The Naughty List – Exclusive Chapter Preview!

Hey loves!

I’m so excited to share a sneak peek of The Naughty List with you! This book has been an absolute joy to write – it’s got all the holiday chaos, sizzling chemistry, and laugh-out-loud moments that I love packing into my rom-coms.

If you’ve been following along, you know this is my holiday gift to you this year. A Christmas rom-com releasing on December 26th? Yes, please! Because who says the romance has to end when the presents are unwrapped?

I wanted to give you a taste of what you’re in for, so I’m sharing an entire chapter right here on the blog. So grab your favorite holiday beverage (mine’s a peppermint mocha, thanks for asking), get cozy, and dive in. And if you love what you read – and I really hope you do – you can preorder The Naughty List right now so it’s waiting for you on release day.

Happy reading, and happy holidays!

xoxo,
Ian



I stared at my reflection in the oversized vanity mirror, still wearing Dr. Brock Blaze’s signature white lab coat—now artfully splattered with what the props department swore was raspberry jam but looked disturbingly like arterial spray. My hair had gone slightly flat under the stage lights. My jawline, which Soap Opera Digest had once called “chiseled by the gods themselves,” looked as sharp as ever, but my eyes told a different story. They looked tired. Haunted, even.

I’d just filmed the season finale’s climactic scene—the one where Dr. Brock Blaze performed emergency heart surgery on his ex-lover’s current husband while confessing his undying love. To a mannequin. Because the actor playing the husband had food poisoning.

“The only heart I can’t save,” I’d intoned, staring intensely at the plastic torso on the operating table, “is my own.”

The director had literally applauded. “Emmy-worthy, Sam! Emmy-worthy!

I wanted to die.

I peeled off the lab coat and tossed it onto the leather couch that dominated one wall of my dressing room. The space was nicer than my first apartment in LA—all modern minimalism with pops of color courtesy of the interior designer the network had hired three years ago. Chrome, glass, and tasteful abstract art that meant nothing to me. A mini-fridge stocked with overpriced sparkling water. A standing desk I’d never used. Plus, a closet full of designer suits for press junkets and award shows where I’d smile until my face hurt and answer the same five questions about Dr. Brock Blaze’s love life.

The face in the mirror looked like a stranger wearing my skin.

Twenty-four hours. That’s all I had to survive before my flight to Virginia. One month in a remote cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains, where hopefully nobody knew Dr. Brock Blaze and nobody cared that I’d been nominated for a Daytime Emmy three years running. One month of silence, solitude, and—

The door to my dressing room flew open with enough force to rattle the framed poster of last season’s promotional shoot.

“ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING ME RIGHT NOW?”

Chandra stormed in like a Category 5 hurricane stuffed into a blood-red wrap dress and six-inch heels. Her dark hair—usually in the soft waves her character, Dr. Sienna Castellano, favored—was pulled back in a severe ponytail that screamed I will end you. She clutched her phone in one hand, her acrylic nails painted the same shade of crimson as her dress, and thrust it toward my face.

“Look at this shit! LOOK AT IT!”

I didn’t need to look. I’d already seen the headlines this morning while stress-eating a protein bar in my car.

SOAP OPERA’S HOTTEST BACHELOR FINALLY OFF THE MARKET?

SAMUEL BENNETT AND CHANDRA REYES: THE ROMANCE WE’VE BEEN WAITING FOR!

IS SAMUEL BENNETT SECRETLY STRAIGHT? SOURCES SAY YES!

The photos were everywhere: Chandra and me leaving Spago last night, her hand in mine because she’d been wearing those ridiculous stilettos and nearly face-planted on the sidewalk. We’d gone to dinner as friends—something we’d been doing for seven years, ever since she’d joined the cast and became the only person on set who didn’t treat me like a walking Ken doll. But the tabloids didn’t care about context. They cared about clicks.

“I know,” I said, slumping into my chair. “I’m sorry.”

“Sorry? SORRY?” Chandra’s voice hit a pitch that could shatter the champagne flutes in my mini-fridge. “Samuel, you’re gay. Everyone knows you’re gay! You came out when you were twenty years old! You’ve been to Pride! You’ve given interviews about being a visible queer actor in daytime television! But somehow, somehow, these assholes keep trying to make you straight!”

