Thicker Than Bone
By
Matthew J. Metzger
Length of Book: 85,000 words
Genre: gay romance, erotica,
interracial. Warning for strong racist/homophobic language used by
antagonist
Author Bio:
Matthew J. Metzger is a British author
currently living, working and writing near Bristol in the south-west
of England. He is both asexual and transgender, and seeks out the
loud characters, rough stories, and quirky personalities that explore
the rich diversity of the QUILTBAG world. He writes both adult and
young adult novels, covering topics from mental illness to
ill-advised crushes, and particularly enjoys writing about universal
issues from the QUILTBAG perspective. Matthew can be found on
Twitter,
Facebook,
Pinterest
and Tsu,
or at his
website.
When not writing (which is rare),
Matthew is usually found crunching numbers at his day job, working
out to inappropriately chirpy pop songs, or being owned by his cat.
It is important to note that the man does not, naturally, own the
cat.
Blurb:
If
you could save someone's life, would you? Anyone's?
Ali's
older brother has a swastika tattooed on his knuckles, a prison ID
number for nearly beating a man to death for the crime of being
Middle Eastern, and spent his teenage years ruthlessly persecuting
Ali for being gay.
Blood may be thicker than water, but Ali has spent most of his life desperate to prove that he is nothing like Tony. A committed vegetarian, charity-supporter, and blood donor, Ali would do anything for anyone, and is frequently teased by his partner, Yazid, for being too soft-hearted. Ali may share parentage with Tony, but he is determined not to share anything else if he can help it.
So when Tony contracts leukaemia, and Ali is the only match for the urgently-needed bone marrow transplant, Ali is caught between two equally awful choices: to refuse, and condemn a man to death, or to donate.
And in donating, save the life of the man who nearly murdered Ali's Iraq-born boyfriend?
Blood may be thicker than water, but Ali has spent most of his life desperate to prove that he is nothing like Tony. A committed vegetarian, charity-supporter, and blood donor, Ali would do anything for anyone, and is frequently teased by his partner, Yazid, for being too soft-hearted. Ali may share parentage with Tony, but he is determined not to share anything else if he can help it.
So when Tony contracts leukaemia, and Ali is the only match for the urgently-needed bone marrow transplant, Ali is caught between two equally awful choices: to refuse, and condemn a man to death, or to donate.
And in donating, save the life of the man who nearly murdered Ali's Iraq-born boyfriend?
Excerpt:
Yazid
gave up trying the moment that the clock on the wall ticked over to
seven. Tracy cheered. "Get yerself on the other side of that
bar!" she crowed, shoving Yazid hard in the back. "G'wan,
yer ingrate, yer not one of my staff no more!"
Danielle,
his pink-haired replacement, giggled and started pouring a Guinness
before Yazid could even ask for it; he laughed and whipped off his
work shirt to the delighted shrieks of a hen party just starting up
in the corner.
"Put
that away!" Tracy jeered, her strong accent turning it into
'pertharraway.' She tossed Yazid his backpack from the storage
cupboard under the till, and he obediently offered the hen party a
little self-indulgent flex or two before tugging a t-shirt over his
head and 'putting it away.'
"Knock
it off, you lot, 'e's a gay-boy!" Tracy shouted, and the
bride-to-be, one of their regulars, whistled even louder.
"Even
better then, get it back out and give us a show!" she yelled
back and Yazid laughed.
"Speaking
of gay-boys," Tracy said, "where's yours?"
"Family
thing," Yazid said, grinning at Danielle when she plonked the
liveliest Guinness he'd ever seen in front of him. "His mum's
birthday, I think. Maybe his sister's. I dunno, I wasn't listening."
Tracy
crowed with laughter; Lee, one of the kitchen skivvies, loped past
and clapped Yazid so hard on the back he nearly hit the bar.
"Lucky
you, getting to escape this place," he said, and Tracy hit him
with a packet of crisps. "Oi! Cow!"
"Pick
yer knuckles off the floor and get movin' with them bar snacks!"
she retorted. Yazid snorted as Lee was scolded back into the kitchen,
and downed a third of his Guinness in one gulp.
"Steady
on, love," one of the other barmaids said. "No plans later,
then?"
"Nah,"
Yazid said. "Starting the new job next week, but the other half
couldn't get much time so our little party's at the weekend."
She
blew up into her fringe. "That's disgusting."
"Didn't
fink you was 'omophobic or nuffink," Danielle said in her thick
London accent. She was a student working to pay her fees to the
University of Leeds, and was routinely mocked for the way she spoke.
She didn't seem to mind.
"Nah,
the bit that's not right is that he gets
a bloke like that, and I don't," the barmaid said.
"Like
what?" Danielle asked.
"Like
that," came
the significant reply, but before Yazid could work it out, a pair of
arms slid around his shoulders and a kiss landed against his temple.
"Hello,
gorgeous."
"Hey
babe," he beamed, twisting to offer a one-armed hug. Ali slide
onto the stool next to his, a broad smile splitting his wind-flushed
face. He looked stunning, and Yazid — emboldened by the fact he'd
never have to step foot back in this place if he didn't want to —
leaned across to kiss him.
"I
made some excuse to Mum," Ali said. "Wanted to come and see
you instead."
"Damnit,
I was going to get with Lee round the back later," Yazid whined,
and Tracy shrieked with laughter.
