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The Full Ride

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Blurb

"Does the idea of a na?ve young buck who can’t stop himself turn you on? Or would you rather experience life as a bottom who is every top’s fantasy? Through unquenchable lust or uncontrollable need, the stories in this collection feature bottom boys who live to please and wouldn’t have it any other way.

In The Full Ride, Gavin Atlas, bestselling author of The Boy Can’t Help It, offers another dose of porn stars, college boys, acrobats, and athletes taken body and soul by tycoons, cops, naughty professors, and other dominant men who won’t take no for an answer.

Journey through stories featuring humor, affection, and devotion, and venture deep into the psychology of s****l mischief. Enjoy the dazed confusion of youthful studs offering themselves up to powerful tops in The Full Ride."

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He Could Stop Traffic-1
He Could Stop Traffic Officer Karl Wilkes tore his eyes off the college boy to check his phone. The incoming call was one he’d been anticipating for weeks. He looked back up. The boy was Latino, and at second glance, damn familiar. His tight tan T-shirt showcased a pumped chest and narrow waist. His shorts revealed tawny, muscular legs with a fine down. Stop staring and answer the phone. How did he know the boy? The boy’s walk was sultry and confident. His muscular body reflected a disciplined workout. Despite the conservative haircut and textbooks, the boy seemed out of place. It could have been the sensuality rolling off him, but something made Karl think he belonged on a stripper pole, not on his way to class. Answer the damn call, Karl. As he clicked the TALK button, Karl saw the stoplight tattoo on the boy’s neck. Heat curled through him as vague memories formed. Oh, hell. I think I’ve had him. If he was who Karl thought he was, he was Hondureño, unbelievably good s*x, and his name began with a T. What was it? “Uh…this is Wilkes. Lieutenant, I’m about to give that presentation about the profiling program. Do I need to scrub it?” Lieutenant Corley might have been lousy at returning calls, but he wasn’t a prick. “No, that’s important. Just make sure you have your Plan A ready for Main Street at five this afternoon.” Karl’s eyes went wide. “Wait, I’ve been asking about this for months. Why—” “Wilkes, a federal wig’s son vanished last night, here in Houston. We’re almost certain it’s El Sistema.” “Oh…fucking shit.” “Exactly. Disaster. On the other hand, the problem you’ve been going on about finally has everyone’s attention.” Karl had apprised the department that the occasional disappearance of male prostitutes outside of a couple hustler bars was likely a larger operation that didn’t just affect the “deviant” element. The white shirts at Main Street sometimes paid attention when gangs kidnapped women, but gay boys? Never. If any of them besides Corley had given a rat’s ass before today, Karl wouldn’t have known. “But do we have the device? And two detectives?” “Checking on the first question and one, but not two. Weren’t you going to work on that?” Karl huffed. “I’ve been scouring the region for agents who fit the requirements, but there’s nothing. Now if I’d been chosen for the Vice Unit, I’d have prioritized—” “Christ, Wilkes, trust me. I know what this means to you. You’ll be on the unit once you’ve had a couple years under your belt. Everything you got by five tonight, clear?” “Get back to me about the device, please, Lieutenant,” Wilkes said before his superior hung up. The hallway had cleared. Which room was C219? He heard his cousin’s voice coming from down the hall. “Officer Wilkes from the Houston Police Department was supposed to be—” “Made it, Tanya.” Karl jogged into the brightly lit classroom. He saw her wince because he’d forgotten to call her Professor Dawes in class again. But he had a recovery plan, and he turned to the students. “Just because she’s my cousin doesn’t mean she wouldn’t have my head if I missed…this.” There was the boy, and he clearly recognized Karl. The name came to him. Tomás. Tomás Torres, the alleged pizza delivery boy who was really a stripper, who was really a nude housecleaner, who, so it would seem, was really a college student. Karl gave him a quick smile and turned away, blood rushing to his groin as his mind now flooded with memories: Tomás in nothing but a jockstrap taking Karl’s d**k in position after position. It hadn’t been much more than a year. Had he gotten that swept up in work? How could he have forgotten how good it felt to be inside that stud? And how much fun they’d had afterward, talking, cuddling, and laughing at stupid movies? Stop it. You have a presentation to give. He cleared his throat and looked at his cousin. Her face was a mixture of bemusement and mirth, but it was clear she was waiting on him. “So, uh, most of you are in this class because you’re about done with what West Harris Community College offers in criminal justice, right? After graduation, many of you will be considering the police academy, but for those looking to transfer to Houston Central University, the geographic profiling program is something the city is very proud of. As a graduate—” “When will the police