Desperately Seeking Roommate
Page 1
Desperately Seeking Roommate
Micalea Smeltzer
Contents
1. Lou
2. Lou
3. Abel
4. Lou
5. Abel
6. Lou
7. Lou
8. Lou
9. Abel
10. Lou
11. Abel
12. Lou
13. Abel
14. Lou
15. Abel
16. Lou
17. Lou
18. Abel
19. Lou
20. Lou
21. Abel
22. Abel
23. Lou
24. Lou
25. Abel
26. Abel
27. Lou
28. Abel
29. Lou
30. Abel
31. Lou
32. Lou
Epilogue #1
Epilogue #2
Whatever Happens
Wild Collision
Prologue
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Micalea Smeltzer
© Copyright 2019 Micalea Smeltzer
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Cover Design: Emily Wittig Designs
Cover Photo: Stocksy
Editing: KBM Editing
Formatting: Micalea Smeltzer
To Lou and Abel.
It’s probably weird to dedicate a book to my characters, but you guys made me see things differently.
One day I’ll have a love like yours.
If you’re reading this dreaming of finding your Prince Charming, I promise he’s coming. We just have to be patient. After all, good things come to those who wait.
1
Lou
“I can’t believe I have to do this,” I sigh, staring at the ad I’ve typed up.
“It’s not like you asked your landlord to be King of the Douchebags and raise your rent,” my best friend Miranda chimes. She’s lying across my bed on her stomach, swiping madly on Tinder. I don’t know why she likes the stupid app. I find it insulting more than anything. The one time I used it I got a message within five minutes of a dick with a bow wrapped around it. I immediately replied that that was not the gift I was asking for at the moment, thank you very much.
She turns her brown eyes to mine and heaves a dramatic breath. She reaches past me and pushes the pad on my laptop, sending the ad through to our university’s newspaper.
I cry out, hands fumbling toward my laptop. “Miranda, I wasn’t ready! I needed to proofread it again.”
“You would’ve been here all day reading it and then talked yourself out of posting it. It needed to be done.”
She rolls off my bed and strides over to my closet door, swiping through the clothes on the hangers.
Miranda is the first friend I’ve ever had who I could share clothes with. I’m short and curvy—or what many would call plus size—and most of my friends growing up were either thin or average-sized. I always felt like the odd duck out, until Miranda and I met during English 101. Neither of us are from Winchester—I came from the southern part of Virginia to here in the north, and she ventured all the way from Delaware.
Somehow, we ended up sitting beside each other in our English class and the rest is history.
She holds up an oatmeal colored over-sized sweater. “Can I borrow this?”
“Sure,” I reply with a shrug, shutting the lid on my computer. With a groan, I stand up, stretching my stiff muscles. I’m twenty-one going on eighty. If I’m sitting or in any position for too long my limbs lock up despite my nearly daily yoga routine. It’s ridiculous.
“Thanks.” She drapes the garment over her arm. Her dark brown curls swing around her shoulders. With her father being Hispanic and her mother Asian, the girl is the epitome of the word unique. She’s stunning and I tell her all the time, but she never believes me because of her size.
I don’t know why us bigger girls are shamed by society. We’re normal-sized—I’m sorry your media standards are candy-cane stick thin. I’d rather eat them than look like one.
“I wish you could move in with me,” I whine, as she goes back to flipping through my closet. I’ve been pouting about this fact for a solid week—ever since I found out rent was going up and I was no longer going to be able to afford my two-bedroom apartment in the historic district. The idea of living with a stranger isn’t appealing at all, and since I have no time to spare, I have to be open to a guy for a roommate too.
The prospect of going to pee and falling into the toilet doesn’t sound like my idea of getting wet, but desperate times call for desperate measures, and I need a roomie stat.
She sighs, her lips twisting downward in genuine apology. “I know, babe, but I just re-signed the lease on my apartment. There’s no way I can get out of it. Living here would be so much nicer. My place is a dump.”
She lives in an older apartment beside the small airport of privately owned planes. I still don’t know how I lucked out getting my cute place downtown—but right now I don’t feel so lucky and want to punch my landlord in his smug face. He’s young, probably late twenties or early thirties, and inherited this building over the summer when his grandpa passed away. Now, the greedy bastard wants to make more money off broke college students like me.
“Does this match?” she asks, pairing the sweater with a maroon skirt that ends above the knees with buttons down the front.
“Yeah, it’ll be cute,” I tell her honestly. “But … what do you need it for?”
Color blossoms across her dark skin. “Charlie asked me out.”
“Charlie?” I shriek. “Why am I just now hearing about this? I thought you hated him.” I jolt upright from this news, in desperate need of hearing the tea on how this came about.
Charlie is in our history class—he’s the type who answers every question correctly and then looks around smugly like we all care that he’s so much smarter than us.
