Claimed Without Mercy Teaser

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Gay Enemies to Lovers Romance

Date Published: April 24, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

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Captive. Claimed. Protected by the devil himself.

I’m Tyson Hughes’ right hand. Collector. Enforcer. Executioner.
When a low-level idiot tries to clear his debt by offering up his own nephew,
I expect a clean transaction. A body to move. A message to send. Business.

I don’t expect Kellen. Bruised. Beautiful. Untouched by this world in
ways that make my jaw lock. He looks at me like I’m either the devil
come to claim him… or the only thing standing between him and worse.
Taking him wasn’t part of the plan. Delivering him to Tyson
would’ve been easier. Smarter. Safer. Instead, I claim him.

Now he’s living under my roof, breathing my air, learning the rules of a
world I don’t sugarcoat. I’m not a hero. I don’t rescue
people. I own what’s mine. I protect it. And I destroy anyone stupid
enough to threaten it. But the deeper I pull Kellen into my life—into
the violence, the loyalty, the blood that binds us—the harder it is to
tell where captivity ends… and desire begins.

When the debt comes due, I’ll have to choose. Tyson’s empire. Or
the young man I claimed without mercy—and refuse to let go.

 

WARNING: Intended for readers 18+. Dark MM mafia romance. Possessive
antihero. Captor/captive tension, dubious consent. High heat. Guaranteed HEA.
No cheating.

 

 

Excerpt
Copyright ©2026 Dulce Dennison

 

Ian

I watched the men work, arms folded across my chest. The dim lights of the
warehouse cast long shadows as they moved product from one crate to another,
their movements precise and mechanical. Nobody spoke much — they knew better.
When I oversaw an operation, I expected efficiency, not conversation. The
tattoos on my forearms seemed to pulse in the half-light, a reminder to
everyone present of who I was and what I was capable of. The man who made
problems disappear.

“Faster,” I said, my voice echoing against the concrete walls.
“We need this shit loaded before sunrise.”

The men picked up their pace, sweat beading on their foreheads. This shipment
was worth seven figures — premium grade heroin straight from our overseas
connections. The kind of product that kept Tyson’s empire running and
our pockets lined.

I paced between the rows of crates, watching each man’s hands, each
movement. Trust wasn’t something I gave easily, especially not to the
low-level soldiers Tyson assigned to these jobs. Most were competent enough,
but all it took was one fuck-up, one greedy asshole, and we’d have cops
swarming the place or, worse, a war with another organization.

Something caught my eye. A slight hesitation from one of the newer guys —
skinny fuck with a neck tattoo that screamed prison ink. He glanced over his
shoulder when he thought I wasn’t looking, then slipped his hand into
his jacket pocket just a little too casually.

I moved behind a stack of crates, circling around until I was positioned where
he couldn’t see me. Three years of working as Tyson’s enforcer had
taught me to spot a rat before they even knew they were one.

“Something interesting in your pocket, Alvarez?” I asked,
appearing beside him like a shadow.

He jumped, nearly dropping the bag he was holding. “No, Mr. Grant. Just
checking the time.”

“Really? Pull it out, then.”

His eyes darted to the exit, calculating the distance. I knew that look.
I’d seen it dozens of times before on the faces of men who thought they
could outsmart me.

“Now,” I said, not raising my voice. I never had to.

“It’s nothing, I swear –”

I grabbed his wrist, twisting until he gasped in pain, then reached into his
pocket myself. My fingers closed around a small plastic bag containing about
twenty grams of our product. The weight of it told me everything I needed to
know.

“Everyone stop,” I commanded, and the warehouse fell silent.
“Gather round. Seems we need to have a little lesson in loyalty.”

The men formed a circle, their faces grim. They knew what was coming.
They’d seen it before, or at least heard the stories.

I held up the bag. “Alvarez here thinks he deserves a bonus. Isn’t
that right?”

“Please, Mr. Grant, I wasn’t –”

My fist connected with his jaw before he could finish the sentence. He
stumbled backward but didn’t fall. Good. I wanted him conscious for what
came next.