She waved her phone like it had personally offended her ancestors. “And now Danny—my Danny, who has the IQ of a decorative gourd—actually believes this shit! He called me this morning screaming about how I’m cheating on him with you! With YOU! I told him, ‘Baby, Samuel is gayer than a pride parade on Rainbow Island,’ but does he listen? NO! Because he’s a fucking idiot who gets his news from TMZ!

Despite everything, I felt a smile tugging at the corner of my mouth. “You’re dating Danny and Mario, though. Technically, you are cheating on Danny.”

Chandra pointed a lethal fingernail at me. “That is an entirely different conversation, and we are not having it right now. Danny doesn’t know about Mario. Mario doesn’t know about Danny. And that’s how I like it, thank you very much. But now Danny thinks I’m sneaking around with you, which is—” She threw her hands up. “My life is a goddamn telenovela, and I don’t even get residuals!”

I couldn’t help it. I laughed—a real, genuine laugh that felt foreign in my throat. Chandra’s whole life was a soap opera. She’d been engaged four times, dated two of our co-stars (simultaneously), and once punched a photographer who got too close to her niece at Disneyland. She was chaos incarnate, and I loved her for it.

“This isn’t funny, Sam.” But she was grinning now, the anger bleeding out of her as she collapsed onto my couch. “Okay, it’s a little funny. But seriously, why do they keep doing this to you? You’re not exactly subtle about being into men.”

“I don’t know.” I scrubbed my hands over my face, feeling the residue of stage makeup under my fingers. “Maybe I’m too masculine for their narrative, or they think a gay guy can’t be the romantic lead unless he’s secretly bi. Probably they’re just homophobic assholes with a publishing deadline.”

“It’s the last one,” Chandra said flatly. She kicked off her heels and tucked her feet under her. “God, I hate this town. Remember when we got into this business because we loved acting?”

“Vaguely.”

“Yeah, me neither.” She picked up one of the throw pillows and hugged it to her chest. “At least you’re getting out of here for a while. Where are you going again? Some cabin in the woods where you can pretend to be a lumberjack?”

“Virginia. Blue Ridge Mountains.” I turned back to the mirror, starting to wipe away the makeup with cold cream. Dr. Brock Blaze’s face slowly disappeared, revealing the real me underneath—or whatever was left of the real me after seven years of this. “A place called Ashford Gap. Population four hundred, no paparazzi, no scripts, no—”

“No fun,” Chandra interrupted. “Sam, you’re going to lose your mind in the woods by yourself.”

“That’s kind of the point.”

She opened her mouth to argue, but the door opened again—this time without the dramatic flair. My agent Sabrina Winstead glided in. She was fifty-something, blonde, and terrifying in the way that only women who’d clawed their way to the top of Hollywood could be. She wore a cream-colored pantsuit that probably cost more than my first car and carried a leather portfolio that I knew contained nothing good.

“Chandra, darling,” Sabrina said without looking at her. “Out.”

“Excuse me?” Chandra sat up straighter. “I’m having a conversation with—”

“Out. Now.” Sabrina’s smile was all teeth, no warmth. “This is business.”

Chandra looked at me, and I gave her a helpless shrug. Picking a fight with Sabrina was like arguing with a shark—technically possible, but ultimately pointless. Chandra grabbed her shoes and phone, shooting Sabrina a look that could have melted steel.

“Call me when you’re back,” she said to me. “And Sam? Don’t let her talk you into anything you don’t want.”

The door closed behind her with a soft click that felt louder than Chandra’s earlier explosion.

Sabrina set her portfolio on the glass coffee table and settled into the chair across from my vanity, crossing her legs with practiced elegance. “We need to talk about your contract.”

“No.” I kept wiping away my makeup. “I told you, Sabrina. I’m not discussing this until after my vacation.”

“Samuel.” Her voice hardened, losing the honey coating. “You’re being offered three more years at double your current rate. Do you have any idea how rare that is? The network loves you. The viewers love you. You’re the face of Midnight At Magnolia General. You’d be a fool to walk away from this.”

“Maybe I’m a fool, then.”

She stood, her heels clicking against the floor as she moved closer. In the mirror, I watched her come to stand behind me, her reflection sharp and unyielding.

