Chapter OneâDay One, At Sea
The warm Florida sunshine bathed Josh Gilbert, and he turned his face into it as he walked up the cruise ship gangway, rolling luggage in tow. His weather app said the temps back home in Indiana would reach a balmy fifteen degrees.
Josh still couldnât believe Mom and Dad had surprised their familyâand Joshâs best friendâwith a Caribbean cruise for Christmas.
Falling in line behind his older brother, Luke, and his wife, Ramona, the Gilbert clan hauled suitcases and bags of holiday presents onto their new home for the weekâthe Pride of the Caribbean.
Dwarfed somewhat by the giant cruise liners docked beside them in the Port of Miami, the elegantly appointed Pride made a grand first impression when they entered the lobby behind a slew of other passengers.
âCheck out this place,â Luke said, craning his neck, eyes wide.
In awe, they all took in the plush red carpets, crystal chandeliers, and the sleek gold-and-glass banister of the impressive grand staircase. A colossal Christmas tree sat proudly on the first landing, a set of stairs branching to either side and draped in glittering garlands. The tree glistened with white twinkling lights, bows, seashells, and large glass ornaments that, when they caught the light just right, seemed to flicker and dance.
How much did Dad shell out for this trip? Josh wondered.
âDang, this ship is da bomb,â Aaron muttered in Joshâs ear.
Pleasantly stunned, Josh glanced up at his tall BFF. âNo doubt,â he agreed, and then he flinched at something unexpected.
In front of him, two men held hands, chatting with excitement about the cruise.
Though it made Josh happy to seeâand more than a tad jealousâopenly gay couples in public still surprised him.
If only Josh could ever have something like that in his life.
âHave you figured it out, Josh?â Mom asked, gesturing toward a different couple boarding the shipâtwo women holding hands.
Puzzle pieces began to fit together, creating a picture Josh wasnât sure he liked. He narrowed his eyes at his mother. âWhatâs going on?â
Mom twirled a brown curl around one finger, grinning. Curvy and shortâheâd inherited that from her along with the brown hair and eyesâshe looked ready to burst.
But Joshâs sister-in-law exploded first.
âItâs a gay cruise!â Ramona cried.
Josh shook his head. âWhat?â
âWeâre gonna find you a boyfriend for Christmas!â Clare announced.
Josh whirled on his sister. âWhat did you say, Clare?â
She clutched her hands to her ample chest, her curvy figure promising the same weight struggle Mom and Josh suffered. âThat weâre gonna find you a boyfriend for Christmas,â his little sister repeated. âThis cruise line is gay-friendly, which means there should be plenty of guys for you to have a shipboard romance. Isnât that great?â
Dad and Luke squirmed, as if caught in the womenâs schemes too, or perhaps they feared Joshâs response. Dad was an aged version of his eldest son, as tall and lean as the rest of the family was short and round.
âItâll be fun, Josh,â Luke assured him, shifting from foot to foot. âNo pressure.â
âYes, pressure,â Ramona insisted, slapping her husband on the arm, her white teeth as dazzling against her brown skin as her white sundress. âHeâs getting on board single, but heâs not leaving that way.â
Aaron laughed, and Josh glared at him.
âAnd I have just the trick,â Mom said, rummaging in her giant purse.
Unable to believe his ears, Josh frowned at Dad. âWere you in on this?â
Before Dad could answer, a stranger stepped in front of Josh. Middle-aged and overly tanned, he wore a lecherous grin.
âWhatâs this?â the stranger asked. âMistletoe?â
Then shocking Josh into a stupor, the man kissed him right on the lips.
âWhat theââ Josh recoiled.
âNameâs Brian,â the guy said, still grinning. âFind me later for a dance.â
Then he slipped into the crowd of passengers.
âWhat the heck?â Josh spun to face Mom.
Grinning like a fiend, she had a childrenâs fishing rod in her hand, and rather than a worm dangling from the hook, sheâd hung a clump of mistletoe.
âWhat are you doing?â he cried, too stunned to be as angry as he shouldâve been.
âGetting you a man,â Mom said, her face serious now.
