The Hopelessly Bromantic Duet Read Online Lauren Blakely

Categories Genre: Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 244
Estimated words: 236705 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1184(@200wpm)___ 947(@250wpm)___ 789(@300wpm)
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That’s another thing that won’t happen—Jude using his ways to get my name out of me. I was looking forward to learning how long it’d take for his tongue to get me to break. With those lips? Probably a minute, tops.

“Thanks,” I say.

“Though, I’d be a lot happier if I could introduce you as Terry, the guy I’m shagging, not TJ, my new roomie because fate decided to fuck me without lube.”

I level a steely stare his way. “Jude, I would never fuck you without lube.”

We both crack up, breaking into peals of you’ve got to be kidding me laughter.

Eventually, we catch our breaths. “I guess we’ll have to be friends,” I say, then I stand and extend a hand.

Jude rises and shakes. “To friendship. But I do have one question. What if I like Led Zeppelin?”

I shudder. “Then I am going to teach you about music.”

That’ll be the consolation prize.

8

THIS IS THE PERFECT DIVERSION TACTIC

TJ

Maybe I pissed off the Fates or incurred some spectacularly bad Karma because it’s Sunday night, and Jude and I are not dueling with words over drinks and then with tongues over at my place. We’re wandering through the home decor section of TK Maxx, looking for a shower curtain.

“What about this one?” Jude asks, pointing to a curtain printed with rubber ducks.

Is he for real? Oh, wait. This could be good. Maybe I’ll learn Jude and I don’t see eye to eye on anything, and all my red-hot desire for him will drain away in one shopping trip.

Yes! “We’re not getting that,” I say. “We’re not three.”

“It’s ironic,” he explains.

“No, irony is when I say That shower curtain is so nice.”

Jude whips out his phone, taps furiously, then reads, “Ahem. Irony: incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the normal or expected result.” He grabs the curtain and holds it out as if I could somehow miss those bright yellow ducks. “This shower curtain is the opposite of what you’d think two young blokes would have in their flat.”

“Hold on,” I say, then grab my phone, and pretend to read, “Irony: still the most often misused word in the English language.”

Jude rolls his eyes. “Call it kitschy, then. Will you allow kitschy, Mister Word Police?”

“I will definitely allow kitschy.”

“Great. Then let’s get this shower curtain.”

“No.”

“Don’t you like kitsch?”

I shoot Jude a searing stare. “About as much as I like the irony of living with you.”

He chuckles, almost despite himself. “But we’re still getting a new shower curtain. I am not showering in that travesty of a bathroom with that horror of a curtain. It had about twenty layers of mold on it,” he says, shuddering.

“I’m aware. I’m the one who took it down and tossed it in the trash because you refused to even go in there and touch it.”

Jude presses his palms together. “And I am still so very grateful for your chivalry, roomie.”

I point to a white shower curtain. “How about that one?”

Jude stares at me, challenge in his eyes. “TJ, are you secretly boring?”

“No. I’m openly interesting.”

Jude scoffs, muttering out of the corner of his mouth, “Who gets a white shower curtain?”

“Who cares about the color of a shower curtain?” I ask, and yes, it’s working. We’re bickering. This will douse the flames in seconds.

Jude points at his chest. “I do. And I’m putting my foot down. We’re not getting a white shower curtain. It’s boring with a capital B. I refuse to be boring,” he says, and he squares his shoulders like he’s going to battle on this front.

“I don’t understand how the shower curtain says anything about whether you’re interesting or not. Who cares about the color of the shower curtain?”

“Everyone,” he says.

His answer awakens the beast in me, and I hiss, “You mean everyone, as in, people who are going to come over?”

“Everyone,” he emphasizes.

I grit my teeth as the creature thrashes harder in my chest. “Everyone like…?”

“Everyone like me,” he says, indignant.

Whew.

Stand down, dragon.

While that’s not an admission that he won’t bring a dude over, at least he’s picky about bathroom decor for an aesthetic reason rather than a look-tidy-for-a-hookup reason.

And maybe this whole shower curtain persnickety-ness will cure me of my lust. Please, pretty please.

“A classy bathroom sets the mood for the day,” he continues, sweeping an arm out, setting the scene. “You want to walk into the bathroom in the morning, enjoy some nice, fluffy towels, and have a shower curtain that welcomes you.”

I chuckle at his Downton Abbey-esque description. “It sounds like what you need is a valet.”

“Don’t tease me like that. A bathroom valet is only the height of my fantasies.”

“You and I have very different fantasies,” I say.

Jude grabs my arm, his touch practically singeing me, and I’m right back on the attraction merry-go-round.

Don’t let go of my arm, hottie.


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