Two years in, Augie thought he knew every version of Wes Karelian. He hadn't met this one yet.
The cabin was the easy part. The wedding was the harder part. But neither one prepared them for the four-day, bear-friendly, queer-run festival deep in the Willamette National Forest - where Augie's oldest friend is about to come out for real, and where a black leather harness Augie bought on impulse three weeks ago is sitting at the bottom of his duffel.
Wes packs the way he packs for everything: meticulously, with contingencies. He has not packed for the version of himself he might become on a dance floor at midnight, surrounded by men who don't know him yet, in a body he is only beginning to understand belongs to him in public.
Bear Country is the third novel in Elias Keane's Bear Hunt series - the longest, the most heat-forward, and the one that takes a quiet love story into the loud, generous world it's been waiting to belong to. A book about being seen. About staying. About what an established couple does when the wider queer world walks through their tent flap and asks them to dance.