Faking with Benefits : Chapter 43
Faking with Benefits : A Friends to Lovers Reverse Harem Romance
I lift one of his trembling hands. He stares at it for a moment, then threads our fingers together. I lean forward, pressing my lips to his. Itâs a slow, gentle kiss, with none of our usual fire, but heat still simmers through me. When I finally pull back, blood is pumping through my body, and Josh looks vaguely more alive.
I trail my lips over his cheek, then look up, finally noticing the corkboard he has pinned over his desk. Itâs covered in small cards and slips of paper, and it takes me a second to realise what Iâm looking at.
âThe infamous wall of wedding invites.â I reach out, brushing one of the embossed cards with my fingertip. âI thought Zack was joking about this.â
He tilts his head against mine. âIs it weird?â
I shake my head, running my eyes over the collage. There must be over a hundred invitations here. Cream, pink, white. Some are handwritten. Some are embossed. Some have photographs, or floral details, or watercolours. Thereâs so many that theyâre overlapping each other, pinned two or even three pages deep. Itâs incredible. âDo you go to all of the weddings?â
He shakes his head. âWe did at the beginning. Now thereâs too many. We make them if we can, though.â He points at a line of photographs at the bottom of the corkboard. I lean in to get a better look.
Theyâre wedding photos. In each picture, all three boys are standing in suits and ties, with their arms around an assortment of beaming brides and grooms. In a couple, Zack is wearing a tartan kilt, which is doing fun things to my insides.
âThatâs so cute,â I whisper, glancing across the line. My eyes automatically focus on one photograph, tacked right at the end. Unlike all of the others, itâs not a wedding photo; itâs a black-and-white headshot of a middle-aged woman, smiling brightly at the camera. I immediately recognise the silky black hair and intensely dark eyes. âIs that your mum?â I point. Josh nods slowly. I examine her. âSheâs lovely.â
âShe was.â
I glance across at him. âSheâs dead?â
âWhen I was nineteen. Car crash.â
I look down, leaning back against his chest. âIâm sorry. I didnât know.â
His voice is robotic. âI didnât tell you.â
I squeeze his elbow, my heart thudding. God, no wonder heâs locked away in here, having a breakdown. The rest of England is spending time with their mums today, and heâs stuck here with no one.
I try to think of the right thing to say. âSheâd be so proud of you, for everything youâve done.â
He sighs, his breath rushing over my cheek. âI hope so. She was the reason I came up with the idea for the podcast in the first place.â
âDid she like advice shows?â
He shakes his head. âHer and my dadâs relationship was⦠bad.â He stares at the photo, his face blank. âHe met her in Vietnam, on a month-long business trip. She was a maid at the hotel he was staying at. Working fourteen hours a day for pennies, while rich men spent ten times her daily salary on one drink in the hotel bar. She and my dad had a fling, and then he brought her back to England and married her.â His mouth twists. âMy grandparents thought it was so romantic. Heâd met this pretty, poverty-stricken foreigner and dragged her out of the gutter. Like a Cinderella story.â
I find his hand and hold it. âBut it wasnât.â
He snorts. âMy mum used to say that he picked her because he liked the way she cleaned his hotel toilet. He didnât want a wife; he wanted a silent, beautiful maid whoâd share his bed, have his kid, and never ask anything of him. He was always complaining about how Western women were too âmodernâ, and I guess she was his solution.â
âThey fought?â I ask, grazing my lips down his temple.
His eyelashes flicker as I kiss his brow bone. âNo. It would have been better if they had. Instead, my dad just⦠ignored her. Blanked her completely.â He takes a sharp breath. His voice is level, but I can feel the energy thrumming through him. âIt tore my mum to bits. She was convinced she could make him love her. Sheâd spend all day cleaning. Making him these massive meals. Sheâd cut flowers for the dinner table, set out all the nice china, and be waiting by the front door to kiss him when he got home from work. And heâd step inside the house, grunt at her, and take his dinner to his office. Every single day.â He touches the ends of my hair.
