Chasing Forever by Kelly Jensen blog tour




Chasing Forever is the final book in the series This Time Forever. Brian and Mal's story is special in all sorts of ways. Even though these books all standalone, Brian has been there since the beginning--as the character everyone loved to hate in the first book, and the character who seemed to have more to him in book two. In this final story, I share who Brian really is, and hope you'll all come to love him as much as I do. Then there's Mal, his other half, my serious soldier who has been waiting all his life for a challenge like Brian. Sometimes we have to be knocked lower than ever before in order to reach that high, and Mal's journey is one I treasure. I hope you enjoy reading this story of redemption and learning to live out loud.


About Chasing Forever

Old wounds, new directions, and a forever worth chasing.

Malcolm Montgomery was a history teacher and track coach until an accident left him with two broken legs. He’ll recover, but life has knocked his feet out twice now. He’s not sure if he’s ready to try again, especially when it comes to love—and slick guys like Brian Kenway. Still, he needs help mentoring the school’s LGBTQ society, so he asks Brian to take some responsibility.

Brian has been hiding behind his reputation as a liar and a cheat for so long that he actually believes he’s that guy—until his nephew, Josh, turns up on his couch, tossed out for being gay. Brian has never considered being a father, but he knows all about being rejected by loved ones. Now Brian wants to be more: a partner for Mal and a role model for Josh.

But when Mal’s recovery is set back and the sad truth of Brian’s past is revealed, the forever they’ve been chasing seems even further from their grasps. It’ll take a rescue effort to revive their sense of worth and make Brian, Mal, and Josh into a family of their own.


About the This Time Forever Series

Small towns and second chances.

Simon, Frank, and Brian think love has passed them by. Each is facing down his fiftieth birthday—Simon in a few years, Frank next year, and Brian soon enough. Each has loved and lost. But for these men, everything old really is new again, and it’s only when they return to their roots that they’ll find their second chances and the happily ever after they’ve been waiting their whole lives for.

This time it’s forever.

This series includes:

