Finding Love On Christmas Eve
By Devyn Morgan
3/5
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About this ebook
Tracey's back! Fresh from her success in helping her gay friend find the right guy in Finding Love On Black Friday, she's got a new mission. Helping her co-worker, Keith, find love during the holidays pushes her skills to the max...
Keith Barone knows exactly what he wants – his best friend, Mike. There's just one little problem - Mike is straight. Keith fears pursuing his desires will crash and burn in heartache. However, Keith's been hiding his feelings for so long, he's ready to burst.
Masculine jock Mike Evers has a reputation for dating women, but never brings them around to meet his friends. Mike has known for a long time that his best friend likes guys. So what? These days, having a gay friend just proves a guy is secure in his sexuality. Still, when Mike pictures his future, he wonders why Keith remains the one person who always figures in his plans.
Will the truth - and Mike - both come out in time for the two best friends to have a merry Christmas together?
Finding Love On Christmas Eve is a standalone gay romance with explicit scenes and an HEA ending.
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Finding Love On Christmas Eve - Devyn Morgan
Copyright © 2016 by Devyn Morgan
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
***
He only wants one thing for Christmas...
Tracey's back! Fresh from her success in helping her gay friend find the right guy in Finding Love On Black Friday, she's got a new mission. Helping her co-worker, Keith, find love during the holidays pushes her skills to the max...
Keith Barone knows exactly what he wants – his best friend, Mike. There's just one little problem - Mike is straight. Keith fears pursuing his desires will crash and burn in heartache. However, Keith's been hiding his feelings for so long, he's ready to burst.
Masculine jock Mike Evers has a reputation for dating women, but never brings them around to meet his friends. Mike has known for a long time that his best friend likes guys. So what? These days, having a gay friend just proves a guy is secure in his sexuality. Still, when Mike pictures his future, he wonders why Keith remains the one person who always figures in his plans.
Will the truth - and Mike - both come out in time for the two best friends to have a merry Christmas together?
Chapter 1
Keith Barone remembered the first time he realized that he'd fallen in love with his best friend, Mike Evers.
On a cold December day, Keith snuggled alone under a blanket on his couch. He perused a local news site on his tablet. An article about a soup kitchen opening in the city caught his attention.
He scrolled through the story which explained that the soup kitchen desperately needed volunteers. Keith realized that he hadn't done any charity work since his community service graduation requirement six years earlier in his senior year of high school.
He decided to remedy that immediately. He would volunteer to work in the soup kitchen a couple days a week. Of course, such an undertaking would be better if he could talk a friend into doing it with him. Mike came to mind first, as always.
Keith called his best friend whom he'd known since college and proposed the idea. Keith explained his motivation. When I was a kid, my family fell on hard times at one point. A local soup kitchen helped us get through a particularly frigid winter when my parents had to choose between heating the apartment and putting food on the table.
I had no idea,
Mike said. You've never mentioned anything about that before.
I know it's nothing to be ashamed of, but still, it feels weird to talk about. My parents both worked for the same factory. It closed with basically no notice. One day, they were both employed, just barely making ends meet, and the next day – no income at all for our household.
That must have been rough on you.
Especially since it happened right at the beginning of December, not exactly a merry Christmas that year.
I can imagine.
Looking back, I wish I had been easier on my parents. I gave them such a hard time. I couldn't understand why Santa was so stingy! All my friends got everything they wanted. I only wanted one particular thing and I still didn't get it.
What was it?
Oh, God, I haven't thought about this in years. Do you remember that sci-fi TV show about the alien race car drivers?
Of course!
Mike answered. That's all any of the boys talked about in school on Tuesday mornings. If I remember right, it only lasted like half the season.
Yeah. I think it disappeared right after Christmas. But, even though I was so young, I still remember the commercials before Christmas for the toys. There was a remote control replica of the main character's race car. It had flashing lights and all kinds of sound effects like roaring space engines and laser blaster sounds.
How old were you?
About five or six.
Tough age. Just a little too young for the 'sorry, kid, there's no Santa Claus' talk.
What do you mean there's no Santa Claus?
Keith joked with mock horror.
The smile in Mike's voice came through on the phone line. Oops. I was going to wait until you turned thirty before I let you in on that one.
Don't even joke about a gay guy turning thirty. That's worse than learning there's no Santa Claus!
Noted,
Mike replied. Seriously, don't beat yourself up about being a normal little kid who didn't know anything about family finances. I'm sure your parents understood.
Thank you, Mike. You always know the right thing to say to make me feel better.
That's what friends are for.
Keith sat back on the couch. He wished Mike were there right at that moment. Cozying up under the blanket with him. For now, he'd have to be satisfied just hearing the man's soothing voice.
Mike added, Thank you for thinking of me for helping out with you at the new soup kitchen. I'd love to do it.
That's great,
Keith said, not trying to hide the enthusiasm in his voice. Knowing he could count on seeing Mike at least twice a week on a regularly scheduled basis made his heart skip a beat. I didn't know if you would want to do this, but I'm so glad you do.
Mike replied, Doing a good deed and spending time with you? How can I say no to an offer like that?
Mike also went even farther. He worked at a national chain superstore with a grocery department. He got his store to set up a program to donate food to the soup kitchen on an ongoing basis. He also convinced the store to set up a collection box near the automated doors so shoppers could donate canned goods and other non-perishables on their way out of the building.
Mike's cheerful attitude and selfless giving of his time and energies to a project that meant so much to Keith really made an impression. Keith definitely felt many emotions during that initial conversation about the soup kitchen. Not to mention over the subsequent days when Mike put all his plans to benefit the soup kitchen into action.
As the two young men worked side by side on the charity project, Keith's feelings for Mike grew. Admiration. Camaraderie. Deep friendship. However, there was one particular thing which tipped the scales toward love.
Chapter 2
Debra, the soup kitchen administrator, pulled Mike and Keith aside to sit at a table with her one evening after the guests had all cleared out. (Guests
was the term they all used to refer to those who partook of the soup kitchen's food and services.)
Debra adjusted the rather gaudy broach on her green holiday sweater. She seemed to have an endless supply of both broaches and bulky sweaters. None of the volunteers or staff had the heart to point out that what Debra thought was everyday fashionable clothing, everyone else thought was only appropriate for an ugly sweater Christmas party.
In her squeaky, but pleasant voice, Debra said to Mike and Keith, You guys have been doing a great job around here. The guests just love both of you.
The two young men smiled at the compliments.
Debra continued, I know you're both still pretty new to the volunteer social services circuit, but I've been doing it for almost forty years since I graduated from college.
Keith made a mental note of that since he'd always wondered about Debra's age. She'd never offered the information before. Having so many female friends had taught Keith that there were two topics that no man, straight or gay, should initiate when talking to a woman. Never inquire about her age. And never mention that it looked like she might have gained a few pounds!
You can't possibly be old enough to have been in college forty years ago,
Mike remarked aloud.
Keith laughed to himself. Now Mike always knew the right thing to say, no matter who he was speaking with!
Oh, aren't you the sweetest thing?
Debra roared with approval. Anyway, as I was saying, you guys have been devoting so much time and energy to this place. It's wonderful and we all appreciate it. I just want to make sure you don't get compassion fatigue.
Is it contagious?
Keith asked.
Debra laughed as she patted him on the arm. In a manner of speaking. People define it different ways. The way I explain compassion fatigue is when caregivers or workers in a setting like this...
She paused to gesture around the soup kitchen.
Keith watched another volunteer organizing the clean utensils in preparation for the morning meal.
Debra continued, "Get overwhelmed by