The Roommate Game (Smithton Bears #3) Read Online Lane Hayes

Categories Genre: College, Contemporary, M-M Romance, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Smithton Bears Series by Lane Hayes
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 67
Estimated words: 64727 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 324(@200wpm)___ 259(@250wpm)___ 216(@300wpm)
<<<<38485657585960>67
Advertisement


Most of the team came, and some had dates or their parents with them…or both. Coach showed up with his wife. Ty brought his mom, dad, and Walker. Regan brought Cassie—and yeah, Brady didn’t like that. He sat with Pritchard and LeMieux and drank way too much champagne.

“I wouldn’t worry about him.” Ty snickered. “Those boys have another year with Coach. We’re celebrating, they’re commiserating.”

Rafe sat at a table with Celine. His parents couldn’t afford to make the trip, and he wouldn’t accept my offer of a plane ticket. He’d see them this summer, and his mom had saved to watch him skate at the championships.

In a twist, my mom was a huge figure skating fan and wanted to know everything about their postgraduation plans and training regimes.

“How adorable are they?” Mom gushed, her cheeks flush from wine and good food. “A boyfriend girlfriend team to watch!”

“They’re not a couple,” I corrected.

She didn’t hear, and it was just as well.

It was bad enough that I couldn’t take my eyes off Rafe. Seriously. I was sure someone would notice my occasional longing stares, but drinking Coke instead of snorting it while shooting kamikazes was a bigger topic.

Brady stuck his face in my glass. “Is there rum in here? I can’t tell.”

“Is this better?” I shook it, and didn’t feel bad at his dramatic gripe about bubbles going up his nose.

I’d become an expert at switching glasses or emptying them. Diversion was my new superpower.

The only person besides Rafe who seemed to be on to me was Ty. He never asked. Maybe he was waiting for me to say something, but the timing still wasn’t right. I had to get through graduation and the parties, and fuck…it wasn’t easy.

The hardest part was having to draw the line at hosting at our place. My parties had been the stuff of legends. Multiple kegs, a ridiculous amount of booze, loud music, and party favors. The more the merrier.

It was how the Langleys entertained. When I was growing up, the Cristal was always flowing and everyone had a drink in hand. Not a Solo cup, but you get the idea. I came by my propensity to bring the fun naturally, and it felt strange to put up barriers.

It was necessary, though. My excuses were so paper thin, they were embarrassing. Depending on who asked, “My landlord won’t let me. He’s already threatened to charge me for undo wear and tear on the house.” Or… “My folks are in town, and it’s not gonna work…sorry.”

Yeah, I lied through my teeth. My landlords loved me. They lived in Florida half the year and as long as I paid rent on time, they didn’t care what I did. And my parents never stayed in town for a whole forty-eight hours. Ever.

The larger population of Smithton students hoping for one last hurrah Langley-style might have been disappointed, but they found other party venues. My closest friends, on the other hand, were suspicious. They shared knowing glances that made me think I’d been the topic of some interesting conversations lately.

But I didn’t sweat it. People could think what they wanted. They always did. Besides, I had enough on my hands dealing with reality.

It came for me in the form of empty moving boxes stacked like Jenga blocks in the living room.

Rafe didn’t explain what they were doing there, and I didn’t ask. They slowly disappeared, and returned to sit in the foyer, taped and labeled, “Bedroom,” “Kitchen,” “Books.”

I ignored them and Rafe ignored me ignoring them, and honestly, it worked just fine. Ignorance really was bliss.

Until the day he put the first box into the trunk of his car.

It was a Tuesday afternoon in early June—a perfect pre-summer day. Most Smithton students had gone home, and the wave of tourists hadn’t arrived yet. It was quiet and pleasantly warm, not a single mosquito in sight.

I’d just checked out a two-bedroom condo in the Bluffs. It was a nice place with lots of natural light, high ceilings, new appliances, and hardwood flooring. It was larger than I needed, but every apartment I’d looked at closer to campus shared thin walls with college students, and that wasn’t where I needed to be. This was better. Rafe would like it, I’d mused on the way home. I wanted to show it to him, get his opinion, and…that was not smart.

Rafe had packed his things.

Rafe was shoving a box into his crappy car.

Rafe was leaving.

I parked my truck at the curb, wordlessly helped him with a heavy box, and asked, “How do you feel about cats?”

Rafe’s glasses slipped on his nose as he wiped his brow. He didn’t wear them often enough in my opinion, and he looked hot as fuck. “I like them. My mom has a tabby named Cecil. He’s pretty cute.”

“Cecil? What kind of a name is that for a cat? Aren’t all cats supposed to be called Fluffy, Whiskers, or Mr. Jones?”


Advertisement

<<<<38485657585960>67

Advertisement