Secrets on a Train

Release Day: Secrets on a Train

Wohoo, today is release day for Secrets on a Train, my short, sugary (as in real sugar, not fluffy sweetness), flirty, meet-cute story about two strangers who meet in a silent car on the train on their daily commute to work. How do you even flirt with someone when you’re not allowed to talk and deliver your best line (along the lines of How you doin?)?

It turns out that as long as you have pen and paper, you’re fine. Take Runar and Valentin’s word for it.

It’s the fountain pens that capture Valentin’s attention on the morning commute, not the perfectly imperfect man who spends his train rides using them. Not his pinstriped suits, his chin-length hair, or his perpetually raised eyebrow. But one morning when the man strikes up a written conversation, Valentin gives up all pretense. It’s not just the pens. It’s the man. Runar.

The conversations continue, and the men get to know each other better, sharing secrets they’ve never told another soul. The connection is powerful, growing stronger with every encounter, every scribbled conversation, every scorching look. But can secrets shared on a train be enough to build a forever?

M/M contemporary / 9889 words

I loved the flirting!

Pre-release review from Xtreme Delusions

Excerpt:

That purple ink. I can’t get over it. So far, he’s only used black or blue ink, serious colors to go with a serious-looking man, making his handwriting almost ominous. But the purple ink softens the sharp edges of his writing—turning the angry-looking slashes into swoops and swirls—and of the man himself.

I grab my phone off the table and tap out a question. What’s up with the purple ink?

He draws a big question mark on the paper, but his quirked eyebrow already asked the question.

It seems so…bubbly. You don’t give me a bubbly impression, so it surprised me.

Bubbly?

I nod.

Ink can be bubbly? The corners of his mouth twitch, as though he’s holding back a smile.

Today’s pen is as sleek as a samurai sword. Your usual black slashes would be more in style.

His eyes crinkle. You’re keeping track of my pens?

I nod. You haven’t used the same one twice since I started sitting across from you.

My admission—revealing that I’ve watched him every day for weeks—could’ve, should’ve, made him wary of me. Scared him even. But nothing in his demeanor suggests that’s the case. Instead, he relaxes back into his seat, crossing his legs over the knees, brushing out invisible wrinkles of his already immaculate suit, smirking as he catches my gaze following his every movement. He wiggles his foot, smirk widening as he gets the desired effect of my complete attention.

I tear my gaze away to ask him another question. How many fountain pens do you own?

He slides his calf down his shin, slowly. When his foot hits the floor, he lets his knees fall open and his hands land on his thighs. He might as well have drawn a huge arrow pointing at his dick and written LOOK THIS WAY! with his irresistible purple ink.

So I oblige him. I look at his long legs, his powerful thighs that not even the fabric of his pants can hide. And I look at his bulge, embraced and emboldened by pinstripes. Tantalizing, promising hidden wonders, making me want to fall on my knees and bury my face in the V of his legs and inhale him. Ingest him.

I run a trembling hand through my hair and let my eyes wander up his body and meet his gaze.

He leans forward to pick up the pen, his eyes never leaving me. More than fifty, he writes without looking, his words veering off the lines. I have to read it three times before understanding.

Oh right. Fountain pens.

Why that many?

I inherited my grandfather’s collection. He always said that a true gentleman needs a pen for every occasion.

And is bright purple ink a suitable color for a true gentleman?

Who said I was a gentleman? His dark eyes burn into me, threatening to set me on fire, and I grab my coffee and drink down a huge gulp to stop myself from licking my lips or doing something equally embarrassing.

My mistake, I type on my phone when I’m sure my hands won’t tremble.

I’m glad I picked the purple. Caught your attention. I want to write “everything about you catches my attention,” but instead, I take another drink of coffee, our gazes locked over the rim of the paper cup, clashing, vying for dominance, and when Runar shifts on his seat and smooths his pant legs with trembling hands, I can barely stop myself from making a victorious fist bump in the air, happy I’m not the only one affected by whatever’s going on between us.  

Coming Soon, Secrets on a Train

Secrets on a Train – available for pre-order

Now that I have an Evil Day Job (it’s only evil because it steals writing time from me, other than that, it’s perfectly fine 🙂 ) I commute to work. My husband drives me to the train station, and I take the train from there to Helsingborg, where my office is located. I spend 35-ish minutes on the train, and most of the time, I sit here:

This four-seater is located in the silent compartment on the train, and most of the time, it’s free when I board the train, so I can snag it before everyone else climbs on board. I want to avoid listening to other people’s conversation that early in the morning; I just want peace and quiet.

