Fake Out: Chapter 5
Fake Out (Fake Boyfriend Book 1)
Attraction is a weird beast.
Once Damon loosened up over drinks last night, I began to think we couldâve come out of this weekend as friends. Heâs intense but still a decent guy.
For some reason, my subconscious held onto that when I went to sleep and decided to show me exactly how decentâor indecentâhe could be. While naked. And begging me to fuck him.
The dream came out of nowhere, but it dredged up shit from college which I thought was long forgotten. Experimentingâthat was all it was freshman year. It wasnât like Iâd found another guy attractive since then.
Then why are you dreaming of fucking your fake boyfriend?
My dick jumps at the thought.
No. Down, buddy. Not going to happen.
It was only a dream. I once dreamed I was the spider from Harry Potter. Doesnât mean I want to fuck a spider.
But you werenât fucking other spiders in that dream.
It was all the alcohol last night. Letâs go with that.
The dream is one thing, but when I woke next to him, it seemed so real, I was harder than Iâd ever been, and it wasnât morning wood. I was horny. For Damon.
Shit.
So, yeah, I may be freaking out a little. Or a lot.
âReady to head out?â I ask as I finish eating. âI havenât bought a wedding gift yet.â
Damon downs the rest of his coffee, and Iâm mesmerized by his throat as he swallows. I begin to imagine how heâdâ
Stop it.
âReady,â he says and stands. âShould we do the dishes?â
âNah, thatâs what Mom is for.â
âIs that so?â Momâs voice comes from behind us as she trudges in the kitchen door, carrying tote bags full of groceries.
âWe canât be late.â I feign innocence.
Mom smiles. âGo on, get out of here then.â
âThanks, Mom.â I kiss the top of her head.
The awkwardness Iâm unwittingly exuding doesnât dissipate as we make our way to the car. I think Damonâs picking up on it now too, but if he is, he doesnât acknowledge it aloud.
âYou have great parents,â he says.
âI know.â
âThey probably wonât care if you told them the truth.â
âThey wonât care that I lied to them for years?â I ask incredulously. âYeah, okay. Theyâre great but not that great.â
âThe longer you leave it, the worse itâll be. What happens when you find a girl you want to settle down with?â
Pfft, like thatâs ever going to happen. âI donât plan on doing that.â
âYouâre twenty-three and already resigned yourself to being alone forever?â
âIâm not a relationship type of guy. I learned that after Chastity.â
âBecause you couldnât break up with her?â
âBecause I donât like hurting people. Call me a wimp, call me a pussy, call me whatever you want, but Iâd rather not deal with drama. Iâm the type of guy who would stay in a relationship for two years too long to avoid confrontation.â
âWhoa. It all makes sense now. You think by telling your parents youâre straight, itâll hurt them because theyâve believed the opposite for so long.â Damon laughs.
âLaugh it up.â
âSorry,â he says, still laughing, âbut do you realize how absurd your situation is? Most gay people are scared shitless to come out of the closet. Youâre scared for your parents to find out that youâre straight.â
My molars mash together as I grit my teeth.
Out of the corner of my eye, Damonâs smile falters as he studies me. âAre we okay? You seemââ
âWeâre cool,â I lie. âIâm just distracted with Chastity getting married today. And weâre here.â The carâs barely in park before I jump out.
Damon slowly gets out of the car, puts his hands in his pockets, and hangs his head.
He probably thinks Iâm the biggest asshole. I should say something, but what? Donât mind me. I had a sex dream about you, and now I canât look you in the eye.
He follows me into the store, and I pause in my tracks. Damon runs into the back of me, and his hands fly to my waist to steady himself. The commotion attracts the attention of the guy whoâs getting rung up at the counter.
I know him well. We used to be friends. Teammates, even.
Damon leans in and whispers, âYou know that guy?â
âI do. And you need to be extra boyfriendly right now.â
His hands tighten on my waist. âThis is a boyfriend move. Unless you have a lot of guys holding onto you for dear life.â
Right.
Damon releases my waist and grabs my hand, interlacing our fingers as he drags us toward Emmett.
