Faking with Benefits : Chapter 6
Faking with Benefits : A Friends to Lovers Reverse Harem Romance
âIâve been dating my three lovely boyfriends for almost a year now,â Josh reads into the mic, his eyes scanning the email on his phone. I yawn, trying to stay awake. âAnd itâs going great. The only problem is, itâs almost impossible for all four of us to spend time together because of our schedules. Weâve got a baby girl, and I really want her to get quality time with all of her dads. How do we handle our clashing timetables? From Beth Ellis in London.â
âDude, thatâs such a mood,â I say into the mic. âWe ainât shared a girl in a couple of years, but back when we were all dating Monica, we used to share an online calendar, so we could see when everyone was free.â
Luke nods. âAnd we tried to be as flexible as possible, trading shifts at work and such. Honestly, the best thing you can do isââ
My phone bleeps in my jacket.
Luke sighs loudly, and Josh closes his eyes. I swear, fumbling to unzip my pocket.
Weâve been in the recording studio since nine this morning, and we have almost no usable footage. Three Single Guys releases eight episodes a month; one a week, with an extra weekly bonus episode available for people who pay to subscribe. Normally, we try to get the recording out of the way during the weekend, and spend the rest of the week editing and doing admin. But today, nothing is coming out right.
First, we couldnât find any of our mic covers. Then we recorded a full hour of footage, before realising that Lukeâs mic wasnât even on. Then we somehow lost the listener questions that Josh had spent all week selecting and filing. And now we canât get through a damn sentence without stumbling over our words, or dropping something, or saying something stupid.
None of us can focus, and we all know why. Itâs Layla.
I hook my phone out of my pocket, checking the screen. Laylaâs face pops up.
Finally.
âQuit texting under the table,â Josh mutters.
I shake my head, thumbing open the message. âHang on. Itâs her.â I read the text aloud. âCan you please tell the guys sorry? Iâm so embarrassed.â
Luke looks confused. âWhy is she embarrassed? Weâre her friends. Iâve seen you get drunk and do much more destructive things than talk about your feelings.â
âUh, because she hates emotion?â I remind him. âCrying in front of people is probably her idea of literal Hell.â I swipe to respond to the text. âIâll tell her we all suffered simultaneous traumatic head injuries and are now suffering from a very specific form of amnesia, yeah?â
Lukeâs mouth presses into a firm line. He looks grimly back down at his notes.
I think we were all shocked by what happened last night. It was so out of character for Layla. Iâve never seen her cry. Sheâs usually so on top of her shit. I actually think thatâs why she canât find a guy â I reckon sheâs intimidating them.
Hell, when we first met her, I thought she hated me. It was the day she was moving into the building. I heard a girl was moving into the flat opposite, so obviously I went over to see if she needed any help. She refused me with a tight smile, disappeared into her flat, and avoided me for the next month.
I thought she was cold. Aloof. Kinda stuck up. The more I got to know her, though, the more I realised that sheâs not really any of those things. Sheâs just shy. Some girls are shy and soft; Layla is shy and hard. Because she acts confident, and dresses like a supermodel, and makes a shitton of money, people interpret her social awkwardness as being rude, but sheâs really just a dork.
It took a hell of a lot of time for her to let down her guard around us, but when she did, it was worth it. Sheâs great. She does what she wants, and she doesnât care what other people think of her. Hell, she models her own underwear designs online, for Godâs sake. Puts pictures of herself half-naked on social media, even though she gets a ton of creepy guys leaving gross comments on them. She doesnât care. She wants to model her stuff, so she does.
Which was why seeing her break down last night was so odd. Iâve never seen that side of Layla. I donât like the thought that sheâs been all sad and alone in her apartment, right at the other side of the hall.
âWe should do something,â Josh mutters.
I fight the urge to roll my eyes. Josh has been head-over-heels for Layla ever since they met, but he wonât admit it. Itâs obvious, though. When sheâs happy about something, heâs wandering around the flat, humming under his breath. When sheâs stressed, he gets all moody. Heâs filled our kitchen cupboard with all of her favourite snacks, and lights up whenever she texts him. Seeing her cry probably killed him.
