Deck the Palms – An Annabeth Albert Christmas Read Online Annabeth Albert

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 73
Estimated words: 67398 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 337(@200wpm)___ 270(@250wpm)___ 225(@300wpm)
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“Is that too silly for a date surprise? I found it online when I was looking for other restaurant ideas.” Now that we were actually here, a fresh, way bigger wave of doubts hit. We were surrounded by older couples making their way through the lobby, mostly tourists. “And I know it’s not Broadway, but it’s an interactive theater troupe with decent reviews.”

“I love it. Sounds delightful.”

“And I was thinking maybe we can stick around after the show, and you could ask some questions, maybe make some local theater friends.” I tried to keep my tone neutral like I’d only had that thought a moment ago.

“You want me to make theater friends?” Nolan sounded both charmed and slightly confused.

“I want to be your friend too. Okay, more than a friend. But you need to find your people here. Community theater, visiting shows…”

“Merry. Are you trying to keep me from getting bored and homesick?” Nolan stopped outside the ballroom housing the performance, stepping to the side.

“Maybe.” My face scrunched as I rethought this whole plan.

“I’m very touched by this date. I am. And you know me well.” Eyes kind, he patted my arm. “Now that I’m staying, I’ll likely try to find friends beyond our fellow teachers. I’m an extrovert, and I do need the occasional theater fix. But I’ve already found my people here. The school. Cara and Craig. You and the boys. You don’t need to give me another reason not to leave.”

“Oh.” I hadn’t realized that was my intent until he pointed it out, and now I felt rather small and foolish, chest tightening. “I’m trying to trust you’ll stay. It’s hard.”

“I get that.” Nolan pulled me behind a fake palm tree, which afforded a small amount of privacy. “And at first, I don’t think I’d really thought staying through. I figured I’d stay for the term, we’d date, it would all be wonderful.”

“I’m sorry⁠—”

Shaking his head, Nolan continued, “As much as it pains me to admit, the break might have been necessary. Because it wasn’t all wonderful. The rainy season hit in a big way, the stomach bug swept through the school, the roof leaked, the kids were cranky, Cara and Craig needed me less, and you seemed to not need me at all…”

“I’m always going to need you, Nolan. The hard part was admitting it. I don’t want to need anyone.”

“Everyone needs other people, at least some of the time.” Nolan’s tone was reasonable without being a rebuke. “And you also rightfully didn’t want to be my only reason for staying.”

“Yeah.” I studied the garishly green fake palm leaves like they might have the secret code for solving the dinner theater murder. “I’m not sure I’m reason enough for anyone.”

“You know, for someone so smart…” Nolan gazed up at the embossed ceiling. “I spent my whole life in a metro area with millions of men. Cute men, single men, even a few willing to date me, and none, absolutely none, were as wonderful as you. And I’ve never shared this kind of chemistry and connection with anyone. That’s special. You asked me earlier to give you a chance, and that’s a big part of why I’m staying.”

“I feel bad that I can’t offer to go to the city.” A trio of tipsy women tottered down the hall, and I lowered my voice. “My whole life is here, but I’m asking you to make the bigger sacrifice.”

“I want a relationship, not a business arrangement. We’re not going to start out by measuring who does what.” Nolan gave me a stern stare. “And maybe someday, I’ll drag you to New York on a visit. Ryder would love Broadway, but you wouldn’t be Merry if you lived there, or rather, you’d be a very miserable Merry. No one wants that.”

“Yeah.” My voice came out rough because I kind of hated that I couldn’t be something else for Nolan. But the fondness in his eyes and tone both went a long way to making me feel understood.

“And as I was saying, I’ve found other reasons to stay. I’m staying because I want to be the best uncle I can and the kids won’t be little forever. I want to be here when Craig gets put in charge of more of the base because that’s happening. My brother, the future general.”

“You’re already the best uncle on Oahu.” I smiled at him, but Nolan wasn’t done with his list.

“I’m staying because teaching speaks to something deep inside me. I clung to acting as my primary job for so long because I wanted to show my parents and everyone else I could make it.”

“You did though. You managed to create a life for yourself, and you don’t need a line of Tony awards to make your point.”

“Exactly.” Nolan beamed like we were on a game show and I’d supplied the winning answer. “I’m a performer. And I realized I will always be a performer, whether in the classroom or on stage. I can be a performer in New York or Hawaii. I’m a performer, and a new locale doesn’t change that, but it does provide the opportunity for me to make a difference as a teacher.”


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