“You want to be a ‘serious actor,'” she said, making air quotes that I felt more than saw. “You want prestige. Film. Broadway. I get it, sweetheart, I really do. But you know what those things require? Leverage. And you know what gives you leverage? Money. Security. A fanbase that will follow you anywhere.” She leaned down, her hands on the back of my chair. “You can’t afford to be an artist if you’re broke and irrelevant.”

Something ugly twisted in my chest. “I’m not irrelevant.”

“Not yet. But walk away from this show, and you will be.” Her voice was matter-of-fact, almost kind. “Daytime TV isn’t a stepping stone anymore, Sam. It’s a career. And it’s a damn good one. You’re making half a million a year to memorize ridiculous lines and look pretty. Why are you so desperate to throw that away?”

“Because I’m miserable!” The words exploded out of me, louder than I’d intended. I spun in my chair to face her. “Because I spend eight hours a day pretending to be Dr. Brock Blaze, and I don’t know who Samuel Bennett is anymore! Because I’m thirty-one years old, and I’ve never done real theater, never auditioned for anything that mattered, never—”

“Never what?” Sabrina’s eyes were cold. “Never struggled? Never waited tables while going to auditions? Never slept on a friend’s couch because you couldn’t make rent? You skipped all that, Samuel. You got lucky. And now you want to throw your luck away because you’re having some kind of artistic crisis?”

The air felt thin, like all the oxygen had been sucked out of the room.

“Why are you pushing this so hard?” I asked slowly. “You’re supposed to work for me. I tell you what I want, and you make it happen. That’s how this is supposed to work.”

Something flickered across her face—so fast I almost missed it. Guilt, maybe. Or calculation.

“I’m your agent,” she said carefully. “I’m supposed to guide your career in the right direction. And right now, that direction is signing this contract.”

“But I’m miserable,” I repeated, softer this time. “You know that. I’ve told you that. So why—”

“Because it’s good for you!” She cut me off, voice rising. “Because you don’t know what’s good for you right now! You’re burned out, you’re tired, you need this vacation. But when you come back, you’ll see things clearly. You’ll realize that walking away from this show is career suicide, and—”

“And what?” I stood up, facing her fully. “You’ll have convinced me to stay on a show that’s killing me inside? Great plan, Sabrina.”

She stared at me for a long moment, and I watched her decide something. I’d known Sabrina for eight years, and I’d seen that look before—the one that meant she was about to do something she’d regret.

“Fine,” she said, her voice dropping. “You want the truth? I’m the one who’s been leaking the stories.”

The words didn’t make sense at first. “What stories?”

“The tabloid bullshit. The ‘Samuel Bennett might be straight’ rumors. The photos of you and Chandra, the speculation, all of it.” She lifted her chin, defiant. “I’ve been feeding stories to the gossip sites for six months.”

The floor seemed to tilt beneath my feet. “You… what?”

“You’re more popular than ever, Sam! Your social media following has doubled! The show’s ratings are up fifteen percent! People are talking about you, and in this business, that’s all that matters!” She spread her hands like she was presenting me with a gift. “Controversy sells. Mystery sells. And a gay actor who might be straight? That’s catnip for the tabloids.”

I couldn’t speak. Couldn’t think. My mind was a blank white screen of rage and disbelief.

“I did this for you,” Sabrina continued, and she actually sounded like she believed it. “To keep you relevant. To make you valuable. To ensure that when contract negotiations came around, the network would be desperate to keep you. And it worked, Sam! They’re offering you double! You should be thanking me!”

“Thanking you?” My voice came out strangled. “You’ve been spreading lies about my sexuality. You’ve been—” I had to stop, had to take a breath before I said something I couldn’t take back. “Get out.”

“Samuel—”

“GET OUT!” I pointed at the door, my hand shaking. “Get out of my dressing room, and don’t contact me until I’m back from Virginia. Actually, you know what? Don’t contact me at all. I’ll call you when I’ve decided if you’re still my agent.”

Sabrina’s face went pale, then red. “You’re making a mistake.”

“The only mistake I made was trusting you.”

For a moment, I thought she was going to argue. But something in my expression must have convinced her I was serious. She grabbed her portfolio, tucked it under her arm, and walked to the door.

“You’ll change your mind,” she said from the doorway. “When you’ve calmed down, you’ll realize I was right.”

The door closed behind her, and I was alone.

I sank back into my chair, my reflection staring back at me—half Dr. Brock Blaze, half Samuel Bennett, and I wasn’t sure which half was real anymore. 

