MIAMI PIRANHAS SERIES

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playing dirty - playing for keeps - playing the player

playing by the rules - winning the season - playing deep

Maybe Tristan was used to tying men into knots, effortlessly, without even meaning to.

He’d certainly done it to Wade.

“You know what I mean,” Wade stuttered out. Never hating more that he was so bad at this.

Of course, what would happen if he was good at the whole flirting, being-attractive, being-irresistible kind of thing?

Absolutely fucking nothing.

All Wade Lewis wants during rookie preseason camp is to play great football and to make it to the final fifty three man roster.

He absolutely does not want Tristan Nicholson.

His complete and total opposite.

His teammate.

His competition.

And his roommate.

During the day, Tristan unexpectedly proves to be helpful on and off the field, but at night, when the lights go out, Tristan also becomes the only man he can’t resist.

First he’s a friend, then astonishingly, he becomes a lover.

And then he becomes the last thing Wade ever expected: everything.

Previously published in the Your Book Boyfriend’s Boyfriend giveaway, this version has only been lightly edited and the continuity errors fixed.


“So you thought you could push me, teach me a lesson, huh?”

“No. No. I want . . .” Sebastian took a step closer, and Beau’s breath clogged in his throat. He told himself firmly that he would not reach out and press a palm to Sebastian’s bare chest.

“What I want,” Beau started over, “is for this to be mutually beneficial for both of us. You want to keep playing. We want you to keep playing.”

Sebastian’s lip curled. “Oh, you’re two regular do-gooders.”

Sebastian Howard is the best damn cornerback in the NFL.

Or at least he was.

Age and injuries have taken a toll, and while most people have written him off, Sebastian isn’t ready to acknowledge that at only thirty-two, he’s already in the twilight of his career.

He signs with the Miami Piranhas intending to prove everyone wrong.

Only to realize that the head coach’s son, out-and-proud Beau Dawson, doesn’t believe he can.

Beau is infuriating but brilliant, and when he offers to help him on the field, Sebastian wants to say yes, but there’s one thing stopping him: the unexpected, inconvenient, and all-consuming crush he doesn’t want to have on Beau.

But Beau isn’t interested in playing it safe, with football or with anything else, and soon they’re embroiled in a hot—and secret—affair that would finish Sebastian’s career if Coach Dawson found out.

As Sebastian falls harder for Beau, he begins to realize that actually the worst thing in the world isn’t getting benched, but losing the man he loves.


It was almost normal now, to let his gaze drift down, to see the way Logan’s muscles bunched and flexed as he strode around the room.

That, Dylan knew, was not something straight guys noticed about their friends.

They wouldn’t want to do more than just look. They wouldn’t want to touch, like he did.

Center Logan Banks didn’t come to Miami looking for a best friend.

He came for football and for a chance at freedom—the freedom to live out of the closet.

But after a water main break, he lands an unexpected roommate, the new Piranhas kicker, Dylan Leonard. Between practices, games, and too many late nights on the couch, a best friend is exactly what he gets.

When Logan’s past rears its ugly head and threatens to destroy the freedom he’s hoped for, Dylan becomes more than just a friend. He becomes a lifeline.

But then their friendship gets incorrectly labeled as something more, and Dylan shocks Logan by suggesting they play along with a fake relationship.

Logan knows it’s off limits to fall in love with Dylan. He’s supposed to be straight, he’s his best friend, his roommate, and his teammate. But the closer they grow, and the more he and Dylan fake falling in love, the more real it feels.

The more real Logan wants it to be.

Making a play for love is the biggest risk he’s ever taken, but he wants it all and he wants it with Dylan.


“I am not your person,” Davis hissed under his breath, except that he was.

They were each other’s person.

If you wanted to screw your person ten ways from Sunday and also cuddle with them and marry them and play football with them for the rest of your lives.

Ex-quarterback Davis Abernathy knows he’s on his last chance.

If he strikes out as Paxton Kelly’s coach, nobody else is going to call him. Not to get back on the field, and not to stand on the sidelines.

He’s got a lot to teach Pax, and as a second-year quarterback, Pax has a lot to learn. But Davis doesn’t anticipate the irresistible way they’ll be drawn together from their first meeting. He never could have predicted such a fierce and uncontrollable yearning—or that Pax would feel the same.

It should be easy to remember rules aren’t meant to be broken, and certain lines aren’t meant to be crossed, but the only thing that’s easy is falling totally, completely in love with Pax.

As Davis falls harder, Pax succeeding becomes just as important—and maybe more so—than resurrecting his own career. If he messes this up, his last chance isn’t all he’ll be sacrificing.

What he should be is focused on being the perfect mentor. But what he wants is Pax in his bed, Pax in his life, and more impossibly, to win Pax’s heart forever.


“I told you there was no room in football for queer relationships. And you came here and proved me wrong. One couple at a time.”

Asa stared at him, eyes wide. The hair on Scott’s arm rose, the silence becoming thick with all the things they weren’t saying.

I still want you. I want you, more than anything else. Nothing is more important to me than you.

Coach Asa Dawson has fallen wildly in love only twice in his life.

First with football.

Then with Scott Callaway.

But Scott isn’t just the one who got away.

He’s the one person—the one man—Asa hoped might finally show him how all-consuming passion could be.

Instead, fate (and football) intervened and they never got the chance to explore their attraction. Their friendship ended in ruins, Scott left, and Asa’s been torn between hating him and loving him for the last seven years.

Asa doesn’t think he’ll ever see him again, but when his bad habits catch up to him and he doesn’t have a choice but to accept help, he’s horrified—and exhilarated—to learn Scott’s been hired to assist him.

With the final stretch of the Piranhas season falling during the holidays, maybe what Asa and Scott have needed this whole time was a little Christmas magic to remind them the most important job isn’t to win the season—but to finally win each other’s hearts.


Kenyon pressed against him again, chest to chest, thigh to thigh, and Julian felt the touch resonate through him. Trembled, against his will.

“See,” Kenyon said softly, “even now, when you’re still being your prickly self, I absolutely love it. I shouldn’t. I should tell you to fuck off. I’m humiliated, and turned on, somehow, impossibly, at the exact same goddamn time. I wish someone would explain that to me.”

Kenyon Ellis knows getting involved with Julian Anderson is an enormous mistake—but from the very first night, he finds him annoying, intriguing and ultimately, irresistible.

One, Kenyon is a player, and Julian is a reporter, so hooking up with him, no matter how spectacular the nights are, is a terrible idea.

Two, he’s falling for him, even if Julian continues to be prickly and impossible. But every time Julian’s walls shift, Kenyon sees the real man behind the attitude, and he only wants more.

Three, between the Piranhas and the charity work he’s committed to, Kenyon really doesn’t have the time for a relationship—but a relationship with Julian turns out to be exactly what he wants.

Maybe even exactly what he needs.

But when Julian starts calling out his performance on the field, the last thing Kenyon expects is to feel betrayed. But is it betrayal? Or does Julian simply see something in Kenyon he’s lost along the way?

The answer leads him not only to love, but to the biggest crossroads of his life.