"Weld will do
The Handyman
, Nick, but not with your name attached. They have an affiliated imprint, Flescher, that handles that sort of book. It's a good book. Just not one to be put out in your name, or by Weld."
"I'm not ashamed of it, Parker. You of all book editors should be open to it." Parker Parnell was my editor at the Weld publishing house. I pressed my forehead to the windowpane and looked down into the front yard of my house on a quiet street in Shepherdstown, Maryland, a small university town on the Potomac River a long way upstream from the hustle and bustle of the nation's capital. I was watching hunky, black Ev Jones mowing my lawn shirtless. The vibrations coming off the lawnmower were making the glass of the windowpane shimmer and I felt close to Ev by feeling the vibrations his mower was causing. Ev revved my engines. I had fantasies of Ev driving me. His muscular ebony torso glistened in the dappled sun coming through the trees on the North Mill Street lawnsâthe torso of a black Adonis.
"It's not the book, Nick. I like it. Howard likes it. The editor at Flescher loved it. He's jumping at the chance to publish it. A historical about subsequent generations in a small New England harbor town from founding to the present and the secrets they keep. The secrets being on the relations between the men of the town, what's not to like?"
"The gay male threads running through it? That the action is graphic?" I asked, a bit amused. I was only paying half attention to him because I was mesmerized by the graceful dance of the big, black buck across my lawn. We were just a couple of blocks over from Shepherd University, where I taught English composition, but we could have been in any small, sleepy town that was wealthy when these Victorian houses were erected at the turn of the twentieth century. This town could be just like the town of
The Handyman
, Shernhaven, and the male love secrets it kept.
"No, we love that, but . . . why did you submit the manuscript under a pseudonym, Nick? Why did you send it to us under the name of G. P. Hardd?"
"Oh, I don't know," I answered. Ev was noticing that I was watching him from an upstairs window. I drew myself up so he could get a real good look. Smiling, he waved and turned to cut a row toward the street and away from the house. "I think I wanted it to be judged completely on its own and not on my reputation. It's quite a departure from what I usually write."
"Bingo. There you have it. Even you sensed that it wasn't something that would go over well with your name attached."
"That's not what I meant," I flared up, turning to the man who had shepherded my books through the Weld production process for the past five yearsâfive years and six books. We couldn't be any more different in looksâParker pushing fifty; tall, trim, and elegant; wavy gray hair, patrician, with an aquiline nose and the look of a professor, and me, actually a professor, not so tall, a bit stocky, dark and, some said, sultry. Always the mischievous look. But we'd melded well as a pair. I knew I should be listening more closely to him, but I had more books in my mind like
The Handyman
and I wanted to get them written and published. I wanted them published as well as my other books had been.
"I don't think you realize what you mean, Nick. You don't have to choose between this book and your mainstream literary historicals. You can do both, although we're running up on the first manuscript submission date for
Alton's Folly
. I hope you have that in hand."
I didn't want to go there. All I could think of once I'd gotten the Shernhaven epic out of my system was a D.C. vice cop trapped by his own desire for young men series my brain was spinning, and the sex. I wanted to be graphicâhonest, sweaty fucking. No, the full manuscript draft of
Alton's Folly
was
not
just about ready.
"You can do both, Nick, and Weld will publish and promote bothâbut in different lanes. What you were acknowledging when you sent the manuscript for
The Handyman
in under a pen name was that your audience for Nick Hampton books wouldn't accept a graphic gay male genre from you. You knew that yourself; you just didn't realize you knew it. We'll do bothâjust separately. Separate publisher imprints and separate author names."
"Why do you bring this up now and here?" I asked. I looked down at the lawn. Ev would be finished mowing soon. He usually came in for a beer and a spell after doing my lawn. Parker Parnell had arrived unexpectedly. I didn't want him here when Ev came inâand I definitely wanted Ev to come in.
"You came all the way down from New York to tell me I am two authors now, with two different publishers?"
"Not just that, although I wanted to get that settled. We'll do separate contracts too. We can legally set it up that the copyright will be in the G. P. Hardd name for
The Handyman
too but that it will trace back to youâjust in a very close-hold way. We don't want to unsettle the fan base you've already established with your previous books. But that settled . . . it is