Fake Out: Chapter 6
Fake Out (Fake Boyfriend Book 1)
His mouth is domineering and forceful. And damn, if it doesnât send a shock straight to my groin. His tongue forces my lips to part, and a moan gets stuck in the back of my throat. Our bodies continue to sway to the slow Ed Sheeran song as I get lost in a kiss thatâs fake.
This whole thing is fake.
I need to keep reminding myself of that, because this feels so good. Fuck, too good. Maddox no doubt can feel my cock growing against his hip. Trying to step backâbecause awkwardâI realize Iâm not the only one whoâs too into this. The hardness between us definitely isnât just me.
The exact moment Maddoxâs brain catches up with his dick, he pulls away. His eyes widen in shock, but his lips are parted in want. He shakes off his dazed expression. âYou were right. Everyone was staring, so I thought Iâd give them what they were waiting for.â
I nod and take a step back.
âDo you wanna get out of here?â he asks. âI have absolutely no reason to be here anymore. Iâve filled my obligation.â
Again with a nod. Apparently when he kissed me, he took my ability to talk.
Maddox heads straight for the exit, without so much as a goodbye to the bride. Or his friends. I donât think heâs aware everyoneâs staring at us. My eyes catch Willâs right before I slip out the door, and heâs scowling. Donât know what thatâs about.
âMaddy, wait up,â I say as I try to catch up to him. If anything, his feet move faster.
He gets to his car and pauses. âShit, Iâll be over the limit. Guess Iâm calling a cab.â He refuses to look at me, and nothing I say or do will change that, so I awkwardly stand a few feet away from him with my hands in my pockets and my eyes looking anywhere but Maddox.
âUber will be here in a few minutes,â Maddox says and throws himself on the curb next to his car.
âOkay.â
âFuck, Iâm sorry.â
âFor what?â I take the spot next to him but make sure to keep my distance.
âFor kissing you.â
âPart of the charade. Although, Iâm not sure the tongue was necessary.â My attempt at a joke falls flat. âProbably didnât help you ran out of there immediately after.â
âIt wasnât partââ He shakes his head. âSorry, yeah, youâre right. All part of the charade.â
We sit in silence, and I stare out at the street. What should I do? Say âHey, itâs okay you were turned on while making out with a guy. Happens all the time. Doesnât mean anything.â Yeah, I donât think thatâll work this time. The dream he had about us is one thing. This â¦
âSorry,â Maddox says again. âChastity getting married has messed with my head. Coming back hereââ
âYou donât have to explain.â I want him to, but itâs not my business, and I have no idea what to say to comfort or reassure him if thatâs what he needs.
âYouâre gonna go home and tell Stacy Iâm a complete head case, arenât you?â
âShe already knows that. She warned me about it.â
He scoffs. âFigures. Look, the dream, the kiss ⦠itâsââ
The sound of a car horn makes both of us jump. âCarâs here,â I say.
âOf course, it is,â he mutters.
Our poor Uber driver tries to talk and be friendly, but Maddox and I keep giving one-word answers. When we pull up to the house, Maddox jumps out and arrives at his front door before Iâve scrambled out of the car.
Maddox pauses in the doorway. âItâs still early,â he whispers. âMy parents are probably awake, soââ
âNeed to pretend youâre not being weird. Got it.â
We donât get two feet in the door before his mom comes in from the kitchen. âYou boys are home early.â
âUh, yeah,â Maddox says, âsaid our congratulations and then got out of there.â
âCome join us in the back for a bonfire and beers.â
âCoolest parents ever,â I say.
Maddox hesitates. âWeâll just go get changed out of our suits first.â
He heads for the stairs, but his mom whispers, âDamon.â When I turn to her, sheâs waggling her finger at me to come closer.
âWhatâs up?â I ask quietly while simultaneously watching Maddox climb the stairs. He doesnât look back at us.
âIs he okay? He looks ⦠down. Did something happen? Thereâs a few in this town who still live in the stone ages. I mean, for a small town, weâre pretty accepting. Thereâs just a handful of them who arenât.â
Well, your son kissed me, which you wouldnât find weird because you think heâs gay, but heâs not. Although, heâs definitely freaking out about kissing me. Okay, so I canât say that. âThere were a few, uh, stares. Nothing major.â
âDid you have a fight?â
Not really. Maybe? I have no idea whatâs going on in his head. Apart from freaking out. But maybe he blames me for the kiss. âNo.â
I donât think she believes me.