His hand is larger than mine, and it feels weird. Or maybe just different. My palm sweats, and I hope to God Damon canât feel how clammy it is.
Emmettâs jaw hardens. âMaddox.â
I lift my chin. âEmmett. This is Damon. My boyfriend.â
Damon lets go of my hand to stick his out for Emmett to shake. When Emmett stares at it without making a move, Damon drops it.
âIgnore him,â I say to Damon.
Emmettâs scowl reminds me of why I didnât bother correcting the town when I was outed. Most people didnât care. It was a scandal, yes, having been with Chastity for so long, but there was still a lot of support. Then there were the people who decided I wasnât worth their time anymore. I didnât tell them the truth, because if they couldnât accept me for meâwhich was still the same person whether they thought I liked men or notâthen I didnât want to know them anyway.
âWhy would you come home for your ex-girlfriendâs wedding when youâre â¦â Emmett starts. I wait for him to say the word gay out loud.
He doesnât.
I wrap my arm around Damonâs waist. âShe invited us.â
Mrs. Jones comes out from the back with a giftwrapped box. When she passes it to Emmett, he canât get out of the store fast enough.
âHe seems like a stand-up guy,â Damon says.
âOne good thing about coming out is I learned who my true friends were. Emmett wasnât one of them. Liked to drop the F-bomb a lot. And Iâm not talking about the word fuck.â
âMaddox,â Mrs. Jones says, âI see the big city has done nothing but accentuate your vibrant vocabulary.â
I grin. âOf fucking course, Mrs. J. I like to think of the word fuck as a sentence enhancer.â
Mrs. Jones approaches and wraps me in a hug. âWe miss you âround these parts. Especially your Mom.â
âAww. You know I was a city boy born in a small town.â
âSounds like a Journey song,â Damon says.
âStill, it wouldnât kill you to come home every once in a while,â Mrs. Jones says. âNew York is not that far away.â
Hello, more guilt. I read somewhere too much guilt and stress cause cancer. Guess Iâll need a physical by the end of this weekend.
âThatâs my fault,â Damon says. âI donât let him go far.â
âAnd who is this charming young man?â Mrs. Jones asks.
âThis is Damon. My boyfriend.â
âWell, I assume youâre here to buy a gift for Chastityâs wedding. Thereâs only a few items left on her registry.â
âWeâll take the cheapest one,â I say, and Damon snorts.
âOf course,â Mrs. Jones says with a smile. She reaches for the shelf above her and pulls down glass salt and pepper shakers that are accentuated with gold around the edges. âIâll wrap these up for you.â
While she does that, Damon leans in and whispers, âWho the fuck needs glass salt and pepper shakers? Is your ex-girlfriend royalty or something?â
âShe wishes,â Mrs. Jones mutters, and I canât help laughing.
Once Iâve paid, and after a âhave funâ from Mrs. Jones, we head outside.
âWhere to now?â Damon asks.
âLunch?â
âWe just ate breakfast.â
I rub my stomach. âIâm a growing boy.â
âI could have another coffee. I didnât get much sleep last night. Someone talks in his sleep.â He nudges me with his elbow.
I freeze, and Damon lets out a loud breath.
âOkay, that was a test. Whatâs going on?â he asks.
âYou know?â I croak.
âKnow what?â
âAbout my dream. About us.â
Damonâs eyebrows shoot up in surprise. âI didnât realize it was about me.â
And now Iâm mortified. âShiiiiit.â
âWait, youâre freaking out about having a sex dream about me? Thatâs why youâre acting weird?â
âMaybe.â
âYou know it doesnât mean anything, right?â Damon says. âWeâre in an odd situation, weâre sharing a bed, and youâre facing demons from your pastâlike your ex-girlfriend whoâs getting married. Oh, and pretending you have to be gay for a whole town. Youâre allowed to have weird dreams.â
âYou think so?â I ask quietly.
âI dreamed I was married to Jennifer Lawrence once. I was totally doing a guy on the side as well, but it counts. Dreaming about me only means youâre ten percent gay.â He grins.
I laugh, but itâs mostly fake. After last nightâs dream, and the stuff I havenât told him, I wonder if he has a point.
