The Guy Next Door Read Online Devon McCormack

Categories Genre: M-M Romance, Suspense Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 94220 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 471(@200wpm)___ 377(@250wpm)___ 314(@300wpm)
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“This is really starting to remind me of the time I hooked up with a girl and she immediately treated me like I didn’t exist anymore.”

“Can you not do this on the front porch?” he asks, his eyes widening as he searches around me, like he’s worried someone might overhear me. He steps aside, letting me in, and closes the door behind me. He still doesn’t look at me, acting more like he did when we first started chatting after the break-in.

I figured with my parents home, he’d get more sleep, be more together, but he seems agitated.

I head to the kitchen and set the container with my carbonara on the counter. “I’ve needed to talk to you the past few days, and suddenly you’ve been mysteriously busy.”

“I do have to make a living.”

“Just stop. I can tell it’s more than that.”

He still won’t look at me, and I can’t keep on trying to act like everything’s normal. I notice the bags under his eyes are more severe than when I saw him the other night. Tension rises in me as my real fear intensifies—that he’s struggling again.

“What’s wrong?” I ask.

“Why does something have to be wrong?”

“Nothing has to be wrong, but you’re not acting like yourself.”

“You don’t know me well enough to say that.” He sounds annoyed.

“Something’s wrong,” I insist, standing by my gut instinct.

He finally looks at me.

“Dude, come on. What is it?”

“Oh, now I’m dude? Are we fighting?”

I have to stop myself from rolling my eyes. “Yes, that’s what this is, if I didn’t make that clear when I showed up at your door and started getting onto you.”

“I have a lot on my mind recently.”

“Hey,” I say, approaching him and resting my hand on his shoulder. “Talk to me.”

He looks at my hand on him, and then his gaze meets mine again, though it’s warmer now. His shoulders relax like he’s letting his guard down a bit. But this whole thing leaves me wondering what the hell could have changed so much in the past few days.

The tension in me intensifies, and as much as I worry about his mental health, there’s another fear I can’t shake, and it’s something that’s easier to discuss, so I just say it. “Is it last week? Do you regret it? That would explain why you haven’t texted as much. That’s probably why you didn’t want me to come over today.”

Fuck.

“I’m sorry,” I add. “I shouldn’t have asked you to show me that. It was inappropriate, and…” The next words are hard to force out, but I somehow manage. “We don’t have to do anything like that again, if it’s made you uneasy.”

He chuckles. Is he relieved I said it so he didn’t have to? “You think that’s what’s on my mind?”

Okay, maybe I’m totally wrong, then.

“Leif, the only way I would regret any of that is if you regretted it, so I want you to get that out of your pretty head.” He flicks his thumb through my bangs. “Why didn’t you wear a beanie tonight? It’s cold out.”

“You don’t deserve the beanie,” I tease.

“Now you’re just being mean.”

His gaze meets mine again, but briefly.

I can tell something’s still bothering him, but at least this exchange assures me it’s not about what we’ve done together, which on the one hand is a relief, but on the other, concerns me that it could be much worse.

He inspects my mouth like he’s about to lurch forward and take it.

I’m tempted to take his, when he whispers, “Can I show you something?”

“Of course.”

“Just…please don’t be weird about it.”

I rub my thumb along the fabric of his sweater. “Zane, don’t you get by now that you can trust me?”

He turns his head subtly either way, his gaze shifting as though he’s still debating if he should even show me whatever the hell it is. Then he closes his eyes. “Fuck,” he mutters as he retrieves his phone from his back pocket.

“You mentioned the Chelsby Hill Public Library the other day, and I haven’t been able to let it go. So on Monday, when I told you I was gonna run some errands, I actually went there. I didn’t even know what I was looking for, and then I saw…”

He shows me a photo of a man. It’s an average-looking guy in his late thirties or early forties. Dark-brown hair. Wearing a button-down shirt, sporting a friendly smile for the camera.

“This face ring any bells?”

I shake my head. “Why? Should I know him?”

“He was at the library when I went on Monday.”

“I’m not following. A lot of people go to that library.”

He huffs like he doesn’t want to tell me whatever he’s thinking, but then he says, “He was the teacher Mike met up with. The one I tried to frame to get Roth to look into.”



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