half-life banner

Title: Half-Life
Author: Gregory L. Norris

Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: January 21, 2019
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 14300
Genre: Paranormal, LGBT, witches, zombies, gay, magic

Add to Goodreads

Synopsis

Whitney Abbott travels to the seaside Maine town of Window to begin a new life in his uncleโ€™s home. Robert Abbott is well-to-do and owns several high-end restaurants. Whitney will start at the bottom and work his way up at the flagship.

But from the moment Whitney exits his car in the drive of the big, brooding house, he senses the sinister atmosphere surrounding his relations.

His cousin November, princess of the estate, feigns joy at having Whitney in town. And Novemberโ€™s handsome athlete boyfriend, Griffin, is an enigma. Soon after his arrival, Griffin warns Whitney to leave.

With nowhere to goโ€”and certain that his attraction to Griffin goes both waysโ€”Whitney is drawn into Novemberโ€™s malevolent plans. Plans that will pit Whitney against dark supernatural forces in order to save both his and Griffinโ€™s lives.

Giveaway

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Exclusive Excerpt

Half-Life Gregory L. Norris ยฉ 2019 All Rights Reserved

I hit the switch. The familiar cold, white glare from the overhead lights rained across the kitchen, prep station, and the industrial dishwasher, scenes of so many long shifts and leg cramps. The light did little to remove the greater darkness that hung over the back of my uncleโ€™s restaurant. The gloom swirling outside had followed me into Abbottโ€™s Table, one of your finer dining establishments along this part of Maineโ€™s Rocky Headlands. Rain pelted the oblong window above the prep-station sink, where Iโ€™d cleaned and breaded untold thousands of shrimp. The ghostly aroma of garlic, lobster, and grilled meat hung over the place. Cloying, with an edge of lemon cleaner.

โ€œHello?โ€ I called.

My heart hammered against my ribcage. I imagined my balls shriveling up against the root of my dick. An icy finger stroked my spine.

โ€œAnyone here? Itโ€™s me, Whitney.โ€

Identifying myself made the creeping sensation even worse. The darkness had pursued me, constantly there at the periphery hiding in shadowy corners. Here in my uncleโ€™s flagship restaurant after hours, the unwanted attention from sinister powers was more tangible, more intimate. I choked down a heavy swallow to find my mouth had gone completely dry.

โ€œGriffin, itโ€™s me. I saw your truck in the lot,โ€ I said, aware of how my lips risked a smile at the mention of his name. Griffin. My heart raced for different reasons after that. โ€œGriff?โ€

I checked the kitchenโ€”empty. Willing my legs forward, I pushed past the rightward pair of swivel doors, hearing the awful voice of the restaurantโ€™s manager, Marc with a cโ€”Always keep to the right, thatโ€™s how itโ€™s done at Abbottโ€™s Table. The dining room sat dark and empty, chairs stacked upside down over tabletops, the floors swept, mopped, and shiny under the green glow of the exit lights.

I checked the bar and both of the public heads, finding the same result: no Griffin. My pulse continued its mad speed. Danger juice soured in my bloodstream. His truck in the far corner of the Abbottโ€™s Table parking lot could have meant a hundred different things on any other nightโ€”Griffin out having fun with some of his hockey league buddies, late fun, guy stuff. I knew he wasnโ€™t with the Ice Queen. No, after what had happened and the kiss that followed, Griffin wouldnโ€™t have gone back to confront my cousin, November Abbott.

That kissโ€ฆ

For a wonderful instant, the storm cloud dissolved, and I was in my car again, his big hand cupping my cheek, his mouth crushed over mine, claiming me as his and offering me all he had to give in return. I remembered the warm scent of pinesap, of Griffinโ€™s magnificent body, the swell of his erection pressing against me as we kissed, and the certainty that what we both felt, while undeniably physical, went past simple attraction. Dare I again think it? Love.

I loved Griffin, and he loved me.

The rain pounding the world outside the restaurantโ€™s windows unleashed eerie silver dapples across the dining room. I stood pondering, waiting for a sound, a sign. When none came, I turned and hastened back in the direction of the kitchen exit.

โ€œWhitneyโ€ฆโ€

I dug in my sneaker treads on the rubber mat set between the kitchen and rear door, at first thinking Iโ€™d hallucinated Griffinโ€™s voice. But then I faced the direction of the sound and found myself staring at the one corner of the restaurant I hadnโ€™t thought to search: the walk-in refrigerator and freezer.