âIâm messing with you,â he says, picking up on my vibe.
âI know.â
âLetâs just get through this wedding, okay?â he says. âThen tomorrow weâll go our separate ways, and we never have to speak of this awkwardness again. It doesnât mean anything.â
âI can do that.â
âYour tie is uneven,â Damon says as we get out of the car at the church.
âAre you going to take my man card?â I force the joke, because the reason my tie is crookedâapart from not knowing how to tie one properlyâis because I was too damn distracted by a half-naked Damon when I was trying to tie it. I understand what he meant last night when he said he doesnât look at guys in locker rooms. It seemed wrong to watch him dress, but I couldnât tear my gaze away. Heâs all muscle and hard edges.
Iâve looked at other guys before, but I wouldnât have said Iâve checked them out. Now, Iâm not sure thatâs true. Guys compare themselves to each other all the time ⦠right?
âCan I fix it?â Damon asks.
âPlease.â
Damonâs hands shake as he loosens the tie around my neck and reties it, and he fumbles with the knot numerous times.
âThought you said you know what youâre doing?â I ask.
âItâs harder doing it on someone else.â
âThatâs what he said.â
Even though he fights it, Damon breaks out in a smile. âStacy warned me youâd make those jokes.â
âI canât help it. Iâm five years old.â
âClearly.â
âSpeaking of your sister, have you heard from her?â
âI got a call and two texts while we were at lunch,â Damon says. âBut I havenât opened them. She gets mad when the phone says Iâve read her texts and I havenât responded.â
âI need to try that tactic. Iâve had three textsâthe third one telling me to stop ignoring her. Part of me wants to screw with her and tell her it was love at first sight between us.â
His fingers still. âYouâre as bad as each other.â
âHey, she had a guy turn up in that ridiculous outfit pretending to be you. I need payback.â
âThat guy borrowed the outfit from me,â Damon deadpans.
I pull back and cock my head.
âWhat? I canât make jokes?â
âI was trying to figure out if you were serious.â And trying really hard not to picture it. That image shouldnât be inviting, damn it.
âAll done.â He pats my tie.
I reach for his bowtie to straighten it. âI donât think Iâm doing anything here. Iâve just seen people do that in movies and shit. How do you even know how to tie one of these things?â
âI have a secret James Bond fetish.â When I donât respond, Damon laughs. But when our eyes meet, the light-hearted moment is gone, and itâs replaced with tension. âReady to do this?â he asks, his voice gruff. âThis isnât going to be like hanging out with your parents today. Youâre going to have to touch me.â
âIâm okay with that.â My feet step forward and my hands run up his chest. For some reason, my brain thinks this is appropriate. Why, I have no fucking clue. I watch my hands as they plant themselves on Damonâs shoulders.
He stiffens but doesnât move. Iâm pretty sure heâs not even breathing.
My gaze moves up to his lips, and I wonder what they taste like. My mouth dries, and my tongue feels thick. The scents of our colognes mix, one woodsy and the other musk, somehow creating a smell that reminds me of sex.
What the fuck?
âAww, arenât you two cute,â Jared says.
Damon and I jump apart. âHe was helping me with my tie,â I say, probably a little too defensively.
Will eyes me in suspicion. âWe should go inside.â
I have no idea what just came over me, but it makes me a dick. Chastityâs wedding is sending me crazy. Yup, that sounds like a legit reason to think about kissing my fake boyfriend.
As soon as our feet cross the threshold of the church, the walls close in and I begin to sweat.
âYou okay?â Damon asks and pulls me back.
Jared and Will take their seats.
âYeah. Itâs, uh ⦠hot in here.â
âNo, itâs not.â
I swallow hard. âI may be having a minor panic attack about the fact this was almost me a few years back.â
Damon steps forward to speak low. âRepeat after me: itâs not my wedding.â
âNot my wedding.â My voice gets stuck in my throat.
âSay it until you believe it. We should go sit down before you pass out.â He drags me over to the pews, and I take the seat next to Jared, but my leg bounces. Damon puts his hand on my thigh to get it to stop.
My brain repeats Damonâs mantra. Not my wedding. Not my wedding. Not my wedding.
