Title: Off the Record
Author: Kelly Rand
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: 01/24/2023
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 62100
Genre: Contemporary, contemporary, Canada, journalist, film director/actor, artists, famous people, power imbalance, coming out, slow burn, age difference, over-40, politics, family issues
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Description
Freelance journalist David Cronkwright needs to finish a magazine article to avoid being evicted from his apartment. The subject is Nic Leduc, a younger, queer filmmaker on track to win an Oscar. But when David gets to Montreal, Nic refuses to be interviewed. Instead, Nic drags David all over the cityβto his stylist, to a karaoke night, to a hiking trail on a mountain. Nic takes him to a party where David realizes how lonely Nicβs success has made him, that perhaps, what they both need is to learn to trust each other.Excerpt
Off the Record Kelly Rand Β© 2023 All Rights Reserved David was sitting in Zaphodβs Restaurant, waiting for his Big Breakfast of three eggs, three pieces of bacon, and the best home fries heβd had in his forty-four years. That was when his cellphone rang. Ivy sat across from him, telling a story about a client who wanted a photo shoot with a leopard-print background, while wearing that same leopard print, and sheβd had to perfectly align the two to fit the creative brief. Her mouth hung open midword, and David glanced at his phone. It was a Montreal number, so it had to be Nicolas Leduc. βSorry,β he said. βI have to take this.β Then, into the phone, βHello?β βYeah, is this David?β The voice on the other end didnβt sound French at all, more like a midrange California accent. βYeah. Is this Nic?β βListen, Iβm having second thoughts.β Davidβs heart sputtered. His eyes must have widened because Ivy leaned closer, making a circle with her hand like she needed more information. GQ had hired him to write an article about Nicolas Leduc, a twenty-six-year-old QuΓ©bΓ©cois director who everyone expected to be nominated for an Academy Award. The Canadian committee still had to choose his film as the countryβs foreign language entry, but Leduc had won the Palme dβOr at the Cannes Film Festival, so it seemed like a formality. David had a last-call notice from his landlord on his table back home, the result of a freelancing dry spell, and the GQ article was the only income standing between himself and eviction. βWhy?β he said. βItβll be fine. Iβm heading out there today.β βIβm just not that into doing interviews right now, thatβs all.β David stammered and found his words. βBut itβs great publicity. Itβs exactly what you need leading up to the awards. Itβs a major magazine.β βI know.β Leduc went silent on the other end, and David imagined a clock ticking. This was the second conversation heβd ever had with Leduc outside of email. The first was when he got his hands on a press pack for Leducβs latest film, Elle, and called the number. Instead of getting a public relations person, he got Leducβs personal cell. Leduc had been riding north in the passenger seat of a convertible at the time. Through the howl of the wind, heβd agreed to an interview scheduled for some time next month. Now, that interview was tomorrow. βWeβll go at your pace,β David said. βWhatever you want to talk about, weβll talk about. Itβll be great. I promise.β During the next pause, the server brought their breakfast, and David smiled and waved his hand before she walked away. βItβll be great,β he repeated. βOkay. But I donβt want to meet at my place. I want to meet at my favorite restaurant. Itβs called Les CrΓͺpes, near Mount Royal. You can google it, right?β βYeah, yeah, I can google it.β David searched his pocket for a pen but didnβt have one, so he repeated it. βLes CrΓͺpes. Same time?β βOne p.m. See you then.β And with that, Leduc hung up. David exhaled. βJesus. I thought he was going to cancel.β Ivy smirked, tapping some salt onto her home fries. βHeβs difficult. Terry says he is.β Terry was Ivyβs new husband, a camera operator who worked on Canadian movies and TV shows. His last job had been on a Sarah Polley film. Ivyβs first husband had been David. βHeβs flighty, I guess,β she continued. βHeβs demanding, and he changes his mind a lot.β βWell, he canβt change his mind about the fucking article.β David stabbed his eggs and put a forkful in his mouth. He was thankful Ivy still did breakfasts with him. Terry came sometimes, too, and sat, quiet and polite, as they talked about their families or the days when theyβd worked in the same Toronto Sun newsroom. When David first made eye contact with Terry in one of Zaphodβs emerald-green booths, heβd watched him for some sign of jealousy. Terry had just smiled and asked questions like Who will be in your next article? Ivy had told him that David was gay. Sheβd never specified, but it was inevitable. David had told Ivy himself in the last year of their marriage as theyβd sat on a bench in a park near the Danforth. Iβve never dated a guy. Iβve never kissed a guy. But Iβm forty-four. I know. βLeduc will be an interesting article,β David said. βHave you seen any of his films?β βOh, yeah. His films are great. Which ones have you seen?β βAll of them. Research. Iβd seen a couple already. I think, The Key to Infinity.β βEveryoneβs seen that one.β Leduc had seven films so far, starting with the one he made when he was seventeen that premiered at the Directorβs Fortnight at Cannes. Heβd released them at a nearly annual clip ever sinceβcascading dominoes of stories about a young gymnast who was transgender; dueling mothers wanting to take control of a child; a mathematical prodigy who holed himself away, Γ la the Unabomber, and established a romantic relationship with the kindergarten teacher living next door. Each film included a colorful montage that made audiences wipe away tears. David had seen Elle in a tiny art house theater at Yonge and Eglinton, sitting in the back with his long legs stretched out, looking over fifteen heads in front of him. When the gymnast, Persephone, broke down in a hospital hallway, collapsing from emotional exhaustion, heβd folded and unfolded the napkin in his hand, tightening his jaw to prevent tears. When the lights came on, heβd wished Greg was there.Purchase
NineStar Press | Books2Read
Meet the Author
Kelly Rand is the author of Off the Record and several LGBTQ romance novellas. Originally from Norfolk County, sheβs now a journalist in the Toronto area. Her previous jobs include farmworker, wedding photographer, and cashier at KFC. Kelly has been published in various anthologies and literary magazines and can be found at kellyrand.net.Website | Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr
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