âOkay, well, make sure you boys join us outside, okay? Donât let him wallow about whateverâs bothering him in his room. Thatâs his MO.â
âWeâll be right down.â
When I reach the bedroom, Maddox is rummaging in his suitcase for warm clothes. Even though he stiffens at my presence, he pretends he doesnât know Iâm in here.
Wordlessly, I grab my own bag and pull out sweats and a long-sleeved Henley.
âWe donât need to go down there if you donât want to,â Maddox says.
I laugh. âYeah, we do. Your motherâs spidey senses are tingling, telling her somethingâs up with us. She told me not to let you stay up here and wallow.â
âHow does she do that? She has like a sixth sense or something.â
âTo be fair, youâre wigging out.â
âIâm not wigging out. Iâm ⦠okay, fine, Iâm wigging out. Iâm confused as fuck right now.â
âKissing a guy might do that to a straight dude.â
Maddox bursts out laughing. âI donât think itâs the kiss. Itâs â¦â His eyes meet mine, and his laughter dies. âWe should get down thereâbefore Mom gets impatient.â
When we dress and go downstairs, Maddoxâs parents have set out two more folding chairs opposite theirs and brought out extra blankets for us.
Maddox hands me a warm beer and then holds my free hand as we take our seats. Iâm confused by the move. Heâs freaking out about kissing me, but now his fingers are relaxed and warm, intertwined with mine. He could use the argument that weâre in front of his parents and itâs part of the act, but we havenât shown much affection in front of them all weekend, so thereâs no real need to do it now. Unless he wants to ease his motherâs mind, in which case, makes sense. Butâ
âYou thinking deep thoughts over there?â Maddox asks quietly.
I shake my head and mumble, âConfusing thoughts.â
âWelcome to my world.â His smile is easy and his panic from earlier gone.
I wonder if heâs suffering some sort of PTKDâpost-traumatic kissing disorderâand has blocked it out already.
The fire barely does anything to keep us warm in the late February cold, but the blanket draped over us is thick and does the job.
My lungs fill with fresh air and smoke. The sky looks as it should outside of the city. I grew up on Long Island, so Iâm not used to seeing so many stars. I went camping upstate once when I was thirteen with my best friend, Eric, and his family. Staring up at the sky, I try to spot the constellation that looks like a dick. I couldnât see it when I was a kid, and I guess I wonât find it now. Maybe Eric was messing with me. Heâs a pro at that.
âYour aunt Cheri called while you were at the wedding,â Maddoxâs mom says.
âHow is crazy Aunt Cheri?â Maddox asks and then turns to me. âSheâs seriously a nut. You know how people say theyâre gonna run off and join the circus? Momâs sister did it.â
âShe does not travel with a circus,â Alana says, her tone exasperated. âSheâs a psychic. She travels with others and does astrology readings and all that stuff.â
âExactly. Circus,â Maddox says. âShe dresses like a hippie and calls herself a free spirit.â
âYou might not believe in all that mumbo jumbo, but how do you explain the fact she hasnât called in months and calls tonight looking for you?â The light flickering across Alanaâs face from the fire makes her look smug.
Maddox rolls his eyes. âCoincidence. Why was she looking for me?â
âSheâs coming into town next month and she wants to see you. Talk to you about ⦠some things.â
Maddox is too busy looking at his mom to notice his dad tense beside her. Guess heâs not a fan of his crazy sister-in-law.
âWhat things?â Maddox asks.
âI donât know, Maddy, why donât you come home and ask her yourself next month?â
He leans forward. âCanât she come to New York?â
âIs it really that hard to come home again?â Alanaâs words hold motherâs guiltâsomething my own mother has perfected over the years. A womanâs brain must change after giving birth, or their guilt gene kicks in, because mothers have it down to an art.
My mom pulled the guilt card last year when I ditched Stacyâs graduation ceremony to hang out with Eric. She didnât understand I was in a bad place with him because of stupid, stupid shit that wasnât worth losing a twenty-year friendship over, but I couldnât come out and tell her thatâs why I skipped out. And to think, if I had gone to Stacyâs graduation, I wouldâve met Maddox then. Wouldâve been better than what I ended up doing that night.
âIâll try.â Maddox sips his beer.
Motherâs guilt wins again.