When I canât catch my breath, Damon squeezes my leg and the reassuring touch makes my anxiety disappear.
The ceremony is long and drawn out. I sense the occasional stare from interested partiesâthe news of me and my boyfriendâs appearance already making the rounds. The pastor rambles on about soul mates here, a bond forever there. Add in sappy vows, and bam, it should be over. Why is this taking so long? At one point, Damon leans in and whispers, âIâm falling asleep.â
When weâre finally released from the torturous ramblings of tying one life to another in the name of God and what-the-fuck-ever, Iâm ready for a drink. Or several.
Itâs a short walk through the cemetery to get to the community center where the reception is being held, and Damon holds my hand the whole way.
I do a quick stop at my grandfatherâs grave, kiss my hand and then place it on his headstone, and continue walking. âIs it weird Iâm more comfortable here than in there?â I point to the church.
âThat youâd rather be dead than married?â Damon asks. âYeah, itâs a bit extreme.â
âYou have to ignore Maddy,â Will says from behind us. âThe only type of commitment he can make is a couple of hours.â
âYeah, Iâve worked that much out already,â Damon says and then squeezes my hand.
As soon as we reach the community hall and wade our way through the crowd and over-the-top decorations, we beeline it to the bar. âScotch,â I say at the same time Damon says, âRum.â
âAre you a pirate?â
âAye. Would you prefer I order a cocktail with an umbrella? Have to give the folks here a nice dose of stereotypical.â
âI kinda want a cocktail with froufrou toppings. Theyâre delicious,â Jared says beside us.
Damon laughs.
âIâd have to drink about a hundred of them to get drunk enough,â I say. âIâll stick with scotch.â
âHow are we getting home?â Damon asks.
âCab? Uber? Walk? Donât care.â
âTonightâs going to get messy, isnât it?â
âIâm counting on it.â
âIâll drink to that,â Jared says. âWill and I were hoping to hook up with a bridesmaid or two. Turns out, Iâve already slept with two of them and Will has the other one, and weâre not interested in crossing swords ⦠so to speak.â
âSo now weâre off to find sad cousins and relatives of the bride from out of town,â Will says.
âHave fun with your sad women,â I say. âIâm ready to be entertained watching you two strike out again like last night.â
âThose girls were interested in you two,â Jared mumbles. âTargets acquired, Willy Boy.â Jared points across the room.
As soon as he and Will are out of sight, Damon slides in closer to me. âShould I be worried that my sister went for a guy like that?â
âI often judge her taste in guys. After all, she rejected me for months, yet that bozo comes to visit and she jumps into his bed a few hours after meeting him.â
Damon winces. âThatâs something I didnât need to know.â
âSorry to tell you that your twenty-three-year-old sister is sexually active and has been since college.â I gasp. âShocking, I know.â
We down a few rounds and laugh our asses off at Will and Jared who are trying so damn hard to get laid.
âYou wish you could be out there with them?â Damon asks.
âNot in this town.â I grab his hand. âLetâs go find our table.â
When he said we had to be more affectionate, I assumed I was going to have to be conscious of doing itâthat Iâd need remindingâbut itâs been natural and reflexive, just as it would if I were on a date with a woman.
I donât know what to make of that, but it also doesnât freak me out like my dream did.
We find our names at the same table as Will and Jared and also a few girls we went to high school with.
âMaddy,â Claire exclaims and jumps out of her chair to hug me.
âHey, Claire. This is my boyfriend, Damon.â
âWow. So you really are gay, huh? We all thought it was your way of breaking up with Chastity.â
Damon laughs but recovers by putting his arm around my shoulder and saying, âI thought he was straight when I met him.â
Yeah, so did I.
âYou still play football?â she asks.
âNot since high school,â I admit.
âHeâs into baseball now,â Damon says. âThanks to me.â
âYou wish,â I say. âYou will never convert me.â
âGive it time.â
âOoh, thereâs Chastity and Christopher. Iâm gonna go congratulate them,â Claire says.
