Blurb
When lonely insurance broker,
Bailey, gets himself a new hobby, he ends up exchanging letters with
a war zone. But he’s not expecting what happens next…
Bailey Hodgkiss is lonely and
dissatisfied with his boring life as an insurance broker. In an
attempt to insert some variety, he signs up to a website to write to
serving soldiers. He’s put in touch with Corporal Nick Rock, and
over the course of a couple of letters, the two of them strike up a
friendship. They begin to divulge their secrets, including their
preference for men.
Nick encourages Bailey to add more
interests to his life. As a result, Bailey picks up his forgotten
hobby, photography, and quickly decides to team it up with his other
preferred interest, travel.
Booking a holiday to Rome is his
biggest gesture towards a more exciting existence, and he eagerly
looks forward to the trip. That is, until Nick says he’s coming
home on leave, and it looks as though their respective trips will
prevent them from meeting in person. Is there enough of a spark
between them to push them to meet, or will their relationship remain
on paper only?
Add to your Goodreads shelves:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20722128-letters-to-a-war-zone
Excerpt
After clicking all the available links
on the website to find out more about it, Bailey decided to go ahead
and sign up. He’d never know what it was really like unless he gave
it a go.
He’d read about the site in an
article somewhere, about how it linked people with serving soldiers,
pilots, marines and sailors in order to write to them. It had been
proven that receiving mail—even from someone they didn’t
know—improved military morale. It sounded like a damn good use of
time to Bailey, and it would be interesting, too.
He began typing his details into the
online form. Of course, the chances were that he’d be paired up
with a man, given the ratio of males to females in the forces. It
didn’t matter, though. He could still exchange letters with a guy,
become friends. It seemed like such an old-school way to communicate
with someone, given how technology had come on over the years, but at
least it was different. Perhaps it would give him something in his
life to look forward to, something other than getting up, showering,
going to work, coming home, eating, watching television and going to
bed. The watching television—and even the eating—were
occasionally replaced by nights out with friends or seeing family.
Weekends were spent cleaning, washing clothes, gardening and odd
jobs. Dull stuff, in other words.
He had an utterly mundane life, and
Bailey knew it. It wasn’t even as if his job was exciting.
Insurance broking was hardly thrilling, game-changing, or going to
save the world. He didn’t expect having a pen pal to change his
entire life, but it would certainly break the monotony. Hopefully.
He went through the various steps to
fill in his details and create a profile, then continued right
through to the information on actually writing and sending the
letters. It looked straightforward enough.
His mind made up, Bailey immediately
went in search of a pen, some nice paper and an envelope. Armed with
a print out of exactly what to do when the letter was finished, he
settled down at the kitchen table. Instantly, his mind went blank.
What the fuck was he meant to say? He didn’t know any soldiers or
other military personnel, didn’t know anything about their lives,
other than there was a great deal more to it than shooting people and
being shot at. His own existence was so fucking boring that he didn’t
want to write about it. Unless there were any insomniacs in
Afghanistan—telling them about his day would solve that particular
condition right away.
After chewing on his biro until it
broke, covering his lips and chin with ink, Bailey replaced it,
resolving to try harder. He’d tell his pen pal the bare essentials
about himself, then ask lots of questions about them and their work.
That was bound to rustle up some conversation.
That decided, he began to write,
absentmindedly swiping at his inky skin with a tissue. He’d have to
scrub it off when he was done with the note. His wrist and hand had
begun to ache before he was halfway down the page. He rolled his
eyes. He sat on his arse at a desk all day, using a computer. As a
result, even writing something short by hand was hard work! There was
no way he was going to divulge that particular piece of information
to someone that was willing to lay down their life to protect their
country.
He just about managed to fill a single
side of the A5-sized paper. And that was only because he’d formed
large letters and spaced his words and lines out plenty. But he tried
not to worry—at least he’d finished it, his first letter to a war
zone.
He read through it carefully, relieved
to find no mistakes. He’d forgotten how much more difficult—and
messy—errors were on the written page. Computers let you edit and
rewrite to your heart’s content. No correction fluid or
crossings-out necessary.
Finally, he addressed the envelope. It
felt like the longest address ever. The area and country was bad
enough, even without including the soldier’s name and BFPO address.
But it was done—Bailey Hodgkiss had penned a missive to Corporal
Nick Rock, currently stationed at Camp Bastion, Helmand Province,
Afghanistan.
Now he’d just have to post it and
wait for a reply. The website had said his missive would take between
one and three weeks to reach Corporal Rock. Then he had to allow for
time for him to read it and send a reply. It could be around six
weeks before he heard anything. If he heard anything at all.
Author Bio:
Lucy Felthouse is a very busy woman!
She writes erotica and erotic romance in a variety of subgenres and
pairings, and has over 100 publications to her name, with many more
in the pipeline. These include several editions of Best Bondage
Erotica, Best Women's Erotica 2013 and Best Erotic Romance 2014.
Another string to her bow is editing, and she has edited and
co-edited a number of anthologies, and also edits for a small
publishing house. She owns Erotica
For All, and is book editor for Cliterati.
Find out more at http://www.lucyfelthouse.co.uk.
Join her on Facebook
and Twitter,
and subscribe to her newsletter at: http://eepurl.com/gMQb9
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