
With Tate, Kee can open up about his fears and confusion without ridicule. It proves to be the best decision he’s ever made, and not just because he’s starting to regain his sexual confidence. Instead of going back to his usual type, Kee hooks up with twink Tate Stevens-a fashion-industry professional who works the image hard. His friends say he’s a twunk-a twink who put on muscle and turned into a hunk-but Kee is searching for somewhere to belong. But after his ex-boyfriend hit Kee and called him names, Kee retired from the social scene.īack after a year’s hiatus, Kee still doesn’t know where he fits.

He knows who he used to be-the ignored gay son who chose a blue-collar job just because no one expected it, the submissive bottom who enjoyed large, masculine jocks who put him in his place, the sleek, fashionable twink who partied all night.

From intolerance to confrontations, Liam must learn to overcome his fears-and his father-before he can accept his sexuality and truly love Jay.

When being with Jay causes Liam’s protective instincts to emerge, Liam starts to believe all he knew in life had been a convenient excuse to stay hidden. unless the accident broke something else inside him. But that’s no reason to question his sexuality. He can’t play football anymore either, and that makes him feel like less of a man. With a flair for fashion, overreaction, and an inability to cork his verbal diarrhea, Liam believes drama queen Jay must have a screw loose.Īn accident as a teenager left Liam with a limp and a fear of driving. Jay is vivacious and unabashedly gay-from the tips of his bleached hair to the ends of his polished nails. And Liam believes it, until a chance meeting with James “Jay” Bell turns Liam’s world upside-down. One thing Liam Turner knows for sure is that he's not gay-after all, his father makes it very clear he’ll allow no son of his to be gay.
