Tattoos & Tinsel
by Anna Martin
Published by Anna Martin
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Tattoos & Tinsel
Copyright © 2012 by Anna Martin
Cover Art by Shobana Appa
vu [email protected]
Characters used courtesy of, and with the permission of Dreamspinner Press
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law.
Original novel Tattoos & Teacups published July 2012 by Dreamspinner Press.
This is a free ebook available f
rom www.annamartin-fiction.com
Firstly I’d like to thank Dreamspinner Press for their support of my releasing another story with my characters from Tattoos & Teacups. That novel was, and still is, very close to my heart and it was a joy and an honor to write more of Rob and Chris’s story.
Thank you to Christine, who edited, and the ever fabulous Bob for creating yet another stunning cover. Thank you, too, to all the readers who supported
Tattoos & Teacups and made the telling of this story possible.
Tattoos & Tinsel
by Anna Martin
“Oh Christmas tree, oh Christmas tree, fa-la-la-la-la branches!”
I shut the front door quietly behind myself and kicked off my shoes
before creeping through to the kitchen. Chris caught sight of me
anyway, but didn’t stop his loud, out of key wailing.
“I don’t think those are the actual words, darling,” I told him as I
leaned in for a kiss, delivered it to the tip of his nose, and held up my canvas bag triumphantly. “Ham joint, fresh from the butcher.”
“Excellent,” he said. “I’ve just made room for it in the fridge.”
There wasn’t much room at all – considering it was going to be only
the two of us for Christmas, we had a huge amount of food. I stuffed
the ham on to a shelf and pulled out a bottle of water and turned back
to Chris.
There was a delicious smell of cinnamon coming from the oven and
he was busy assembling something else on the counter. Despite my
best efforts to hide or burn his hideous jumper, he was still wearing
the baggy, misshapen thing he’d found in a charity shop. Apparently
lopsided reindeer were this season’s latest thing.
My nose was cold and I rubbed it with the palm of my hand to warm
it up before I stepped up close behind Chris and took his waist in my
hands, leaning my chin on his shoulder to watch what he was doing.
“What are you making?”
“Your nose is cold, Rob,” he complained as I nuzzled it into the side
of his neck. “There are sugar cookies in the oven and I’m trying to
make mince pies. I found a recipe online and thought I’d give it a go.”
“They look good so far,” I said, reaching around him and poking my
finger into the mix of dried fruit, suet, sugar and alcohol he was
carefully stirring. I licked my finger, hummed in approval and gave
him another kiss.
This Christmas was going to be our first together and we were both
determined to make it special. There had been invitations from family
and friends to spend the holiday with them, and after careful
consideration, I’d politely declined them all in favor of locking myself
away with Chris and spending the day alone with him.
We made a trip down to Florida for Thanksgiving, my first chance to
meet in person Chris’s mother, a woman whom I spoke with nearly
every week on the phone. With five children and five grandchildren
(so far), she and Chris’s father didn’t have many opportunities to
travel up to Boston to see us. I’d been wary at first, aware of how my
own parents were uncomfortable around any discussion of my
sexuality. But Betty-Sue Ford had treated me as family from the
beginning; apparently she was not at all bothered that her son had a
male partner rather than a female one, or that I was nine years older
than him.
After all, none of that mattered to us.
Chris’s family were completely opposite to my own; a big, tumbling,
noisy, messy group of people who talked over each other, argued
good-naturedly and laughed so much. It took much less time than I’d
expected for me to fit right in.
Being Scottish, my own family didn’t celebrate Thanksgiving and
made more of a fuss around the big Christian holidays. For that reason
I could see the trips to Florida in November becoming a regular thing.
In the past six weeks I had learned that Chris was someone who didn’t
just get into the holiday spirit, he flung himself face first into it and dragged along with him anyone who might be looking slightly less
than cheerful. I had managed to reign him in with most of the
decorating in our apartment, coming to an agreement that downstairs,
the decorations would be limited to a tasteful display of glittering
lights on the hallway table. Upstairs, he turned into a sparkling,
tinseled fairy grotto.
The whole of our living room area, which was on the top floor of the
building, was covered in lights and assorted Christmas décor. The tree
(that we’d had to drag up two flights of stairs to get in place) was
covered in fairy lights, decorations hung from the ceiling, tinsel was
draped on any surface that could support tinsel-drapery, baubles and
candy canes and twinkly lights and fake snow on the windows. It was
gaudy. It was horrific.
It was Chris.
So I loved it.
