Welcome to the Spotlight stop for Catriona's Curse!!
A. T. Weaver is the pen name of a divorced grandmother of eleven, great-grandmother of one. She lives with her cat, Cleopatra, in downtown Kansas City, MO.
When she was growing up, the word gay meant happy and carefree and homosexuals were called queer or ‘one-of-those’. However, she never heard those terms until she was married and a mother. When two men moved in down the street from their mobile home, her husband had to explain they were queer. As far as she was concerned, they were just a couple of men sharing a trailer.
In 2003, through a TV show called Boy Meets Boy, A.T ‘met’ over 3,000 gay men in a Yahoo group. These men educated her as to the inequalities suffered by the LGBT community and she became a staunch ally. She visited one of the men in San Francisco who lived just up the street from the Castro. As he showed her around, they stopped in front of what was once Harvey Milk’s camera store. Her question, “Who was Harvey Milk?” started her education into Gay history.
A. T.’s aim is to move you in some way. Whether you laugh or cry, love it or hate it, she welcomes all comments, whether good or bad.
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Title: Catriona's CurseAuthor: A. T. Weaver
Genre: M/M romance, paranormal, historical, fiction
Although Sunny Nelson was raised in a dual theology family, he doesn’t really believe in reincarnation nor does Jeff Davis. However, the visions and dreams Sunny keeps having lead them to be regressed where they discover they have at least two past lives together.
With Jeff’s sister April, they discover and attempt to dispel the spell cast by Sunny in one of these past lives. Along the way Sunny and Jeff fall in love. Jeff finds Sunny’s Pagan practices and the idea of reincarnation unsettling at first, but eventually decides to accept them if he wants to be with Sunny.
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Excerpt Time:
Boonville, Missouri, June 17, 2009
SUNNY
“Granddad, what
have you gotten me into now?” I thought as I drove down the gravel driveway
lined with majestic oak and walnut trees toward the one-hundred-fifty-year-old,
three-story rock mansion.
My name is Sunshine
Nelson, thanks to my hippie parents. Actually my first name is Matthew but,
since my dad was Matt, I’ve always been called Sunny. I’m almost thirty-five
years old and live in Los Angeles, California. My parents have known for nearly
twenty years I’m gay. They aren’t really happy with the fact, but have accepted
it.
My father’s
father died and left me this house my fourth-great grandfather built just prior
to the Civil War. My parents insisted I take a few days off work, fly to
Missouri and check out the place. In Mom’s words, “Getting away from California
and Dan will help you get over him.” After three months, I thought I was over
Dan, but seeing him at Dino’s Restaurant last week with his little bear cub
hurt more than it should have. After all, you don’t get over eight years of
loving someone overnight.
The sticky humid
eighty-five degrees made my mood somewhat touchy. I spent last night in Kansas
City with my old college roommate, Jack, and his partner, Bret. When Bret
suggested he tag along to keep me company, I had no idea what was in store for
me. We hadn’t gone twenty miles before I regretted bringing him along. Over the
last two hours I’d endured his unending flirty innuendoes and stories about the
sex parties he and Jack throw. I’m not one to indulge in sex just for the sake
of sex. I believe in monogamous relationships. I know they’re possible. I have
friends who’ve been together over forty years.
Driving toward
the house, I noticed newly-broken limbs on a few of the trees, but most of them
seemed to be healthy and well trimmed. The yard looked as though it could stand
to be mowed, but it wasn’t what I’d call overgrown. I stopped the car about
fifty yards from the house and studied it. The house stood just off Rocheport
Road about five miles outside of Boonville. Made of native stone, it sat in the
middle of an expansive lawn. The long drive formed a semi-circle in front of
the house.
A wide
flat-roofed veranda held up by huge pillars fronted the house and continued
around both sides reminiscent of the southern mansions I’d seen in movies.
Except for a few missing shingles on the roof and peeling paint on the wooden
veranda, it appeared to be in good repair. A sense of calmness settled over me.
I felt like I’d come home from a long trip.
Bret’s voice
interrupted my thoughts, “That looks more like a hotel than a private
residence; it’s huge.”
His words
ignited the glimmer of an idea into my head. I put the car into gear and drove
the rest of the way down the drive.
As we got out of
the car, Bret asked, “Sunny, do you see a shadow in the window to the right of
the door? Your grandma didn’t say anything about the place being haunted, did
she?”
I removed my
sunglasses and looked up. A female-shaped shadow quickly disappeared. “Not to
me. But then, she’s never been here. The only member of the family who ever saw
the place was Granddad the year he inherited it from a distant cousin. None of
us has been back since and no one has lived in it for twenty years. I’m going
to look inside. Watch the steps, they might be rotten.”
Bret fanned
himself with his scarf. “I think I’ll wait in the car with the air conditioning
on if you don’t mind.”
“Be my guest,” I
sighed. “If you weren’t wearing that scarf, you wouldn’t be so hot.”
“You’re just
like Jack,” Bret whined. “You don’t know anything about fashion.”
“I prefer
comfort to fashion.” I retrieved my camera from the car and took several shots
of the grounds before entering the house.
* * *
JEFF
My sister and I
were in what everyone called the haunted bedroom when we heard the car pull up.
April ran to the window and looked down. “Wow. Dibs on the blond; he’s
beautiful.”
I walked up
behind her and took a look for myself. The tall blond removed his sunglasses
and I felt a déjà vu like stirring deep inside. I knew I’d never seen him
before. I’d have remembered. He looked to be a little over six feet tall,
athletically built and close to my age. A pair of light blue trousers hung
loosely around his legs and a short-sleeved, cream-colored pullover almost the
same color of his hair accented his taut abs. Just then a ray of sunlight hit
his hair and it shone like silver.
On the other
hand, the man who got out of the passenger side was several inches under six
feet and stocky with dark hair. His outfit marked him as obviously gay. He wore
grey trousers and a coral long-sleeved, button-down shirt. A grey scarf the
same shade as his trousers wound around his neck.
“Sorry, sister
dear, but judging from his companion you aren’t his type,” I said.
Her voice
registered disappointment, “And I suppose you are?”
“More so than
you. It seems a shame if he’s taken.”
“I don’t know.
They don’t look very well matched if you ask me.” She shrugged, “But there’s no
accounting for taste.”
April left the
room and I followed.
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