Once Upon a Christmas Song Read Online Mary Calmes

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance, Novella Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 45
Estimated words: 43920 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 220(@200wpm)___ 176(@250wpm)___ 146(@300wpm)
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People came by, wanting to talk to Lex Luthor, or Benny, or Knock-Knock, Los, and especially Daw. The nicknames were terrible, and I told the first wave of folks that I had no idea who those people were. Later, there were more inquiries at the door, lots of gorgeous men and stunning women, all wanting to know where the superstar was. I squinted, said no one was there but me, and perhaps they had the wrong house. When a woman tried to push by me, I simply stood there and waited.

“Wow, you’re kind of big, aren’t you?” she said, her hand flat on my chest, and then suddenly smiled. “Do you wanna play?”

“I’m very flattered, but no,” I said kindly. “You should perhaps go home and drink some water. You look a bit flushed and dehydrated.”

“Really?” She sounded surprised, and turned to another woman there with her. “Do I look dehydrated to you?”

Her friend nodded. “Yeah, and I can feel how tight my skin is. I think we should both go and have facials and maybe a saline drip at the clinic.”

“Or maybe just some water,” I suggested.

“Yeah,” they both agreed.

It was quiet after that.

I found a panini press, which was even better than frying the ham and cheese melts, and when Dawson came stumbling out around midnight, I asked if he was ready for his sandwich.

“Why didn’t you wake me?” He walked over and wrapped his arms around me. “I don’t want to waste any time you’re here sleeping.”

“Sleeping is a good thing,” I soothed him, pushing his hair out of his face and kissing his forehead. “But now you need to eat.”

Looking around the room, seeing his comatose bandmates, he sighed deeply. “What’d you do to the guys?”

“Just food, and I took away the party favors.”

He nodded, clunking his head against my chest.

“Come sit down.”

“I’ll buy you a car if you feed me,” he whimpered.

“No car needed, just sit down and keep me company.”

It was funny how he sat there watching me make his sandwich.

“You’re supposed to be talking to me,” I informed him. “Tell me everything that’s happening in your life.”

“It’s the same,” he replied, mesmerized by the preparation.

“Why did you stop calling and texting?”

His gaze lifted to mine. “I just…get depressed, and what am I supposed to do? Make you miserable too?”

“Just a two-minute, five-minute check-in to let me know you’re okay,” I told him. “That’s all I need.”

He nodded. “Okay, okay. I’ll really try. But you have to know, you must know, that it has zero to do with how I feel. Never wonder how I feel.”

“I won’t,” I promised. “But I need communication from you, rock star.”

“Not a rock star,” he grumbled, glaring at me. “Just don’t wonder about stupid crap like, is Dawson West in love with me, because yes, I am. When I walked into your crappy club⁠—”

“I’m sorry, what’d you say?”

“Great club, fantastic club, don’t stop making the food,” he groused at me.

I shook my head but continued, using the press and frying an egg in a small pan.

“When I first walked in there, I was like, who the fuck is that?”

Carefully, I moved the ham and three-cheese sandwich off the press, then plated it, flipping the egg once before placing it on top.

“What is that?”

“You need the protein, and this is my take on a Croque Madame. I’m getting really good at making them at home, though I don’t have this groovy machine, just a cast-iron skillet.”

He was gesturing at me to hand over the plate.

“Wait. I need to get out the fruit salad and⁠—”

“Just give it to me,” he threatened, using a weird voice.

I went still, staring at him. “The hell was that?”

“That’s my demon-from-the-pit voice,” he quipped, like his response was completely normal.

“You just sound like you need to cough.”

“Give me the plate, Christopher.”

Chuckling as I handed it over, I was very glad I’d taken a quick nap between the guys falling asleep and him waking up. I’d be dead otherwise. I was on a two-hour time difference, which meant it was two in the morning my time back in NOLA.

Going to the refrigerator, I got out the fruit I’d cut hours ago and brought it over, just as he was starting on the second half of the sandwich I’d made on large thick slices of sourdough bread. I was stunned.

“That was hot.”

He leered at me. “No, you’re hot. But this sandwich is great. Easily the best thing I’ve had in months.”

“All that cheese was like molten lava.”

“Was it?”

“Ohmygod, you probably have third-degree burns in your throat,” I said, watching him wolf it down.

“Can you make me another one?” he asked as he started forking the bite-sized pieces of fruit I’d cut up in the enormous bowl.

“Yes, sir,” I said, starting on it.

“And so you know,” he explained between bites, “when I walked into La Belle Vie for the first time, I thought, it’s nice, it’s very clean, and the vibe was low-key, which you know I like.”


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