LOGIN/THEO/
He just stared at me with those deep blue eyes, his expression so flat it was almost impressive. Up close, he was even more intimidating—wide shoulders, a sharp jawline, and a general vibe that would make anyone be afraid to approach him. I was different of course, not that I wasn't afraid that he'd call the cops on me, in the sense that I was brave enough to approach despite his demeanor and intimidating look. I wish he wouldn't look at me like some kind of creep. He looked like some high-level accountant or a manager who took himself way too seriously, maybe that's why he was so rigid. "I’m sorry," he said, his voice so deep that I gulped in surprise. I was weak for deep voices. "Do I know you?" "Not yet! I'm Theo Pearson," I said, sticking my hand out. He looked at my hand like it was some foreign object and didn't move. I slowly pulled it back, tucking it into my pocket. "I heard you just got the two-bedroom. I’ve been looking for a place in this area, and honestly, I’m the perfect roommate. I’m clean and can clean, I can cook—like, actually cook, not just microwave stuff—and I’m barely even here because I work a lot." The man turned back to the landlady. "I believe the lease was for a single occupant, Mrs. Gable." Mrs. Gable, a woman in her sixties with bright purple spectacles, looked at me with a soft expression. "Well, technically yes, Mr. Armoni. But the rent for this unit is quite steep for one person. It was originally built for couples or students. Having a second name on the lease does make the paperwork look more stable for the owners." I saw a flicker of hesitation in the man’s eyes. ‘Armoni.’ Even his name sounded stiff. “Do I look like I can't afford the rent, Mrs. Gable?” He looked nearly angry. “N-No, not at all,” she stuttered. “Good, because I'm not interested in sharing," he said firmly. He started to walk past me toward the stairs. "Wait! Mr. Armoni!" I scrambled after him. "Look, I’m in a really tight spot. I have one week to find a place or I’m basically homeless. I promise, I won't be a bother. Pretty please!” He stopped and looked at me over his shoulder. The way he looked down at me made me feel like I was 5'2" instead of 5'9". "No," he said. I knew I was being annoying. I knew I was being "extra." But then I thought of Nevan’s pretentious face at the breakfast table and Blanche’s comment about my empty piggy bank. I couldn't go back. As he turned to continue up the stairs, I did the only thing my brain could think of. I lunged forward and grabbed his left leg, dropping to my knees. "Please!" I wailed, probably a bit too loudly. "I’ll do your laundry! I’ll meal prep for you! I’ll be so quiet you’ll forget I exist! If I don't get this room, my sister is going to make me move back in with her husband, and I’d honestly rather jump in front of a bus!" I felt the muscle in his leg go rock-hard under my grip. The landlady gasped, and the agent, who had just walked up, looked like he wanted to vanish into the pavement. "Let go," Armoni said, his voice sounding even more serious than before. It was cold enough to give me goosebumps. "Not until you say you'll consider it!" I squeezed tighter. "I'm a great roommate, I swear! I don't party, I don't have people over, and I’m very good at following rules!" "I will call the police," he stated calmly. "Go ahead!" I bluffed, though my heart was hammering. "Tell them a desperate, hardworking graduate is trying to pay you rent! See who they side with!" He looked down at me, and for a second, I thought he was actually going to kick me. Instead, he looked past me, toward the street. A dark sedan was crawling slowly down the block, the windows tinted. He seemed to stiffen, his eyes narrowing. "Fine," he muttered, so low I almost missed it. "Get up. You’re making a scene." I scrambled to my feet, dusting off my jeans and beaming. "Does that mean yes?" He looked at Mrs. Gable, then back at me. He looked like he was choosing between two different types of poison. "You stay for a trial month. You pay half the rent and a third of the utilities. You follow every single rule I write down, or you're out within twenty-four hours. Understood?" "Crystal clear! You won't regret this, Mr. Armoni!" "It’s Lorcan," he snapped. "And I already regret it." Ten minutes later, I was standing inside the apartment. It was actually really nice—minimalist, clean, with white walls and dark wood floors. It was exactly the kind of place a boring, high-strung office worker would love. Lorcan walked to the kitchen island and pulled out a notebook and a pen. He didn't even take off his sweater, he just started writing with a ferocity that was slightly terrifying. "Rules," he said, sliding the paper toward me when he was done. I picked it up. 1. Zero Interaction: Do not speak to me unless it is about the apartment or an emergency. 