My fucking agent had been sabotaging my personal life to boost my career, which coincidentally boosted her pay since she got 15% off my earnings. The tabloids thought I was a closeted straight guy. My co-star Chandra was having two secret affairs. And tomorrow, I was getting on a plane to hide in the mountains of Virginia like some kind of emotional fugitive.

I grabbed my phone and pulled up my email, finding the confirmation for the cabin rental. Ashford Gap, Virginia.

One month. Complete privacy. 

The listing had promised a “luxurious mountain retreat with stunning views, modern amenities, and the perfect escape from the pressures of everyday life.” The photos had shown a sprawling deck overlooking misty peaks, a stone fireplace, and windows that seemed to bring the forest inside. It looked like paradise—the kind of place where a person could find themselves again.

One month to figure out who the hell I was when I wasn’t Dr. Brock Blaze.

One month to decide if I was brave enough to walk away from everything I’d built.

One month to find something real in a life that had become nothing but performance.

I stared at my reflection one more time, at the tired eyes and the fake smile and the face that belonged to someone else.

“What if I get there and realize I don’t know who I am without all of this?” I muttered aloud, glancing around my dressing room.

The question hung in the air, unanswered, as I reached for my jacket and prepared to leave the studio for the last time in thirty days.

What if the person I found in those mountains was someone I didn’t recognize at all?


The Naughty List goes live on the day after Christmas! Preorder your copy today for only 3.99. The price goes up to 4.99 on release day, so lock in your savings now. The Naughty List is available exclusively on Amazon.

Interview: Dr. Felix Sterling – The Man Behind the Lab Coat in The Naughty Professor

I knew the moment I walked into Dr. Felix Sterling’s office that I’d found my next leading man—or at least, the messiest genius in a three-mile radius. His office was part library, part explosion, and part cry for help. Books everywhere. Three open laptops. A whiteboard covered in formulas that may or may not have been about lube viscosity.

Dr. Sterling himself was hunched behind a desk, chewing the end of a pen and looking like a gay Doogie Howser who’d aged into anxiety and never stopped pulling all-nighters.

Me: Dr. Sterling. Thanks for letting me barge into your natural habitat.

Felix: Oh! Yes! Thank you for coming. I—wait, not like that—I mean, thank you for visiting.
[He shoves a pile of papers off a chair with a panicked gesture.]
Please, sit down! I printed out a journal article for you but then spilled coffee on it. And ink. And possibly a chemical that makes mice fall in love.

Me: Happens to the best of us. So, you’re a tenured professor, a published researcher, and you’ve got a… very interesting extracurricular situation.

Felix: [blushes hard]
If you’re referring to the, um, transformation serum, that was honestly never supposed to be public. I synthesized it during a particularly lonely Valentine’s Day.
[beat]
They say necessity is the mother of invention, but loneliness? She’s a wicked stepmother with a strap-on.

Me: Wow. Okay, let’s unpack that. Are you lonely?

Felix: [laughs nervously, then stops]
Yes. Profoundly. I haven’t had a boyfriend. Ever. Not a real one. I mean, there was that guy from Reddit who mailed me a lock of his hair, but that doesn’t count, does it?

Me: …No. That counts in court records, not dating history.

Felix: Exactly. I’m just not… I don’t know. People don’t see me that way. I talk too fast. I care too much about obscure 18th-century aphrodisiacs. I own a custom lab coat with my D&D character embroidered on it.

Me: Sounds like husband material to me. But you did create a serum that changes your entire personality?

Felix: It’s more than that. The compound rewires neural inhibition, boosts testosterone, and hijacks frontal-lobe regulation. It unleashes the part of me that isn’t scared all the time. The part that doesn’t double-check his outgoing emails for tone.
[quietly]
The part people actually want.

Me: Felix. C’mon. You are the whole package. You just don’t see it.

Felix: That’s sweet of you to say, but I assure you, the only people who’ve called me “hot” were under the influence of my own synthetic aphrodisiac. And it was a peer-reviewed double-blind trial, so they didn’t technically know it was me.

Me: Felix. Babe. What if you drank the serum right now?

Felix: Oh no no no no—absolutely not. The last time I did that, I woke up with glitter in places I don’t talk about, a tattoo of a dolphin with abs, and a police citation for “inappropriate hot tub evangelism.”

