by Renae Kaye
Table of Contents
Blurb
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Interview One
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Interview Two
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Interview Three
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Interview Four
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Interview Five
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Interview Six
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Interview Seven
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Interview Eight
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Interview Nine
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Interview Ten
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Epilogue
Interview Eleven
Author’s Note
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Copyright
Knowing Me, Knowing You
By Renae Kaye
Loving You: Book Four
Can friends turned occasional lovers move beyond past mistakes and wrong assumptions to build something that can last?
Quiet bookworm Shane has a big secret—one he’s kept for fifteen years. AFL superstar Ambrose Jakoby grew up next door to Shane. They were close friends, and Shane supported Ambrose through school.
One night, everything changed.
Before Ambrose left Perth as a scared eighteen-year-old to head to Melbourne and take up his new footy career, Ambrose and Shane slept together.
For the next nine years, they continued a secret friends-with-benefits situation whenever Ambrose was in town. Shane never knew exactly where he stood or how to define Ambrose’s sexuality—and Ambrose didn’t know either. Then last Christmas, everything changed again, and a disagreement strained their friendship. Shane vowed to get over his unrequited love.
But Ambrose is back, recovering from an injury and hoping to make amends. He claims he’s ready for a real relationship. But Shane has to decide whether Ambrose means it and whether his Hufflepuff soul can take the chance.
A huge thanks to Sean Kennedy for allowing me to borrow his characters for a bit. I’m proud to have Micah Johnson and Declan Tyler in my book.
Forever Freo.
And of course to Donna and Suzie, so you can stop complaining that I’ve never dedicated a book to you.
Prologue
HE WALKED into my bedroom without knocking. He’d been doing it for twelve years. As of tomorrow he would be doing it no longer.
I was stretched out on my bed, resting against the pillows and doing my best to lose myself in reading. When the going gets tough, the tough get going, and Shane reads a book. I wondered whether that saying was too long for a tattoo.
I looked up from the words on the page. Hosseini’s gripping book had no interest to me if Ambrose was in the room. I wasn’t dumb enough to put the book down, though. No need to admit to unrequited love when that person was leaving the following day.
“Hey,” I said, trying to sound casual. “What are you doing here? I thought you were going out partying with the boys for one more night?”
Ambrose walked across the room, his long-legged stride familiar to me. He threw himself down on my desk chair and picked up the snow globe he’d bought me for Christmas. It was cheesy. It was cheap. I was going to treasure it.
“I blew them off.”
The one thing you don’t say to a nineteen-year-old gay boy who’s desperately in love with you and doesn’t get near enough action to satisfy his libido is “I blew them off.”
I deliberately placed my book in my lap. “Lucky them. How long did it take you to do them all? Did you do them one at a time, or could you manage a few together?”
He stuck a middle finger up at me, and I grinned. I was going to miss him—badly. He was still fiddling with the snow globe, turning it upside down to cause a blizzard to the winter scene inside and then watching the flakes settle with an intensity that told me he was freaking out.
“All packed?” I asked softly.
“Yep,” he replied, not taking his eyes off the globe.
“Your mum still driving you to the airport?”
“Yep.”
“You still sure you don’t want me to go with her? To see you off?”
“Nah. I don’t want a big fuss.”
My heart thumped rapidly as something akin to grief welled inside me again. “So this is my goodbye?”
“Yep.” His voice broke. I ignored it like the good friend I was. I knew he thought eighteen-year-old boys aren’t meant to cry. It was a pity about the tears in my eyes, then, because I was a whole eighteen months older than him, and I was ready to bawl.
I picked up my book and tried to focus on the words so we could both regather our composure. I heard the quiet snick as he placed the globe back on the desk. In my periphery I could see him stand and go over to stare at one of the posters on my wall. I loved that poster and paid way too much to have it framed. Someone had taken a bunch of my favorite cult and fantasy characters and placed them in a picture together. Stone steps were leading up to some sort of colosseum-type structure I assumed was supposed to represent some heaven, and on the steps were all the characters—Legolas with his sword drawn, standing back-to-back with a stormtrooper; Captain Picard standing with Dumbledore; Van Helsing crouching next to Tank Girl; Sarah Connor holding guns with Dean Winchester; C-3PO leaning against the TARDIS.
Ambrose wasn’t into it as much as I was, but he’d watched enough movies with me over the years that he could identify most of the characters, just like I’d watched football with him. I thought about having to watch a game without him by my side and felt a sharp pain in my stomach.
“You’re gonna text me, right?” he asked suddenly, and I looked up in surprise. Our relationship wasn’t about texting and calling. Since we lived in each other’s pockets, there was no need. If I wanted to tell him something, I’d simply wait until that night.
