A Take Me Out to the Ballgame Story (9) Billy Gustafsen had always been a ballplayer second, and a decent human being first. Sometimes being a nice guy can get a fellow rewarded when he least expects it.
A heavy snow storm leaves a young teenager alone in an isolated cottage after her parents are snowed in at relatives. She plans a fun unsupervised evening but a car runs into her garden wall and an older woman unexpectedly shares her evening. But a mutual attraction leads to some very sexy fun.
This is a nostalgic tale from 1980’s. An era with no cell phones, just Walkmans and mixtapes. Danny Harper, a high school senior and cross-country runner, meets his muse. This is a journey as he navigates desire, team spirit, and the thrill of pushing limits. Expect a mix of steamy encounters, heartfelt camaraderie, and a bittersweet coming-of-age arc.
An unexpected holiday, an accident, a dying man and a fascinating woman with an unusual ability; can Bella change Andrew from being a confirmed bachelor? Oh, and more motorbikes. / (Reviews)
Survivor of a virulent bio-weapon attack gone wrong tries to figure out what to do with himself and how to best survive. He ends up leading an effort to regroup and restart civilization. I know there are a lot of stories out there like this, I've read all or most of them. This is my take on it.
This is the follow-on to the story I did earlier, "Mile High Club - The Reality". As stated there - that ending is the real true ending to the story. This is my fantasy ending - the way I'd have much preferred it to end. But alas, it was not meant to be. If you've read "Mile High Club - The Reality", you can skip to Chapter 2 directly unless you want/need a refresher.
Madeline, unable to stop grieving for her dead husband, boarded a stage coach for the month-long trip to California, where her sister lived. Among the other passengers were two cowboys who seemed to be too friendly with each other. And when a freak accident trapped the young widow with these two men in an old mine, she saw it as her moral duty to heal them of their affliction. The only problem was... they weren't afflicted.