Damon leans in and whispers, âYou know, Iâm starting to think your town isnât as dumb as I thought they were. Iâm wondering if everyone knows youâre full of shit.â
âI guess they canât exactly say âyouâre lyingâ to my face. Itâs like one of those pranks where youâre sure youâre being pranked, but you donât want to call the person on it in case itâs not. Like with the dude with the angel wings yesterday. I was ninety-nine percent sure he wasnât you, but I still hesitated because what if it was?â
âThat wasnât my idea, by the way.â
âOh, I know. Your sister is pure evil. Itâs why I love her.â
Damon grimaces and changes the subject. âSo, you used to play football?â
âI was the punter on my high school team. Nowhere near good enough for Olmstead. Their teamâs full of NFL-bound players. I like the sport but was never in love with it or anything. Nothing like you and baseball.â
âIncoming,â Damon says and takes a sip of his drink.
I turn to find my ex approaching.
âHey, Maddy, so glad you could make it.â
âYou look beautiful, Chastity.â I lean in to kiss her cheek. Iâm not lying. Sheâs always been a beautiful girl.
âThis is my husband, Christopher,â she says, pulling the guy forward. Heâs a balding guy in his late twenties.
I shake his hand. âCongratulations.â
âThank you.â
âUh, this is Damon. My boyfriend.â
âAh, this is the boyfriend,â she says. âI thought he was making you up. Couldnât even tell me your name last week.â
âI was a wee bit drunk,â I say.
âAre you â¦â Christopher narrows his eyes at Damon. âNo, wait, are you ⦠Damon King?â
Damon stiffens.
âHoly shit. I canât believe Damon âThe Lionâ King is at my wedding.â
âLion King?â I ask.
Damon rubs the back of his neck. âI didnât realize Iâd be famous in these parts.â
âIâm a Newport alum,â Christopher says. âI played for the Lions, and then the year after I graduate, in comes freshman Damon King and takes the team on to win the fucking College World Series three years in a row. Almost made it four untilââ Christopherâs mouth slams shut. âOh. Sorry. That last game was brutal.â
âDonât sweat it,â Damon says, but I think I can hear his molars grinding. âIt was a few years ago.â
âAre you okay now? All healed?â Christopher asks.
âAll healed. Never playing ball again though.â
I think I see the actual moment Christopherâs heart breaks. Iâd find it funny if Damon didnât look like he was about to vomit.
Chastityâs gaze ping-pongs between me and Damon. âChristopherâs running for mayor. Heâs going to be a politician.â I donât know if she can sense Damonâs discomfort too or if sheâs trying to one up me on the whole my new partner is better than yours.
âLocal government is a long step from the White House, honey,â Christopher says.
âChris and Chas, come over here,â a woman calls from the table next to ours.
âBetter make the rounds,â Chastity says. âThank you for coming, Maddy.â She hugs me. âYou were an important person in my life for so long, andââ
My throat does that constricting thing again. âYou should get to your guests. Congrats again.â
She smiles a classic Chastity smile, and I have to admit a part of meâway, way, way deep downâhas missed her, but as soon as she walks off, I sag in relief.
âChris and Chas? Could they get any more sickeningly cutesy?â Damon says.
I turn to my pretend boyfriend who has obviously been keeping a huge secret from me. âSo, Simbaââ
âFuck me,â Damon mumbles.
âYou didnât tell me you were famous.â
âBecause I knew youâd call me fucking Simba.â
I laugh. âYou mustâve been a big deal for someone who didnât go to school with you to recognize you.â
Damon sighs. âI was a gay ball player with rumors of becoming the number one pick in the draft. It was big news, so I was everywhere for a while. Especially in baseball.â
âI was wondering why you went to Newport instead of Olmstead like Stacy. I mean, Jersey versus New York? No contest.â
âNewport was better for baseball back then. I wanted to get the attention of agents, but you know that saying be careful what you wish for? I didnât get just agentsâ attention. When the media caught wind that I was an openly gay player headed for the big leagues, everything exploded. More media and sporting journalists went to Newportâs games than any other school. I had people recognizing me on the street. I felt like a celebrity.â
âThatâs a lot of pressure.â
âRight? It was the pressure that made me push through the pain. I never told my coaches my arm was pinching. Then a few weeks after the pain starts, Iâm on the mound during the championship game for our conference.â He gulps down a mouthful of rum, and his knuckles turn white holding the glass. âWeâre up by one, itâs bottom of the seventh, bases are loaded, and I just need one out. Iâd kept them from scoring the whole game. The coach tries to take me out of the game and put a closer in, but Iâm determined to finish the inning.â Damonâs voice cracks.