âItâs a shame Tommy had a home game this weekend,â Alana says. âIf he was away, Jacie and the kids couldâve come to see you. Heâs gone so much during the season; they need family time when heâs home.â
âTommy?â I ask. Boston player named Tommy ⦠Holy fucking shit. âYour brother-in-law is Tomik âTommyâ Novak? No fucking way.â My eyes widen. âSorry for swearing, Mr. and Mrs. OâShay, but that is seriously cool.â
âWeâre fucking Irish, we donât care about swearing,â Colin says.
âHow did you not know about Tommy?â his mom asks.
Oops.
âI didnât tell him,â Maddox says. âMaybe I didnât want Damon to use me to get to Tommy.â
Yet, he offered him up anyway. My meeting is with Tommy Novak? Thereâs no way heâd dump his agent for a newbie like me â¦
I let out an exasperated grunt when I work it out. Maddox never told me who it was because he knew I wouldnât have accepted the terms. Meeting with Tommy would be a complete waste of time at this stage of my career. When Maddox said high profile, I thought he was overselling and possibly knew someone on the farm team for Boston. I didnât realize he was underselling. He shouldâve said hockey god.
âTommy-fucking-Novak,â I mumble. âHeâs like the biggest player in the NHL this season. Superstar forward for Boston. Traded from New York a few years back. Heâs scored more goals this year than any other player. Heââ
Maddox puts his hand on mine to make me stop talking. âI get it. Youâre a fan.â He leans in and whispers, âDonât worry. Iâll keep my side of the bargain.â
I slink back in my seat. âDonât worry about it. I mean, hell yeah, Iâd want to meet him, but thereâs no way someone like Tommy will sign with a green agent like me.â I should be pissed, because this has been a waste of my time, but Iâm not. Perhaps itâs because I actually like Maddox. Had I known him before all of this, I wouldâve volunteered to come back with him without the incentive.
âI still canât believe you didnât tell him,â Alana says.
âI would have eventually,â Maddox says.
I shrug. âItâs not like itâs baseball. Had you been related to Zach Pritchett and not told me, I wouldâve broken up with him.â
His mom eyes us warily, so I wrap my arm around Maddox and pull him closer. His breath hitches when my mouth lands near his ear. âYour momâs suspicious,â I whisper as if Iâm telling him sweet nothings. âSmile as if Iâm being romantic.â
Instead, he laughs. With a quick kiss to his temple, I pull away but keep my arm around him. He tenses briefly when my lips land on him, but he relaxes again just as fast. Rubbing a soothing hand over his shoulder probably isnât a good idea, so I keep as awkwardly still as possible.
His parents ask me question after question about my family, and theyâre shocked when they find out I grew up in New York and Iâm not a thug. Or that Iâve never been mugged. I have to bite back a laugh. Thereâs more small talk, but every time thereâs a lull in conversation, his mom glances between the two of us again and her face takes on an analytical expression. She looks like me when Iâm trying to do algebra. Iâm all right with math until the alphabet gets involved.
The cold air gets colder somehow, and I move in closer to Maddox to block some of the breeze.
âI know what youâre doing, dickhead,â he mutters with a smile. âWe should swap places. Youâre wider than me.â
âThen Iâll be cold,â I complain.
âBut I wonât be.â
Maddoxâs dad gets out of his seat and throws another log on the fire. âThat should be good for another two hours, boys. Weâre heading to bed.â
âWe are?â Alana asks. He walks over to her and offers his hand and then leads her toward the house. âOkay, I guess we are.â
âTheyâre so cute,â I say.
âIf you say so. Iâm worried about the glimmer in Dadâs eye.â Maddox shudders. âParents arenât supposed to get freaky. Especially when their son is visiting.â He shudders some more. âYou, ah, can let go of me now. Theyâre gone.â
âBut Iâm not holding onto you for show. Iâm freezing my nuts off.â
Maddox laughs. âWe can go inside if you want.â
âNah, if your parents are going at it, I donât want to be hearing that.â
âDude. No. I canât un-see those thoughts.â He leans forward and hangs his head in his hands.
My arm drops, and I pull it under the blanket to keep it warm now itâs not being heated by Maddoxâs body.