“Tyson Hughes pays you well,” I said, addressing everyone now.
“He provides for your families. Keeps the cops off your backs. And in
return, he asks for one thing.” I grabbed Alvarez by the throat.
“Loyalty.”

I slammed him against a crate, my hand still tight around his neck. His eyes
bulged, face turning red, then purple.

“You know what happens to thieves in this organization?” I asked,
loosening my grip just enough for him to breathe.

He nodded frantically, gasping for air.

“Tell them,” I demanded, nodding toward the other men.

“They… they die,” he choked out.

I smiled. “Usually. But tonight, I’m feeling generous.”

Relief flooded his face for a brief moment before I slammed my knee into his
groin. As he doubled over, I caught him with an uppercut that sent him
sprawling across the concrete floor.

The men watched in silence as I approached Alvarez, who was now curled into a
ball, blood trickling from his split lip. I knelt beside him, keeping my voice
low enough that only he could hear.

“I’m going to let you live, but not out of mercy.” I pulled
a switchblade from my pocket and flicked it open. “You’re going to
be a message.”

What happened next filled the warehouse with screams that the thick walls
swallowed whole. The men watched, faces impassive but eyes wide with fear as I
made my point in blood. When I was done, Alvarez lay sobbing on the floor,
clutching what remained of his left hand.

“Get him patched up,” I told two of the men. “Then drop him
at the emergency room across town. Make sure he understands that if he says a
word about where he was or who did this, the next visit won’t be so
pleasant.”

They nodded and dragged Alvarez away, leaving a smear of crimson across the
floor. I turned to the remaining men, wiping my blade clean on a handkerchief.

“Finish loading the shipment. I want everything out of here in thirty
minutes.”

They scattered like cockroaches under a light, moving twice as fast as before.
The metallic smell of blood hung in the air, mixing with the dust and chemical
odors of the warehouse. I checked my watch. Almost 3 AM.

My phone vibrated in my pocket. A text from Tyson:

Need you at the house. 9 AM sharp. Important matter to discuss.

I stared at the message, feeling a familiar mix of pride and anxiety. A direct
summons from Tyson usually meant one of two things: I’d fucked up, or he
had a special job that only I could handle. Given that I’d been running
operations smoothly for months, I was betting on the latter.

I supervised the rest of the loading in silence, watching as the men carefully
avoided the bloodstain on the floor. By 4:15 AM, the warehouse was empty
except for me and the lingering evidence of what happened to those who
betrayed Tyson Hughes.

I locked up and climbed into my black Audi, the leather seat cool against my
back. The night had turned cold, but I barely noticed. My mind was already on
the meeting with Tyson, wondering what assignment awaited me. Whatever it was,
I’d handle it. I always did. That’s why, despite everything, I was
still alive when so many others weren’t.

I pulled out of the warehouse district, leaving behind the night’s
violence and heading toward my apartment for a few hours of sleep before
meeting with the only man I’d ever truly respected. The only man
who’d ever given me a chance when everyone else saw nothing but gutter
trash. The man who’d made me what I was.

For Tyson Hughes, I’d do anything. And he knew it.

I pulled up to Tyson’s estate at 8:55 AM, early as always. The gates
opened automatically — security knew my car. As I drove up the long, winding
driveway, I caught glimpses of the sprawling mansion through the trees. Tyson
had built all this from nothing, clawing his way up from the streets to become
the most powerful man in the city’s underworld. And he’d picked
me. Even after all these years, that fact still hit me in the chest sometimes,
a mixture of pride and the constant fear of disappointing him.

I parked next to Tyson’s collection of luxury cars and straightened my
tie in the rearview mirror. Despite only three hours of sleep, I looked
presentable. The dark circles under my eyes were practically permanent
fixtures anyway.

The front door opened before I could knock. Nick, Tyson’s longtime
second-in-command, greeted me with a curt nod.

“He’s in his study,” he said, stepping aside.

