christmas stories I’ve read. Everything about this book screams PERFECT and it really made my day even if the start of the story was horribly sad...."

Bookwenches  - 4.25/5 -  "....Ms. Scott proves to have a deft hand with emotion, and she pulls our hearts into this story. Zach’s sense of abandonment and betrayal by his family, his fear, his moments of panic at feeling trapped lend an almost agonizing sadness. But there are also moments of warmth and joy, of lighthearted sibling rivalry and fugly Christmas sweaters that are sweetly funny. Sexual, or even romantic, tension takes a back seat throughout most of the story, because Zach is a child at the beginning and needs to both heal and grow up before he and Ben can have a relationship...."

The Hope Chest Reviews - 4.5/5 - "....From the moment I first read the synopsis and excerpt of The Christmas Throwaway, I was drawn into the story and wanted to know more. I was almost positive I would enjoy it, even though at the time I had never read a male/male romance, and I have to say it did not disappoint...."

Click cover to enlarge
Rainbow Book Reviews  -  "....The Christmas Throwaway' is a charming, heart warming love story about second chances, overcoming obstacles, and the importance of a loving, supportive family. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone in the mood for a sweet story which will not only leave you feeling good, but will also remind you to count your blessings...."

GLBT Bookshelf - 4.25/5 - "....Ms. Scott’s writing style is clear and descriptive. Her characters are believable and interact in a manner that feels quite natural, and her imagery is vivid enough to pull the reader right into the setting. In fact, the scene she sets at the beginning of the story brings the cold to such chilling life that although I was warm and comfortable as I read, I was tempted to shiver along with Zach. I could almost feel the ache in his body from the extreme cold...."

Joyfully Reviewed - "....The Christmas Throwaway is the Happily Ever After tale that everyone wishes for. There is a sense of compassion and hope against overwhelming odds – a teen that’s all but given up, holding on by a thread.  Told with a skilled and delicate touch, The Christmas Throwaway manages to give readers that ‘feel good’ story without falling into overkill or maudlin, unrealistic tripe.  Zach is the real deal with his emotions everywhere at once, while Ben is the knight in shining armor without seeming too good to be true.  The fact that there’s chemistry between them only adds to the tension and it too is tastefully handled here.  The Christmas Throwaway will give you that heartwarming glow, promise.  I Joyfully recommend The Christmas Throwaway!..."

Mrs Condit & Friends - 5/5 - "....The Christmas Throwaway by RJ Scott is a character driven story that highlights the all-too-common tragedy of kids being thrown out of their homes by their families for being gay. With a smooth plot flow, and a backstory that fills in the gaps, you can’t help but be pulled into this sad, yet ultimately hopeful tale. The author’s style is eloquent, insightful, and concise, and pulls back the curtain on a subject all too many people want to pretend doesn’t exist. This lovely Christmas tale has a HEA ending that I absolutely loved. So if you’re looking for a story that skillfully blends heartache and hope, then I definitely recommend this book to you...."

Boy Meets Boy Reviews - Natasha - 4.5/5 - "....The writing, in my opinion, was terrific. I felt drawn in, brought into a warm, welcoming place, and held there for the few hours I read the book. This isn’t my first R.J. Scott book, and it very likely won’t be my last either...."

Excerpt

Chapter 1: The First Christmas

"Hey! You can't sleep here."

Zachary Weston had closed his eyes and let sleep pull him under. The simple fact was that sheer exhaustion meant he couldn't physically stay awake any longer. Sleep came quickly, the sleep of the desperate man, despite the furious aching pain in his lower back. He had pushed on through the pain for the last week. Ironically the ice and frigid temperatures, whilst freezing his extremities, helped ease the aching.

Behind his eyes he saw a crackling fire in an iron grate, the red and gold flames casting a beautiful light throughout a room decorated for Christmas. A tree stood tall in the far corner, its sparkling fairy lights, colored tinsel, and baubles catching and glinting random colors.


UK Meet - Competition and Novel Openings Question

UK Meet

At the UK Meet this weekend I am on the Novel openings panel. We are all reading out 100 words from the start of one of our novels and then I think there will be Q&A after.

I need to know which of the following three that I should use. These are my favourite openings but I am going to let you choose which one I use... the voting button is below...

Competition.

I'll take everyone who votes and offer a signed paperback to a single winner drawn at random. Closes 11pm GMT on 3rd June.

One Hundred Words


Oracle (103 words)

When he was nine, Alex Sheridan, the boy with new parents and no memories, disappeared.

The bullying had started on hour one, of day one. The new boy with the curious accent and stilted English carried strange scars on his body. Some said he had gotten them in a fire. Others suspected that he had done them to himself. Alex never deliberately showed the scars to anyone, but physical education and the changing rooms meant even he couldn't keep all his secrets hidden.

There was a group of boys—bigger, stronger, and crueler than Alex could ever be—that made his life miserable.


The Christmas Throwaway (101 words)

"Hey! You can't sleep here."

Zachary Weston had closed his eyes and let sleep pull him under. Sleep came quickly, the sleep of the desperate man, despite the furious aching pain in his lower back. Ironically, the ice and frigid temperatures, while freezing his extremities, helped ease the aching.