2. The Kitchen: You may use it between 6:00 AM and 7:30 AM, and 6:00 PM and 7:00 PM. Outside of those hours, the common area belongs to me. 3. Scents: I don't think we'd have much of an issue with this. However, do not wear strong perfumes. I have a low tolerance for smells. 4. Volume: No music without headphones. No loud phone calls. 5. Privacy: My room is off-limits. If you enter it, the police will be called. No exceptions. I blinked at the list. "Wow, you really like your personal space, huh?" He didn't answer. He was already opening a laptop, his fingers flying across the keys. I began to wonder if all office workers were this dedicated. "I’ll go grab my stuff," I said, ignoring the 'Zero Interaction' rule for a second. "I don't have much, so I'll be out of your hair by tonight." He didn't even look up. I walked toward the smaller bedroom, feeling a strange mix of triumph and nerves. Sure, Lorcan was a bit of a jerk, and he was definitely the most antisocial person I’d ever met, but at least he didn't seem bad and he's even a Beta which I considered a bonus. He was just a guy who worked too hard and hated people. I sat on the edge of the bare mattress in my new room and exhaled a breath I felt like I’d been holding for years. I was finally out of Nevan’s house. In the next room, I heard the continuous clicking of Lorcan’s keyboard. “Poor guy,” I thought. “He’s probably just as stressed about life as I am. Working all those hours just to afford a place like this. Don’t worry, Lorcan. Your new roommate is going to make sure this place stays sparkling clean.” I grabbed my phone to text Mayla. “Found a place! Moving in today. My roommate is a bit of a grouch, but he’s a responsible office worker. Tell Blanche I found a piggy bank with actual bills in it!” I tucked my phone away and headed back out to grab my things from my sister's residence. I had a month to prove I belonged here. How hard could it be to live with a guy who wanted to pretend I didn't exist? As I walked out, I glanced at Lorcan one last time. He was still hunched over his laptop, his face illuminated by the blue light of the screen. He was such an odd ball. I was certain he didn't have a single friend with that personality of his. “Lucky him, now he has me,” I muttered as I rubbed my nose confidently. If there was anything I was good at, it was making friends./LORCAN/“You know quite a lot about your acquaintance,” Fenton remarked. “Perhaps, you should tell your acquaintance to tell his sibling to put themselves in the shoes of the roommate. No one would want to be told they reek for no reason, would they now?”“You have a point,” I rubbed my chin."In most normal interpersonal relationships, if someone's feelings are hurt by a harsh remark, a direct approach is usually best. A brief, sincere apology for the choice of words would likely shatter the ice."I frowned, a sour taste hitting my tongue. "An apology? He shouldn't have to apologize for stating a fact. The scent was genuinely irritating.""Even if it was a fact, sir, the delivery matters," Fenton explained, his eyes twitching slightly as he did. "If the sibling wants the domestic environment to return to normal, they need to show a small gesture of goodwill. Perhaps purchasing a favorite meal, or simply addressing the roommate directly to clarify that there was no real malice intend
/LORCAN/As much as I'd tried to pretend like I hadn't noticed it, it was clear that Theo was angry at me.For three straight days, Theo had been avoiding me. He didn't greet me, neither did he chatter away as usual when he saw me, and worst of all, the kitchen island was completely bare when I came home. No extra portions left in the fridge and no bright neon sticky notes with clumsy handwriting telling me not to skip dinner. I didn't exactly need him to make me dinner since I could always order in but I'd gotten used to him making me food that it felt weird now.Whenever we crossed paths in the hallway, he would immediately look down, mutter a quick apology, and slip past me like I was a stranger. “Theo, I'm coming in,” I said as I knocked on his room door. Before he could protest, I opened his door and walked in. “Do you want something?” He asked without looking me in the eye.“I just wanted to tell you that I'll be going somewhere for a few days,” I said. It was the first time
