All I Want for Christmas is a Fake British Boyfriend Read Online Lili Valente

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 76664 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 383(@200wpm)___ 307(@250wpm)___ 256(@300wpm)
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“I hope you’re right,” I mutter, fighting to swallow past the lump forming in my throat.

My laptop pings with a new email, making me flinch.

I shouldn’t look. I really shouldn’t.

But hell, I’m already spiraling, might as well keep swirling down the despair drain.

Ms. Darling: After careful consideration, we’ve decided our firm wouldn’t be a good match for what you have in mind for the Fletchers’ event. But we wish you the best in your future endeavors. Nathan Smythe, Chelsea Botanicals

“Make that seven florists,” I mutter, sinking onto the bed with my laptop on my trembling knees.

“Seven? How is that even possible? It’s not even noon!”

“Belinda Moore rides at dawn.” I refresh my email, watching two more rejections pop up in real-time. “Eight. Nine.” I scroll, throat growing tighter as I scan the messages. “The last one includes a personal note advising me to leave the country as soon as possible. Apparently, once the British tabloids have someone in their crosshairs, they’re like a dog with a bone.”

“Well, at least that’s kind? Sort of?”

“Sort of,” I agree. “But they also included a link to a meme of me crushing the manger. Apparently, one of the parents was filming when I fell.” I click over to Instagram, unable to stop myself from looking. “Nearly a million views, Maya! Already.” My stomach pitches as I realize it’s set to ‘All I Want for Christmas,’ and that they’ve timed it so I land on baby Jesus right when Mariah hits the high note. My breath comes faster, and my ribs squeeze tight. Tighter. Tightest. “I’m a meme. A horrible, embarrassing meme. And once you’re a meme, there’s no escape, Maya. Once you’re a meme, the internet will haunt you forever. This is now my own personal, hellish Ghost of Christmas Present! And Future! And⁠—”

“Emily, breathe,” she cuts in. “This isn’t helping. We have to calm down and strategize.”

“I think we’re beyond strategy, Maya.” I scroll through other social feeds, each one bringing fresh horror. “This is it. I’m over. Finished. I’ll have to change careers. Move away from people who have access to the internet. Maybe I can get work on an insect farm in rural Kenya. They speak English and Swahili, so maybe I could⁠—”

“Stop it, woman. Right now. And listen to me.” Maya’s voice takes on her no-nonsense boss babe tone, the one that usually means she’s locked in on a solution against all odds. “I’ve been scrolling, too, and a pattern has emerged.”

I frown. “A pattern that I am a hideous, klutzy sow with a leg that does weird things when I’m kissing?”

“A pattern of assumption,” Maya counters. “The pictures actually aren’t that steamy, Em. And you don’t look silly at all.”

“The comment section would beg to differ.”

“Well, I beg to differ with the trolls, and so should you. You look like a cute woman, fresh off a long flight, having a steamy night with a hot guy,” she says. “The problem is that the tabloids and the gossip accounts and everyone else are assuming you’re some rumpled nobody who threw herself at a drunk aristocrat who kicked you to the curb as soon as he sobered up.”

“Thanks,” I say. “You’re making me feel so much better.”

“Let me finish. You’re only a scandal because you’re an outsider. A nobody. Some spicy stranger who popped up in connection with this usually well-behaved guy they’re assuming you led astray with your big American boobs.”

“Don’t remind me.” I squeeze my eyes shut, but the shot of Olly cupping my breast through my shirt is burned into my brain.

“What I’m saying is they’re assuming you’re fair game. But what if you weren’t? What if you weren’t a stranger or a nobody? What if you were something far more banal?”

I exhale, my eyes flying open. “I don’t understand.”

“Emily, what’s the most boring story in the world?”

I shake my head. “I don’t know. Watching paint dry? British parliamentary procedure? My love life before last night?”

“An established couple getting drunk and handsy after date night,” Maya says, victory in her voice. I don’t understand. “Nobody cares about a man kissing his girlfriend outside a pub. I’m sure it happens literally every night. It’s normal. It’s boring. The press would move on in forty-eight hours, guaranteed.”

My stomach drops as I realize where she’s going. “Maya, no.”

“Listen, you said he apologized this morning and wanted to see you again. I’m sure he’d be open to bending the truth a bit in the name of making this up to you.”

“Absolutely not.”

“Oh, come on. All you have to do is pretend you’ve been dating for a while, and this whole thing becomes a non-story. You’re not some random hookup. You’re his girlfriend who missed him so much she couldn’t help making out with him in the snow.”

“I can’t fake date a Viscount’s little brother!” I stand up too fast, laptop sliding dangerously. I catch it, setting it back on the bureau, before I add, “He’s fifth in line to the throne. That’s like being a Kennedy. But with actual crowns and probably a castle or giant manor home somewhere.”


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