I walked through the marble-floored foyer, past priceless artwork and antiques
that Tyson collected not because he gave a shit about art, but because they
signified his rise from poverty. Everything in this house was a trophy, a
reminder of victories and conquered enemies.

The study door stood ajar. I knocked anyway.

“Come in, Ian,” Tyson called.

He sat behind a massive oak desk, silver hair immaculately styled, wearing
what I knew was a hand-tailored suit that probably cost more than most people
made in a month. At fifty-three, Tyson Hughes carried himself with the ease of
a man who knew his own power and had no need to flaunt it. When he killed, he
did it with a phone call, not his hands. Those days were behind him.

“Right on time,” he said, looking up from his computer and
removing his reading glasses. “How’d the shipment go last
night?”

“Clean and quick. One minor issue that’s been handled.”

Tyson raised an eyebrow. “What kind of issue?”

“Alvarez tried skimming product. Won’t happen again.”

“Is he breathing?”

I nodded. “Missing some fingers, but alive. I figured he’d be more
useful as a warning than a corpse.”

A smile touched the corners of Tyson’s mouth. “Smart. That’s
why I trust you with these things.” He gestured to the chair across from
him. “Sit. Drink?”

“It’s not even ten.”

“Since when has that ever stopped either of us?”

I smiled despite myself and took the seat. Tyson poured two glasses of scotch
from a crystal decanter, sliding one across the desk to me.

“You look like shit,” he said casually. “Not
sleeping?”

“Sleep’s overrated.”

“Not when I need you sharp.” He leaned back in his chair, studying
me with those penetrating gray eyes that saw everything. “You’ve
been pushing yourself too hard lately.”

“Just doing my job.”

“Your job is to follow orders and stay alive. Can’t do either if
you’re running on fumes.”

I took a sip of the scotch, letting the burn distract me from the fact that
Tyson was the only person on earth who could talk to me like this without
ending up in pieces.

“I’m fine,” I said. “What’s this important
matter you wanted to discuss?”

Tyson’s expression shifted, his eyes hardening. “Sean
Collins.”

The name hung in the air between us.

“What about him?” I asked.

“He owes us three hundred grand. Has for almost six months now.”
Tyson took a long swallow of his drink. “I’ve been patient. Sent
Nick to have a chat with him twice. Sent messages through mutual associates.
Nothing.”

“You want me to collect.”

“I want you to make an example of him.” Tyson’s voice
dropped, became colder. “Collins thinks because he’s got
connections with the Irish that he’s untouchable. He’s been
spreading word that I’ve gone soft in my old age.”

My jaw clenched. “That’s a mistake.”

“A fatal one.” Tyson stood up and walked to the window, looking
out over his manicured gardens. “Sean Collins is a particular kind of
vermin. Beats the girls who work for him, sometimes kills them if they try to
leave. Has a taste for the young ones too.”

“Want me to take care of him permanently?” I asked, already
knowing the answer.

Tyson turned, his expression softer now, almost paternal. “Not yet.
First, get my money. Make him understand who he’s dealing with.”
He returned to his desk and pulled out a file, sliding it across to me.
“Here’s everything you need to know. Addresses, hangouts, known
associates. His nephew lives with him — kid named Kellen Lin. Collins had
custody since the boy’s mother died. He’s an adult now but
hasn’t moved out.”

I flipped through the file. Photos, financial records, property deeds. Tyson
was nothing if not thorough.

“The nephew — he involved in Collins’ business?” I asked.

“Not as far as we know. Works at a coffee shop. Keeps to himself.”
Tyson refilled his glass. “Use your judgment there.”

He didn’t need to finish the sentence. Collateral damage was part of the
job.

“When?” I asked, closing the file.

“Yesterday would’ve been good. Today’s acceptable. By the
end of the week, non-negotiable.”

I nodded, downing the rest of my scotch in one swallow. “Consider it
done.”