âYou donât have to tell me if itâs too hard.â
âItâs not that. I just ⦠fuck, Iâm still mad at myself for not paying attention to the signs. I threw a fastball, and then bam, I was on the ground trying not to pass out from the pain. The fucker from UMass hit it deep left field, and two of those assholes crossed home plate by the time the ball was back in our catcherâs mitt.â
âFarrrrk,â I say.
âThe closer couldnât turn it around, and we lost the game. There was pain in my shoulder, and I ignored it. The doctors say I probably had a small tear, and I kept playing on it and did more damage. Career suicide.â
âAthletes are taught to play through the pain, though.â
âExactly. I told myself to suck it up, because I was worried Iâd be benched if they found out. And I often wonder if it wouldâve been different if I was closeted. If I was the number one draft pick as a straight guy, I doubt the media wouldâve jumped on it so hard.â
âLetâs drink more,â I say. âBecause thatâs depressing.â
âWelcome to my life.â
After we get new drinks, the mood is somber when we get back to the table. Damonâs dream was shattered in mere seconds, but he went and moved on and had made a life becoming a sports agent. Something he loves ⦠probably. Itâs a logical step. Ballplayer turned sports agent. My only goal was to get out of this town, and I did that. Now what?
âYou know,â Damon says and leans forward. âYour ex isnât the ball-busting girl I thought she was going to be. I donât get it.â
âDonât get what?â
âYour aversion to all this and your ex-girlfriend. Iâm missing part of the story.â
I hate that this guy who Iâve known for all of twenty-four hours can read me. He stares right into me, leaving me vulnerable but not entirely uncomfortable. Confusion clouds my head again for the sixtieth time in the last twenty-four hours.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â Damon asks.
âNo oneânot even Stacyâhas asked me why I am the way I am.â
âSo, why are you?â
âYou ask me for my deepest and darkest secrets so casually as if itâs not a big deal.â
Damon runs his hand over his jaw, as if heâs trying not to smile. âUnless youâve killed a guy, been abused, or belong to ISIS, your deepest and darkest secrets canât be too scary.â
I blow out a loud breath. I donât talk about this stuffâto anyone. âThis town was my home for eighteen years, but I donât belong here, and I never have. Canât tell you why because I couldnât work it out. I lived here, I had fun here, I was a normal kid, but the idea of living here my entire life made me break out in hives. And with Chastity â¦â
âYou wouldâve been trapped here.â
âExactly. My parents are great, but Iâve never been close to them. Or my sister. I look nothing like them, act nothing like them. My whole life has been one big game of one of these things is not like the other.â
âMaybe you were switched at birth,â Damon jokes.
âYouâd be surprised how many times I asked myself that growing up, but itâs not just them. Or here, for that matter. Iâve never belonged anywhere. Even in New York. I almost transferred junior year because I was bored out of my brain. Now Iâve graduated and been in my job for a year, itâs like Iâm on that never-ending conveyer belt I left here to get away from. I wanted to travel and explore. Iâve done none of that.â
I could keep talking. I could ramble all I want about seeing the world and not being tied down, living a life trying new things, doing new people, but I donât say those things aloud. I canât explain why being stuck in the one spot for the rest of my life scares the shit out of me.
âWhat keeps you in New York?â Damon asks.
Thatâs easy to answer. âYour sister.â
He screws up his face as if heâs tasting something sour.