Behind his eyes he saw a crackling fire in an iron grate, the red and gold flames casting a beautiful light throughout a room decorated for Christmas. A tree stood tall in the far corner, its sparkling fairy lights, colored tinsel, and baubles catching and glinting random colors.

"You can't sleep here."


Guarding Morgan (95 words)

"Twenty, one sixty-six, Altamont, western, black cat, lemon pie…" The words were on repeat in Morgan Drake's head, a litany, over and over, in case he forgot. His FBI shadow had drummed the words into him until he could repeat them in his sleep.

"Just in case, Morgan, okay? If there's any problem, you take these keys and the car I showed you in the next door basement parking, and you take Highway Twenty West onto the 166, head for Altamont, Western Street, find a bookshop called Black Cat Books. Someone will locate you there."



The Christmas Throwaway - French, Spanish and now Italian translations

Tomorrow, 16 May, is the official release date for Il miracolo di Natale, the Italian translation of one of my favourite stories, The Christmas Throwaway.

This means that one of my best selling books (and probably most reviewed!) is now available in four languages and I am absolutely blown away by this fact.

It feels really special.

Added to which BitterGrace Art took the original cover and created three beautiful new covers for the translations.

* * * * *

Originally these were only appearing on Amazon. This was because ARe etc wouldn't show the rest of their site in a specific language. However, due to public demand these translations are now on All Romance in ePub and PDF (as well as Mobi!).

All the All Romance files are here.

Watch my website for a competition to win a gift voucher tomorrow (Friday 16th)

Little known fact... Did you know that The Christmas Throwaway was the Best selling book on All Romance for 2010?

Jeté à la rue pour Noël


Noël est une époque de partage - mais que feriez-vous si tout le monde s'en foutait?

Pour Zachary Weston Noël signifie dormir sur un banc du cimetière, dans le froid et la neige, sans perspective d’avenir. Jeté hors de son domicile parce qu’il est gay, il est seul et sans argent et n’a, apparemment, nulle part où aller.

Jusqu'à ce qu'un étranger lui montre que certaines personnes ne s’en foutent pas du tout.

Ben Hamilton est un bleu chez les flics de sa petite ville natale de province. Le soir du réveillon de Noël, il trouve un jeune, fraichement débarqué de la ville, qui a été mis à la porte et qui dort sur un banc du cimetière de l’église. Peut-il être celui qui donnera à Zachary son propre miracle de Noël?

Acheter

Amazon (France) | Amazon (CAN) | Amazon (UK) |  | Amazon (US)Kobo

Extrait

Chapitre 1

Le premier Noël

"Hé! Tu ne peux pas dormir ici. "
Zachary Weston avait fermé les yeux et s’était laissé emporter par le sommeil. Son état d’épuisement était tel qu'il lui était physiquement impossible de rester éveillé plus longtemps. Le sommeil était venu rapidement, celui d’un l'homme désespéré, et ce malgré la douleur lancinante et violente au bas de son dos. Il avait fait avec elle toute la semaine dernière. Ironiquement, les températures glaciales, bien que gelant ses extrémités, aidées à la soulager.

Derrière ses paupières fermées, il voyait un feu qui crépitait dans son âtre. Les flammes rouges et or renvoyaient une douce lumière dans la pièce décorée pour Noël. Un grand sapin de Noël siégeait dans un coin, avec ses lumières féeriques qui scintillaient, ses guirlandes colorées, et ses boules de Noël attrapant et reflétant les couleurs aléatoires.

"Tu ne peux pas dormir ici. "

Les cadeaux étaient dispersés et empilés, de manière aléatoire et irréfléchie dans leur arrangement, tant ils étaient nombreux. Des livres, de l’argent de poche et des vêtements chauds attendaient dans leurs papiers cadeaux festonnés avec du bolduc or et argent, son nom était griffonné en or sur une bonne partie d'entre eux.

"Hey! Tu ne peux pas dormir ici."

Dehors, il neigeait - pas une tempête de neige - mais de gros flocons paresseux qui tombaient dans une danse envoûtante et qui rejoignaient ceux qui formaient déjà un fin manteau neigeux et qui cachaient le jardin de la vue. Le froid signifiait que l'extérieur des fenêtres était recouvert de givre, celui-ci rampait dans des vrilles blanches en dessinant des motifs aléatoires sur la vitre glacée et en reflétant les lumières colorées de l'arbre.

"Hé …"
Zach se pencha, ramassa le premier paquet, regardant sa mère par-dessus son épaule. Elle souriait, heureuse de voir son fils si excité, elle partageait des hochements de tête avec son père. Ils avaient tous deux tant d'amour dans leurs yeux.

"Hey!"
Quelqu'un lui parlait de l'extérieur de la pièce, mais il ne pouvait pas voir de qui il s’agissait. Ça n'avait pas d'importance, parce que s’il se concentrait suffisamment, il pouvait se focaliser sur les cadeaux. Il frissonna, le froid s’infiltrait en lui, et inconsciemment il se déplaça plus près du feu. Il fronça les sourcils quand, bien que plus près, la chaleur autour de lui diminua. Stupide feu. Il prit le cadeau suivant, tirant sur le papier rouge et argent, il découvrit le plus doux des pulls molletonnés, épais, chaud et doux, dans un bleu surprenant que sa mère déclarait identique à la couleur de ses yeux. Malgré le feu de cheminé, il faisait encore extrêmement froid, et rapidement, passant sa tête dans l’encolure, il mit le pull. La chaleur de la matière douce sur sa peau gelée et frigorifiée était à la fois chaleureux et réconfortant. Il sourit alors, enveloppé par les étincelles d'affection et d'amour d'un Noël en famille, comme il l’était avec le chandail.