Newsflash, we don’t.
She shrugs. “It happened yesterday. I bumped into him in the library and he asked. I don’t really like him, but … Lou, it’s been forever since I got laid and I’m desperate. My kitty needs more than some sweet vibrations. I need a man. On top of me. Inside me. All around me.”
“But Charlie?” I can’t get over this. He’s not hideous, but if looks were determined by personality he’d be one ugly guy—like Smeagol.
“He’s not horrible looking,” she reasons, her bottom lip jutting out in thought. “And you never know, he might be cool.”
“Well, when he bores you with his vast knowledge of the size of every shit a president took, don’t come crying to me.”
“I doubt he knows that.” She spreads the clothes on top of my bed and stands back, assessing how they look together. Glancing at me she adds, “I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt, okay. Can you do that, too? For me?”
I hug my best friend. “I’d do anything for you.”
“Thank you.” She smiles, her dark slanted eyes looking relieved. Her relief transitions into worry and her lips flatten. “What are you going to do if no one responds to your ad?”
I sit down on my bed, looking out the old dirty window onto the street below.
“Live on the streets, I guess.”
“You know I’d
never let that happen,” she vows. “My place might be small, but I can make room for you somewhere—maybe add a cat cushion in the bathroom.”
I grab a pink pillow and toss it at her. “My ass wouldn’t even fit on it.”
“At least it’s a nice ass.” She gives it a tap. “Can we get something to eat now? I’m starving, and you bribed me with the promise of dinner only to spend two hours writing a measly four lines for your stupid ad.”
It was more like seven, but even that is a pathetic amount of time to spend writing it.
“Fine,” I grumble. “I do owe you food.”
Her eyes roll as she sticks her tongue out at me. “At this point you owe me a whole fucking pizza.”
* * *
Twenty minutes later we’re seated in a booth inside the cozy wood-fired pizza place—aptly named Woody’s.
The place has a warm and cozy vibe with browns and blacks used for much of the décor. Our booth is beside the bar, packed with people—mostly fellow college students and the random old guy interspersed. I watch one old man leer down the shirt of the woman beside him.
Nasty old bastards.
Picking up my beer glass, I let the warm liquid slide down my throat. Across from me, Miranda texts on her phone, and I don’t dare ask to whom, because I don’t want to hear the name Charlie leave her lips. The thought alone makes me want to gag.
Who knows, he could prove me wrong, but as her best friend it’s my job to have reservations about any guy she dates. She’s a queen and deserves to be treated as such. A guy will be lucky to get my stamp of approval, and chances are it won’t be Charlie.
She sets her phone aside and stretches across the table toward me. “How much longer until the pizza is here? I’m withering away by the second.”
“Considering we ordered five minutes ago, I’d say you’ll be waiting a while.”
“Dammit.” She tosses her head back in aggravation. “Good thing I always have snacks in case of an emergency.” She rifles through her purse and pulls out a small bag of popcorn. She proceeds to open it and starts shoving pieces into her mouth.
“If you had that why didn’t you eat it earlier?” I remark.
She shrugs and answers around a mouthful. “Forgot I had it.”
I shake my head amusedly. Miranda is one of a kind.
I wasn’t hungry before, but now that we’re here I’m positively starving. It feels like it’s been a whole day since lunch, not hours. I was too busy agonizing over the stupid ad to think about my stomach.
“Give me some of that,” I plead, holding my hand out for some popcorn.
She cradles it against her boobs. “Mine.”
“Miranda,” I gripe. “Please?”
“Fine.” She drops a stingy three pieces in my hand.
“That’s all you get.” She grins and shoves more in her mouth.
I glare at her, but at least it’s better than nothing. I eat the three pieces slowly, savoring them. The food is on its way, and once it’s here all will be right in the world again. I’m pretty sure pizza can solve any problem. Honestly, I’m not sure why the idiots in government haven’t just ordered some damn pizzas already. Nobody can fight when ooey-gooey-cheesy goodness is in front of you. It’s like, against the laws of nature or something. I’m sure of it.
She finishes her popcorn and stuffs the empty bag in her purse.
“I’m full, let’s go.”
I narrow my eyes.
“Kidding,” she adds. “God knows it takes more than that to fill me up.”
As much as I don’t want to bring up Charlie again, I have to. “When is this date of yours?”
“Tomorrow.” She bites her lip.
Studying her, I narrow my eyes into slits. “If you’ve never really liked him why are you acting nervous all of a sudden?”
She tucks an errant piece of dark hair behind her ear. “I honestly haven’t liked him. He’s arrogant, rude, condescending … but also kind of hot in a dork-ish sort of way. The glasses, the floppy hair.” She rests her chin on her hand and gives a dramatic dreamy sigh. I’m friends with a complete and utter nutcase.