Me: Exactly. That’s the kind of energy this blog needs. For the readers.

Felix: But—I—this is supposed to be a serious academic interview!

Me: This is serious. I’m seriously begging you. C’mon, just one sip. For science. For love. For the readers who like a good “nerd to thirst trap” transformation.

Felix:
sighs
Fine. But if I start stripping, you have to turn the recorder off. Unless it’s for Patreon content.

Me: Deal.

Felix opens a drawer and retrieves a small, glowing vial. He eyes it like it’s his worst idea and his best chance. With one last glance at me — equal parts dread and curiosity — he knocks it back like a man surrendering to fate.

He shudders. A low sound escapes him. And then… he changes.

The curve of his spine straightens. The nervous fidgeting stills. His eyes sharpen with intent. One eyebrow arches in slow, sexy defiance. The glasses come off and so does the act.


Jax:
Ahhh. That’s better.
[Cracks his neck, flashes a grin so smug it should be illegal.]
You must be Ian. You’ve got the kind of vibe that makes a man wanna misbehave in a hotel elevator.

Me: I—okay. Hi, Jax. Welcome to the interview.

Jax: Thanks, darlin’. Felix gets all shy about this part, but I’ve got no such hang-ups. What do you wanna know? I’m an open book. A very naughty, slightly bent book.

Me: Well, people are curious. Who are you, exactly?

Jax: I’m what happens when Felix stops worrying about tenure and starts worrying about pleasure. I’m the part of him that says, “Screw the rules,” and then actually does. I like good wine, bad decisions, and kissing boys who use big words.
[leans forward]
Especially if they wear glasses and pretend they’re not kinky.

Me: You seem… confident.

Jax: Oh, I am. Confidence is just chemistry with better posture. I don’t waste time overthinking. I want something, I say it. I feel something, I do something. And if someone wants me? Baby, I notice.

Me: So you’re basically Felix, minus the insecurity.

Jax: Exactly. Felix is all heart and no hustle. I am the hustle. And sometimes, people need both.
[pauses, then softens — just a little]
He wants to be loved, you know. Not just admired for his brain. He wants someone to look at him and see him — the stammering, brilliant, lonely man who’s never quite believed he was enough.
He doesn’t think he deserves to be wanted.

Me: But you do?

Jax: Oh, sweetheart. I know he does. That’s why I exist.
[grins again, full heat this time]
And if anyone needs convincing? I’ve got a few ideas that don’t require words. Just consent… and maybe a sturdy table.


The Naughty Professor is available to preorder now. Come fall for Felix. Try to survive Jax. And maybe discover that sometimes, the messiest love stories are the ones that actually stick. The preorder price is 3.99, and goes up to 4.99 on release day!

That Crazy Old Lady Bleached My Asshole!

Chapter 10 of The Casting Couch

I wasn’t scheduled for anything else today, which meant one thing: freedom. Sweet, beautiful, no-lube-needed freedom. No studio lights, no body oil, no terrible dialogue I had to deliver while holding a plank position.

I leaned against the front desk like I had nowhere better to be, which was a lie, but a cute one. Petyr was scrolling on his phone, probably looking at tweets about union strikes or articles on OSHA violations. Dimitri had a sudoku book open, pencil tapping against the counter like it was a metronome set to “mildly annoyed Russian.”

“Another thrilling day in adult entertainment customer service,” I said, grinning. “Tell me, gentlemen… when you dreamed of escaping Soviet oppression, is this what you pictured? Lube shipments and call sheet drama?”

Petyr snorted. “Back then, I dreamed of eating a sandwich without standing in a line for three hours.”

“Dream big,” I said.

Dimitri didn’t look up from his puzzle. “At least this job comes with free coffee. Even if it tastes like sadness and broken promises.”

I laughed. They were both like that—sharp, dry, impossible to rattle. They were also disgustingly in love. It had been what, decades now? Since before I was born, probably. Every time I caught them sneaking little glances at each other or making dirty old man jokes, part of me wanted to roll my eyes… but a bigger part of me just… wanted.

I wasn’t used to that feeling. Most of the time, I was perfectly fine just floating. Hookups, jokes, nights on stage with a mic in my hand, making people laugh so they didn’t notice I was deflecting my loneliness like a human pinball machine. Love was for other people. People with stable home lives and functional trust issues.