Josh set his rolling suitcase on all four wheels and then crossed his arms to glare at her. âYou are certifiable, you know that?â
âCertifiably the best matchmaker you know,â she quipped. âAsk Clare and Luke how good I am.â
Luke threw an arm around his pretty wife, and they shared a loving kiss. âLuckiest man in the whole world that Mom introduced me to her tennis coach.â After six years of marriageâsans kids, though not for lack of tryingâLuke and Ramona were living the high-end life with their goldendoodle, Fred.
Patting Josh on the shoulder, Clare sighed. âSeriously, dude, you should let Mom pick a guy for you. She has the gift.â Clareâs husband, William, was the son of a lady in Momâs bunco group. They were married last Valentineâs Day.
âNo,â Josh declared, waving his hand in a sweeping gesture of finality. He couldnât argue against Momâs success thus far, but Mom would not be how he found his first real boyfriend.
âYou can find me a boyfriend, Mrs. G.â Aaron took the fishing rod from her and waggled it over his own head. âMistletoe, boys!â
Sure enough, Joshâs attractive friend soon had a line of four guys waiting to kiss him. Joshâs face flamed with embarrassment when the third guy added some tongue action and a grope on the ass, which Aaron didnât seem to find offensive at all.
Josh would die a million deaths if some guy kissed him like that in publicâespecially in front of his family.
Mom laughed and took back her fishing pole. âYou donât need any help,â she told Aaron, who was still whispering something in bachelor number threeâs ear.
Josh pointed at his mother. âKeep that thing away from me.â
âYouâre such a party pooper,â she scolded.
âThatâs enough,â Dad decided. âLetâs find our rooms.â
As the Gilbert clan moved forward, much to Joshâs further horror, Ramona announced, âSingle hot gay guy coming through!â
âRamona,â Josh hissed, face on fire.
âItâs my job to take pictures of all the single hot guys on this cruise ship,â a sultry voice said from off to the left.
Josh jumped and turned, shocked by the camera pointed at him.
Click.
The lens lowered, and the hottest man Josh had ever laid eyes on was grinning at him.
Tanned, blond, and straight off a Ralph Lauren yacht, the man wore white pants, a navy jacket, and a red ascot. He was tall, lean, and broad in the shoulders, with green eyes a man could get lost in and a face like Adonis himself!
âUhâŚ?â
âNathan Bradshaw, shipboard photographer,â the man introduced himself, his blond hair glistening in the sparkling lights of the chandelier.
Or maybe Josh just imagined it glistened. The guy was startling to look at.
Nathan extended a well-manicured hand. âWelcome aboard the Pride.â
âUhâŚ?â
âThis is Josh,â Ramona piped up, bodily pushing him closer to the handsome stranger.
A warm hand, soft but firm, took hold of Joshâs.
âHeâs single,â Clare said.
âIs that so?â Nathan drawled, shaking Joshâs hand and not letting go. âWell, so am I, Josh. Itâs very nice to meet you.â
âYeah, um⌠you too, Nathan.â Thatâs when clarity came to Joshâs stunned brain. He scowled at his meddling family. âYou guys, just stop,â he hissed, dropping the manâs hand like a house afire.
Clareâs big brown eyes widened innocently. âWhat?â
Nathan chuckled, and Joshâs face heated furtherâif such a thing were possible.
âEverybody needs a cheering section,â Nathan said. Then he gestured to the whole Gilbert clan. âEverybody, get closer. Letâs immortalize the moment you began the best vacation of your life.â
Josh squished between Clare and Ramona, while Dad, Aaron, and Luke took the back and Mom the far left. Josh somehow managed to say âcheeseâ along with everyone else while Nathan snapped a few pics.
Nathan looked at his display. âPerfect. Now, letâs get one of each couple.â
âWeâre a couple.â Ramona pointed at Luke, then Mom and Dad. âAnd so are they. Those three are all flying solo.â
âSo you said.â Nathan eyed Josh with a sideways grin that could almost be described as predatory.
Joshâs cheeks warmed, and he couldnât smile. I must be losing my mind. This is all some sort of twisted dream. Please wake up. Wake up!
But nothing happened, except Aaron and Clare posing on either side of him and Nathan raising the camera again.
