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GENRE: Gay Thriller Spicy Romance LENGTH: 23,931 words RATING: A recent graduate of the NYPD’s cadet academy, Jimmy McSwain dreams of anything except being a cop. He has a complicated history with the police, and it isn’t from a rap sheet. Years ago, his police officer father was gunned down during an off-duty incident, leaving Jimmy bitter that his killer was never found.Now, trained in the art of law, Jimmy decides to embark on a new career: that of private detective. But he just can’t get his own license; he needs experience. What happens will lead Jimmy into a part of New York he doesn’t know, realizing he’s the stranger in a neighborhood that lives by its own rules.His mother, Maggie McSwain, is skeptical about his job but there’s nothing she can do to stop her headstrong son from entering this shadowy new world. As a warm spring settles over the city, a twist of fate has Jimmy taking on his first case, one that is a time bomb ready to explode.What he can’t leave behind is the memory of his father, and the silver shield which he earned only out of respect. Can he live with his decision?EXCERPT:Note: may contain sexually explicit scenes of a homoerotic nature.
It was a day to celebrate as James McSwain watched over his son Jimmy McSwain. Jimmy was born into an Irish clan to Maggie and Joseph McSwain, they also have two daughters. Mallory working her way up in law and Meaghan now a disinterested teenager. Jimmy followed in his father’s footsteps and went to the Police Academy and passed top ten in his class. He earned the gold cords and blue citations, not just with the necessary requirements but with achievement in physical strength and excelled. Though it’s a day of celebration with his Ma, Maggie, her brother and uncle Paddy in attendance, he requested they not celebrate. Somewhere in the sea of people was Ralphie. Ralphie Henderson was his father’s best friend and his NYPD partner. Jimmy chose Mario’s an Italian restaurant for the gathering of his Irish family and even Grandma Hester came. Over four-hundred cadets had graduated this day. Some would be assigned to their neighborhood or the five Burroughs. Once home Jimmy removed the un