Diesel Gannon doesn’t mind attending a BDSM party or two, but he draws the line at inflicting pain. That might seem odd because he has a dominant personality, but it’s just not who he is. He’s seen enough war and pain to last a lifetime. Out on medical leave, and as a favor for a friend, Diesel heads to the Triple R to check on Triton. A man who is far, far too young for him.
Triton Scott has been running from abuse his whole life. First his father and now his boyfriend and the guy’s thug brother. He wants an older man who will treat him right, like Diesel Gannon, but the big bear that rescued him from a cave-in thinks he’s too young to know his own mind. So what if there’s a sixteen year age gap between them. Since when does love have an age limit?
When Diesel leaves the Triple R and heads home to Oregon, Triton is at a loss and makes a really bad decision. Things take a turn for the worse and a hero is the only thing that stands between good and evil.
What the killers don’t know is that when they mess with someone in the small town of Fern, Oregon, the men who live there will F you up.
Trigger warnings: Abuse, violence.
Authors note: Bringing It Home is the third Code of Honor book in the series, but can be read as a standalone. This slow burn, age gap, brothers-in-arms, small town love story is a fast-paced tale with a full cast of characters and an HEA. * Code of Honor, Cobalt Security, and Out for Justice series are loosely connected.