“I always do when I give you an assignment.” Tyson smiled, the
kind of smile that had always made me feel like I belonged somewhere.
“That’s why I chose you, Ian. From the first day I pulled you out
of that shithole your father called a home, I knew you were different. You
understand loyalty.”

“You gave me a life,” I said simply. It wasn’t flattery. It
was fact. Before Tyson, I was nothing. A fifteen-year-old kid with a junkie
father and violence in my blood. Tyson had channeled that violence, given it
purpose and direction.

“And you’ve repaid that a thousand times over.” He walked
around the desk and put a hand on my shoulder. “Collins is just the
beginning. I’m getting older, Ian. Starting to think about the future of
this organization.”

My heart skipped a beat. We’d never discussed succession before, though
everyone in the hierarchy wondered who would take over when Tyson eventually
stepped aside. I’d always assumed it would be Nick, but at the same
time, Nick was also getting up there in years. Both men were close in age and
had worked side-by-side for as long as anyone could remember. But if I thought
about it, I was probably the next closest to Tyson, the most trusted after
Nick.

I left the study with the file tucked under my arm and a sense of purpose
burning in my chest. Tyson had called me “his boy.” It
wasn’t the first time, but it never failed to hit something deep inside
me — that hungry, abandoned part that had never known a real father’s
approval.

For Tyson, I’d collect this debt and a thousand more. I’d tear
Sean Collins apart if necessary. Because when Tyson Hughes looked at me like
that — with pride and expectation — I felt like I was worth something. And
that feeling was more addictive than any drug I’d ever tried.

 

 

About the Author

Dulce Dennison is a pen name for gay and LGBTQA+ themed love stories from best
selling MC romance author Harley Wylde, AKA award-winning science
fiction/paranormal romance author Jessica Coulter Smith. From cowboys to
shapeshifters, Dulce/Harley/Jess believes in love in all shapes and sizes, and
that everyone deserves a happily-ever-after.

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

 

Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15

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Jumper Blitz

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Children’s Book

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Jumper is a little colt’s inspiring journey after being separated from
his birth mother who is addicted to a toxic plant. From fear and loss to
healing and hope, this book tenderly portrays the complexities of addiction,
abandonment, trauma, and healing.

The author lives on a horse ranch and has experience fostering and adopting
children, allowing her to masterfully weave this beautiful metaphor. This book
helps build bridges, teaching difficult topics without judgement or blame and
offers a compassionate view of addiction. It can grow with children through
different stages of their life, as they take in layers of wisdom at their own
pace. Reading Jumper is a great springboard for discussions on difficult
topics for young children and teenagers alike.

Perfect for children with:

* RAD, Reactive Attachment Disorder,

* ODD, Oppositional Defiance Disorder,

* SAD, Separation Anxiety Disorder.

* Abandonment Trauma

While invaluable for those involved with foster care or adoption, Jumper is a
powerful tool for teaching EMPATHY and a great addition to any family library.
JUMPER IS FOR EVERYONE. Thoughtfully written with deep sensitivity, Jumper
shows an example of unconditional love and its power to heal, while validating
the anger, pain and confusion that can be brought on by trauma. Young and old
will be captivated by this moving story. Whether you are a horse lover or not,
you will be by the end of this story!

 About the Author

Shelley Flake
Shelley Flake was a foster parent for 8 years & has two adopted children
for a total of nine. She has a bachelor’s degree in Special Education & a
lifetime of experience working with children of all ages both at home &
through volunteer work. She & her family recently moved from their home
just north of New York City to a quiet 100-acre ranch in the West, with a
dozen trail horses, cows, chickens, barn cats & her beloved Border-Aussie,
Blue. One of her favorite pastimes is singing & dancing with her family in
the kitchen. Bring on Ed Sheeran, Frank Sinatra, Billy Joel, Carly Simon, The
Beatles, or Alicia Keys…Bottom line, there is always music playing at the
Flake house.