While he continued to bake and sing along to the radio, I grabbed my
new laptop and fired it up to answer some emails while sat at the
breakfast bar, away from his floury hands. Despite the fact that
Christmas break was well underway, I still had the occasional student
sending me an email asking for advice or help with assignments. If I
didn’t have any messages to answer I liked to stay on top of the news
websites.
I wasn’t paying much attention to what Chris was doing, although I
couldn’t help but notice when he switched the trays around in the
oven and his cookies were set out to cool. He seemed to be done, for
today at least.
It didn’t take long for him to do the few dishes and put the kettle on to boil, making a pot of the Christmas coffee I’d picked up that week
when doing our grocery shopping.
“Thanks,” I said as he handed me a mug, hot and strong, as I liked it.
I’d always thought there was something special about being able to
spend time with someone without the need to fill each moment with
conversation. Being with Chris was just easy.
I’d already finished wrapping up most of our gifts, but apparently
Chris had done some last minute shopping without me. After dinner
he spread himself out on the floor in the living room with paper, bows
and confetti to wrap into the layers.
I left him to it, occasionally providing a finger to hold a bit of paper in place before he taped it, and watched the TV while sprawled out on
the sofa. The gift-exchanging celebration with our family and friends
would happen on Boxing Day, a tradition I’d brought with me from
Scotland which Americans did not seem to share. It originated from
the times when people still had servants; on the day after Christmas
they’d be given a box of gifts – usually food or clothes – from the
master of the house. The day was a public holiday in Britain and we
were going to celebrate by inviting almost everyone we knew to
spend the day with us.
For me, the most important part of the holiday would be spending it
with Chloe. In the past year my daughter and I had continued to grow
closer, mostly due to Chris’s intervention. She had turned fifteen over
the summer and was beginning to mellow and mature, something I
was intensely relieved at.
She was going to be coming over with her mother, Luisa, who was
one of my oldest friends (she had long ago graciously forgiven me for
accidentally knocking her up when we were eighteen), her step-father,
Mike and her younger siblings with whom Chris was hopelessly in
love (an emotion that was reciprocated by the children in question).
Also joining the fray were two of Chris’s former band mates, John
and Lexi, who’d just welcomed baby Ruby into their family and my
sister Jilly. My friends Adam and Marlene were also coming along,
with their children. Needless to say, with the number of people we
were expecting, we had bought in extra food for the occasion.
When the last of the gifts was wrapped and pushed under the tree I
pulled Chris up onto the sofa and into my arms, where he settled back
against my chest. The only lights in the room came from the glow of
the TV, the twinkling of the tree in the corner, and the soft warmth of
the fire across the room. I hadn’t pulled the heavy curtains over the
windows to stop the head escaping even though I knew I should.
There was something about these long winter nights that I absolutely
loved; being warm inside while looking out into beautifully clear
nights, when all the stars were visible, or the sky dark, heavy and
close with snow.
Chris sighed and turned his head against my chest, tilting his head up
so he could kiss my chin. Even after the year or more that we’d been
together, he still had a way of making my stomach flutter with lust,
excitement, and love.
“Need to go to bed soon,” he said, pointing to the clock which read
eleven thirty, “or Santa won’t come.”
I laughed and wrapped my arms around him, pressing a kiss to the
crown of his head.
“Come on, then,” I said. “Help me turn all of this off.”
We made short work of the task; the decorations had been up for
weeks and I had started to remember which plug sockets to go to
when switching the lights off. Chris bolted the front door and I
checked that my grumpy cat, Flea, was inside before falling into bed.
Even though I had the heat on it was still colder in our bedroom than
in the living room. Chris snuggled into my chest, tangling our legs
together with the comforter pulled up high on our shoulders. For a
few minutes all I could hear was his deep breathing, he then hummed
low in his chest and turned to seek out my kisses.
I wasn’t surprised that he wanted this – to be fair, he always wanted
this. Chris used sex as a way to connect, to share something beautiful
and intimate that belonged to only us. Before I’d met him I wasn’t a
particularly sexual person, but he’d drawn that out of me to a point
where I was confident enough to be myself and enjoy my sexuality.
He was a sensual person and I’d fallen in love with the way he
touched me.
For tonight, he positioned his body on top of mine, aligning our chests
and wanting cocks and held himself there as we exchanged soft,
delicate kisses. Our lips rubbed together and his tongue gently flicked
out to tease my bottom lip before he redirected his attention down the
side of my neck.
I kept my arms wrapped loosely around his waist as he pressed his
lips to my skin, over and over. His hair still faintly smelled of the