1.     Building Forever — released October 15

2.     Renewing Forever — released November 12

3.     Chasing Forever — released December 10


Excerpt

Visit with Vanessa
This is a longish excerpt, but when it came time to choose pieces of Chasing Forever to share, I knew this would be one of them. Vanessa is Brian’s best friend and this visit with her is as necessary for him as it is to his new relationship with his nephew, Josh. We learn a lot about Brian as a man in this scene: where he came from and why he’s so lost. It also marks a sort of truce between him and Josh, and a change in direction for them.
~*~
Vanessa opened the door and greeted Brian with her customary smile and smacking kiss to his lips. Brian hugged her tight, inhaling the familiar scent of perfume and Vanessa, his oldest friend. He loved this woman. Would marry her if she wasn’t always getting married to someone else. Also, he’d suck as a husband. He had no interest in sex with Vanessa and a lot of interest in sex with other people. Men. Mal, currently.
“You must be Josh,” Vanessa was saying to his pink-cheeked nephew. “The color of your hair is fantastic! How long ago did you dye it?”
Josh did a little gaping.
“And I cannot get over how much like Brian you are. It’s like being transported back a hundred years.”
“Which would make you as old as I am,” Brian put in.
Vanessa, of course, looked amazing and ten years younger than he did.
Putting her hand around Josh’s shoulder, she guided him up the stairs and into her studio, a light-filled space that encompassed nearly the entire top floor of the house. Brian followed.
They were across Elizabeth Avenue from Weequahic Park, light-years from where he’d grown up, but only a few miles in actual fact. Brian didn’t visit Vanessa often—he found the reminder of where he’d come from both nostalgic and painful. Mostly painful. After he’d been kicked out, he’d lived in this house with Vanessa and her uncle Tristan for a handful of years before college. They’d been good years, despite the fact that Tristan had been slowly dying the whole time. But Tristan had done his best to convince Brian that life was worth living, and now, some thirty years later, Brian had to agree. Still, returning to Elizabeth Avenue was always hard—even more so than simply being in Newark—and Brian often wondered why Vanessa had remained. Of course, she hadn’t had his start. And she’d always had Tristan. Maybe she’d dulled pain of his loss by continuing to live here, even after Tristan’s death.
Brian was unaware he’d made a sound until Vanessa touched his arm. Had he sighed? Hopefully it had only been a sigh. As though she sensed his thoughts, she squeezed his arm and gave him the special smile that had made and kept their friendship. “Wait here.”
Vanessa abandoned them in the middle of the large attic room, where two couches faced each other over a coffee table piled high with books and magazines. All of the walls were hung with her paintings. One also had a row of low counters and cabinets, which was where she stored her tools. Adjacent to her work space were the windows overlooking the park, and the source of most of the light. Large skylights opened up the sloping ceiling so that even on the darkest days, Vanessa barely needed to turn on a light. She had lights, though, clustered over the half of the attic devoted to her easels and tables.
She’d disappeared into one of the two rooms at the back that she used to store her work.
While Brian worked to steady his breathing—no more sighing!—Josh wandered toward the half-finished painting on the closest easel. “I can’t believe I’m actually here. Do you think she’d let me take a couple of pictures?” He had his phone in his hand.
“Probably. Maybe not the unfinished stuff, but I don’t know. I’ve never asked.”
“How come you don’t have any of her paintings at your place if you’re such good friends?”
“I do. I just haven’t hung them up. I’ve only been in that house for . . .” Two years. “I had them hanging in my old place.”
“My art is in a box? For shame, Brian.” Vanessa popped out of the storage room, carrying two small canvases.
Brian recognized the frames. “Oh, no. Ness. Don’t show him those.”
Grinning evilly, Vanessa held out the two portraits for Josh to see. “Me and Brian, age . . .” She glanced over her shoulder. “God, were we seventeen? Eighteen?”
Brian reached out to snatch the portrait he’d done, the crime against art he’d painted so long ago. “I cannot believe you kept these.”
“I kept all your art.”
“What do you mean ‘all’?”
“I have your sketchbooks too.”
“You are no longer my best friend.”
Vanessa laughed. “So you keep trying to tell me. Find someone else who will put up with you for as long as I have and we’ll visit that topic again.” She hadn’t let go of his painting, and Josh was studying it and comparing it to Vanessa’s portrait of Brian, which even then showed what would become her style: messy blocks of color that could look like nothing so much as a cut-up picture pasted back together again. Badly. But also showed exactly what it was meant to be: a face. An impossibly young face framed by dark-purple hair and big blue eyes.
“You had purple hair?” Josh asked, glancing up at Brian.
Cheeks heating, Brian reached for his picture again. “For a while.”
“And green and blue, something like yours. Orange. Black. Do you remember your black phase?” Vanessa asked.
“Unfortunately, yes.”
Josh turned his attention back to Brian’s painting. Brian’s style was much more realistic than Vanessa’s—something he’d struggled with and probably the reason he’d given up on art. He’d never been able to get anything to look exactly as it should and had never grasped why you would paint a scene other than realistically, even though he could appreciate Vanessa’s style for what it was. But he’d never had any real talent. His lines were timid and his perspective off. He had an easier time with buildings. Plans. Square things.
Josh’s lips pressed together and apart. Then he glanced up. “You were good.”
Snorting, Brian pointed toward Vanessa’s latest canvas. “If you want good, check out Vanessa’s stuff.”
An hour passed with Vanessa allowing Josh to take pictures of whatever he wanted. Apparently she posted regular updates of her works in progress online. They chatted art and music and food while Brian made affirmative noises when called upon. He envied the ease with which Vanessa bonded with his nephew, and was grateful for it at the same time. Josh was obviously having a good day, and that mean Brian was having a good day.
When Josh excused himself to use the bathroom, Vanessa sidled up next to Brian and put her arm around his waist, snuggling in close as she always did. “He’s adorable.”
“Today he is.”
“Have you stopped looking for somewhere to send him?” Vanessa arched her eyebrows in question, while eyes dared him to say no.
Brian shrugged and she smiled.
“I like seeing you like this,” she said.
“Like what?”
“With family. With Josh. He likes you.”
“I’m sure he does.”
“No. He . . . Be nice to him, Bri. I get the feeling you’re the only thing standing between him and you know what.”
Brian grimaced lightly. “That’s because I am.”
“So you know how important what you’re doing is.”
“That’s why I brought him here today.”
Her smile widened. “I’m glad you did. You don’t visit me often enough.”
“Yeah, well.”
Sobering slightly, Vanessa gave him another hug. “It’s okay to let go, Brian. You know that, right? You can’t hold on to everything forever.”
He wanted to tell her he had let go—of a lot. This house, for instance. But as quickly as the thought occurred, a second replaced it. He’d never encouraged a friendship between Vanessa and Simon, and this was why. Just as he’d always kept one condo empty, he liked to keep spaces between the compartments of his life. Vanessa here, with his past, Simon . . . There was no Simon. Not anymore. Was it because of this . . . this feeling welling up inside him now? The memory of himself at Josh’s age? A younger version of himself. The self he had only ever shared with one person, the woman hugging him so tightly right now?
And if he was going to be doing all this thinking—it must be Vanessa’s perfume. She always smelled like a fresh spring morning after the rain . . . If he was going to keep thinking along these lines, examining the rights and wrongs, then which part of himself was he going to share with Mal?
Or was that something else he should let go of?
Once again sensing his thoughts, Vanessa pressed a kiss to his cheek. Brian sighed—purposefully this time—and rested his forehead against hers.


About Kelly Jensen

If aliens ever do land on Earth, Kelly will not be prepared, despite having read over a hundred stories about the apocalypse. Still, she will pack her precious books into a box and carry them with her as she strives to survive. It’s what bibliophiles do.

Kelly is the author of a number of novels, novellas, and short stories, including the Chaos Station series, cowritten with Jenn Burke. Some of what she writes is speculative in nature, but mostly it’s just about a guy losing his socks and/or burning dinner. Because life isn’t all conquering aliens and mountain peaks. Sometimes finding a happy ever after is all the adventure we need.

Connect with Kelly:

·        Website: kellyjensenwrites.com

·        Facebook: www.facebook.com/kellyjensenwrites/

·        Twitter: twitter.com/kmkjensen

·        Tumblr: kmkjensen.tumblr.com/

·        Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/kmkjensen/

·        Instagram: www.instagram.com/kellyjensenwrites/


Giveaway

To celebrate the release of Chasing Forever one lucky person will win a $25 Riptide Publishing gift card and a swag pack of stickers, art cards, and bookmarks! Leave a comment with your contact info to enter the contest. Entries close at midnight, Eastern time, on December 15, 2018. Contest is NOT restricted to U.S. entries. Thanks for following along, and don’t forget to leave your contact info!


Comments

Unknown said…
Thanks for hosting me!
Thank you for dropping by, Kelly!
Anonymous said…
It's been a great tour!

vitajex(At)Aol(Dot)com
J. Shannon said…
Thanks for the excerpt!
jlshannon74 at gmail.com
H.B. said…
Thank you for the blog tour and good luck with the release!
humhumbum AT yahoo DOT com

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