“If you want,” I replied and immediately saw it was the wrong answer. He looked hurt. I rushed on to try and make amends. “I mean, you’re going to be so busy in Melbourne that you won’t have time for texts from me. Your mum’s already told you she’s going to be ringing every night, and you’ll be flat-out training and making new friends, and—”
I flinched as Ambrose launched himself at me. I’d been on the receiving end of a lot of wrestling matches with Ambrose over the years, and I usually lost. It was a little disheartening when the guy who was two years younger than me managed to outgrow me before he turned fourteen. Now, at nearly twenty years of age, I’d given up hoping for a late growth spurt.
I’d upgraded my bed—with more than a few blushes—eighteen months earlier, so I could hopefully have some friends “stay over.” Sadly it hadn’t been used as frequently as I hoped, but I’d been flattened on it many a time by Ambrose when he decided he needed to “teach me a lesson.”
I antic
ipated the physical contact and brought my hands up to protect my chest. Instead I found myself astounded when Ambrose threw himself on the bed beside me and buried his face between my neck and the pillow. He still made contact with my body when he slammed down on my shoulder, because he wasn’t a small guy, and I was stretched out in the middle of the bed, but I managed to save my book from being crushed. I quickly closed it and put it on the shelf built into the bedhead. Sometimes Ambrose was thoughtful like that—allowing me to safely put aside my precious items before I had to submit to his physical strength.
But he didn’t move once the book was away. I predicted I had all of three seconds before I would need to fight for my masculine pride. I knew I would lose, but I had to at least try, however Ambrose was a rock at my side, not moving, not even breathing, from what I could tell.
He half lay on me, his chest squashing my arm and shoulder, his arm curled tightly against him but resting on my chest. I suddenly realized I’d been too caught up in my own feelings about Ambrose leaving to delve too deeply into his. I knew he was excited and unsure, but I didn’t realize that perhaps he was sad as well.
I lifted my hand, placed it on his shoulder, and rubbed my palm over the cotton of his T-shirt. I swallowed loudly.
“Of course I’ll text you. I’m going to miss you. A lot.”
There was no response from him—either movement or sound—so I tried to lighten the atmosphere. “I’m not sure what I’ll do with myself. I’m going to have to find someone else to force-watch all the movies and TV shows I like. Then someone else is going to have to listen to me prattle on and on about how the movie missed out some of the main plot points of the book. That’s going to be at least two people, because it’s too much of a burden for one person to put up with all of that. I’m pretty needy when it comes to that sort of stuff.”
It was one of Ambrose’s regular complaints to me. I’d often hear some version of “Oh, come on, man! I just sat through two hours of the movie. We don’t need to discuss it point by point again.”
He didn’t discuss the shows with me, but he was nice enough to listen to me go on and on, or at least pretend to listen.
“And what am I going to do with my weekends once the football season starts?” I asked in a joking voice. “I mean, I’ll have hours extra now that I don’t have to watch the game with you.”
“You still have to watch.” The words were muffled against my shoulder. “It’s mandatory. I’m going to ring you after every game to check up and make sure you did.”
I chuckled and patted his arm, trying not to turn it into a caress, but noting the muscles he’d worked on so hard—which made me remember something.
“Oh, I was going to ask you. All your weights are still under my bed.” Last year I had tutored him to help him finish high school. It was a compromise that he did some weight training while we sat and discussed his subjects or while I quizzed him or read to him. Through trial and error, I’d learned that Ambrose seemed to retain more information if it was verbally given to him. “Did you want me to sell them for you? Or did you want me to hold on to them? Then I could maybe do some lifting while you’re not here. Get in shape? Find me some muscles to attract the boys who ignore me?”
He wriggled a bit as though to get more comfortable, and I felt him turn his head, which I was glad of because I was worried about him suffocating in there. “You’re fine as you are, Shane.”
I didn’t know how to react. What did he mean, I was fine as I was? Didn’t he know? Couldn’t he see? He ranked something like a thirteen on my score-out-of-ten sexy scale. I was maybe a three… if I squinted hard. My teenage acne hadn’t quite cleared up, and my body was more sponge than muscle. I would think about working out and becoming buff and gorgeous… but then a book would call my name, and I’d be lost.
“A fine mess,” I scoffed, finally able to find my tongue. “Do you know that guy I told you about? Justin? I said he finally talked to me at the party two weeks ago, and I was hopeful?”
Just because I was in love with Ambrose didn’t mean I wanted to be celibate for the rest of my life. I was currently celibate, but that wasn’t by choice—at least not by my choice.
Ambrose grunted and muttered, “The one I told you that you had to flirt with and make it obvious you wanted his attention?”
“Yeah. Him.” I snorted at my failure. “I did that last night. I flirted like mad for a good ten minutes. Then I screwed up my courage and asked him if he wanted to leave the party and go somewhere more private.”
