
"Divorce can be nasty. Clement discovers how nasty gay divorce can be as he surveys the damage wreaked by his ex-partner in their soon-to-be-sold home.
After cleaning the mess, he goes for a late coffee and dinner snack. The lone barista, Troy, recounts his traumatic car accident drama as they close the shop and share coffee and leftovers. Troy also reveals the pain of rejection he's felt for being gay.
The two men share another connection: the next day, Troy starts a new position as a social worker, and Clement is a counselor, as well. So the next morning when Clement drives Troy to his new job, he knows they may cross paths again.
It comes sooner than expected, though, when Clement returns to Troy’s office with an abused gay teenager who has nowhere to go. Try as they might, Troy and his new coworkers can find no available foster family. Suddenly Clement finds himself with a potential new family. Can things work out for the three of them?"

Define Boink By Emery C. Walters I was supposed to meet Derrick, my soon-to-be ex, at The Mug Shot, where we could work out how to separate my stuff from his stuff from our stuff, without the ability to kill each other, as we would have had in private, at our shared condo. He was in the process of moving out, and, as it had already sold, I was going to be left to rearrange what was being sold with the place from what was mine and what else I wanted. I looked as if I was about to become homeless or to learn how to couch surf off my friends. I wasn’t in a very good mood. The line was long and slow, and they were out of my favorite scones. I had to wait for my drink, and the guy making it was new or from a different shift. I watched him like a hawk; he was so young, I felt like a chicken-h