“Don’t go falling in love now,” I joke. “I can’t be left alone in my singledom.”
She rolls her eyes and fans her hand through the air. “Not going to happen. I doubt Charlie can handle all of this.” She wiggles her body. “I have needs that need to be met and I’m not certain he’s the guy for the job. It’s only a date though—free dinner and a movie? I’m not going to complain one bit about that shit.”
“True.” When you’re a broke ass college student, getting to go out and have a free meal is the equivalent of the Holy Grail. Toss a movie into the mix and you’ve found Jesus himself.
It’s been so long since I’ve dated I’ve become a Scrooge. Freshman year I went a bit crazy, going out all the time to parties and on dates with guys that usually only led to sex. Then last year I decided I wanted something more serious, but most guys still only wanted a one-and-done experience and the few looking for a relationship didn’t want someone like … well, me.
I never used to be insecure about my size. I don’t think anyone at any size should ever be ashamed of their body. You never know someone’s personal struggles, so who are you to judge? But suddenly, I did start to become insecure and wondered if men didn’t see me as the type they wanted to have a future with—that I was only good for a quick lay.
After that, I swore off men, determined to build up my confidence again.
Junior year is supposed to be my year, and I won’t let myself get dragged down by pining for some ideal that exists solely in my head.
Love will come along when it’s meant to. Until then, I’ll be living my best life, which includes pizza nights with Miranda, manicures and pedicures once a month, and whatever else I want to do—which let’s be real, after I spend the money on the mani-pedis I’ll be sitting in my apartment contemplating my life choices and if I really had to buy those Cheetos from the campus vending machine two years ago for three dollars and fifty cents, because surely if I had that money today I’d be better off. You might say I don’t need the mani-pedis, which might be true in theory, but I don’t need that kind of negativity from anyone in my life, so you can kindly fuck off.
“Here you ladies go,” our usual waiter Joe says with a smile, setting down each of our pizzas—Miranda’s meat lovers and my veggie. Joe is an older guy, probably in his fifties, bald, and has a black goatee. He’s awesome and always makes us laugh. “Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do tonight.”
Miranda snorts. “Like devour this pizza whole? You bet your ass that’s happening.”
He merely chuckles and walks away to tend to another table.
I cut two slices of pizza and set them on the plate Joe brought earlier to cool down.
Miranda stares longingly down at her plate. “I want to eat it now, but I know if I do I’ll have severe regrets when my tongue is burnt for a week.” She raises her eyes to mine and shrugs. “Eh, you only live once, right?”
Before I can stop her, she grabs a piece and takes a huge bite. “Regret,” she cries, pulling a stringy piece of cheese away from her mouth. “Instant. Regret.” She pants, spitting out a blob of too hot pizza.
Stifling a giggle, I gesture toward the unfortunate mess of cheese and other toppings in front of her. “Now look what you’ve gone and done. You ruined a perfectly good piece of pizza.”
She frowns. “Such a tragedy. Let’s have a moment of silence in its honor for its service to my mouth.” She claps her hands together and bows her head. Lifting it two seconds later she announces, “Enough of that.”
She proceeds to pick up the rest of the piece she bit into and blows on it to cool it down.
Once a few more minutes pass and I feel sure my own pizza is green-lit to eat, I take a bite.
Nope! Abort mission!
“Ah!” I cry, as the hot cheese and sauce burns my tongue, bringing tears to my eyes. “Get it out,” I plead stup
idly, because it’s not like a stranger is going to shove their hand in my mouth to yank out the scalding piece of pizza. I manage to spit it out and reach for my beer, but the starchy drink does little to soothe my tongue. I spot Joe walking by and wave madly, nearly falling out of the booth. “Water,” I beg when he sees me. “Need. Water.”
He chuckles. “Coming right up.”
Looking across the table at Miranda, I sigh. “We shouldn’t be allowed out in public. We’re both walking disasters.”
“I like to think my awkwardness brings joy to those around me.”
“As opposed to what?” I inquire, thanking Joe with a nod as he sets down a glass of water for each of us. I gulp greedily at the cold liquid.
“Horror at the realization a walking wrecking ball exists, ready to take down anything and anyone around her. I can’t help it that I’m clumsy and stupid things happen to me.”
“Same, girl.” I can relate to that on every level.
When I was six, I fell from the top of the playground slide onto the ground, banging my head into a piece of wood that was a part of the area separating the grass from the mulch. Suffice to say, there was a lot of blood, more than five stitches, and a scar on my forehead that I carry with me to this day.
“Let’s try this again,” she says, and takes a tentative bite. She gives me a thumbs up. “All clear.”
I follow suit, thankfully, it’s not scorching hot anymore, but my sore tongue makes it less enjoyable than it should be.