Helping Hand Read Online Jay Northcote (Housemates #1)

Categories Genre: College, Erotic, Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance, New Adult, Romance, Young Adult Tags Authors: Series: Housemates Series by Jay Northcote
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Total pages in book: 42
Estimated words: 43759 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 219(@200wpm)___ 175(@250wpm)___ 146(@300wpm)
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“I’ll tell him it was nothing. That it was a one-tim e thing, that we were

drunk and passed out after watching porn and j erking each other off or

som ething. I m ean, he’ll still think it’s gay, but that won’t sound as bad,

right?”

Jez was dressed now, and he m et Mac’s gaze. Mac’s expression was

tense.

“Um … y eah. Okay.” His voice sounded strained. “Yeah. Tell him

whatever y ou want. Whatever y ou think will help.”

Jez went to Shawn’s room , but he wasn’t there. He cursed under his

breath and then ran down the stairs, following the sound of cupboard

doors slam m ing and the clatter of the cutlery drawer. In the kitchen he

found Shawn and Mike. They were both dressed in sports clothes; Jez

hadn’t noticed what Shawn was wearing before.

Shawn had his back to the door when Jez entered. Jez was alm ost

afraid to look at Mike. Had Shawn already told him what he’d seen?

But Mike looked up from the cereal he was pouring out, sm iled, and

gave him a cheery, “Hi.” There was nothing in his expression to suggest

that he knew.

“Uh, hi. You guy s are up early. What’s going on?”

“We lost a bet last night, prom ised Katie off m y course and her

friend that we’d play squash with them this m orning.”

“Oh.” Jez tried to sum m on up the will to sm ile. “I bet that’ll be fun

with a hangover.”

“Well, at this rate we won’t get to play, because Shawn’s racket’s

broken. That’s why he cam e to borrow y ours. Sham e y ou’ve lost it.”

Relief flooded Jez as his suspicions were confirm ed. Shawn had kept

his m outh shut. “Yeah. You can probably hire one, though.”

“Yeah.” Mike picked up his bowl and headed for the kitchen door.

Jez waited till he’d gone and then pushed the door shut, wanting to

m ake sure they weren’t overheard. Shawn still had his back to him . He

was standing over the toaster, glaring at it as though willing it to pop.

“Shawn, m ate,” Jez began.

“Don’t,” Shawn snapped. “I feel like I don’t know y ou at all

any m ore. But whatever. It’s not m y business.”

“Oh for fuck’s sake.” Jez’s irritation flared. “I’m exactly the sam e

person I’ve alway s been. What difference would it m ake if I was gay ?”

“Are y ou?” Shawn turned then, and his face was hard.

Jez took a breath and paused a m om ent. “I don’t know. I don’t think

so? But m ay be I’m not totally straight either.”

Shawn snorted. “D’y a think?”

“But any way, the point is, m e and Mac, it was j ust a one-tim e thing.

We’d had a few beers and stuff happened. It was nothing. Nothing that

m atters.” His gut lurched at the lie, because it did m atter to Jez. But

keeping their secret and protecting Mac m attered m ore. “So… please

don’t tell any one, okay ?”

Shawn stared at him . Jez felt each thum p of his heart while he

waited.

“Yeah,” he said finally. “Okay. Like I said—it’s none of m y business

any way.”

Jez guessed that was as good as he was going to get.

Once Shawn and Mike had left, Jez went back upstairs. His room was

em pty now, so he went to Mac’s and tapped on the door. Mac grunted

som ething that sounded like “Com e in.”

“Hey,” Jez said.

Mac was fully dressed and ly ing sprawled in the m iddle of his bed.

Jez sat awkwardly on the edge, and Mac didn’t m ove over to m ake space.

His face was shuttered and unhappy -looking.

“Stop stressing. Shawn’s not gonna say any thing.” Jez was pretty

sure they could trust him . He m ight be a bit of a twat som etim es, and he

clearly had issues with what he’d seen this m orning. But Shawn wasn’t

usually a troublem aker or a gossip. Jez didn’t think he’d drop them in it

with any of their other friends.

“Yeah? What did y ou say to him ?”

“Like I said to y ou. I told him it was a drunken one-off. That it didn’t

m ean any thing and wasn’t going to happen again. I thought that was best

for dam age lim itation.”

“Okay.” Mac didn’t look any happier.

“I’m sorry.”

“What? Why ?” Mac frowned, his dark ey es troubled.

“Well, it’s all m y fault, isn’t it? That any of this happened in the first

place. It was stupid. We should never have started it.” Once Jez began

talking, the words kept com ing. He felt sick, but he knew it was for the

best. It was tim e they put an end to this before any one else found out and

things got even m ore m essy and em barrassing. “Let’s call it a day, eh? It

was fun for a while, but it’s got out of hand.” He forced out the last words

over the lum p in his throat. “I think it’s best if we go back to being j ust



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