The Best Men (The Best Men #1) Read Online Lauren Blakely

Categories Genre: Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance, Romance Tags Authors: Series: The Best Men Series by Lauren Blakely
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Total pages in book: 110
Estimated words: 107454 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 537(@200wpm)___ 430(@250wpm)___ 358(@300wpm)
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He gives me a dark look, but doesn’t bother to respond. Understandable. That comment was more for my amusement. Which, let’s be honest, a lot of things I do are.

But there was one I’m so sorry I definitely wanted a front seat to. I clear my throat. “I noticed I didn’t get one.”

“An apology?” Mark snorts, furrowing his brow. “Unless you’re going to the chapel after knocking up my sister, I don’t think I insulted you.”

A laugh bursts from my chest. “Something no one will accuse me of. Ever.”

“Then we’re all good,” he says.

I give an easy shrug. “Sure, sure. I guess I don’t require one. After all, you did say I was hot. Nothing to be sorry for there. You’re absolutely right.” Then I flash him a grin. A damn good one, and I know how to give them. Though, as a rule, I don’t flirt with straight men. Waste of time, right? But why did Mark say I was hot? Where did that come from?

But the loose-lipped texter is hard to read. He’s shooting me an I-can’t-be-bothered look. Damn. Mark Banks must kill it at poker. He has some impressive bluffing skills. “That was just the whiskey talking,” he says evenly.

I scoff-laugh. “Right. Of course. Whiskey often goes on and on about levels of hotness.”

“Like I said, you can’t trust the words of a single-malt scotch,” he says.

Hmm.

So that’s how he’s spinning this. Well, two can play that game. “You may be right. It is hard to trust the liquor, so I better refresh my memory to make sure I got it all correct.” I stop, grab my phone from my pocket, and whip it out, sliding a thumb across the screen.

Mark cuts in quickly. “There’s no need for that.”

Ha. Now I’ve rattled him. I clear my throat, and read aloud my new favorite text message ever. “Also, what is the deal with your friend with the hair?”

I glance up from the phone, tilt my head. “You noticed my hair. So sweet,” I say, giving a shake of the locks.

“It’s impossible not to. It enters the room before you do.”

“Allow me to continue. Why is it so floopy . . . wait . . . floppy . . . nope . . . it’s floofy. His hair is floofy.” I look up. “Is floofy even a word?”

He answers my question head-on. “Yes. It’s a combo of poofy and fluffy.”

Well, he’s a worthier adversary than I expected. All the more reason to keep going. “My hair is not poofy, Banks. It’s shaggy. But we’re not even at the best part of your epic rant.” I inhale deeply, savoring what’s to come. The piece de resistance.

He knocks back his orange juice, and kudos to the man. He’s taking the text message reenactment like, well, like a champ.

I brandish my phone, savoring every single second. “Anyway, whose hair looks like a shampoo commercial? Who takes off his shirt at a dinner party? Who has a body that annoyingly perfect? He’s not even real. He’s like a fucking comic book hero in those graphic novels I used to read. Here he comes . . . FLIP’S SUPERHOT . . . WINGMAN! Asher, with his stupid hair and stupid lips and ridiculous body. Who even looks that good in real life, Hannah? No one. Just no one.”

There’s more, but really, I need to bask a little longer in the glow of compliments. I tap my lip. “You’re right, Banks. I do not at all require an apology for this ode to me. In fact, I ought to give you a thanks,” I say, bringing a hand to my heart. “This made my week.”

“You’re welcome,” he snarls.

I should let him off the hook now, and circulate a bit here at the party.

Yet I can’t just drop it. Everything I thought I knew about Mark Banks is suddenly in question. Is he the fun-phobic banker I thought I knew? Who is this guy who invents words to describe my hair, and has deep thoughts about my abs?

I’m pretty sure straight guys don’t refer to other dudes as superhot.

Which makes me wonder if he’s not as straight as I thought.

Maybe I can get him to clarify. I tap my phone one more time. “I do have one last question about this description—superhot wingman. That must mean there are levels of hotness. So, Banks. Tell me. Where does the scale start?”

This is when he’ll back down. Talk in circles. Run away. I’d be willing to bet my sexy new Nikon on it.

Mark takes a breath, meets my gaze head-on. “Yeah, St. James. There are definitely hotness scales for, well, lots of things. Starts at basic hot. And, to be honest, lots of things are basic hot. Like, for instance, when someone can do square roots in his or her head, that’s basic hot.”


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