"Tu ne peux pas dormir ici."


Zach sursauta. La voix à l'extérieur de la pièce était tout à coup juste à son oreille et les derniers vestiges de son rêve n'étaient plus qu'une simple évocation dans son esprit. Brusquement, ses yeux furent grand ouvert et, après une seconde, fixés sur l'origine des mots. Zach ne vit pas grand-chose au-delà de l'image flou d'un badge en argent et d'un uniforme bleu marine, mais il se concentra rapidement sur les yeux de la personne qui lui parlait. Ils paraissaient très sévères sous la lumière des lampadaires, et il y avait des petits nuages blancs qui se formaient dans l’air, créé par la respiration de l'homme. Merde! D'une certaine manière on l'avait vu et on avait rapporté sa présence, ou le flic l'avait repéré. Il allait devoir aller ailleurs, encore une fois. Il tira sur la mince veste qu'il portait, la mémoire d'un tissu bleu et doux clignota dans son esprit et le désorienta un instant.

Zach avait tant espéré pouvoir éviter les forces de l’ordre, il avait, dans un optimisme prudent, pensé que le cimetière pourrait être un lieu de refuge la veille de Noël.

"Désolé," dit-il rapidement, se mettant sur ses pieds aussi vite qu'il le pouvait, ce qui n'était pas vraiment rapide considérant le froid qui l'avait endolori et qui semblait scinder ses os en deux. Il jura lorsque la couverture échappa à ses mains engourdies et atterrit dans la neige à ses pieds. C'était la seule source de chaleur qu'il avait, une pièce élimée, qu'il avait volé aux bonnes œuvres quand la femme en charge lui avait tourné le dos. Et maintenant, la fichue chose allait être mouillée.

Pourtant, il n’avait pas de temps pour s'inquiéter à ce sujet, le flic voulait qu’il bouge. Il se pencha pour la ramasser, pour voir arriver le sol vers son visage à une vitesse alarmante. Des bras puissants l'empêchèrent de tomber face la première dans la neige, mais il sorti de leur emprise rapidement. L'homme pouvait être un flic, il pouvait porter un badge, mais personne ne le touchait. Zach savait ce que les hommes pouvaient vouloir de l’enfant qu'il était encore. Il n'était pas stupide, et il en avait suffisamment esquivé quand il était encore en ville.

"Quel âge as-tu? " lui demanda le flic, l'air inquiet et très professionnel.

"Dix-huit ans, " menti rapidement Zach. Il fit un pas en arrière jusqu'à ce que ses cuisses touchent le banc derrière lui et sur lequel il se reposait quelques secondes plus tôt. Le flic avança avec lui, semblant grand malgré le fait qu’il avait quelques centimètres de moins que Zach, son front plissé par un froncement de sourcils.

"Quel âge as-tu vraiment? " persista le flic, son expression calme, sa voix basse et curieuse.

Zach se mordit la lèvre inférieure, il sentit le sang chaud contre sa langue, les frissons en lui commençaient à se manifester par des tremblements qu’il savait que même le flic pouvait voir. Prudemment Zach leva la couverture, trempée et glacée, en essayant de créer une barrière entre lui et l'agent de police au regard intense.

"Dix-sept ans", dit Zach dit finalement, suppliant à ses dents d’arrêter de claquer, "mais j’aurai dix-huit ans dans quelques jours. " Il ajouta au dernier moment, offrant au flic une porte de sortie. Il voulait ajouter juste laissez-moi tranquille, je ne fais de mal à personne.

"Ben Hamilton, “ dit doucement le flic dit doucement, tendant sa main comme s'il voulait serrer celle de Zach. Zach était confus, incertain, il s’attendait à voir le reflet des menottes, et il serra ses mains plus fortement sur la couverture humide qu'il tenait. Le flic, Hamilton, ne bougeait pas sa main de son côté, il se tenait là ferme et stable. Finalement Zach tendit sa main froide, la texture des gants en cuir de l'agent était douce et étrange sous son toucher.

"Zach", se présenta-t-il doucement, se rappelant de ne pas mentionner son nom de famille. Le flic ne pas le poussa pour le connaître, il hocha juste la tête et retira sa main.

"Alors, Zach, que t’es-t-il arrivé? Pourquoi étais-tu allongé sur ce banc de l'église de Sainte-Margaret la veille du jour de Noël? "

L'agent ne criait pas, il demandait calmement, mais Zach s’était mis immédiatement sur la défensive. Il y avait un air concerné sur le visage du flic, et il fronçait les yeux en posant la question.

"Je ... " Zach s’arrêta, évaluant les mensonges qu'il pourrait dire, pensant aux histoires qu'il avait utilisées pour convaincre les gens de le laisser seul. Aucune bonne idée ne se cristallisa cette fois. Il y avait quelque chose à propos de ce flic, un homme qui ne semblait pas être beaucoup plus âgé que lui, un officier qui n'était pas flic dans une grande ville, mais flic d’une petite ville de province. Il ne ferait pas partie du système de la même manière qu’avec les flics de la ville qui lui disaient qu'il devait rentrer à la maison. Je n'ai pas de maison. Peut-être ... peut-être qu'il devrait lui dire la vérité?