âNah, man, not like that. I had a thing for Stacy freshman year, but after I gave up trying to get her into bed, we became actual friends. Iâm glad she stood her ground, because if she hadnât, I wouldnât have her now. Does that make any sense or is the scotch already affecting my speech?â
Damonâs face remains stoic. âIt makes sense.â
âWhen I told her I wanted to transfer out of OU, she asked me to stay, so I did.â
âBecause you couldnât man up and do what you wanted? Iâm starting to sense a theme. Chastity wouldnât let you go to New York; Stacy wonât let you leave.â
âItâs not like that with Stacy. When she asked me to stay, I realized sheâs the closest thing to home Iâve ever had.â
Damon takes a swig of his drink. âOkay, Iâm going to ask this once, and whatever you say, Iâll accept as the truth. Are you sure you donât still have a thing for my sister?â
I burst out laughing. âNo way. And if I did, Jaredâs done her, so sheâs off limits. Iâm not into crossing swords either. Sheâs honestly more of a sister to me than Jacie is.â
Damon leans back in his chair and finally looks satisfied that there is absolutely nothing between me and Stacy. âOkay. Should we dance? You need to make a choice, because Iâm fairly certain everyone here knows we arenât together and that youâre not really gay. You either double down on this lie of yours or come clean. I vote for the latter but will support you if you choose option A.â
âGuess you need to show me your dance moves then.â
Damon shakes his head in disappointment. ââKay. Iâm gonna hit the head and then drag you onto the dance floor.â
While Damon walks away, my eyes gravitate to his ass. The one he was begging me to fuck last night in my dream.
I shift uncomfortably in my seat.
âWhatâs the story?â Will asks, taking the chair next to me.
âWhat story?â
âYou say this is all fake, but is it?â
âAnd here Damon thinks weâre not convincing enough.â Yeah, Iâm deflecting. âHeâs a cool guy. I think weâll be friends after this.â
âYou keep staring at his ass.â
âJealous? Want me to stare at your ass instead?â
âWell, shit, Iâm sorry for being concerned for my friend after you came home freshman year andââ
âThis is nothing like that.â Only, itâs a hell of a lot like that.
Will is the one person in the world who knows what happened between me and my roommate freshman year of college, but I wasnât expecting him to throw it back in my face.
âWhat ended up happening with that, anyway?â
I crack my neck and breathe deep, because I donât want to get into it right now. Iâm already confused enough as it is.
âReady?â The rumble of Damonâs voice brings me out of my murderous mood. Willâs a lucky man, then.
I stand. âReady.â
Damon leads me to the dance floor and pulls me close.
âIâm not gonna be the chick,â I say when we fumble with where to put our hands.
He rolls his eyes and grabs me around my waist, and with his free hand, clasps our hands together out to our side. Damon mumbles something that sounds like âGod forbid a straight man do anything that resembles a feminine trait.â
Eyes from everywhere around the room land on us. I donât need to glance around to know the burning sensation at the back of my head is from the stares of both curious and disgusted spectators. Emmett wasnât the only person to cut me out when Chastity told everyone I was gay.
âMight wanna look like youâre enjoying this,â Damon says at my frown. âWe have an audience.â
âI hate dancing.â
âOf course, you do.â
Iâm lying. I donât mind dancing, but the truth is, I hate dancing right now. I hate that weâre on display and that everyone is passing some form of judgment. Theyâre wondering why I came home, why Iâm at Chastityâs wedding, and some are probably even wondering what Iâm doing here with Damon. But what I hate more than that is the fact I like being pressed against him a hell of a lot more than a straight guy should.
My gaze wanders around the room and lands anywhere but on Damon. Itâs not the stares that are getting to meâitâs him.
âArenât you in marketing?â he taunts. âThatâs selling, right? Youâre not selling this very well.â He cups my head, forcing my eyes to meet his. I beg him silently to let me out of whatever invisible hold he has on me, because his piercing green eyes make me think about things that I shouldnât.
Like my dream.
His strong arms and how good his hard body feels against me.
And his lips. Those damn lips I canât stop looking at.
âItâs a short song,â Damon says. âYou only have to pretend to like me for a little longer.â
Pretending certainly isnât the problem. Pretending Iâm not drawn to him is.
My eyes go to his mouth again, but when Damonâs brow drops, he catches me in his confused gaze.
âMaddoxââ
I donât know Iâm moving closer until my mouth meets his, and I swallow his gasp. My name on his lips breaks the fraying cord attached to my denial.
And when he kisses me back? Iâm completely lost.