Faking with Benefits : Chapter 5
Faking with Benefits : A Friends to Lovers Reverse Harem Romance
My first thought when I crack my eyes open the next morning is: shit, itâs bright.
I donât usually wake up to daylight. Iâm normally up and out the door on my morning run well before the sun has risen.
I groan and roll over. I feel like crap. My eyes are sandy and gritty. My head is pounding. My mouth feels like itâs had all the spit sucked out of it by one of those saliva hoovers they use at the dentist. All I want to do is go back to sleep, but judging by the light spilling in from my half-open blinds, itâs time for me to get up. Patting around my bedside table, I yank my phone off the charger and squint at the time.
Then I blink. Rub my eyes. Squint some more.
Itâs eleven forty-five.
âShit,â I mumble, rolling out of bed. My foot gets tangled in my phone charger, and I trip, catching myself on my dresser right before I fall. I feel fuzzy and uncoordinated, but I ignore it, stumbling over to my desk and thumbing frantically through my agenda. My eyes run over the neatly colour-coded appointments, my heart pounding in my chest as I read each one. Finally, my shoulders slump with relief.
Thank God. I have the morning off. The rest of my day is packed, though. I have a call with a supplier at one; at two, I have a two-hour meeting with my manufacturers to check that everything is going to plan with my upcoming summer line. After that, I have three hours of paperwork scheduled, a quick dinner break, then a seven oâclock call with an online influencer to discuss her rates for a sponsored post.
But for now, Iâm fine.
I check the time on my phone again â then frown. I have a ton of message notifications. I scroll through them with sweaty fingers. Theyâre all from the guys.
ZACK: Hey, L, are you up?
ZACK: are u ignoring us now
ZACK: *angry emoji*
ZACK: I know ur probably freaking out because of last night, but donât make it weird, babe. You donât have 2 b embarrassed
JOSH: I left some painkillers in your bathroom cabinet last time I was over. Come over if you want juice or anything
LUKE: I hope you feel better today, sweetheart. Drink a lot of water and try to take it easy. Our door is always open if you need to talk.
I stare at the messages in horror. What are they talking about? Why would I need to talk to them?
And then the memory of last night slams into me like a freight truck.
Suddenly, I remember it all. I remember the terrible date with Mike. I remember Zack finding me at the restaurant, comforting me, plying me with mojitos. I remember staggering into the guysâ apartment, eating a huge plate of cheesy pasta, and sobbing all over them.
Oh God. I told them about all the failed dates. I showed them my stupid ten-year-plan.
I think I offered them money to date me.
âCrap,â I groan, tossing my phone back onto my bed and stumbling to my little ensuite. I assess the damage in the bathroom mirror.
Iâm a hot mess. My bleached-platinum hair is messy, falling down to my chin in jagged spikes, and Iâm still wearing the silvery dress and fishnet tights I wore to my date last night. My pale green eyes are puffy and rimmed with smeared mascara, and thereâs lipstick smudged on my cheek.
Swearing, I turn on the cold tap, scooping up two handfuls of water and splashing it onto my face, methodically scrubbing the dried tears and makeup off my skin. Embarrassment is burning through me. What the Hell is wrong with me? Why did I drink so much last night? Why didnât I just come home, watch some TV, and go to bed, instead of wallowing in self-pity like a total loser?
And now Iâm running late. Normally, by now, Iâve worked out, answered my emails, taken calls, scheduled my day, made and eaten breakfast, run a few errands â
Anxiety squeezes my insides and nausea rises in my throat. I grip the porcelain edges of the sink and force myself to take a few deep breaths.
Itâs fine. Iâm fine. I havenât missed any appointments. Iâm not going to be late for anything. The day isnât going to plan, but thatâs okay.
It is.
This is why I donât like to drink. It messes with my routines too much. And without my routines, my life turns into a hot, steaming mess.
Pulling myself together, I brush my teeth, spit, and then stagger back to my bedroom and stare longingly at my rumpled bed. I just want to crawl back into the sheets, order some breakfast, and spend the rest of the day watching Project Runway reruns and nursing my hangover.