But watching Dimitri scribble in his sudoku while Petyr tilted his phone toward him to share some meme, and seeing the way they smiled at each other like it was all still new? Damn. I wanted that. Someday. Maybe.

If I didn’t die of sarcasm poisoning first.

I was about to say goodbye and head out when the phone on the desk rang. Dimitri picked up, still holding his pencil like he was ready to stab something if this was another spam caller. “Boys On Film, how can I direct your… oh. It’s you.” His whole tone shifted. “Yes, sir. He’s standing right here.” Then he held the receiver toward me like it was radioactive.

“It’s the boss.”

I blinked. “Jack?”

Dimitri nodded. “Da.”

I grabbed the phone, a little confused. Jack never called me directly unless it was about a scene. “Nico Steele, local legend, speaking.”

Jack’s voice crackled on the line. “Cute. Listen, I need you to come to the production meeting. Conference room. Ten minutes.”

I frowned. “Production meeting? Why? I’m not a producer. Or a director. Or even emotionally stable enough to be in that room.”

“You’ll understand when you get there,” Jack said. Then he hung up.

I lowered the phone slowly. “Well. That’s not ominous at all.”

“Good luck,” Petyr said, already back to doom scrolling.

Dimitri winked. “If there are bagels, bring me one.”

I headed toward the conference room, curiosity buzzing in my chest like a bad caffeine hit. This was weird. What did Jack want me there for? Was I in trouble? Was I getting fired? Promoted? Canceled?

Right as I turned the corner near the makeup suite, I almost collided with… oh no.

Bradley.

He was limping like a war survivor. Moving like every joint hurt. And his face… Jesus. The area around his eyebrows was an angry, blistering red. Like he’d lost a fight with a glue gun.

I winced in sympathy. “Dude… you okay?”

Bradley just shook his head, slow and defeated. His eyes were wide and glassy, like he’d just seen the face of God, and it was wearing a waxing apron.

“Eyebrows?” I guessed, nodding at his scorched forehead zone.

He gave me a barely there nod. His mouth opened like he wanted to speak, but no words came out. Just air and trauma.

I wanted to hug him. Which was new. Physical affection wasn’t usually my default setting. But there was something about the way he looked right then. Like a kicked puppy who’d been dumped in a rainstorm, that tugged at something soft in my chest.

Before I could act on the impulse, he mumbled, “I’m supposed to meet Jack and Liam for… something. A meeting.”

My ears perked up. “Wait. No way. Me too. Come on, just follow me.”

Bradley hesitated, like he didn’t trust the universe anymore. Which was fair, but he limped after me, anyway.

And as we headed toward the conference room, side by side, something in my stomach did a weird little somersault. Like… anticipation. Or dread. Or… something else I couldn’t name yet.

Bradley shuffled next to me like a condemned man heading toward the firing squad. Every step looked like it hurt. Hell, even watching him walk hurt.

I kept glancing sideways at him, debating whether to put an arm around his shoulders. Would that be weird? Too much? Too soon? Probably. But… damn. The poor guy looked like he’d been through a full season of America’s Next Top Traumatized Porn Star.

We hit the hallway leading toward the conference room. Carpeted, quiet, the kind of corporate ambiance that screamed “free coffee and passive aggression.”

Bradley cleared his throat. “Do you… uh… do you know what this meeting’s about?”

I shook my head. “Nope. Jack was super evasive. Real ‘I’ll tell you when you get there’ energy. Like a horror movie, but with worse lighting.”

Bradley sighed. “Awesome.”

There was a beat of silence. Then, just loud enough for me to hear, he muttered, “Can’t even sit down…”

I glanced over. “Wait. Why?”

He stopped walking. Turned toward me. His eyes were shiny, like actual tears pooled up along the lower lids.

And in the most broken, betrayed voice imaginable, he said, “That crazy old lady… bleached my asshole.”

I froze. My brain short-circuited. Like, full system reboot.

My mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.

And then, before I could talk myself out of it, I opened my arms wide. “Oh, buddy… come here.”

Bradley didn’t even hesitate. He stepped right into my chest like it was the most natural thing in the world.

I wrapped him up in both arms, pulled him tight… and immediately regretted how hard I squeezed when he made a tiny, wounded noise and whispered, “Ow… my back…”

“Shit, sorry.” I loosened my grip fast, hands going soft on his shoulders. “Forgot about the… uh… full body trauma.”