"Now
that would
be sick," she said. "What can I get you, my love?"
The
bar was empty but loud, the hen do and a couple of lads at the pool
table making it seem busier than it actually was, and as the evening
shift drifted in for their own patterns, Lee and Lizzy, one of the
cleaners, clocked off and joined them for a toast to Yazid's new job
and 'escaping the madhouse' when Tracy was out of earshot. Yazid's
good mood was bolstered by a win on the fruit machines, and then the
hen party staggered off to start their bar crawl proper, and their
little party of four squashed into the abandoned booth.
"Gonna
be almost feminine without
you, mate," Lee said, clacking their glasses together messily.
"Won't be no blokes left!"
"Yazid
doesn't count as a bloke," Lizzy argued. "Gays don't
count!"
"More
bloke than any of you tarts," Lee snorted.
"Definitely
all bloke," Ali said. "When you're not being a princess,"
he added snidely, and Yazid laughed, dropping an arm around him
faux-casually.
"Princess
Yazida, that's me," he agreed, to Lee's good-natured ribbing and
Lizzy's alarmingly high giggle. "Lizzy, he just means nobody to
discuss the football with without having to compete for you girls."
"Sorry
Lee, you just ain't my type," Lizzy said, and waggled her
fingers in front of her chest with a leery grin. "You just ain't
got the knockers!"
"Neither
have you, you flat-chested tart!" Lee retorted, and Yazid
laughed. He waved to Danielle for another pint, feeling at ease and
relaxed, and quite prepared to get a bit wankered now Ali had shown
up and would steer him vaguely homewards at closing time. Maybe with
a detour to —
"What
the hell are you doing here?!"
Ali's
angry voice jolted Yazid out of his happy buzz, then there was a fist
in his t-shirt and he was jerked from his seat to the wall, the
slightly sticky paintwork hitting him too hard in the back and his
quarter-pint of Guinness crashing down his trousers to the floor.
"What
the—"
"Shoulda
known it was you," Tony Barraclough snarled at disturbingly
close range. His teeth were yellow, and he stank of cigarettes and
weed.
"Oi!"
Tracy bellowed from the bar.
"Get
off me," Yazid snarled, and shoved. Tony was either too stoned
or too surprised, and staggered back a good couple of feet. "You're
barred, now get the hell out," he snapped, the good mood
thoroughly gone. He'd had quite enough of this. At least at the new
job, he could shove the bigoted idiot's hand in a deep fat fryer if
he came knocking.
"Tony,
get out of here!" Ali shouted.
"You
skipped out for him?" Tony
growled. His voice was hoarse and raspy.
"I
have a life!" Ali shouted, throwing up his hands. "You
should try one, now try it elsewhere!"
"Now,"
Tracy snapped, stalking over from the bar, all five foot nothing of
her. "Yer barred, now get out before I 'ave the police in 'ere."
"You
skipped out," Tony snarled, ignoring Tracy entirely, "for
this Muzzie piece of—!"
Lee
started up violently from the table, his dark skin burning to black
in instant anger. "You shut your—!"
The
noise level started to rise, Lee and Tony both yelling over each
other, and Tracy's shriek demanding Danielle to get one of the
bouncers in, or call the police. Yazid found himself straightening
his own back, squaring up to Tony's aggressive stance. Okay. Thug
wanted a brawl, he'd get one. Yazid was sick and tired of this utter
crap.
"Tony,
piss off!" Ali shouted, riled up maybe the most by his brother's
appearance, and Tony's lip curled.
"You
skip out on your own sister for this bit of halal meat, s'at how it
works, Ali?" he snapped right back, and Yazid opened his mouth
without thinking.
"Nah,"
he said, making an obscene gesture at his own crotch. "Halal
drains the blood out, not pumps it up full. This meat's all haraam,
babe."
Tony
moved. His arm lashed out, something flashing in the dim light of the
bar, and there was —
There
was a blur of motion, and then pain and heat exploded across Yazid's
face. The room spun; he felt the wall against his cheek, then his
arm, and then he was sitting on the floor and people were screaming.
There was hot liquid running down his face, and the entire world was
red and black, splashes and round dots vying for his attention. He
felt himself sway, and put out a hand to catch the wall, only to miss
and slump against it head-first. Pain. Pain-pain-pain. There was —
There
was a loud bang, and the bouncer — N...Ni... — the bouncer was
shouting, and then there were dark shapes and Yazid could feel his
stomach rolling.
"Bucket!"
someone yelled. "Trace, get me a bucket, he's gonna hurl!"
There
were hands on his arms and shoulders, and Yazid closed his eyes,
feeling sick and shaky from the spinning. The heat was still coming,
and his hair and clothes felt wet. He could smell Sol — and that
was it, he opened his jaw and threw up painfully. The clang of metal
and the stench of vomit said the bucket had been dutifully got, and
the screaming was morphing into the shrill call of a siren.
"What—"
he tried.
"Easy,
mate." Lee. "Easy. You'll be all right."
"It's
okay." Softer, gentler — higher. More frightened. Yazid
twitched with the need to stop that fear, and curled his fingers
around a hand that found its way to his. Ali. "It's okay, you'll
be okay, you're okay, oh my God..."
Then
the pieces slotted together — and Yazid realized, just as he
recognized the heavy thunder of police boots on the weak boards to
the main bar area, that he'd been bottled.
Then
he blacked out.
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