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Not on My Bucket List

When Sam goes on a gay website looking for romance, he finds more than he bargained for. Rejecting all the usual requests for hook-ups, he searches for something more sincere. And he finds it in the most unexpected of places, as he is drawn to the profile of a man in a faraway place.<br><br>Amir, an Algerian descended from desert nomads, has posted a profile looking for the love of his life. Sam finds it amazing that a gay man born in the Algerian desert has the bravery to not only declare he is gay, but also to admit his dream is to find a husband to spend his life with.<br><br>While Sam doesn’t consider himself the marrying kind, he starts chatting with Amir, telling himself he just wants to learn about another culture. His friends laugh at him, saying this man just wants to use him to emigrate to the west and take him for his money. But he refuses to believe it, sensing a sincerity he has never seen with anyone else. The two begin a dialogue that moves to weekly Skype sessions, discussions of religion and world politics, assistance with life challenges and, finally, a declaration of love ... and an invitation.<br><br>Can these two men from vastly different worlds and cultures meet and find common ground for a romance? The challenges are great, and spending a life together seems like an impossible dream. While Sam’s friends continue to discourage him, he knows he cannot give up this man. Is Amir sincere, or is Sam being used?<br><br>There is only one way to find out if Amir is really sincere. And Sam knows what he has to do.

Tom Monroe · LGBT+
Not enough ratings
55 Chs

Chapter 20

“It is already hot!” he exclaimed. Indeed, while I was enjoying the fine spring weather of early May, he was already into the heat of summer.

“Ramadan starts next week,” he said, “and it’s going to be difficult. It is hard to get through the day when it is hot with no water. And the days are already long. It is so much easier when Ramadan comes during the winter. The days are not as hot, and we can end the fasting at sunset which in the winter is at the normal dinner hour. Now it will be late into the evening before we can eat or drink. That’s several more hours of fasting.”

“Amir, you be careful. It is not healthy to go all day without water when it is so hot.”

“That is true, Habibi. But we do it willingly because that is our responsibility under Muslim custom.”

I had to respect him for that. It had been a long time since I had practiced any sort of religion, and I doubted I would have the determination to do what he was so willing to do.