âAbout our deal â¦â I say. âAs much as Iâd love a chance at representing someone like Tommy-fucking-Novakââ
âHeâs still a human being, you know.â
âNah, heâs a hockey god. But itâs all good. You donât have to introduce us. Iâm officially taking back our deal.â
âNope. Consider it done. Itâs the least I can do after what Iâve put you through this weekend.â Maddox sits up straighter. âI guess now would be when to sayââ
âIf you apologize one more time, I may have to kick your ass. Iâve never been in a physical fight in my entire lifeâgot into a few yelling matches with an umpire during a gameâbut Iâve got muscles. Iâm sure they could do some damage.â
Maddoxâs smile has a dimple appearing in his chiseled face. âI was going to say I should give you an explanation.â
âNot my place. You donât owe me anything. We kissed. You liked it. Now youâre confused. Itâs got nothing to do with me.â I donât want to shut him out, but the needy side of me wants him to say he wants more, and I canât be that guy. I donât want to be Maddoxâs sexual guinea pig, and I already have a tiny crush on the guy, so he needs to work this out on his own. Harsh, maybe, but I canât go through this again.
âHow do you know I liked it?â he asks defensively.
I cock my eyebrow at him, because we both know I felt how hard he was when his tongue was in my mouth.
âOkay fine, I more than liked it. Which ⦠okay ⦠so ⦠andââ
âYou do know youâre not constructing a sentence right now? Scotch make speech good?â
âThereâs no more scotch in me.â Maddoxâs knee bounces. âI wish there was, because this is hard to say. The only person I ever told was Will.â
âIs that why he was scowling at me at the wedding?â
âProbably. He thinks Iâm going to get all fucked up over you like I did with â¦â He draws in a deep breath. âLike I did with my roommate in college.â
My earsâand shamefully, my cockâprick up at that.
âYou know how I said I had a thing for your sister freshman year?â
âYeah â¦â
âOne of the nights I struck out with her, I went back to the frat house and my roommate was asleep. Or, I thought he was. I â¦â He takes in another deep breath. âYou know that unspoken rule where if your roommateâs jerking off, you pretend itâs not happening?â
My eyes narrow. âYou were jerking off in your room, while your roommate was asleep but not?â
âRight. Anyway, he asked if I needed a hand, andââ
âSmooth.â
âI thought it was his way of being all âStop whacking off, Iâm awake over here.â So I stopped. But it was his way of â¦â
âActually asking if you wanted a hand?â
âRight. Well, a mouth.â Maddox shifts in his seat, and the light from the fire shows off his flushed cheeks. âAt first, I was all âWhat the fuck, Iâm not gay.â And he said he wasnât either. He said he and his high school buddy used to give each other brojobs all the time.â
âBrojobs,â I repeat like a moron. I hate that termâalways have. âOkay, so your roommate gave you a blowjob?â
âSort of, umm ⦠yeah. Uh, multiple, actually. It kind of became a running joke between us that heâd only do it on weekends.â
âDid you ⦠enjoy it?â Why am I asking that? It doesnât matter whether he did or not. I shouldnât care.
âThe first few times I closed my eyes and pretended he was a chick. But, really, it was a wet, hot mouth on a horny eighteen-year-oldâs cock. What do you think?â
I chuckle but it comes out as a harsh breath. âRight. Of course, what was I thinking? Maybe that straight guys generally donât like gay guys manipulating them into fooling around, but whatever.â
Maddoxâs brow furrows. âMattâs not gay. It wasnât like that. He gave me plenty of chances to say no and constantly asked if I was okay with it. There was no manipulation on his part. And I never touched him. I didnât offer to return the favor, and he never asked.â
âMatt? Matty and Maddy? How cute.â Why am I getting defensive and tight-chested, andâoh, fuck no. I canât be â¦Â jealous. I was literally just thinking I canât be Maddoxâs sexual experiment, and now Iâm pissed heâs been with another guy before.
âMatt claims to be heteroflexible.â
I scoff. âRight. Only gay on weekends. Got it.â
âWhatâs with the pissed-off tone?â Now heâs getting defensive, but heâs right. I have to tone down the attitude.
I try to tame my irrational side and go for the coverup excuse. âFirst off, heteroflexible is a term someone uses when they donât want to admit theyâre bi. If youâre sexually attracted to both males and females, even if youâll only have relationships with one gender, congratulations, youâre still bi. Pretty simple philosophy. But do you know a lot of straight guys whoâll willingly give blowjobs for nothing in return? Your man is gay.â
Maddoxâs mouth drops open but nothing comes out.
âSorry if that bursts some kind of bubble you were living in.â
âWell, fuck.â