âWe could just⦠do what she asked,â I point out. âHelping people with their relationships is literally what we do.â
âWeâre not dating the girl,â Luke cuts in, sounding exhausted. âAnd she doesnât need our help.â
âThen why was she crying in our living room?â Josh snaps back. âYou saw her.â
âShe was drunk.â
âThat doesnât mean that she wasnât really upset.â He glances back down at the emails in front of him. âI think we should help her. Yeah, we canât accept money, but maybe we could still⦠take her on a few practice dates, or something. Just to get her used to it.â
Luke stares. âYouâre joking, right?â
âShe said that she feels comfortable with us!â Josh argues. âThatâs a big deal.â
Lukeâs jaw stiffens. âWell, I donât know if I feel comfortable telling a former student how to improve her love life.â
âYouâve got to get over this, man,â I tell him. âSheâs not your student anymore. Come on, whatâs the point of doing this job if we canât even help people we care about?â
Before Luke can retort, thereâs a knock on the door. âGuys?â Paul, our manager, calls through the wood. âCan I come in?â
I rub my eyes. I hate this guy. Ever since the podcast blew up years ago, weâve been working for a media company. Buzztone. They produce a ton of podcasts.
I hate them. They can cut our pay whenever they want, they pick crappy sponsors, and weâre not even allowed to swear on our own show. And to top it all off, Paul is a money-hungry git.
âYou may as well,â Josh calls tiredly, taking off his headphones. âWeâre not getting anything done here.â
The door edges open, and Paul steps inside. Today, our squat little manager is dressed in a pinstriped three-piece suit with his hair oiled back, like an American car salesman. His face is grim.
âLet me guess,â I say flatly. âNumbers are down. Again.â
Paulâs mouth thins. âWorse. Sweetheart Soulmates have been making some comments about you guys overnight.â He slaps a tablet onto the table between us. âYou need to see this.â
My fists clench. Sweetheart Soulmates is a rival relationship advice podcast that started getting popular last year. Normally, that wouldnât bother me â I ainât afraid of competition. But the advice they give is total crap. They tell their listeners that itâs a wifeâs job to stay at home and look after the kids. That new fathers shouldnât take paternity leave because they have to provide for the family. That giving teenage daughters birth control will just encourage them to sleep around. And the worst thing is, people actually believe them. I squint at the tweets.
Each one has over three thousand likes.
I scoff. âYeah, well, at least we give people actual advice. Instead of just tellinâ women, âhey, if your man cheats, itâs your fault, âcause you ainât giving him enough blowies and sandwichesâ.â
âIf you donât want people to take their advice,â Paul says calmly, âmaybe you should focus on bringing their listeners over to Three Single Guys instead.â
âHow?â Josh presses, scowling. âWe havenât changed anything. I donât know how weâre losing listeners.â
Paul slaps a hand on the table. âExactly. You havenât changed anything. Youâve been doing this for five years now; your content is stale.â He plucks at the pile of printed listener emails. âThereâs only so many of these questions you can answer before youâve said everything ten times before. You need to branch out.â
âHow?â Luke asks calmly. âDo you have any suggestions?â
Paul shrugs. âThatâs your job. But if you donât start bringing in more listeners, weâre gonna have to cut your funding.â
âShit,â Josh mutters, putting his head in his hands.
At Buzztone, budget cuts are a death knell for a podcast. I honestly donât care much if the show dies and we have to move onto something else, but Three Single Guys is Joshâs baby. He started the podcast five years ago, when he was studying communications in uni. Luke joined after about a year, but I came in later.
Itâs a funny story. Growing up, Josh and I were best mates â we both lived on the same street and went to the same school. We lost contact for a bit when I started playing rugby, but after I tore my ACL and got kicked off the team, Josh found me again. I was a mess: drunk and depressed. He scraped me off the floor of my hotel, moved me into his apartment, and flat-out demanded that I join the show.
It was actually a really great move; I attracted a ton of new listeners to the podcast, and Three Single Guys has been doing pretty well ever since.
Until now.
âFigure something out,â Paul orders, giving us one last stern look, then picking up his tablet and leaving the room.
I flip off the door as it swings shut. âI still think we should just go independent,â I say. âWeâve been doing this long enough to work stuff out by ourselves.â
As usual, no one listens to me.
Josh is frowning at the pile of papers in front of him. âSomething fresh,â he repeats. I can practically hear the cogs turning in his head. âThat weâve never done before. That will attract viewer engagement, and prove to people that we actually know what weâre doing.â
âYou got something?â I ask.
He nods slowly. âI think so.â He looks up at me. âCall Layla. Have her meet us at our place after sheâs done with work.â
âWhat?â Luke asks. âWhy?â
âI have an idea. But weâre going to need her help.â