âCâmon, smile for the camera,â Nathan prompted, and somehow Josh managed to suck in his gut and smile.
Looking only at Josh, Nathan stepped toward them. âThe pictures will be displayed on the viewing screens near the purserâs desk at 7:00 p.m. tonight. Theyâre available for purchase anytime during the cruise.â He leaned in close and whispered, âBut just a tip, they go on sale the last day, so keep track of the numbers for the ones you want.â Not leaning out of Joshâs personal space, Nathan winked at him. âJust donât tell anybody or it might get me fired.â
Josh swallowed, nervous all of a sudden with how close Nathan had gotten and how delicious his cologne smelled. Like honey or something else equally warm and inviting. Josh couldnât quite place it, but he liked it. Before he could get another chance to identify the alluring fragrance, the gorgeous photographer had slipped back into the crowd, smiling and flirting with the next group of passengers.
For a hot second, Josh had imagined Nathan was actually flirting with him, but he quickly pushed such thoughts away.
Itâs his job to flirt. Get over yourself!
âHe was handsome,â Mom said.
He flinched at her hovering behind him, and then he frowned at her. âSo is Brad Pitt. Doesnât mean he wants me.â
She scoffed. âOh, if Brad Pitt ever saw this face, heâd switch teams, for sure.â
And then, to Joshâs horror, she pinched both of his cheeks.
Hating it when she did that, but grateful she didnât add her usual âjust look at these chipmunk cheeks,â Josh wriggled out of her grasp. âDonât pull on my skin. Youâll give me wrinkles.â
She scoffed again. âYouâre only twenty-seven. What do you know about wrinkles?â
âAn ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,â Aaron chimed.
Yeah, it was bad enough that at twenty-seven Josh had never had a real boyfriend. The last thing he needed was premature wrinkling. His family was already going to make him prematurely gray.
âCâmon,â Dad said. âIâm tired after all the driving. Letâs get to our rooms and get settled. I think thereâs a manhattan somewhere on this ship with my name on it.â
Several crewmembers with tablets mingled in the crowd, giving directions to staterooms. Dad made a beeline toward a man in a Santa hat, holding a tablet, who stood beside a distinguished-looking fellow in a captainâs uniform.
âWelcome aboard,â the man with the tablet said. Though he looked almost Mom and Dadâs age, his tanned skin was flawless and his hair a rich brown. âIâm Raoul, your purser, and this is Captain Leonides.â
âWelcome aboard,â the captain said, with a tip of his hat. He was quite handsome, in an exotic Mediterranean sort of way, with the faintest hint of gray at his temples. Definitely looked competent to captain their ship, a man born to be at sea.
I might die of embarrassment, but at least not from shipwreck.
âThank you,â Dad said, and everyone else repeated similar greetings. âWeâre the Gilbert family. I believe we have four rooms booked.â
Raoul swiped a few times and tapped on his tablet. âYes, the Gilberts. You are in cabins F1, 2, 3, and 4, on the Fiesta deck. Very nice accommodations youâve chosen. Some of our finest suites, each with ocean views and balconies.â
âBalconies?â Luke cried, sliding down his shades, his brown eyes wide. âHow much money did you spend on this, Dad?â
Dad raised a hand. âYou know itâs rude to ask that. This is your Christmas present, and I want us all to have a great time. I even got us the unlimited drink package.â
âWoo-hoo, margaritas, here I come,â Aaron declared, raising his hand for a high five from Clare, which she returned after a slight frown.
âYou guys better have a great time,â Mom said. âBecause none of you are getting birthday gifts from us this year.â
Josh laughed. Dad had an overly generous spirit, but Mom kept a tight rein on the family purse strings. She might have married a renowned heart surgeon, but she never forgot the trailer she was born and raised in. She passed along the value of money to all of her childrenâwell, maybe not to Clare. As the youngest and the only girl, Clare was more than spoiled. Dad had bailed her out of credit card debt twice that Josh knew of.
âNo birthday present for me? Mrs. G, thatâs just cruel,â Aaron cried.