We laughed, both of us quick and awkward, and then kept walking.

When we pushed open the conference room door, the full cast of characters were already mid-salad. Laura, Liam, Jack, Nessa, and Moira were all sitting around like the judges’ panel on some adult industry version of Shark Tank. Coffee cups were everywhere. Half-eaten chopped salads. Nessa had her phone out like she was live-tweeting Bradley’s suffering.

Jack looked up first. “Grab some food and have a seat.”

There was a buffet spread along the back wall. Sandwiches. Fruit. A giant bowl of mixed greens that looked like sadness coated with dressing.

Bradley made a beeline for the farthest end of the table, keeping his distance from anything leafy.

I drifted behind him, watching the way Nessa’s eyes lit up when she spotted him. Like a cat that discovered a bird with a broken wing.

“Oh, no, you don’t,” I muttered under my breath. I parked myself next to him at the buffet line, close enough to block her line of attack.

Bradley hovered awkwardly over the food, looking like none of it made sense to him. Like he wasn’t sure if eating would make the pain better or worse.

Trying to cheer him up, I nudged his shoulder. “You know what helps after a traumatic cosmetic experience?”

He glanced at me, wary. “What?”

“Carbs. Lots and lots of carbs. Bagels are nature’s apology letter.”

That got him. A tiny, reluctant laugh broke out of him. Soft but real. His first actual smile since I’d seen him.

And wow.

Hearing that sound, God. It hit me right in the chest. Made me want to hear it again. Immediately.

So I kept going.

I grabbed a sandwich and held it up like I was a game show model showing off a prize. “This one’s got turkey and provolone. Full of healing properties. Also, I’m pretty sure eating it will reverse the psychological damage caused by Lola’s… services.”

Bradley’s laugh got a little louder. “Not sure that’s medically accurate.”

“Oh, I don’t do medical accuracy,” I said, grinning. “I do emotional support and poor decisions.”

He smiled down at the sandwich tongs like they were suddenly the funniest thing he’d ever seen.

We were still standing there, giggling over deli meats, when Jack cleared his throat.

Both of us turned toward the table.

Everyone—and I mean everyone—was staring at us.

Laura had one eyebrow raised, like she was mentally taking notes. Liam was biting back a smirk. Moira had gone into full gossip-mode, sipping her coffee slowly like she was watching a soap opera. And Nessa… Nessa looked like Christmas had come early.

Jack gave us a look that said “Anytime, gentlemen.”

Sheepishly, Bradley and I grabbed our food and hustled to two empty chairs side by side.

As we sat down—Bradley gingerly, like every surface was made of hot coals—I stole one last glance at him.

He was still red around the eyebrows. Still moving like he needed medical leave. Still adorable in that whole wounded-animal sort of way.

I didn’t know what this meeting was about.

But I suddenly didn’t mind being here at all.

Jack cleared his throat again. “Alright. Let’s call this meeting to order…”

And with that, we were off.

Jack cleared his throat again, tapping a pen against the table like he was warming up for a TED Talk. “First off… Nico.”

I blinked. “Me?”

Jack nodded, giving me a rare, genuine smile, the kind he usually reserved for Liam or big subscriber milestones. “We want to thank you for trusting us with your comedy career. It means a lot. We’re gonna work our asses off to make sure you’re a success.”

My stomach did this weird, flippy thing. “Wow. Thanks, boss.” I gave him a little salute. “I like the sound of ‘success.’ Sounds expensive.”

The table chuckled.

Nessa leaned forward, her huge acrylic nails tapping against her iced coffee like castanets. “And speaking of expensive… your management contract’s ready.” She pointed at me, all sly grin and Bronx attitude. “After this meeting, I’ll give it to you to look over.”

Liam immediately jumped in, waving a forkful of salad for emphasis. “And get an entertainment lawyer to review it. Seriously.”

I gave him a thumbs-up. “Obviously. I like to know exactly how I’m selling my soul.”

“Good man,” Liam said.

Jack set his pen down with a little clap against the table. “Okay. Now, for the real reason, we’re all here.”

Everyone shifted in their chairs. Moira put down her phone. Even Laura sat up straighter.

Jack gestured toward Nessa like he was passing a live grenade. “Ness, you wanna explain?”

