Love comes in all colors…
Art evaluator Miles Tate is finally about to start living his dream… that is if he can get the funding in place to open his own art gallery in New York. But when an unexpected turn of events finds every one of Miles’ perfectly-planned dreams turned upside-down, it’s time to escape Manhattan and reluctantly take up a well-paid job in the tiny seaside town of Hope’s Bluff, Georgia. For Miles, it’s his only chance to make some money, claw back what little dignity he has left, and figure out what the hell to do with his life.
But evaluating the art collection of a deceased estate isn’t made easy by the grandson of the dearly departed in question. Indeed, the young man who calls himself Rainbow is a hot-tempered, hotter-than-hell artist whose secrets run deep and passions run raw. He is talented, troubled, tempestuous and deaf… and possibly the one person who can save Miles from his own heartache.
Can Miles finish the job he’s been paid to do… or will two opposites find that they have more in common than they first imagined? Can the pair of them find the strength in each other to rebuild their lives… or will the traumas of their pasts drive them both away? Will Miles turn his back on the handsome, hurt, artistic genius he’s stumbled upon… or will he finally find true love in the arms of a Boy Called Rainbow?
Title: A Boy Called Rainbow
Authors: Robin Knight
Length: 62k
Genre: Contemporary
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I stood from my spot on the floor and nodded, “You want to see me dance? Then let’s dance!”
Rainbow jumped up and down, clapping excitedly before racing off to Odette’s closet and returning with an old record player. He set it down on the floor, plugged it into the nearest socket, disappeared again, then returned with an album cover in his hands.
He spun it in his fingers before presenting the cover to me.
“Oh wow! Whitney Houston. You’re serious about this!”
Rainbow nodded confidently, looking extremely pleased with himself.
“But wait… you can hear music?”
Rainbow laughed again and shook his head. He crouched and placed his hand against the floor, then ran his fingers over his bare feet, up his legs and torso, and finished with a thump-thump-thump against his heart.
I felt stupid. “The vibrations. You dance to the vibrations.”
He nodded again, then slid the record delicately from its sleeve. Holding it between is fingertips, avoiding any chance of leaving his prints on the vinyl, he placed the record on the turntable with the utmost care, as though he was cracking a safe or setting an explosive with sticks of gelignite. He set the turntable in motion and the record started spinning, and with one final act of precision, he placed the stylus in the groove—
Side A.
Track One.
Rainbow turned the volume up as high as it would go, the crackle of the needle in the groove filling the room before the beat of Whitney’s I Wanna Dance With Somebody kicked in.
Instantly Rainbow’s feet began to move, his body light as a feather, his every step in time with the music.
His hands curled up and his fists began to shake like he was holding maracas.
His hips began to gyrate ever so slightly, feeling the rhythm.
His shoulders tipped left then right, shimmying in such a sexy way I wanted his jeans off then and there.
But first there was music to dance to.
With a mischievous gleam in his eye, Rainbow hustled his way toward me.
He craned his eyebrows suggestively, then did a turn in perfect time to the song, letting me know that the music was all that mattered right now, and if I wanted to join in… now was my one and only chance.
Stiffly I began to move my hips.
I felt like the Tin Man trying to boogie, which was clearly the impression Rainbow got too.
He grinned and reached for me, taking my hips in his hands and swaying me into a smooth and sexy groove, left and right, then back and forth, forcing my feet to move in time with my hips.
I laughed joyfully and shouted over the music, “Fuck, I think I’m dancing!”
But Rainbow wasn’t watching my lips. He was far too caught up in the beat, far too busy passing his moves onto me until we began to dance in unison together.
I felt my shoulders freeing up, as though Dorothy had just squirted oil from her oilcan into my rusty limbs.
I watched my feet step in time with the rhythm… almost… while my legs bent and straightened, freeing themselves of the stiffness that might have set in for the rest of my life had I never met Rainbow.
He twirled and so did I.
He swiveled his hips and soon had me doing the same.
He threw his arms in the air as if he didn’t have a care in the world, whooping with sheer delight over the blasting music, and I did the same.
He grabbed my hand and pulled me close, but he moved too quickly for my fledgling feet.
I stumbled into him.
I stood on his foot and we both staggered, me forward, him backward, until soon we completely lost our balance.
Rainbow fell and thudded onto his back on the floor, making the needle skip to the start of the song.
A second later I fell on top of him, knocking the wind out of him.
Rainbow wheezed as I mumbled, “Shit, fuck, I’m so sorry! God I was doing so well!”
He caught sight of my lips as I said that, and through his gasping and spluttering for air he started to laugh, shaking his head in disagreement.
Two things I am an absolute sucker for. Dancers and deaf or hard of hearing characters. So I was all in.
Let’s start with main character #1 Miles. Art evaluator/wanna be gallery owner who catches his long term boyfriend cheating. Of course the boyfriend gaslights him into thinking he is the my boring, arrogant person out there. Throwing all of the ex lovers in Miles’ face was a bit much.
Off he goes to a small town outside Savannah, Georgia to appraise a collection by a completely unknown, and now deceased, artist. His first meeting with the man who hired him had me rolling me eyes. Talk about some crazy stereotypes. And not for nothin, Miles putting up with the slurs from this guy was ridiculous. He is also waiting to kick his brother out of the house formerly owned by his grandmother- the deceased artist. The hatred was ridiculous.
Off Miles goes to a bed and breakfast of sorts even though there are only 2 rooms for guests. And the B&B owner is a bit of an eccentric cat lady. Literally 13 cats. And the stereotypical talk again. And what she cooks makes it sound like they are in the bayou of Louisiana, not coastal Georgia.
Finally we meet Rainbow. Who is deaf and no one bothered to tell Miles. Rainbow is the only character who isn’t a giant stereotype. He is desperate to keep his grandmother’s art private as was her wish. And to keep the roof over his head.
Miles begins learning ASL at a very rapid pace from a handwritten book. Sigh. ASL is a language. There’s no way to learn it as fast as he did. Anyway. There are sparks between them, Miles learns more about Rainbow, his grandmother and their family.
Beyond the ASL thing, I really did feel like Miles and Rainbow had a connection and belonged together.
There are a couple more quirky characters, a couple more stereotypes and a hurricane.
Overall I liked the story, there were just more than a few things that ruffled my feathers. A few things that were just far too unbelievable that just took me out of the story.
3 pieces of eye candy
. .
Robin Knight is the author of gay fiction novels, novellas, and short stories, ranging in genre from gay adventure, gay romance, gay suspense, and gay comedies.
The heroes of Robin’s books love to spend their time jumping off the page, stumbling through misadventures, and falling in love.
Robin has worked in advertising, politics, journalism, and event management, but nothing is as fun as telling stories.
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