And Valentin and Runar in Secrets on a Train are the same, so it’s in the silent compartment of the train they meet. And the four-seater in the picture above is where I imagine most of the story is taking place.

It’s a short (app 9900 words) flirty story with two strangers who meet in the silent car and converse by writing on paper, or in the notes app on the phone. I’m calling it a modern epistolary story since most of the MCs’ conversation is written, even if they’re sitting across from each other on a train.

Does that sound like something you’d be interested in? If yes, it’s now up for pre-order at JMS Books.

It’s the fountain pens that capture Valentin’s attention on the morning commute, not the perfectly imperfect man who spends his train rides using them. Not his pinstriped suits, his chin-length hair, or his perpetually raised eyebrow. But one morning when the man strikes up a written conversation, Valentin gives up all pretense. It’s not just the pens. It’s the man. Runar.

The conversations continue, and the men get to know each other better, sharing secrets they’ve never told another soul. The connection is powerful, growing stronger with every encounter, every scribbled conversation, every scorching look. But can secrets shared on a train be enough to build a forever?

M/M contemporary / 9889 words

Coming on February 5

Nell's WIP, Secrets on a Train

Fountain Pen Day: Excerpt From My WIP

Honey, did you know today is Fountain Pen Day? the hubby asked earlier. I didn’t know, but I immediately asked him if he’d bought me another fountain pen to celebrate, but he got veeeeery busy all of a sudden so I guess the answer is no. 😁

But it sparked an idea for a blog post (even if my friend Holly Day usually is the one who’s celebrating all these weird days): I’m currently 7000 words or so into a story called Secrets on a Train for a Sugar or Spice submission call for my publisher, and there are a lot of fountain pens in that story. You know the old saying write what you know? Yeah, I took that and ran with it, so fountain pens. Lots and lots of them.

And so I thought you might like an excerpt? Keep in mind that it’s unedited and unfinished.

Excerpt:

Then he scrunches his eyebrows together. “No sugar-slush today?”

My frown returns, and I shake my head. “No time. I overslept.”

“Sit tight, I’ll be right back.”

I watch him disappear down the aisle, past the compartments, out of sight, as I shrug out of my coat and sit. He’s not gone for long; he returns carrying two cups of takeaway coffee and he sets the bigger one in front of me. With his lip curled up, he reaches into the pocket of his jacket and pulls out a handful of sugar packets.

“I don’t know how many you need, so a grabbed a bunch.”

I count them, and say, “Seven is a bit excessive, even for me.”

“Keep the rest. It can be your emergency supply.”

“It’s very thoughtful of you.” I grin, tear open three of the packets, and dump them into my coffee. He didn’t bring a spoon, so I swirl the cup around, hoping that the sugar will dissolve quickly. Then I gulp down two huge swallows, burning the roof of my mouth and my tongue, not caring one bit now that I finally have coffee. “Thank you,” I say again. “You’re a life savior.”

“You sure you don’t need more sugar?” he asks, his voice rumbling its way through me until every cell in my body resonate with it.

“Nah. I’m sweet enough as it is.” As soon as the stupidity is out of my mouth, I groan. “Can I take it back?”

Nick chuckles and shakes his head. “I’m afraid not. Besides, it’s true.”

“It’s not. I’m not sweet.”

“Oh, come on. You almost cried when I showed you the animal pictures yesterday. And you’ve brought me coffee for no reason the last two days. If that’s not sweet, I don’t know what is.”

I harrumph.

“Besides. I like sweet.” He takes a sip from his coffee.

“Oh?” I grab one of the sugar packets. “You want one?”

He wrinkles his nose. “Sugar in coffee is not sweet. It’s an abomination.”

“I could agree with you but then we’d both be wrong.”

He throws his head back and laughs, a dark, throaty sound. It rasps against my skin, finds its way into my belly, pools between my hips. God, I thought his voice affected me, but his laughter is a whole new level. I want to hear more of it.

“Where’s your pen?” I ask instead of jumping over the table and curling up in his lap like I really want to do.

“Do you have a fountain pen fetish or something?” He smirks.

“I didn’t until I met you.” I make a gimme motion with my fingers. “Come on. Show it to me.”

He nods and reaches into his inner pocket. “It was my grandfather’s favorite. The first time he used it was when he signed his marriage certificate, and since he and Gramma had a long, happy life together, he referred to it as his lucky pen.” Nick holds it out for me to see, his touch careful and affectionate. It’s a humble metal pen in a matte silver color with no frills. Just straight lines and functionality, a scratched surface that tells the story of a loved writing instrument that’s been in frequent use.

“Thank you for showing it to me. It’s my favorite, too.”

“Why?”

“Because I love the backstory. I love how much you love it.”