I ignored it when Ambrose stiffened beside me. He always did that when I talked about trying to get laid. He considered me too reckless for encouraging men to follow me to my car or somewhere out of the way. We fought about it enough that we’d agreed to just disagree. I knew his view, and he knew I wasn’t going to start asking for police references before trying to get naked with another guy.
“And did he? Want to?”
I snorted again, disgusted by myself and willing to tell Ambrose about it to cheer him up. “He looked at me in surprise and then said he didn’t realize I was gay. I mean, I’d chatted him up on at least three different occasions, and he didn’t realize I was coming on to him?”
But Ambrose didn’t laugh like I wanted. He flattened his palm on my chest and said quietly, “His loss, Shane. If he can’t see the good guy you are, then his loss.”
“I know,” I half wailed, turning on the hysterics by channeling my drama-queen friends. Hysterics weren’t me, but it was fun to act it up a little when it was just Ambrose and me alone. “But it doesn’t help me in my quest to get laid, now does it?”
He finally unbent enough to chuckle. “So the guy doesn’t matter, it’s the laying bit?” he asked in amusement.
How could I tell him that of course the guy mattered, but I knew that no one would stack up to him.
“Does that make me a slut?” I asked with real worry. “I just thought it made me horny.”
“It’s the teenage hormones,” he soothed with fake solicitousness. “Soon you’ll be twenty, and it’ll be all downhill from there.”
I poked him in the ribs in retaliation, and he jumped, grabbed my wrist, and pinned it to my side. I tried to fight him, but he was too big, too strong, and too heavy. We tussled for a bit until I gave up like I always did. My pride smarted, but my blood sang happily to be touching Ambrose.
“You win,” I said as I went limp and gave in to his strength.
He laughed, sounding happier than he had since he entered my room, and released his hold. “Did you ever doubt it?”
No. Not really. And I was fine with it. I readily acknowledged I didn’t have a tenth of Ambrose’s drive to be the best, to win-win-win, to strive for greatness. That’s why I was sitting in my bedroom reading a book about a guy who goes on adventures while Ambrose was getting ready to jet off to the other side of the country.
We slumped together on the bed, a tangle of limbs, not ready to move. I knew it would be the last time. When he came home next, he’d be changed. He’d be a man. Striking out on his own would change him.
I wondered whether we’d still be friends when he got back. Nothing could erase the twelve years of growing up together, but time and distance could loosen the bond.
“Will you miss me?” I asked timidly. I was looking for reassurance from him, a role reversal of our usual relationship.
“Course. There’s so much I wanted to—”
When he didn’t finish, I drew back on the cloak of the protector I usually wore around him and rushed to reassure him. “You’re going to be brilliant, do you know that? You’re going to wow them all. But don’t be afraid to ask for help. Don’t expect to be the best out there anymore. You’re in the big leagues now. You’re going to have to fight your way back to the top. I know you’ll do it. I believe in you. You just need to keep focused on the end goal and have faith in yourself.”
“You’re the only person who’s ever had faith in me. I mean, from the beginning.”
Maybe because, to me, he was everything. There was nothing I couldn’t see him doing.
“Don’t think about that,” I counseled. “Don’t think about those who want you to fail or don’t think you can do it. Think about who you want to be. Who would make you happy. What you want to do.”
He moved so abruptly that later I couldn’t remember him doing it. One moment I was trying to instill in him all the advice my nearly twenty-year-old brain had, and the next moment, he was on me, kissing me.
And it was nothing like I dreamed.
It was harder. Hotter. Wetter. And infinitely more beautiful. I was shocked to stillness for a long time, which gave Ambrose the opportunity to push my legs apart and settle between them, flattening me on the bed in a new way, before I’d even had a chance to protest—not that I wanted to protest. For God’s sake. It was Ambrose.
He was kissing me in almost a feverish manner, as though stopping to draw breath would allow sanity in and it would all disappear. Perhaps he was right. I wasn’t going to allow sanity to even get a peek in. I wrapped my arms around his shoulders and kissed him back even harder. He made a sort of moan in the back of his throat, as though my arms around him made the kissing even better.
I tilted my head to the side so the lock between our mouths was tighter. He moved too, and I found myself on my side. I was still pressing against Ambrose, but this time we were chest-to-chest. I moved my head to the side and sucked in a deep breath as he stole his hand under my T-shirt and began to smooth over the skin. I tried to find my reason.
This was Ambrose.
We could discuss the whys and the what-fors later. I wasn’t willing to speak, because I didn’t want to break the spell. I turned my mouth back to his, and he willingly pressed in again. We kissed deeply for long minutes, and I didn’t want to let him go, so I held on tightly to his shoulders and head, but he roamed at will with his free hand.
He traced the muscles of my back and then followed the line of my spine down to my shorts. It was summer and hot. The elastic waistband of my shorts was no barrier to his hand, and he slipped it under and cupped the flesh of my arse.