Nessa beamed like it was Christmas morning and she’d just unwrapped a pair of Louboutins. “Absolutely.” She flipped open her notebook and pushed her sunglasses up onto her head like a Wall Street executive, if Wall Street executives wore hoop earrings and hot pink lipstick.

“So. Earlier today, I had a visit from a group of Japanese businessmen.” She gave a dramatic pause, letting that sink in. “They’re here in the States for some kind of… tech conference? Anyway, they found our site, watched a few of our videos, and they want to hire us, Boys On Film, to produce a custom scene for them.”

Laura blinked. “Wait… an outside contract? Like… an actual commission job?”

Nessa nodded. “Yep. Fully funded. Their production company wired over the deposit already.”

There was a collective buzz of excitement around the table. This was big. Like… real-world, industry-recognized big.

“They’ve offered…” Nessa flipped a page for dramatic effect. “…almost two hundred thousand dollars for the project.”

The entire room went silent.

Even Jack looked like he might faint.

For about three full seconds, the only sound was Moira’s straw sucking the last inch of coffee from her cup.

Then, all at once…

“Two hundred K?!”

“Holy shit.”

“Are you serious?”

I just sat there blinking. Even Bradley—poor traumatized, still-pink Bradley—looked like he was having a mild out-of-body experience.

Liam held up a hand like a traffic cop. “Okay, hold on. This all sounds amazing, but… what exactly are we making for them?”

Jack smirked. “Glad you asked.”

All eyes swung back to Nessa. She bit her lower lip, clearly savoring the buildup like it was dessert.

“When I heard what they wanted,” she said, voice syrupy with fake innocence, “the first person I thought of… was Bradley.”

Everyone turned.

Bradley froze like a deer caught in very judgmental headlights.

“Wait, what? Why me?” His voice cracked halfway through.

“Yeah… why Bradley?” Liam asked, glancing between them.

Nessa clapped her hands once. “Because the project is… drumroll please…”

Moira tapped on the table obligingly.

“…a gay bukkake video.”

The room went dead silent again.

I felt my pulse kick up, suddenly wide awake. “Okay wait… I’ve heard that word before… but I don’t actually know what it is.” I looked around the room like I was expecting someone to say it meant “group hug” or “team-building exercise.”

Laura gasped like I’d just admitted to not knowing how to use Google. “Oh, my God. No. Are you sure we wanna go there? Boys On Film’s never done something that hardcore before!”

Nessa waved her off like she was swatting at a fly. “Laura, sweetie, did you not hear me? Two. Hundred. Grand.”

That shut everyone up again.

I mean… we were all whores in different ways. But two hundred thousand dollars? That was… retirement money. Health insurance money. Rent-for-a-few years money.

Liam gave Jack a look. “We’ve… never done anything like this before.”

Jack’s expression stayed cool and calculating. “We’ll figure it out.”

I raised my hand like I was back in high school. “Okay, but like… what is it, though? Someone explain for the people in the room who don’t have a porn PhD.”

Moira snorted into her coffee.

Nessa smiled at me sweetly. “It’s simple, baby. One guy kneels on the floor… and a bunch of other guys… finish on him.”

My brain took about five full seconds to process that.

I turned to Bradley just in time to see all the color drain from his face like a cartoon character fainting.

He pushed back from the table like he was about to make a run for it. “Hell no,” he said. Loud and immediate. “Absolutely not. There’s no way I’m letting a bunch of guys jizz all over me. No. Nope. Not happening.”

I kind of wanted to applaud. The man had conviction.

Jack leaned forward, propping his elbows on the table, that signature wicked grin spreading across his face. “Would you do it… for twenty thousand bucks?”

Bradley froze mid-freakout.

I could practically see the math happening behind his eyes. Rent. Debt. Food. Survival.

He swallowed hard.

And then, after the most painful, reluctant pause in history, he said, voice both soft and doomed:

“Yes. Yes, I’ll do it.”


Heads up, babes! The Casting Couch is officially up for preorder at your favorite online bookstore—and trust me, you’ll want to lock it in early. The preorder price is just $4.99, but it jumps to $5.99 on release day, July 17. That’s one hot dollar saved—use it to tip your favorite fantasy or buy a pack of gum for the awkward scenes. Either way, grab your copy now and get ready for a hilarious, steamy ride full of ex-cons, adult film chaos, and one seriously complicated crush. 💋