 

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Deconstructing America Virtual Book Tour

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Political Nonfiction

Date Published: January 21, 2026

Publisher ‏: ‎ Seacoast Press

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In recent decades, most of us have witnessed increasing social and
political strife, tearing apart the very fabric of American society. This
polarization stems from decades of shifting ideologies, moving from a
foundational center-right perspective toward the left. Acknowledging the root
causes of this cultural shift and recognizing the depth of the problem is the
first step toward addressing it.

The divide we see today is largely driven by ideas that contradict the
founding principles of the United States. Deconstructing America explores
these forces through a series of interconnected, fact-based narratives,
revealing the key moments and influences that have contributed to America’s
decline.

Deconstructing America paperback

EXCERPT

A nation, any nation that can proclaim national sovereignty has a duty to its citizens to protect them from harm by external forces that threaten their culture, indeed, a national identity, including their laws and constitutional order. 

The United States of America was invaded by illegal aliens from all over the world during the presidency of Joe Biden and his counter-part Vice President Kamala Harris (2021-2025) in one of the most cynical and dangerous open-borders policy in world history. The internal corruption this caused is unprecedented: Billions of hard-earned tax payer money at both the state and federal levels further exacerbated political polarization in the American electorate. 

As blue-states that are governed entirely by the Democrat Party not only embraced this new illegal alien constituency and reinforced their rhetoric and policy toward sanctuary status for illegal immigrants, it pitted federal law enforcement against federal (ICE, Customs and Border Patrol) law enforcement creating dissention among citizens. 

In blue-states, such as Chicago, Los Angelis, New York, Boston and others, rampant criminality and a newer entitlement class became all too evident. Soft on crime policy, a feature that had already been present in these blue-states with the defund police movement, especially after the BLM protests and anarchy in the summer of 2020, after the death of George Floyd further created a new criminality among criminal illegal alien gangs let into the U.S. during the Biden open-borders debacle. 

In the meantime, other illegal aliens who were not necessarily criminal actors but came here for a perceived better life, still created downward pressure on the local, state and federal economies. The U.S. at the state level provided housing that was already in crisis, but also includes food, clothing and schooling, all at the expense of U.S. citizens. 

Imagine a country that would destroy themselves from within. A country that would degrade its public education system in order to fund its unions who are entirely beholden to one political party—the Democrat Party. Public sector teachers unions did not help create an atmosphere for positive learning outcomes, they instead hindered educational outcomes with decadent progressive policies that harmed children. 

Imagine a country that would allow foreign nationals to vote in their elections, thereby cancelling out a citizens vote and creating a situation that that disenfranchises the citizen voting public at-large.

Imagine a country that would allow the marginalization of parental control in favor of the state. A country that would in certain states create laws that would take children away from their parents because the parents didn’t agree to usher their child into sex change surgeries and hormone blockers is truly a country in decline. 

Imagine a country, a Western capitalist country, especially the U.S., hell-bent in allowing a culture of anti-American sentiment to thrive. 

The United States which is a nation founded on Judeo Christian values that has eroded faith as its foundational and cultural mediator in favor in the omnipotence of MAN. A nation, especially the U.S. is easily led down a path to its own destruction under that kind of leadership. Communism and its precursor socialism are then, in turn, is easily adopted by the failing nation where their leaders eradicate Christian faith. In the United States of America to this point today we are beyond just the slippery slope of decadence. In the U.S. we have reached the point, the precipice, where the confluence of deconstruction is near complete and the following quote from the book is apropos.

       “This newer madness is just the tip of the iceberg if we let it continue. This isn’t just about communism, because communists in Russia or China wouldn’t allow such decadent behavior in their own society. This is purely a far-Left progressivism that has proliferated over the course of generations.

       “Communist leaders are ecstatic at the specter of America’s devolving cultural decadence. While American’s are fighting each other on cultural terms and watch their core institutions that made America great in the first place weaken, communist nations are shoring up their military alliances.” (Introduction, P. xiii)

About the Author
G.H. Spears
After a long career as an entrepreneur working in the cycling and
fitness industry managing, owning, and consulting for numerous retail
establishments, it became natural to study the people, cultures, and social
environments in and around my working life. Once retirement became imminent it
afforded me the time and vigor to completely immerse myself in the social
sciences, including anthropology, sociology, social psychology, and history in
furtherance of understanding and writing about the complex world issues that
humanity faces.