"Je ne peux pas être à la maison en ce moment, " dit-il finalement, grimaçant alors que la main gantée du flic traçait les ecchymoses sur son œil gauche puis vers le bas sur la ligne de sa mâchoire.

"Qui t’as fait ça, Zach ? Est-ce arrivé ici, dans cette ville ? " Les paroles de l'officier tissaient comme une sorte de havre de paix, idéal pour partager des secrets, douces, insistantes, et elles ne sonnaient pas vraiment comme un flic. Zach se recula instantanément du doux touché, une lame glacée d'incertitude le frappa tout à coup alors qu’il songeait au fait qu’il était seul avec cet homme sur le terrain sombre de l'église. Il semblait plutôt sympa, mais si ce n'était seulement qu’un nouvel acte? Prudemment, et en essayant de ne pas révéler ses intentions, il regarda à sa gauche, puis à sa droite. S'il devait courir, il lui faudrait un bon départ, et être retenu ou coincé lui enlèverait cette avance. A droite, un feuillage dense bloqué la sortie ; à gauche c’était la porte du cimetière et l’ombre des pierres tombales. C'était sa meilleure issue. Il déplaça son poids sur son pied droit, prêt à prendre de l’élan et à s’enfuir vers la porte. Sa jambe trembla sous la pression supplémentaire, et il savait qu'il tomberait probablement au premier obstacle. Pourtant, n’importe quel plan offrait plus d'espoir que pas de plan du tout.

"Je suis tombé, " dit-il fermement, la même excuse qu'il avait utilisé presque toute sa vie, celle qui lui avait valu des regards qui allaient du doute à la pitié. Quand il avait dit ces mots aux responsables à la soupe populaire, aux flics du coin, au propriétaire du refuge pour sans-abri, il l’avait été sermonné, on lui avait fait des avances, on avait pleuré, ou on l’avait repoussé avec dégoût. Il n’attendait pas beaucoup plus d'un autre homme qui détenait l'autorité.

"hm hm. " L'agent ne poussa pas pour plus de renseignement, il hocha simplement la tête à cette déclaration et fit un pas en arrière et au loin. Il parla directement dans sa radio. "Je rentre à la maison maintenant. Il n’y avait rien à craindre à l’église. " Les parasites brisèrent le silence qui régnait, la neige amortissant tous les bruits, et une voix grêle répondit au message radio avec une série de codes et un seul nom - Ben. Le flic regarda à nouveau Zach, et Zach jugea que, maintenant que le flic était à deux pas de lui, s'enfuir en direction de la porte serait plus facile. "Tu ne peux pas dormir ici. Je vais te trouver une chambre pour ce soir, et nous gérerons le reste dans la matinée. "

Les yeux de Zach s’élargirent. Il n'allait pas n'importe où avec n'importe qui, à moins qu'il ne soit en état d'arrestation. Ce flic allait lui trouver une chambre? Probablement un motel à l'écart qui n'en avait que le nom. Merde. Pas moyen que cela se produise à nouveau. Il avait à peine réussir à prendre la fuite deux nuits auparavant, indemne, avec une proposition qui lui avait offert beaucoup plus d'espoir que ce que le flic lui proposait. Zach avait dépassé la crédulité.

Se redressant de toute sa hauteur, il pinça ses lèvres avec détermination. Il n'allait pas passer d’un enfer à un autre, il n’en était pas question.

"Non, merci, mais non, je dois ... aller à la gare pour prendre le train. " Il essayait de ne pas laisser le désespoir s’entendre dans sa voix, il essayait de paraître sûr de lui malgré ses dents qui claquaient. Il testait les mots dans sa tête, et il savait exactement ce qu'il disait. Il avait manifestement une raison d'être sur un banc dans la neige la veille de Noël et le flic devait respecter cela. C’était un pays libre.

"D'accord, Zach. " Le flic soupira. "Nous pouvons faire ça de deux façons. Il est tard, et c'est la nuit de Noël. J'ai vraiment envie de rentrer à la maison pour être avec ma famille et tu es en train de rendre tout cela très difficile. Maintenant, tu peux venir avec moi, avoir un repas décent, une douche, et peut-être même des vêtements chauds, et tu pourras alors passer la nuit au chaud dans un lit. Où je peux rendre tout ceci officiel et t'arrêter, te forcer à partir, c'est à toi de faire ton choix. "

Zach entendit chaque mot. Il regardait désespérément autour de lui, la petite église, le cimetière, le banc, la neige, et puis de nouveau le flic face à lui qui avait l'air si jeune. Il était vraiment baisé. Le froid sous ses pieds grimpait le long de ses jambes, apportant avec lui une douleur lancinante. Ses jambes étaient en train de le lâcher. Il avait couru pendant tant de jours, en parvenant à maintenir une avance sur tous et tout, et il n'avait plus que deux jours à tenir jusqu'à ce qu'il puisse s'arrêter. Pourquoi son corps choisissait-il de le lâcher maintenant?

