Home Game (Fixer Brothers Construction Co #7) Read Online Raleigh Ruebins

Categories Genre: Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors: Series: Fixer Brothers Construction Co Series by Raleigh Ruebins
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Total pages in book: 76
Estimated words: 73174 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 366(@200wpm)___ 293(@250wpm)___ 244(@300wpm)
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The camera crew was packing up their equipment in their van when I got home. I felt like I had a mountain of guilt on my shoulders.

I had to make this right.

“Tiring, isn’t it?” Nathan said as he headed outside, carrying a thick plastic box full of tools toward his own construction van.

“More than I even realized,” I said. “I don’t know how filming interviews for the camera is more exhausting than professional football, but it is.”

Nathan laughed. “Bullshit.”

“Okay, fine, it’s not more exhausting than a game,” I said. “But it’s pretty far up there.”

“You did great, by the way.”

I smiled. “Um, Nathan, you don’t happen to know where Emmett might be, do you?”

“He’s been in and out all day,” Nathan said and I gave him a hand hoisting his tool box into the side of the van.

I know he’s been in and out all day, I thought. Not like I’ve been hyper-aware of it, or anything.

“I wanted to chat with him about something.”

“Oh!” Nathan said, snapping his fingers. “Right. He took a meeting with a rep from Racks down at our office. It was supposed to happen in a few days, but they said they wanted to push the meeting sooner, for some reason. Should be about done with it by now, if you wanted to head to the town center.”

Fuck.

Fuck, fuck, fuck.

If the execs from Racks suddenly wanted a meeting pushed to today, it definitely could have had something to do with my post last night.

Companies didn’t usually like it when celebrities posted bad things about them, and I’d gone ahead and done exactly that.

“I hate to jet, but I really do need to talk to Emmett,” I said. “Are you guys okay wrapping up here?”

He gave me a little salute. “All good,” he said, but he furrowed his brow. “Is everything all right, with Emmett?”

“It’ll be okay,” I said, hoping it wasn’t a lie. “Just need to talk with him.”

I was in the Bronco within another ten seconds, zooming down the roads toward the center of Jade River. I hit Spruce Street and beelined for the Fixer Brothers main office, pulling into the lot and seeing the red Porsche parked there, too.

Inside the office, I found Sawyer, the Fixer Brothers’ landscaping guy.

“Hey, Sawyer. Any chance you’ve seen a fancy looking guy in a suit?” I asked him.

“Emmett?”

“Yes sir.”

Sawyer rolled up the blueprint he’d just printed out. “He actually just left. Said he was gonna take a walk to clear his mind,” Sawyer said. He bit his lip as he turned to me. “He didn’t seem happy. The meeting with the Racks people didn’t go great, or something. He didn’t tell me the details.”

Double fuck.

“Thanks, Sawyer,” I said, waving to him and already heading for the doors. I jogged out onto Spruce Street, my eyes immediately scanning the tree-lined road for Emmett’s suit.

It was chilly out, and I’d left the house in nothing but a white T-shirt and shorts. I noticed with a bitter irony that today was exactly the type that Emmett must love: the fall leaves were in their full glory now, red and gold and yellow on every tree that wasn’t a green pine.

I jogged through the crunchy leaves on the stone sidewalks, looking for any man in a suit. I saw nothing other than the usual slight bustle of the area. A mom herding her three kids toward the park, all of them wearing little plaid scarves. A guy walking his huge Labrador. Squirrels jetting back and forth across the sidewalk, rustling up the leaves.

My heart sank as I reached the end of the town center without finding him.

I doubled back, worry gnawing at me.

I’d made so many mistakes in life, but I rarely regretted any of them. I always had to move forward. Had to do my best. I always had plenty to be happy about, even if I’d disappointed someone.

But disappointing Emmett felt different. The look on his face this morning—the sheer defeat, after so many attempts to rise to my level—had made me feel like I’d done something wrong, for the first time in a long time.

I didn’t want Emmett to feel that way. I didn’t want to spar with him if I was really just kicking him when he was down. And I sure as fuck didn’t want to truly hurt him.

I’d almost given up when I finally caught sight of a suit. I ran over past a group of people, looping around and getting closer.

It was Emmett. He was on a bench in a little grass patch at the edge of the small river that went through town.

My shoes crunched on leaves that had fallen onto the grass patch.

He looked up at me like he couldn’t really believe I was there.

“Storm,” he said.

I breathed in deep. “I don’t know what happened with the guys from Racks, but I can smooth it over,” I said. “I’ll pay them anything. Say on social media that they’re the best company ever, or something. I don’t care. Whatever happened, I can make it right. What was the meeting about?”



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