realize profiling is wrong?” The voice from the back of the room was loud, accusatory. Karl looked up. White male. Approximately twenty years of age. About five eleven. Thin frame. Ratty tie-dye T-shirt. Brown curly hair. “Uh, geographic profiling is—” “You of all people should know what it does to minorities! But you’re blinded by the power of your badge.” Karl arched an eyebrow. “First, young man. Why me of all people?” He knew he looked black, and nine days out of ten if someone asked him how he felt about something as a “black man” he didn’t blink. But he was also part German, Mexican, and Navajo. If some clueless kid was going to lecture him on the prejudice of appearance, he’d better— “Alan, would you shut up and do the goddamn reading for once?” The new voice was Tomás. “You’re talking about offender profiling. The HCU program is geographic profiling.” “Here we go,” Karl’s cousin murmured to him. “I’ve been expecting this blow-up all semester. That ignorant loudmouth thinks he’s the god of social justice.” Karl and his cousin listened as Tomás gave a textbook definition of geographic profiling. “Is that one a good student?” he whispered. “Intelligent. Works hard. You should take him.” He knew what she meant, but a ripple went through Karl’s groin anyway. There was no way Tanya could know her words had sparked images of Tomás naked and leaning against the lectern while Karl ground into his gorgeous ass. “Okay,” said Karl, “since this fellow has done an excellent job explaining why I’m here, I’ll describe how this helps us fight human trafficking here in Houston.” He looked at Tanya. Her expression was tight-lipped. They’d lost her older sister’s daughter several years ago, possibly to El Sistema. It was the reason this was their life. He began explaining how analyzing multiple locations of disappearances could eliminate suspects by reason of opportunity. As Alan began yelling about governmental spying, Tomás said, “It’s called Google Earth.” Tomás is damn smart. He would make an excellent cop, Karl thought. Then the idea hit him. He would be perfect for this operation. Or he would be after three years’ experience, but this judge’s son needed someone by five o’clock. s**t. These were extreme circumstances, but how likely was it the department would accept assistance from someone with zero training? The boy made a beeline for the door the second Tanya dismissed class. Karl barely waved goodbye to his cousin so he could catch up. “Tomás! Wait!” Tomás shot Karl a withering look but didn’t slow his pace. “Do I know you?” Karl had reached Tomás so now he could speak in a low voice. “Oh, yeah, you know me. I would have thought you’d have many fond memories.” “You told me you were a manager at Arby’s.” Karl shrugged. “Okay, you caught me. But you told me you were a delivery boy for Pizza Rico.” “I am.” “And a stripper and the star employee of Just Jocks Cleaning Service.” “I can’t afford rent plus tuition with one job.” “You didn’t say you were a college student.” “You didn’t ask.” “Well, my friend, you sure are full of surpr—Hey, stop! Why are you so angry?” Tomás halted at the bus shelter next to the building’s side exit. He frowned with exasperation. “I’ve figured you tops out. I’m ‘Triple Tap Tomás.’ A guy f***s my ass once, comes back for seconds because it was fun, then f***s me a third time to prove he can have it anytime he wants. I’m an easy bottom. That’s what I get. But I guess I’m not the only one who didn’t know the code. See, a top never returns for a fourth time until months later because that’s his way of telling me I’m just for fucking.” Oh. Karl owed Tomás an apology. “And I did come over a fourth and, uh, fifth time pretty quick, so you thought it meant more. I can explain. First, I’m sorry I hurt you, but—” Tomás looked away. “‘I’m sorry’ is good enough, dude. If I understand the rules, I should say no after giving it up the second time, right? But I’m too horny, too dumb, or too nice to play games for the sake of figuring out who’s interested in me. Not just my ass.” Karl discerned some “protesting too much” beneath legitimate disappointment. Tomás wanted to be f****d, but perhaps he’d felt the same connection Karl had felt but hadn’t let it show. “Tomás, I really was interested, but…when you told me online what you did, I didn’t think you’d meet me if I told you I’m a cop.” Tomás looked down and chewed his lip. “Stripping isn’t the cleanest gig, but once I learned it was nude housekeeping, too, it…wouldn’t work. The white shirts would smell prostitution, even if I know different.” Tomás shrugged. “Yeah, your police world sucks. I wasn’t thinking of background checks when I decided on criminal justice. My jobs are worse than no job. If your work requires you to be naked and you want a career change, the only jobs you can get require you to be naked. Even so, I didn’t think a decent guy would be ashamed to be with me.” Karl raised his hands to object. “It’s seriously my job. Not about shame.” He put his hands on Tomás’s shoulders. “If you’re interested, I want to talk more about us, but first, if you’re looking to get into law enforcement, there’s an outside chance the department might need you, like, immediately. We should talk someplace quiet.”

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