"Alors ? " le flic continua, "Je n'ai pas toute la nuit. Je ne veux vraiment pas passer mon réveillon de Noël au-dessus de ton corps froid en expliquant ta mort au médecin légiste. Donc, ton choix est …?"

Il n'avait pas le choix. C'était une situation sans choix. Il le savait, et le flic le savait aussi. Il se redressa de son mieux, la douleur au bas de son dos le brûlant à son niveau habituel malgré le froid du banc qui avait commencé à engourdir un peu la chair.

"D’accord", déclara Zach doucement. Après tout, c'était un flic. Comment cela pourrait-il être mauvais de vouloir être chaud pour une nuit ? "Pas une cellule ? ", demanda-t-il prudemment.

L'Agent Hamilton tourna sur les talons et commença à marcher dans la direction opposée au banc.

"Non, pas une cellule. "

"Vous promettez ? " Merde! Pouvait-il avoir plus l'air d'un enfant ? Drôle de façon de se faire passer pour un adulte responsable qui avait le contrôle de sa vie.

Le flic s'arrêta et regarda par-dessus son épaule, mettant ses mains dans les poches de sa veste épaisse. Zach se trouva à la regarder avec envie.

"Je te le promets. " Il se retourna, s'attendant clairement à ce que Zach le suive, ce qu'il fit. Il trébuchait sur le chemin glacé, dans les mêmes fines baskets qu'il portait quand il avait été jeté à la rue, il y avait seulement une semaine. Il jura dans sa barbe, car les bottes du flic lui offraient une adhérence sur la neige alors que lui devait gratter ses pieds sur le sol pour le suivre. C'était humiliant de trébucher à chaque pas sur son chemin comme un chiot perdu et pathétique derrière le flic. En même temps, Zach admit qu'il ne pourrait pas distancer le flic s'il décidait d'agir impulsivement, juste pour aller le plus loin possible de l'homme en uniforme. Il le suivait donc du mieux qu'il pouvait.

Ils marchèrent en silence pendant un peu plus de dix minutes dans les rues froides, et vides, ils passèrent le square de la ville et une horloge qui était encastrée dans le mur d'une petite bibliothèque. Elle lui indiqua qu’il était onze heures et demie. Le flic s’arrêta à la petite épicerie avec le signe fermé à la porte, vérifiant la porte et regardant le vide à l'intérieur. Zach regarda seulement le policier faire son travail, éraflant ses chaussures contre une arête de glace sur le trottoir. Ensuite, le policier conduisit Zach vers une maison à la fin d'une rangée d’habitations toutes similaires. Les rideaux avaient été laissés ouverts et Zach pouvait voir le sapin de Noël par la fenêtre, ses lumières de Noël les accueillants alors qu’ils parcouraient la petite allée dégagée. L’agent Hamilton entra, tapant la neige de ses bottes devant la porte d'entrée, et faisant signe à Zach de le suivre.

Zach hésita. Il pouvait sentir la chaleur à l'intérieur, voir les lumières douces, la chaleur d’une maison décorée pour Noël. Pourtant, ce flic lui demandait d'entrer dans une maison. Personne ne saurait que Zach était entré dans la maison. Avec le flic. Avec un étranger.

"Ben ? " La voix était douce, et une femme apparue à l'intérieur du hall bien éclairé, s'arrêtant aux côtés du policier. Elle était petite et soignée et elle avait une mine préoccupée sur son visage. Elle lui rappelait sa propre mère, sans le regard totalement épuisé et abattu qu'elle semblait toujours porter. "Il y a un problème ? " Le flic retira sa veste et l'accrocha à la patère, puis il enleva ses gants et retira les lourdes bottes.

"Nous avons un invité pour Noël, maman. ", répondit-il doucement, faisant signe à Zach de passer la porte et, comme dans un rêve, bercé en partie par la voix de la femme, Zach enjamba le seuil. La chaleur sur sa peau gelée fut comme des aiguilles chaudes et douloureuses, et il cligna des yeux au changement soudain dans son corps quand la porte se referma derrière eux. Une torsion momentanée de peur le rendit nauséeux. Il n'avait pas été enfermé à l’intérieur, par une porte, depuis une semaine et d'être là le faisait se senti comme enfermé dans une prison aussi rapidement que vous pouviez dire "intérieur douillet".

Le flic - Ben - le guida dans une pièce sur le côté où un feu sifflait derrière sa grille, le sapin se tenait près de la fenêtre, et des cadeaux étaient éparpillés de manière nonchalante au pied de celui-ci. Zach eut alors son premier vrai regard sur l'homme qui l'avait sorti du cimetière. Il était un peu plus petit que lui, solide et musclé avec des cheveux et des yeux marron foncés. Il portait bien l'uniforme, soigné de près. Zach détestait les uniformes. Mais ce flic n'avait pas l'air officiel comme les forces de l’ordre qu’il avait croisé dans les parcs de la ville ou devant les portes cochères où il avait dormi. Il n'avait pas l'air tourmenté, suspicieux ou dur. Cela troublait l'esprit de Zach d'être confrontés à cette contradiction.