She patted his cheek rather than pinching it, Josh noted. âOh, well, maybe for you.â
âThatâs fair,â Clare muttered to Josh, and he wisely said nothing.
Clare might be spoiled and bad with money, but Josh adored her. And since her husband was currently in Afghanistan fighting for their freedoms and she would be spending her first Christmas as a married woman without him, he kept the comment to himself that she shouldnât worry. Daddyâs girl always got a present.
A large, stoic bellman loaded their suitcases, gift bags, and wrapped presents onto a trolley, grunting a âNoâ when Dad tried to help. Raoul gave him instructions to deliver their things to the suites, and the man lumbered toward an elevator.
Raoul snapped his fingers, and as if out of nowhere, a very petite woman with a bright smile and a pink streak in her hair appeared.
Aaron jumped back and put his hands to his chest. âYou just came out of nowhere, didnât you?â
âIâm little,â she quipped.
âPenelope dear, please show the Gilbert family to their suites,â Raoul told her.
She grinned impishly. âRight this way, family,â she said in a cheery voice. All but floating up the grand staircase with her hands at the small of her back, Penelope led them to their rooms.
âHave you sailed with us before?â Penelope asked Dad, gazing up at him with big doe eyes she batted coquettishly.
âNo, first time.â Dad smiled down at her, seeming smitten with how cute and tiny she was.
âIsnât she adorable?â Mom whispered to Josh.
âYeah, sure, I guess,â he said. For a flash, Josh thought Penelope frowned at him, but the change in her face happened so quick he probably imagined it.
Penelope was very pretty, but her long eyelashes were as fake as the pink streak in her blonde hair. The glitter across her brow and eyelids mightâve been unprofessional, but this was a gay-friendly cruise. He wondered if she was on the rainbow, but couldnât be sure with the way she giggled so flirtatiously with Dad.
âHere is the first suite,â Penelope announced, pausing outside F1. She studied Josh and Aaron. âI pick this one for you two.â
âUm, okay,â Josh said, figuring it was her attempt at being cute and the rooms were assigned.
The act worked on Dad and Luke, if the way they tilted their heads and smiled at her were any indicatorâas if they couldnât decide if she was real or not. Regardless, Luke had better stop staring or his feisty wife would smack him one.
But when Penelope opened the first room, all their eyes went straight to the spacious suite and dazzling view.
Josh gasped.
âHoly ocean view, Batman,â Aaron exclaimed.
The room was gorgeous, not cramped like the cruise he went on for spring break in college. They each had a double bed, and there was a sitting area with a couch, a door that probably led to the bathroom, and sliding doors that opened to a balcony, which currently faced the Port of Miami. Towels folded into wreaths with soaps for ornaments and big red bows lay on each bed. A pretty Christmas tree with blown-glass ornaments that seemed to glisten and dance in the light was perched on the table between the beds. Mirrored closet doors visually doubled the space, and much to Joshâs surprise, their luggage had already arrived.
âWowâ was all Josh could say.
Dad and Mom grinned, and rubbernecking behind them, his siblings had eyes as wide as their mouths.
âHave fun, boys,â Penelope sang.
Josh pulled out his wallet to tip Penelope, but Dad raised a hand. âNo, no, save your money for souvenirs.â
âThanks, Dad.â
Aaron went up and hugged first Mom, then Dad. âThank you, Mr. and Mrs. G. Can you adopt me?â
Mom laughed. âI think we did that a long time ago.â
âMoving this way, family,â Penelope announced. âLetâs see which of you get the next room.â Then she flitted away, the rest of the Gilberts following and her voice fading like tinkling sleigh bells as their suite door shut.
Once alone, Josh and Aaron exchanged looks.
âThis is going to be the best vacation ever,â Aaron declared.
Josh put his hands on his hips. âFess up. Did you know Mom and Dad booked a gay-friendly cruise to find me a boyfriend?â
Aaron waved him off. âWhy are you looking a gift horse in the mouth?â He was tall, fit, and had the prettiest dark curls and blue eyesâwhich was why he never had a problem scoring a date.
