"... possession is achieved as a result of winning a contest." Australian rules football.
Each book features a football player whose possession of the guy he wants is... contested.
These books can be read in any order, but some readers recommend reading the George-Finn-Joq saga as follows: Because He’s My Guy, Because He’ll Always Be My Guy, His Boyfriend’s Rookie, You Could Do Better.
His Boyfriend's Rookie
How far would you go to keep your boyfriend?
This is the debut season of the second greatest rookie of all time: Finnegan Flynn.
This is the season the greatest rookie of all time, George Creed, takes his position in history as the youngest person ever to coach a league team.
And this is the season Head of Stadium Security, Joaquin Nord, watches his boyfriend, the deeply closeted coach, fall in love with his superstar rookie…
Joaquin watches this mutual attraction unfold with patient horror, certain his boyfriend will get over his crush. But a moment of aching intimacy caught on camera forces him to intervene.
Will his desperate act of sabotage be enough? Or will it cement George and Finn as the first in Australian Football history at something else?
Because He's My Guy
He's been in an open relationship for twelve years
He's never touched another guy...
Until him.
George Creed will soon debut as the youngest coach in Australian Football history.
He's excited, he's nervous.
He's more obsessed with meeting his new rookie.
Finnegan Flynn is finally joining the team after being sidelined with injury for two seasons.
As the number one draft pick, he's got a lot to prove.
He's more obsessed with meeting his new coach—his footy idol and teenage crush.
When George invites Finn over for dinner, Finn suspects they're about to take their budding attraction to the next level. Until he meets George's boyfriend, Joaquin.
Finn is crushed, but George explains he's in an open relationship. Except George doesn't do open, he's a one man kind of guy.
Finn is utterly confused: if George doesn't do open, why tell him?
Because George isn't open, until he meets Finn.
But if George is a one man kind of guy, then whose guy is he?
Because He's My Guy is a soft for you MM romance featuring an age gap, team feels, relationship drama, and a reason to come out when you're a football superstar.
Because He'll Always Be My Guy
These bonus scenes will take you back into their world as George explores his sexuality, and Finn reveals a hurt he can’t get past. There’s a trip to a bathhouse, a baby, a memorable Best & Fairest red carpet interview, and a George grand gesture to heal all Finn’s wounds.
If you ever wondered how they navigated life after their shady beginnings, here are 30,000 words of just that.
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You Could Do Better
Chris McLachlan can’t stop thinking about the cool guy he met at a rooftop bar. So when he crashes into him at his favourite coffee shop a year later, he asks him out immediately. He’s bewildered when he gets turned down cold—he’s a decent looking billionaire, is this guy for real? Sure, Chris has a sexual problem, but this guy doesn’t know that.
After his messy break-up, Joaquin Nord never wants to date again. Riddled with feelings of betrayal, shame and depression, he’s content to keep to himself and avoid all things George and Finn—his ex and the rookie he married a month after they broke up—for the rest of his life. He’s definitely not going to date the weird guy who keeps rocking up at his coffee place.
But when Joq is subjected to yet another installment of the Gay Football Soap Opera that is George and Finn in the media, he decides to give Chris a shot. Losing himself in a hot one night stand is just the ticket he needs to move on.
But from the first night, it feels like more than a hook-up. For Chris, it’s the first time he’s slept with someone he wants to see again. For Joq, it’s far too intimate.
Joq won’t do another relationship. And Chris can’t because he’s sexually dysfunctional. It makes no sense for them to keep hooking up.
And yet, they do, repeatedly, both of them waiting for the other shoe to drop…
Until Joq realises he can’t do better, but can Chris?
The follow-up to His Boyfriend’s Rookie and Because He’s My Guy, You Could Do Better brings Joq some much-needed closure and a sweet HEA.
This Is My Church
“Church boys don’t come out of the closet to marry cocaine snorting dudes who like to take it up the—”
Mates with everyone and beholden to none, Lacy is a twenty-seven-year-old football superstar who parties as hard as he plays. It makes no sense for him to become best mates with their new ruckman, the bible reading, softly spoken celibate, Thaddeus Clay.
But from the moment the freshly traded twenty-three-year-old walks into the locker room, they do everything together.
Well, almost everything.
When Thad stumbles upon Lacy’s extracurriculars—a drug-fuelled gangbang where Lacy loses consciousness to the number of men who take him—he knows they can’t do that together.
But what Thad does next will change the course of their relationship in irreversible ways. Except Lacy doesn’t remember. And Thad is left with a secret that threatens his friendship and his faith.
Lacy knows he never stood a chance with a church boy, but when Thad avoids eye contact he’s left with one question—what the hell happened on the weekend?
This Is My Church carves a path through gangbangs, benders and a whole lot of praying to find out what it means to be truly loved.
We Were Never Lovers
He knows they were friends
He knows they were enemies
But were they ever lovers?
Aboriginal footballer and rising superstar Sean Hiller wakes up in hospital, missing the last two years of his life. The first thing he sees is the good-for-nothing white boy he hates—his teammate, Jack Reaver. And the last thing he remembers is an altercation with Jack in the locker room.
Jack must’ve put him here. Except Jack didn’t cause his accident because he’s now Sean’s best friend and roommate. Jack will be taking Sean home to care for him while he recovers. Sean can’t believe it. Letting Jack back in means confronting what happened between them when they were seventeen, and Sean can’t do that.
But when he discovers Jack strung out in their kitchen at 2:00 AM, Sean takes care of him in a way he’d never dreamed possible. And Jack refuses to tell him exactly what that means. As Sean stares down the prospect of being medically retired at twenty-seven, the pain of not knowing who they are to each other hurts him more than the loss of his career.
He knows they could’ve been friends, could’ve been more. He knows they became enemies instead. But were they ever lovers?