"C'est Zach. Il a besoin de quelques vêtements et d'un endroit pour dormir ce soir. " La voix de Ben était grave et sûre. Il ne fit pas d'excuses pour avoir amené un étranger dans la maison de sa mère, et en retour, elle ne semblait pas du tout en colère. Quel genre de Stepford soap-opéra était cette maison ?

"Bonjour, Zach. " Il grimaça au ton doux de la mère du policier. "Vas prendre une douche pendant que je vais te réchauffer de la soupe. " Elle n'attendit pas qu'il lui dise oui ou non, mais à ce point, la pensée d'une salle de bain propre, de vraies toilettes, et peut-être d’une douche était suffisante pour faire pleurer Zach. "Ben, montres la salle de bain à Zach, donnes lui un rasoir et des serviettes propres, et fouilles dans tes affaires tu lui trouveras peut-être un survêtement, chéri. " Elle lui sourit, mais Zach était désorienté, épuisé, et dans la douleur. Tout ce qu'il pouvait faire était de rester debout sur ses pieds, alors former des mots ou parvenir à rendre un sourire...



L'heure suivante, il la passa dans un état second de chaleur et d'eau chaude, sous la douche, la porte verrouillée contre toute personne qui tenterait de rentrer dans la pièce. Le rasoir fit disparaître la barbe de trois jours de son visage. Il n'avait pas utilisé une brosse à dents depuis une semaine, et le dentifrice et la brosse à dents neuve nettoyèrent ses dents alors qu'il se regardait dans le petit miroir embué au-dessus du lavabo. Zach se sentit finalement propre pour la première fois depuis au moins sept jours.

La dernière fois qu'il avait eu la chance de se laver s’était il y a deux jours dans la salle d'attente de la station de bus, et l'eau qui coulait dans la cuvette avait été étrangement brune. Il avait un billet pour quitter la ville dans sa poche, aussi loin que ses dix-huit dollars et vingt cents pouvaient l’amener. Pour sa propre sécurité, il avait besoin de partir de Harrisonburg. Dieu savait où la route allait l’amener, mais alors qu’il suivait avec un doigt le tracé de la I-81 sur la grande carte sur le mur, il avait espéré qu'il pourrait peut-être aller aussi loin que Winchester. C'était là que ses cousins au second degré vivaient, et peut-être qu'ils l’hébergeraient jusqu'après le Nouvel An.

La guichetière derrière la vitre ne lui avait pas ri au nez, mais elle lui avait fait clairement comprendre, avec cette façon désinvolte que seul des adultes vendant des billets réussissaient à avoir, qu'il devrait s’estimer heureux s'il arrivait à mi-chemin. Il avait pris ce qu'il pouvait avoir. Finissant Dieu-sait-où, en Virginie, à mi-chemin de la sécurité.



Il se regarda froidement dans le miroir de plein pied qui se trouvait derrière de la porte de la salle de bains. Son corps avait toujours frisé le trop maigre, parce qu’il grandissait si vite, mais maintenant son corps était décharné. Ses yeux fatigués et sa peau grise rendaient sa maigreur encore plus perceptible. Au moins, ses cheveux étaient propres, blond foncé parce qu’ils étaient mouillés et coiffés en arrière. Ses yeux bleus semblaient sortirent de leurs orbites. Ils étaient injectés de sang et il avait de gros cernes sombres, les ecchymoses violacées sur le bord des orbites n'arrangeaient pas les choses. Il avait l'air pathétique. Il se sentait pathétique.

Le flic lui avait passé un pantalon de survêtement qui était un peu court pour son corps long et mince, mais il était chaud et sec, il était usé par le lavage mais doux sur sa peau propre. Il passa par-dessus sa tête, dont il avait séché les cheveux à l’aide d’une serviette, un T-shirt, puis un sweat-shirt, et enfin se regarda à nouveau dans le miroir de la salle de bain. Des larmes lui montèrent aux yeux instantanément. Pour la première fois depuis des jours, Zach pouvait vraiment se voir dans autre chose qu'une vitrine de magasin. Il savait qu'il avait perdu beaucoup de poids, il pouvait le sentir avec son jean qui refusait de tenir en place. Mais dans le miroir, il ne vit que l’ombre de lui-même battu, épuisé, et vraiment trop maigre.

Il était le stéréotype du gamin de la rue, et ça lui faisait peur qu'en si peu de temps il soit passé de l'adolescent normale jonglant avec ses études à cette image brisée en face de lui.



Il savait qu'il devait aller affronter le flic et sa mère parce qu'il était certain qu'il ne pouvait pas rester dans la salle de bain pour toujours. Prudemment, il ouvrit la porte, une petite partie de lui s'attendant à voir le flic qui l'attendait derrière avec une paire de menottes. Il n'était pas là, mais ça n'aida pas Zach à se sentir moins nerveux. Il reprit le couloir en sens inverse, suivant les voix dans la cuisine. Apparemment, ils parlaient de lui, parce que lorsqu’il rentra dans la pièce, le silence fut immédiat et quelque peu inconfortable. Le flic était assis à la table, une tasse dans ses mains, aillant l’air incroyablement jeune pour un flic dans la lumière de la cuisine. La mère de Ben était à la cuisinière remuant quelque chose dans une casserole. Ses yeux marrons clairs et chaleureux alors qu’elle le regardait, ses lèvres se courbant en un sourire. Il lui fallait faire attention ici, mesurer ses mots, ne pas donner trop de lui-même.