âIâm not.â
âYou are.â He made a beeline to the balcony door and slid it open, filling the suite with warm, salty air. âAnd yes, I knew it was gay-friendly, and the girls have this notion that youâll have a shipboard romance and fall in love. Maybe you will, maybe you wonât. All I know is that youâre the luckiest SOB on earth to have a family who would pick a gay cruise line just for you. And your mom even booked us all mani-pedis this afternoon. Your dad and Luke are getting massages. Bet theyâre hoping that little pink pixie, Penelope, is the massage therapist.â He snorted at his own joke, obviously noting the same thing Josh did about the way Dad and Luke had been enraptured with the woman.
Chagrined by Aaronâs speech, Josh shuffled his feet, studying his sandals. He knew he was lucky. Aaronâs family would never go on a ship like this. Especially his father. The man could barely look at Aaron sometimes. His mom and brother were never cruel, but Josh always sensed they werenât sure how to take the flamboyant Aaron. Sometimes, if Aaron had too much to drink, heâd cry or bitch about them, saying he felt more love from Joshâs family than his own.
Evidenced by the coin Dad put out for this trip, the Gilberts viewed Aaron as family too.
âYeah, I know I sound ungratefulââ
âYou do.â
âBut I hope they donât run around the ship looking for a man for me. That will be so humiliating. And that mistletoe fishing pole? What the heck?â
âThat mistletoe got me a hot date for the Christmas costume party tonight. And your family means well,â Aaron said, leaning on the railing and tipping his face up to the sun.
Not a fan of heights, Josh popped his head out onto the balcony. âNice view. I wonât be sitting out here.â
âWhy not?â
âHavenât you heard about all the people who fall off cruise ships?â
Aaron scoffed. âOnly jealous husbands push their wives overboard. That would never happen on a gay ship.â
Josh chuckled but wisely stepped inside. âPromise me you wonât go on the balcony after weâve been drinking, âkay?â
âOkay, worrywart, as long as you promise to let loose. Have fun.â Aaron gave Josh a shimmy. âThis is a cruise custom designed for us!â
âOkay, I promise to have fun.â
âGround rules.â Aaron sprawled out on the bed closest to the balcony, lacing his fingers behind his head. âIf the Do Not Disturb is on the door, we wonât interrupt any hookups. Any overnighters, we have to okay with the other, that way one of us can sleep in Clareâs room.â
âOkay.â Josh laughed, doubting very much heâd have an overnight guest.
âAnd no fucking in each otherâs bed,â Aaron added. âI love you, but even I have standards.â
âIâm fine with whatever,â Josh said. âWe both know youâre the only one whoâs going to be hooking up in this room. I should probably just move my stuff into Clareâs room right now.â
âYou donât know that. You could meet the man of your dreams.â
Josh scoffed, his mind revisiting a pair of green eyes and golden hair sparkling in the sunlightâŚ. Nope, never gonna happen. âYeah, like Iâm gonna meet the man of my dreams.â
âYou never know what could happen.â
âIâm too fat.â
âNo, youâre not. I know how hard youâve been trying to lose weight. You look amazing.â
âI could stand to lose another twenty pounds.â
âDonât,â Aaron scolded. âI hate it when you get down on yourself.â
âItâs just the truth.â
âSays you. Just try and chill out for once. Donât worry about your waistline or whatever rules youâve made up in your head. Just go out there and have fun. Who knows? Maybe something magical will happen.â
As he unpacked, listening to Aaron list all the activities and excursions the ship offered, Josh knew he could be a stick in the mud. Well, in comparison to Aaron, anyway. But heâd been looking forward to a relaxing vacation with no computers, deadlines, or spreadsheets, and no worries. He didnât even have to worry about any homophobes on this trip.
His thoughts alighted again on the cute photographer, Nathan.
Maybe this boyfriend cruise might not be so bad.
His family loved him enough to pick this ship, and honestly, until this moment, a shipboard romance hadnât been an option. He hadnât been on board half an hour and heâd already been kissed onceâeven if he wasnât pleased with Mom about it.
This ship was full of potential for a guy like Josh.
Aaron was right. Josh needed to let loose this week. Heâd waited his entire life to find romance, so if a chance presented itself, he should not squander the opportunity.
Even if that meant his family embarrassing him all over the Caribbean.