Reaching the big stainless-steel door seemed to take longer than the actual few seconds. I tugged on the latch. The door resisted, as though someone was pulling at the same time from the other side. The inner voice that had told me a week earlier to turn around, to not travel north to the town of Window, Maine, was back, urging me to get out. Just leave. Run!

I drew in a breath, smelling the rain, the kitchenโ€™s funk, and the trace of clean, athletic sweat from the T-shirt I woreโ€”Griffinโ€™s sweat, and Griffinโ€™s shirt, borrowed on an afternoon that now felt part of another decade. I pulled harder. The door released. A gust of cold, foggy air billowed out. The front part of the walk-in was already lit up from inside, even though the light switch was off. I pushed through the long plastic strips of the freezer curtain and into the wide space that housed expensive cuts of tomahawk steaks, bins of heirloom tomatoes and other fresh produce from the local farmerโ€™s market, and, I discovered, one sacrificial altar.

I froze, my eyes recording detailsโ€”the waxy candles, three, burning around the body on the folding table, the sprigs of Datura stramonium Devilโ€™s Snare flowers draped around the nude manโ€™s corpse laid out in a funeral pose. I recognized the patch of hairy, athletic lower leg, upon which a winged lion had been inked.

โ€œGriffin,โ€ I gasped.

A breeze that hadnโ€™t been there the previous second whispered through the walk-in, stirring the leaves of bunches of basil, parsley, and other fresh herbs. My paralysis broke. I moved beside the table, my eyes wide, not blinking. Griffin, naked, his hands folded over his midriff. Even as I reached my trembling fingers toward his and the voice in my head screamed for me to runโ€”run from the restaurant, from Window, Maine, and, above all else, from Griffinโ€”my eyes recorded the pallor of his skin. Griffinโ€™s flesh was gray in the flickering candlelight.

My hand covered his. A chill raced up my fingertips. He was icy to the touch. No, impossibleโ€”hours before, in that other era, heโ€™d held me, kissed me. And I had seen proof of our tomorrow together even as the storm clouds raced over our heads. Griffin had pledged his love and promised to return.

I glanced at Griffinโ€™s big jock feetโ€”still sexy despite their grayness, up his legs, past his junk, and all the way to his eyes, clamped shut. I gripped his hands, the fingers interlaced in prayer, and squeezed.

โ€œGriffin!โ€

The dead manโ€™s eyes shot open. Gone was their beyond-blue colorโ€”what Iโ€™d come to think of as twin sapphire gemstones. What focused upon me now was a pair of predatorโ€™s eyes with a wolfโ€™s silver sharpness. The hands beneath my fingers abandoned their illusion of prayer and seized hold of my arm. I shrieked, attempting to pull away. Right before the corpseโ€™s legs swung out and the altar collapsed, toppling candles, I saw Griffinโ€™s mouth open. He licked his lips. His teeth chattered. The dead man salivated hungrily.

And then his weight spilled on top of me, and he was snapping at my throat.

Purchase

NineStar Press | Amazon | Smashwords | Barnes & Noble | Kobo

Meet the Author

Raised on a healthy diet of creature double features and classic SF television, Gregory L. Norris is a full-time professional writer, with work appearing in numerous short story anthologies, national magazines, novels, the occasional TV episode, and, so far, one produced feature film (Brutal Colors, which debuted on Amazon Prime January 2016).

A former feature writer and columnist at Sci-Fi, the official magazine of the Sci-Fi Channel (before all those ridiculous Ys invaded), he once worked as a screenwriter on two episodes of Paramountโ€™s modern classic, Star Trek: Voyager. Two of his paranormal novels (written under my rom-de-plume, Jo Atkinson) were published by Home Shopping Network as part of their โ€œEscape With Romanceโ€ line โ€” the first time HSN has offered novels to their global customer base. He judged the 2012 Lambda Awards in the SF/F/H category. Three times now, his stories have notched Honorable Mentions in Ellen Datlowโ€™s Best-of books.

In May 2016, he travelled to Hollywood to accept HM in the Roswell Awards in Short SF Writing. His story โ€œDrowningโ€ appears in the Italian anthology THE BEAUTY OF DEATH 2, alongside tales by none other than Peter Straub and Clive Barker.

Follow his literary adventures at http://www.gregorylnorris.blogspot.com.

Facebook | Twitter


Blog Button 2


Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.