âThatâs horrible,â I murmur.
He looks down, his Adamâs apple bobbing. âWhen I got older, I realised how badly he was treating her. I used to beg her to divorce him. But she never understood. And over the years, itâs like she just faded away. By the time she died, she was just⦠a shell.â He takes a deep breath. âThatâs why I do the show. I want to help people like her. I want to help them see that they deserve better.â
âYouâre so much more than you let other people see, Josh.â
His hand flexes on my hip. He dips his head, and for a second, I see a flash of the emotion hidden behind his carefully blank expression. Then he clears his throat, and it goes away again. âYou can stay, if you like,â he murmurs, tugging at the belt of my coat. âI canât promise Iâll be very good company, butââ he pushes aside one of the panels of my coat, and stares at the corset Iâm wearing underneath. I wait patiently as he visibly struggles to speak.
âYouâre not wearing any clothes,â he manages eventually.
âYes. And I see now that itâs not really appropriate for the situation.â
His mouth turns up slightly, but the smile doesnât reach his eyes. âYou came here wanting to have fun. Sorry.â He hooks his finger under the straps. âSorry Zackâs not here. Heâd have taken this off you before youâd even made it through the front door.â
I push his hand off me, offended. âOkay. Can you not act like Iâm a total bitch?â
He blinks. âWhat?â
âYou donât have to apologise for grieving. For Godâs sake, youâre my friend. I donât just want to sleep with you.â
His gaze flickers. âWhat do you want?â
I run my fingers through his thick hair. âI want you. I want to see you happy, and proud, and sad, and tired. I want your low moments, as well as your high ones. I want all of you. I want as much of you as youâll give me.â
He looks up at me, his eyes dark, and Iâm shocked by the raw grief in his face. Josh seems so cold and aloof, but he has so much going on under the surface.
And I want to help him. I have to.
âI want a date,â I decide.
âWhat?â
âIâm your girlfriend, right? You guys have taken me on all these dates. I havenât gotten to pick anything. I want a date.â
âRight now?â He looks exhausted. Like all of his batteries have run out of juice. It hurts my heart to see him like this. âCan I get a rain check?â
âSorry, itâs not raining,â I tell him. âDonât worry. Itâll just be at my flat. Iâll order pizza and weâll watch a movie. Whatever. Itâll be chill.â
He frowns. âI donât think Iâm in the right mindframe to be romantic. Iâll probably just bring the mood down.â His hand splays over my back. âIâm sorry.â
âJesus, Josh.â I lean forward, pressing my forehead to his. âI donât want you to be romantic. I donât want you to be anything.â His breath hitches as I press a kiss under his jaw. âYou donât have to do anything. Or say anything. You can just sleep in my bed, if you want. Drink all my wine. Play Snake on your phone and ignore me. We donât have to exchange one word. I literally donât care.â I take his hand, interlacing our fingers. âJust come, please.â
His brow is furrowed as I help him to his feet. âWhy?â
âI donât want you to be alone right now.â
He doesnât have anything to say to that. He lets me tug him out of his bedroom and across the hall into my flat. Next to his dark, messy lair, my living room is like some kind of pink-papered paradise, clean and warm and full of light. I shove him onto the sofa, hand him the TV remote, and go to the fridge to get us both a drink.
When I get back with two bottles of beer, he hasnât moved. Heâs staring blankly at the wall opposite, his jaw working. I can practically feel the sharp fragments of his grief splintering through the quiet room.
âJosh,â I say quietly.
He looks up at me. His eyes are dry, but heâs breathing hard.
I plop onto the sofa next to him. âLie down.â When he doesnât move, I push him down, curling against his broad chest. His arms wrap around me automatically, and he buries his face in my hair, breathing me in. For a while, we just lie together in the quiet, dim room. Eventually, he falls asleep, his body finally relaxing underneath mine. Itâs way too early for me to sleep, but I just arrange him a bit more comfortably, watching over him as the sun sets outside the window. My heart feels like itâs bursting.