"De la soupe de poulet ça te conviens mon chéri? " Lui demanda-t-elle doucement, avec précaution.

"Mon Dieu oui! ", déclara rapidement Zach, il grimaça à sa perte de contrôle, puis en réalisant ce qu'il avait dit. Il s'était peut-être détourné de Dieu qui l'avait laissé être battu et rejeté par son père, mais cela ne signifiait pas que les autres n'y croyaient pas. Il devait faire attention à ce qu’il disait. "Désolé, madame", lâcha-t-il rapidement. "Je veux dire, oui, je voudrais bien un peu de soupe. "

Le flic grogna son amusement, et sa mère lui tapa l'épaule, le reprenant pour son ricanement inapproprié. Elle versa ce qui sentait aussi bon que le paradis dans un bol, tout en disant à Zach de s'asseoir et décidant ensuite de le regarder manger comme une lionne avec ses petits. Il ne pouvait pas se soucier d'être ainsi observé, pas plus que du policier qui n'avait pas bougé de son siège et qui le regardait également. En fait, ils étaient probablement tous les deux assis en train de juger où le flic l’avait trouvé et à quoi il ressemblait.

"Ben, chéri, tu as fini ta journée? "

"Jusqu'à demain. "

"Vas retirer ton uniforme alors. Tu as encore quelques vêtements à l'étage, du week-end dernier. Peut-être que tu pourrais nous donner à Zach et moi-même le temps de discuter. " Zach leva la tête à cela, le pain mi-chemin de sa bouche. La discussion. Merde. Il était vraiment dans la merde.

"Je reviens dans dix minutes", déclara-t-il clairement et fermement, et Zach le regarda, la mise en garde clairement visible sur son visage - Ne fout pas la merde avec ma mère. Il hocha la tête légèrement, pour faire comprendre à Ben qu'il avait bien reçu le message, et regarda l'homme aux larges épaules sortir de la cuisine.

"Donc, Zach, je devine que tu n'es pas ici par choix? ". Elle commença assez innocemment, en lui servant un autre bol de soupe et en lui redonnant du pain. Elle le regardait attentivement. Il se demanda ce qu'elle voyait quand elle le regardait et il eut honte. Les anciennes et les nouvelles ecchymoses sur son visage à moitié recouvertes par ses cheveux blonds encore mouillés, il les avait mis en avant pour pouvoir les cacher. Il savait qu'il avait l'air plus jeune que ses presque dix-huit ans, il pouvait même facilement passer pour beaucoup plus jeune. Zach était conscient de chaque petite sensation dans son corps, la chaleur, la paix, le calme, l'acceptation, mais s’était si déplacé en ce moment. Il ne méritait pas cela, et il ne savait pas comment le gérer.

"Non, madame", dit-il finalement, mordant dans le pain croustillant dont les miettes saupoudraient sa soupe alors qu’il mangeait. S'il avait la bouche pleine de nourriture, peut-être qu'il pouvait s'en sortir sans rien dire du tout. Il avait écouté suffisamment de sermon dans sa vie pour être en mesure de les éviter.

"Ben m’a dit que tu avais presque dix-huit ans, mais qu'il ne savait rien d’autre, à part ton prénom. "

Merde. Son nom de famille, elle voulait connaître son nom de famille. Il devina que ça n'avait plus beaucoup d'importance maintenant, comme il n'y avait aucune possibilité qu'il rentre chez lui. Il n’y avait plus que deux jours avant qu’il ait dix-huit ans. Il était trop tard pour que la mère du flic puisse retrouver sa famille. Il avala sa bouchée de pain et de soupe et essuyant son visage avec le dos de sa main, et puisa dans la confiance qu’il voyait dans les yeux de la femme.

"Zachary Weston, madame", offrit-il finalement. "J’aurai dix-huit ans, le vingt-sept décembre. " Elle hocha pensivement la tête, et il prit rapidement une autre cuillerée de soupe, la chaleur du doux velouté glissant dans sa gorge. Elle ne parla pas tout de suite, elle regarda juste la tasse entre ses mains avant de poser la question suivante.

"Peux-tu me dire pourquoi tu n’es pas à la maison avec ta famille? " Elle hésita, penchant la tête sur le côté. "Je suppose que je ne devrais pas m’avancer en supposant que tu as une famille. "

"Non, madame, j'ai une famille. Une mère, un père, et une sÅ“ur. Il - mon père – ne veux plus de moi à la maison. "

"Qu'as-tu fait pour mériter ça? Tu fréquentais les mauvaises personnes? La drogue? L’alcool? "

La douleur s’abattit en lui au vu des options qu'elle lui donnait. Les raisons pour lesquelles les jeunes étaient généralement mis à la porte par leurs parents. Elle pensait qu'il était un toxicomane? Il n'avait même jamais touché une cigarette, alors les drogues, ou l’alcool ... Il ferma brièvement les yeux. Pourquoi ne penserait-elle pas qu'il avait commis une faute? Il savait qu'il avait l'air suffisamment malade pour que les gens supposent qu'il prenait quelque chose qui lui faisait du mal. Il détourna son regard, comme s’il était fasciné par sa soupe, ses cheveux retombant devant lui pour le cacher de son regard trop perspicace. Devait-il lui raconter toute l'histoire? Voulait-elle entendre tous les détails? D'autres personnes lui avaient demandé, mais ils ne voulaient pas vraiment entendre.