 

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DEVIN AND THE DEVIL Blitz

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Romantasy

Date Published: March 16, 2026

 

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Anita was a timid college student who dreams of love and adventure. By
chance she meets Devin a handsome and charismatic man with dark secrets of his
own. Together with family, friends and a spirit they must face fears and
challenges, doubts and danger. This book is a true Romantasy, it is a love
story and a fantasy. Order on Amazoon.com, in eBook and soft cover. I think
you will fall in love.

 

About the Author

Judith S Cohen

 I am a retired teacher, parent, wife and Grandmother of four. Stormy my
Havenese dog is 19 years old, and I think of him as my fur child. I enjoy
writing science fiction, fantasy, and stories about my life. Devin and the
Devil is my third book, and my favorite. I hope it is yours too.

 

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The Bric-A-Brac of Mickey Mack Teaser

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Poetry /Comedy Satire Gift Rhyme Millennial Humor Silverstein Memory

Date Published: 04-15-2026

Publisher: The Tink and Tank Press

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A wry poetry collection that captures the jarring sink-or-swim leap into
adulthood. This book honors the limbo of exiting youth, a unique period where
responsibility suddenly smashes the youthful optimist, crushing it under the
crippling weight of adulthood. Twenty-somethings scatter across life’s
spectrum with some jobless and couch-surfing, while others marry, become
parents, and buy a house. Everyone eventually finds themselves old enough to
fight in foreign wars but too young to rent a car. It’s the fast, brutal shift
to an unguarded world, to bowling without bumpers. You’ve entered a chaotic
soup of competing ambitions and subterfuge, where one hand offers help while
the other conceals a knife. You’re expected to be an adult without ever having
been one, like seeing the ocean from afar and suddenly wrestling its waves.
This book highlights the inevitable sense of crushing defeat and loss, but
reveals the importance of laughing anyway. After all, life is a game of
avoiding the consequences of your own actions. The Bric-a-Brac of Mickey Mack
will hand you a mirror and dare you to laugh at its reflection.
Excerpt
I sat across from him, he had a twisted distant gaze
while he wracked his mind and grappled with a foolish phrase
which was written on a note and shuffled in a mess of junk
atop a desk ensconced in filth, no doubt the man was drunk.
His name was Mickey Mack, both laser focused and aloof,
fenced in by Bric-a-Brac unpacked and stacked up to the roof.
A product of his times, so wise, yet dumber than a door.
A man of vast experience and yet he’s such a bore.
He’d traveled ’round the world and been to many foreign lands
to simply say he had, to sit and sulk, his only plans.
For “that’s what people do,” he’d say, “they travel to enjoy
the petty world and what it offers every girl and boy.”
Despite the fact that Mr. Mack had traveled far and wide
he would do what’s done at home and find a bar to sit inside.
And there, while many past him by, bemoaning life itself,
it tortured Mickey for he couldn’t help but see himself.
He realized now that time is gone, and that’s the way it is,
and he, while living other people’s lives, had wasted his.
And as a way, as best he could, expel the toxic bile,
he has compiled every groan and gripe within a file.
And written down, at last, now put together in a book
the crying whines of all he heard from all the trips he took.
A vapid, superficial twit, he sobered up somehow,
and Mickey Mack looked up at me behind a furrowed brow,
and as he squinted, leaning closer straining hard to see,
He was looking in a mirror, for the hopeless fool was me.

About the Author

Mickey Mack
Mickey Mack is a world-weary traveler and obsessive collector of
life’s absurd talismans and trinkets. After years of eavesdropping on
bar-stool confessions around the globe, he distills the Suffering Olympics of
modern adulthood into witty, rhythmic heroic couplets.

 

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