| Derek feels like he lives in a city full of comic book heroes. Known as Straight Man, he works as a night clerk in a hotel where he is entertained with an unrelenting man known as Coffee Guy. Scott, the Coffee Guy, works the graveyard shift at the hotel diner. Derek likes working alone even though it gets boring but the coffee comes in handy but tonight it appears his coffee is running rather late. Scott has been watching Derek for a while and offers him a proposition, sure the guy is gay. Scott figures since they are both bored why not check out each other’s merchandise. Derek thinks Scott is a chatty delivery boy but one thing leads to another and they find themselves in Room 13 doing a little exploring. Since the hotel runs by the rent by the hour and the clients sign permission for them to often be taped, neither Derek nor Scott imagined their activities would be documented on film. Scott could careless about anything but Derek. He wishes to make Derek a permanent feature in a relationship. Derek has to make up his mind if he wishes to allow Scott to enter, or stay alone all his life.
Take one lonely desk clerk who prefers his solitude and one diner guy who seems to have more time on his hands, and you have two hot guys who find passion in the arms of each other. Straight Man and Coffee Guy is a fascinating read. The two guys, at first appear as if they have nothing in common; in reality have lots of things that keep them as an item. Coffee Guy, or Steve, is rather persistent but he sees a good thing and goes after it. All he wishes is an everlasting relationship with someone he cares deeply and Straight Man, or Derek, is the one. Ms. Okati pens a book that grabs the reader’s attention from the beginning. Incorporating a scene, inside a hotel room, with a hidden camera, produces some erotic sex scenes between the two that add some delightful interest.
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Reviewer: Linda L. |