Devait-il lui donner les détails de son éducation stricte ou que son père, ancien militaire, estimait que les leçons s'apprenaient via les châtiments corporels? Ou l'enseignement à domicile et le fait qu'il n'avait pas d'amis? Peut-être qu'il devrait juste choisir la solution de facilité, une base de vérité de ce qui lui était arrivé. Il ne voulait pas lui mentir. Ce n'était pas en lui de mentir. Il leva les yeux se focalisant directement sur elle, la soupe instable dans son ventre.

"C'est arrivé parce que je suis gay, " dit-il simplement et si doucement qu'elle due se pencher en avant pour l’entendre. Elle fronça les sourcils alors qu'il poussait la chaise de la table.

"Et tu t'es enfui? ", demanda-elle.

"Non! ". La réaction de Zach fut instantanée. "Ils ont essayé de me rendre normal, mais cela n'a pas fonctionné. Je ne voulais pas que cela fonctionne. Alors ils m'ont dit de partir. "

"Je vois", fut tout ce qu'elle dit. Il n'avait pas entendu de dégoût dans sa voix, mais ce n'était pas comme si elle avait immédiatement sauté de joie et pris le jeune gay qui avait été jeté à la rue dans une étreinte.

"Je vous remercie pour la soupe, madame. J'apprécie votre aide, et celle de votre fils. " Il trébucha pour se lever, des fourmis dans les jambes, et il prit la direction du couloir, s'arrêtant uniquement parce que l'officier de police lui bloquait le chemin. L'homme sortait de la douche avec ses cheveux sombres en épi et ses yeux noisette qui le regardaient intensément, il avait moins l’air d’un flic et plus d’un type normal.

"Où penses-tu aller? ", demanda-t-il, sa tête inclinée en posant la question. Zach vit la perplexité dans les yeux du gars, puis regardant plus intensément, il y vit une compassion comme il n'en avait pas vu depuis longtemps.

"Je pars, M. ... l'officier. Ecoutez, je vous remercie pour votre aide. Et je suis désolé. " Les paroles de Zach tremblaient, mais il faisait en sorte que son intention soit évidente. Il était déterminé à partir. Eux aussi, ils ne le voudraient pas sous leur toit maintenant. Au moins, il avait un repas chaud dans le ventre, et il sera damné mais il ne rendra pas les vêtements chauds. Il n'avait qu'à récupérer ses chaussures, et il serait parti. Il pourrait probablement distancer le flic avec une bonne longueur d'avance puisque l'autre homme était debout dans le couloir les pieds nus. Zach baissa les yeux et tenta de le dépasser, mais il fut arrêté par une forte prise sur son bras.

"Maman? A-t-il fait quelque chose? Tu vas bien? " Ben ignora Zach, qui trépignait presque sur ses pieds tout en essayant de desserrer la prise que Ben avait sur son bras, l'anxiété et la panique montèrent à l'intérieur de lui. Il n'avait rien fait à la mère du policier, il ne ferait jamais de mal. Il tirait faiblement sur son bras, mais ce foutu flic avait une prise d’acier.

"Il semble que les parents de Zach l’ait mis à la porte parce qu'il est gay, " répondit-elle. Zach s’éloigna autant qu’il pouvait pour avoir une marge de manÅ“uvre. Soudainement le visage de Ben se tordit de colère. Merde, Zach pensa immédiatement, nous y voilà, et alors que le policier levait une main, Zach se couvrît en vue du coup imminent. Au lieu de cela, le flic posa doucement la main sur son épaule et sembla choisir d'ignorer le fait que Zach avait reculé en arrière de peur.

"Ça arrive souvent, " dit le flic, son visage vide de toute expression, "mais dans cette maison, ce n'est pas un problème. Maman a un fils hétéro, marié et père de deux enfants, et une fille qui a deux petits amis en même temps". Il s'arrêta, le laissant clairement assimiler la première partie "Puis elle m’a moi, son fils, flic et gay. "

"Oh" fut tout ce que Zach put dire, en frottant le bras que Ben avait attrapé pour soulager la douleur.

"Le fait que tu sois gay n’est pas une chose qui pourra affecter ton séjour parmi nous. D’accord? "

Zach se tourna pour regarder la mère de Ben, toujours assise à la table. Elle hocha la tête en accord. C'était étrange. C'était comme un de ses films surréaliste pour filles, qui passait l’après-midi où des gens vraiment beaux étaient gentils avec des jeunes extrêmement seul qui avaient été jetés à la rue. Il cligna des yeux, les yeux s’écarquillant alors qu’il assimilait ce qui venait d’être dit, c’était trop beau pour être vrai, mais d’une certaine façon si réelle.

"Je vais me coucher, Ben. Pourquoi ne resterais-tu pas un moment avec Zach et peut-être lui montrer l'ancienne chambre de Jamie. Il y a des draps propres dans le placard. " Elle se leva gracieusement, plaçant le bol dans l'évier et traversa la pièce pour prendre son fils dans ses bras. "Ellie sera là à deux heure. Elle l’a promis. Alors garde un Å“il sur elle pour moi. "