Or maybe call my landlord, cancel my lease, and find a new place to live far, far away from my neighbours.
But I do neither of these things. Instead, I strip off last nightâs slept-in clothes, change into some workout gear, and grab a hair tie off my dresser, pulling my hair back into a ponytail. I need to get this morning back under control.
Twenty minutes later, Iâm jogging through Hyde Park. Itâs a beautiful day. The sun is hot and bright, but the big, leafy trees spreading over my head throw cool, dappled shadows over the grit-covered running paths.
Iâm flagging. Usually I can run five miles no problem, but my body is slow and sluggish from dehydration and exhaustion. I hate working out when Iâm tired, but I hate breaking my routine even more, so I push through, pulling my phone out of the pocket of my running shorts. Iâm going to need a distraction to get through the next three miles. Not slowing my pace, I load up the newest episode of Three Single Guys and press Play.
The familiar theme tune plays, and then Joshâs low voice sounds through my headphones.
âHello, everybody, and welcome to episode four-hundred-and-forty-two of Three Single Guys, a podcast where three single men give you dating advice. Iâm Joshua, I just turned thirty, and I havenât had a steady relationship in years.â
Luke chimes in. âIâm Luke, ex-high school teacher, and the teamâs resident divorcee.â
âAnd Iâm Zack, rugby legend, calendar boy, and the Best Shagger in Europe.â Zack says lazily.
âNo one has ever called you that.â Josh says flatly.
âAye, they do! I get around.â
Josh sighs. âWe are Three Single Guys, and weâre completely unqualified to give you relationship advice. As always, please remember this show is for entertainment purposes only. Do not take our advice.â
âAnd when you do,â Zack chips in, âsend us a wedding invite.â
Despite my shitty mood, a smile spreads over my face.
I love Three Single Guys. The concept sounds stupid. Why should three men who arenât even in a relationship be able to dole out dating advice? But the guys are actually really helpful. They all have their own specialities: before Luke divorced his ex-wife, they got a ton of coupleâs counselling, so he knows a lot about relationship psychology; Josh is so direct heâs almost rude, so he has no problems telling listeners if they need to dump their partners; and Zack answers all of the sex questions. Plus, their chemistry together is incredible. They always start off each episode with a few minutes of banter, talking about their weeks â but my favourite part is when they answer listener emails.
âOkay,â Joshâs low voice says as I hit the last stretch of my run. âHereâs an email that I think must be meant for Zack. Itâs from the pseudonym âMoist in the Midlandsâ.â
âOh, thisâll be good,â Zack answers. âHit me.â
Josh clears his throat. ââThe last few times me and my girlfriend have slept togetherâ, he reads aloud, âsheâs squirted. I think itâs great, but sheâs horrifically embarrassed every time it happens, and itâs really affecting our life in the bedroom. How do I convince her that itâs normal⦠and that I actually really like it?ââ
âDrink that shit up,â Zack says immediately. âYou gotta get in there and SWALLOW, man. You canât just tell her you think itâs hot, you gotta show her. So get between her legs and go down like youâre at a damn watermelon eating contest. Trust me, sheâs gonna know you think itâs hot when youâre licking her clean like sheâs a melting ice cream cone.â
I burst out laughing in the middle of the park. A passing woman pushing a pram gives me a nervous look and switches to the other side of the path. I try to push down my laughter, jogging over to a nearby bench to cool down. My phone has been dinging steadily through my run, so I pull it out and flick through the messages as I start stretching out my thighs.
Theyâre all from Zack.
ZACK: Yo L you up??
ZACK: weâre at the studio atm, but weâre getting lunch soon. Come join if you wanna talk about last night
Iâm about to swipe the messages away, but then another text pops up.
ZACK: weâre worried about you. Donât like to see you cry ð
Guilt twists me. Of course theyâre worried about me. I cried all over them like a little baby. Theyâve never seen me like that before. I usually try so hard to be in control.
I have to apologise.
Sighing, I start typing back a message.