I cleared my throat and tried not to smirk. “So… pet names?”
“No.”
“Hear me out,” I said, inching onto the couch. “Snuggle beast.”
Her eyes narrowed. “If you call me that in public, I’ll smother you in your sleep.”
I pressed my hand to my chest. “Magsie-Pie?”
She hit me with a pillow.
Eventually, we got down to the details. I insisted we have a backstory-something swoony yet believable. I launched into an elaborate tale about a smoothie explosion, accidental hand-holding, and shared emotional trauma over Trader Joe’s being out of cookie butter.
I was presenting myself as cool, calm, and collected, but internally, I was freaking the fuck out. Faking a relationship with Maggie was just a way to put off the inevitable a little bit. A Band-Aid of sorts. I planned to find a permanent way out of the damn thing well before the required mating… I just had no idea what the hell that would be yet.
Maggie chewed on her bottom lip. “How about this? We met, I tolerated you, now I regret everything.”
“Very Hallmark. But I think the audience will want more romantic tension.”
Mid-eye roll, she stilled and tapped her pen slowly against the notebook. “Why me, Roman?” she asked softly. “Why tell your whole pack we’re together?”
My mouth opened, but nothing came out. So I did what I do best: I deflected.
“Because if I had to emotionally blackmail someone into fake love, it was either you or Doris. And Doris hates shifters, so I just don’t think it would work out between us.” I laughed, but inside I was unraveling.
I didn’t want Seraphina back. I didn’t want another arranged match, or some power-hungry she-wolf’s claws in my life. I didn’t want to feel like a pawn in Lucien’s glitter-coated chess game. With Maggie, it was… different. She didn’t pretend. She didn’t perform. It was a nice change. And I didn’t feel like I had to perform either. That scared the shit out of me.
But I couldn’t say that. So I smiled.
She tilted her head and studied me. “Final rule.”
“Hit me.”
“No falling in love.”
I grinned. “I’ll jot that down. In erasable ink.”
Her eye twitched, and her cheeks flushed. I pretended not to notice. We shook on it. Her hand was so small and warm in mine. I meant to let go quickly, but I didn’t. She tugged out of my grasp a second later, cheeks even redder.
“Your hand is really hot. You should get that checked.”
“Thermal superiority is a known werewolf trait,” I said solemnly.
To cut the tension, I launched into a “couple selfie” session, declaring that lighting was everything and arguing that shirtless pics were more believable. Maggie nailed me in the face with a pillow and told me to shut up before she reported me to the Better Roommate Bureau.
“What’s the deal with Seraphina?” she asked.
I hated talking about Seraphina. Hated remembering what it had been like to feel like a side character in someone else’s fantasy. But Maggie had agreed to this madness, so she deserved the truth.
“Our relationship was political,” I said. “Her parents are high up in pack hierarchy. Everyone thought we’d be the perfect power match. And she’s-” I exhaled. “Seraphina is beautiful and smart, but she never actually saw me. She wanted to build a brand, not a relationship. And I was convenient. We started out as roommates and fell into a relationship-at least, that’s what I thought. She’s ambitious, and I had connections she wanted. While I was falling for her, she was maneuvering.”
Maggie nodded as she absorbed that. “So, why’d you take on another roommate? You clearly like being alone.”
I shrugged. “I realized… maybe I’m not going to find the kind of romantic connection I want. So, I thought maybe it’d be better to have someone here who could still give me something. Company. Connection without all the pressure.”
She studied my face for a long time. “Have you ever been in love?”
It took me a second to answer. I sighed. “Her name was Willow. We were kids. Grew up together. She understood me in a way no one else ever has. We were together all through high school, but then her family moved, and our lives… didn’t align after that.”
“And you never got over it.”
I didn’t respond. I didn’t need to. Maggie was quiet again. Then, like she needed a way out of the conversation, she grabbed my phone and started scrolling through our selfies.
She snorted and tossed me my phone. “This is going to be a disaster.” Then she disappeared into her room, the door clicking softly behind her.
I stood alone in the middle of our chaotic, shared life, my heart still beating too fast, my hand still warm from hers.
I was kind of looking forward to a disaster.
Feeling accomplished wasn’t exactly my default setting, but I was riding the high. Yesterday, Maggie and I had successfully navigated the roommate version of a DTR conversation-Define The Relationship, but in our case, fake dating. And more importantly, she hadn’t stabbed me with a fork or set ground rules that included separate ZIP codes.
I counted that as a win.
She’d disappeared into her room after, probably to design some sleek logo or lay out a magazine spread in Helvetica like it was foreplay. The door was closed, but I could see the soft glow of her desk lamp under the crack and hear the occasional annoyed sigh. She made that sound a lot around me. I was starting to like it.
I rolled my neck and stretched out on the living room rug, taking a second to check in with myself. It’d been days since I’d last shifted, and I hadn’t done so nearly as often as I normally would after the incident when Maggie first moved in. Maggie had recovered faster than I expected, considering she’d caught me mid-shift like a deleted scene from
Teen Wolf: Uncut
Edition. I hadn’t shifted in the apartment since then. It was too risky.
But right now? We were stable. The ground rules were in place.
I let the shift roll over me slowly.
It started as heat blooming low in my core, pushing out through muscle and bone. My skin rippled. Fingers curled in. Joints popped and reset. My jaw stretched, spine lengthened, heart rate dipped into that low, ancient rhythm. My body bowed forward, and then I was on all fours. Thick black fur covered my skin. Claws clicked lightly on the floor. The wolf.
God, it felt good… this time.
I shook out my coat and padded quietly down the hallway. The stretch of my limbs, the redistribution of weight, the subtle difference in how the world smelled-it was all grounding. Real. I circled the kitchen, dug briefly at a corner of the rug because it looked at me funny. I sniffed the fridge door, lingered a beat too long when I caught a whiff of Greek yogurt. I rolled onto my back and scratched an itch behind my ear using the wall like a medieval peasant.
Fifteen minutes of bliss.
Then I shifted back, my body naked and damp and rug-burned in places I refused to acknowledge. But the relief in my muscles? Worth it. Always.
I lay on my back, panting softly, hair damp with sweat. “Mags,” I called out, “time for an obligatory emotional recovery cuddle!”
“Give me a minute. I’m on a deadline!” she yelled through her closed door.
And that’s when it happened. Three sharp knocks. Firm. Rhythmic. Judgy.
My stomach hit the floor.
“That’s a landlord knock,” I muttered, shooting upright.
“Mags!” I whisper-shouted down the hall. “Don’t open the door! I’m naked, and there’s wolf hair everywhere!”
Her door cracked open. She stepped out slowly, a pen tucked behind her ear, her expression already halfway to murder. “Why are you naked?”
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