/THEO/The next morning, I woke up before my alarm even had the chance to go off. I lay under my duvet for a long time, staring at the ceiling as the events of the previous night replayed in my head.“Go take a shower, you reek.” “It’s annoying.”The words still stung. I bit my inner cheek, a wave of embarrassment washing over me all over again. I had genuinely thought we were making progress. I thought that by keeping the place clean, making him dinner, and respecting his space, he was slowly starting to view me as something resembling a friend. Or at least, a tolerable human being.But I had been completely delusional. To him, I was just a nuisance who smelled bad and asked too many questions."Maybe there really are people I can't befriend," I muttered to the empty room, tossing the covers aside. Deep down, I didn't want to abandon Operation Friendship but I also didn't want to be pushy.“I guess while I thought I was being friendly, he just saw me as a nuisance,” I muttered as I s
/LORCAN/I returned from the supposed business trip on Saturday morning, my patience completely worn down by a week of endless corporate dinners and negotiations. The moment I unlocked the apartment door, I felt myself feeling relieved and more relaxed.As expected of Theo, the flat was spotless. The kitchen counters were gleaming, and everything was exactly where it belonged. Theo was apparently out, which was perfectly fine by me.I dragged my suitcase into my bedroom and dropped it at a corner. I hadn't exactly packed anything in it since this wasn't a business trip in the first place and I clearly had everything I needed in my main residence.I walked over to the closet and pulled the doors open, but the moment I looked at the rows of hangers, I stopped.My brow furrowed. The dark gray t-shirt and the black sweatshirt I usually kept on the middle rack were missing. I looked down at the laundry basket—it was empty.I stepped back, scanning the rest of the room. The desk had been du
/THEO/I ran up to the cafe where we were supposed to meet. I ended up running late on a day I'd actively pushed for us to meet up.“Oh my goodness,” I panted as I slid into the cafe. “Am I late?”“Clearly,” Joni adjusted her glasses. “Don't sweat it though. You're already making that face like you're about to cry.”“That's because you can be so mean,” I pouted as I took a seat.“You know the way Joni is, she just loves teasing you,” Cosette intervened. “Why don't you order a drink to calm your nerves?”“It's been a while since we all met up like this. Nobody should even think about going home early today,” Skye said, he was prepared for today.Well, it was Saturday so I was free to hang out with them. We ordered sodas and food after catching up a bit.“I forgot to ask, why are you suddenly wearing glasses?” I asked Joni.“Oh, this? I just thought they'd look hot on me,” she was so proud of her taste. “I look good, don't I?”“Anything you wear looks stunning, babe,” Skye sang her prai
/THEO/“I'll be going on a business meeting for a while,” Lorcan said casually as we ate dinner.“Eh? Why so sudden?” I completely lost interest in my food. “I wouldn't say it's sudden, I'm just telling you now,” Lorcan replied.“You should at least try to sugarcoat your words,” I muttered. “Don't tell me…is that the reason you agreed to have dinner with me?” I knew it! Despite our living situation getting better, he rarely ever had any meal with me.“Let's just say some things are best discussed over dinner,” he said as he slipped from his glass.“When are you leaving?” I asked.“Tomorrow morning,” he stated. And here I thought I'd be able to find a way to bond with him since it was Sunday and we were free. Not that he'd have agreed even if he was free.I paused, holding a my fork over my food without touching it. "Oh. For how long?""A week. Maybe two," he replied, standing up and grabbing his laptop. "As annoying as you may be, I trust that you'll be able to handle the house in my
/THEO/How I managed to drag myself to work on Friday morning was a miracle. My bed was in the perfect state to have that knockout sleep, it was cold alongside my pillows.“Why do I have to work?” I groaned as I ate breakfast.“Stop whining and eat your food,” Lorcan who just wanted a glass of wate
/LORCAN/A few days had passed since I had allowed Theo to continue his stay at the apartment but it was about time to go back to work.I adjusted the cuffs of my tailored suit jacket as I stepped out of the executive elevator. For the last three hours, I had been tearing through a budget dispute w
/THEO/How I woke up on my bed the next morning was still a mystery to me.I distinctly remembered passing out face-down on the kitchen island, with my laptop screen still on. Yet, here I was, tucked neatly under my thick duvet. I checked my neck—no stiffness. I scrambled out of bed and rushed int
/LORCAN/The apartment had been annoyingly quiet in the past few days.For the past week, I had been forced to adapt to a constant, irritatingly bright presence. There was always the sound of footsteps, the quiet humming from the kitchen, or the clumsy thud of a shoulder hitting a doorframe. Now,







