Heroes come in all sizes. The best ones come with four legs and a tail. In this series, AF Henley intertwines the love shared between a man and his four-legged bestie with the romantic love two men can share with each other. Sometimes one thing leads to another, and these fur buddies are going to make sure their humans find true love.
Contains the stories:
But by the Grace of Dog: Thom has been struggling with anxiety his whole life but when he finds an "ugly" dog in need, Thom decides it's the ideal friendship for him. The dog immediately befriends the man Thom has been coveting -- his neighbour Justin. With the dog boosting his courage, Thom agrees to let love in. Then a stranger shows up demanding the dog's return, a loss that will take all of Thom's confidence with it.
Gordy's Got a Problem: Living in Toronto can be expensive, but the city has a lot to offer. If only Leo had any energy left to get out there. Gordy is the most attractive and loudest young man that Leo has ever met. When he starts turning on the charm, Leo can't help but wonder why. Together they need to find a home for Gordy's new roommate: a goat who comes with a deathbed promise and unexpected life lessons.
Still Standing: Bryson had a rough start but got lucky with his new life. If only that luck extended to picking the right partner. When Bryson meets Duke, all he wants is to get Duke's sweaty hands on his body. Until he meets Beau, the horse in Duke's care, and finds out what Beau's intended fate is. Enraged, Bryson buys Beau and walks away without looking back. Fate, however, has other plans for all of them.
EXCERPT FROM "But by the Grace of Dog"
"Dude!" Justin stood on the sidewalk in front of Thom's house, mouth half open in an exaggerated expression of pleased surprise. "Is that a dog? It is a dog! Oh, my good gracious, when did you get a dog?" His gaze dropped from Thom to Dog. "Hello, precious boy! How are you? Are you new? Are you a good boy?" He stuck his hand out, already walking towards them, firing questions. "Is he friendly? Can I pat him? Do you have a name, little guy?"
Dog let him get all the way to the porch without reacting, but Thom saw Dog's tail still when Justin reached the first step. With his heartbeat pounding in his ears and a sense of dread gathering around him in a weird, creepy way, Thom did his best to either swallow his tongue in distraction or make it start working so he could voice a warning. Justin never made it to the top step.
It was as if Justin's rise up the stairs and Dog's rise from seated to standing were timed one to the other. By the time Justin lifted his foot to make the final step, hand still out, smile still wide, questions and exclamations still flying, Dog was springing. It seemed to be a happy leap, but Thom didn't know the animal enough to be sure he wasn't trying to take Justin's throat out.
Justin's expression morphed from glee into startled. Dog's tongue fell out, all four paws sprawled out in a Superman stretch. Thom managed a gurgle as the leash yanked him forward. Justin was pushed backwards, Dog followed through, and Thom lurched after the both of them. They all went down hard, Justin onto the walkway, Dog on Justin, Thom on Dog.
With eyes as wide as saucers Thom stared down at Justin. "Oh! Oh ... oh, God. Justin ... oh my, God, I'm sorry. I didn't ... I don't ... he's not ... "
Justin burst out laughing even before Dog began to cover his face with exuberant doggy kisses. He continued laughing as Thom rolled away.
Mortified, regardless of Justin's apparent glee, Thom tugged Dog fruitlessly. "Damn it, Dog! Justin, this is the worst. I'm so, so, so sorry. I had no idea he would do that."
"No, don't be. That was all on me." Justin rested both hands on his stomach, still chuckling and looking up at the sun. "Don't approach strange dogs, Justin," he said, voice high and head shaking. "You're too busy. Dogs like calm. Let them approach you if they want to." He turned to look at Dog who, once pulled into place, had taken a seat quite happily at Thom's side. "My mother used to always tell me that. Today is not the first day I've been knocked off my feet by a new fur pal." He squinted at Thom. "But I have to say, if I meet my demise under the paws of an overzealous doggo, there are certainly worse ways to go."
He rolled to his side and his smile hardened into a grimace. "Ow."
All the blood that had rushed into Thom's face from effort and humiliation tried to make a sudden exit via his feet as Justin stilled in place. Laughing or not, that was a man in pain. Now what was he supposed to do?
Thom reached, "Oh. Oh, no. Are you ...?" He pulled his hand back before it could connect and gripped it into a fist. "... is there ... what should I do?"
"I just landed weird. Tweaked my back a bit," Justin said. He took a breath and then pushed himself up, first to his knees, then a crouch, before trying to straighten up. "Ow. Ow. Yep, that's tender." He put both hands on his lower back. "You think I can maybe just sit here? On your step for a minute?"
No! was Thom's first thought, though at that point Thom could hardly deny him. "Yes, of course. Yes, sure. Um ..." He reached behind his neck and began to tug at his shoulder muscles. Forget worst shopping trip ever, this was the worst day ever.
Justin tilted his head to give Thom a look. "Don't worry, I won't make you touch me or anything."
"I ... " Thom frowned. "Sorry?"
"It's okay, I know. You don't really like me too much. I promise I appear more overbearing than I actually am. For me, meeting people tends to work out like the run in I just had with your pupster. I'm in such a rush to say hi and make a new friend that I freak people out."
"Wait," Thom shook his head. He put out his hand, traffic-cop style, as if that might somehow stop Justin from continuing. "No. It's not ... I mean, it's not you. No."
Justin stepped. He winced. "Your porch suddenly seems to be eight miles away." Rather than turn towards Thom, Justin side-eyed him. "So, you don't run away from me because I'm freaking you out?"
Thom blew a breath that was half air, half sound. "No." He paused. He looked down at Dog. Dog blew out his own air-cough. "Yes? Kind of?"
"I thought so --"
"But that's because of me, not you," Thom hurried to add.