Out in the Field by Lane Hayes
Title: Out in the Field
Series: Out in College #4
Author: Lane Hayes
Publisher: Lane Hayes
Release Date: July 11
Heat Level: 4 - Lots of Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 51K
Genre: Romance, New Adult, College, Coming Out, Baseball, New Adult, Humor, Opposites
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Synopsis
Max Maldonado loves baseball. He knows playing first base at a private college probably won’t get him to the big leagues, but he doesn’t mind. He loves the game and his teammates. If he has to stay in the closet until he graduates, that’s okay. Baseball comes first. Relationships are complicated anyway. And after his recent messy breakup, Max prefers to keep things simple.Phoenix Bell is a fabulous theater geek. He’s excited about his recent transfer to a new school with an elite liberal arts program. Life has been on hold for a while, but this opportunity feels like the fresh start he was hoping for when he moved to California. And the chance reunion with the hot closeted jock is an unexpected surprise. The two men have nothing in common and their timing couldn’t be worse. However, when their unconventional alliance blossoms into friendship and perhaps something more, it may be time to make some hard decisions. And perhaps risk it all…out in the field.
Excerpt
We were quiet for a moment. We shared
his drink in silence as occasional bits of conversation and laughter from the
party drifted our way. We were far enough from the action that the excess noise
didn’t penetrate our cocoon. Just a couple of strangers in the dark again,
minus the club music and lights and unrealistic hopes from the first time. I
didn’t know about Phoenix, but this felt cathartic somehow. Like a fresh start.
“What else is going on? You look sad. It’s
not me, is it?” I asked with a comedic expression.
He chuckled. “No. This is nice. I just—I
tend to get a little blue on the night of the final performance. The
anticlimactic feeling sucks, but it’s the nature of the beast. The cycle of
slowly learning lines and getting to know your castmates is followed by long
rehearsals where everything starts to gel. The excitement builds before the
shows and everyone gets better and better and then…<em>boom</em>!
It’s over. All that momentum and all the joy that comes from being part of
something special disappears overnight. I’m gonna wake up in the morning back
at square one.”
“That’s depressing.”
“Thus the vodka.” Phoenix raised his cup
and took a sip. He set it between us before flashing a lopsided smile my way.
“It’s just part of the process. I’ve been doing some version of this for years.
You’d think I’d be better at transitioning from high to low.”
“Hmm. It’s kinda the same in baseball.
When we start in January, most of the guys are out of shape and out of sync. We
have to get used to a new crew and figure out how to work together. By the time
our season ends in May, we’re a well-oiled machine. I’m not always sad when
it’s over. Sometimes I really need the break. But by June, I miss it. The best
thing to do is to stay in the game as much as possible. Play, watch, read
stats. There’s probably a theater equivalent.”
“Sure. It’s called ‘get a new part.’ I’m
already memorizing the script for the spring production at the Arts Center.
They’re doing <em>Chicago</em>. God, I love that show. So many
juicy roles. ‘And all that jazz,’ ” he sang that last line, then took
another drink and handed his cup to me for no particular reason.
I widened my legs and propped my elbows
on my knees. His gaze dipped briefly to my crotch before he licked his lips and
glanced away.
“Who do you want to be?” I asked. “I
mean…in the play.”
“In a perfect world, I’d be Roxie. But…I
have a dick, so I’ll have to audition for Billy and pretend not to be crushed
when they give me the role of prison guard or mafia henchman number two.”
“Why can’t you be Billy?” I asked before
draining the vodka cocktail.
“I don’t have the right look. You’d
actually be a perfect Billy. Have you ever thought about acting?”
“Me?” I pointed at my chest
incredulously. “Fuck, no.”
“Why so adamant? It’s fun.”
“Theater stuff just isn’t my thing. I
play baseball.”
“You can’t do both?”
“Nope. Not me. And I’m not interested
anyway.”
He sighed dramatically. “Well…you were a
good fantasy while you lasted.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” I asked
with a faux scowl.
“Just what you think it means. I know
close to nothing about you except that you’re a decent kisser and—”
“Decent?” Now the scowl was real.
“Okay, better than decent. You were
amazing. A real-life Prince Charming. But we can be friends now and—”
“I don’t want to be your friend,” I
intercepted.
“Why not?”
“ ’Cause I like you.”
“That makes no sense.”
“Yeah, it does. I—” I hesitated for half
a second before crashing my mouth over his.
And damn, kissing Phoenix was better
than I remembered. I caressed his jaw tenderly before tilting my head to deepen
the connection. I didn’t want to overwhelm him, but damn, it took everything I
had not to put my hands all over him. I licked the corner of his mouth and
groaned. He tasted sweet—like cherries or something. That had to be his lip
gloss, I mused before driving my tongue inside.
Phoenix didn’t seem to mind. He moaned
when I cupped his neck and tilted my head slightly to soften the connection. I
flicked my tongue at the corner of his mouth before biting his bottom lip and
pulling away. The kiss was sweet but much too short. And yeah, I was incredibly
impressed with my restraint, but I couldn’t afford to start something we’d both
regret later. Phoenix wasn’t a stranger anymore. He was a fellow student who
knew my biggest secret. I should have been more concerned with resetting
boundaries and moving on. But it didn’t feel that simple.
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