LOGIN“And what does that have to do with me?” I frowned. Ace Hunter didn't even blink. “You're going to save my Boxing career.” I laughed. “Excuse me?” “You're the only genius on this campus who can drag my grades out of the gutter.” He folded his arms. “And in return, I'll help you get over my brother.” My heart skipped. “What?” “I'll fake date you.” I stared at him like he'd completely lost his mind. “The rumors will spread. Brooks will watch the girl he's always taken for granted become someone else's. He'll finally see you as a woman instead of his kid sister.” His lips curved into a dangerous smile. “And while we're at it, I'll keep my GPA high enough to stay captain of the hockey team.” “You're insane.” “Maybe. But I'm also your best shot.” ... For three years, I loved my childhood best friend in silence. The night I finally gathered the courage to confess, he introduced me to his fiancée instead. Humiliated and heartbroken, I accepted the most ridiculous deal on campus. Tutor Ace Hunter—the university's arrogant Boxing Champion, who's one failed class away from losing everything—and pretend to be his girlfriend for six months. The rules were simple. No strings attached. No real kisses. And absolutely no falling in love. But fake relationships have a dangerous way of feeling real. Especially when the boy I thought I'd never stop loving suddenly decides he wants me back. Now I'm trapped between two brothers, and a fake relationship that's beginning to feel like the only real thing in my life.
View MoreSummer’s POV
Brooks Hunters had the messiest apartment known to man. I’d said that a hundred times and I’d say it a hundred more, because every single time I walked through that door, it proved itself true again. A jersey was thrown over the back of the couch. Shoes were kicked off near the entrance but never inside the shoe rack. “I don’t understand how he functions,” Ali muttered from across the room, holding up a damp towel she’d found draped over the kitchen counter. “Like genuinely, Summer. How is he not living in filth?” “He functions because people like me keep cleaning up after him.” I pulled a stack of books off the shelf and started arranging them again.“Hand me that mug, please.” She passed it without looking away from the towel. Brooks had texted me that morning, saying he just landed, and had stopped by to drop things, and I knew what that meant. The apartment would look exactly like this. So Ali and I had come over. Then two weeks ago, he’d broken up with Taylor. He hadn’t said much about it. But he’d called me late that night, and I’d known something had changed. He just said, “I ended things,” and I said, “Okay,” and neither of us talked about what it meant. “Summer.” Ali’s voice pulled me back. She was standing in the centre of the room. She sounded amused. She held up her hand. In it was a small velvet box. My brain didn’t process it immediately Then Ali pressed her lips together like she was holding in a scream and crossed the room to me in three fast steps. “Sit down,” she whispered. “Sit down, sit down….” She pushed the box into my hands and I opened it. Inside was a simple diamond ring. “Okay.” Ali was using the voice she used when she was trying very hard to be calm and failing completely. “He went on a trip. And he came back with a ring.” “And he broke up with Taylor before the trip,” I said slowly. “And he’s been calling you more.” She started counting on her fingers. “He told you he had something to tell you tonight and you shouldn’t be late.” Well, Brooks had texted me saying he had something to tell me tonight. “Summer.” Her voice dropped. “He bought a ring.” Something moved through my chest. “We don’t know what it’s for,” I said carefully. “He broke up with his girlfriend and came back from a trip with a diamond ring and has been attached to you for two weeks.” She stared at me. “What else could it be for?” I closed the box slowly, and set it back exactly where she’d found it. I’d spent three years keeping these feelings locked. I always thought brooks would never, ever look at me that way. And now there was a ring, and a text that said *don’t be late*. Wait! Was Brooks going to propose to me? “I’m going to confess,” I said, quieter than I meant to. “Tonight. Whatever he wants to tell me, I’m telling him too.” I held Ali's hand, jumping up. Ali’s face broke into the widest grin I’d seen in months. The rest of the afternoon was hers. She picked the dress. She practiced conversations with me, playing Brooks, feeding me lines and waiting while I found the words. She did my hair, and told me to breathe at least six times. I wrote down what I wanted to say. I was finally going to confess to him. The neon sign of The Daily Puck buzzed overhead, casting a warm glow over the damp sidewalk. I stood just outside the campus diner, my fingers nervously smoothing down my dark green skirt for the fifteenth time in the last two minutes. “Ali, I look ridiculous,” I muttered, staring at my reflection in the glass door. The skirt was a little shorter than what I usually wore. “I should have gone home and changed into my old flannel. This isn't me.” Ali rolled her eyes, grabbing my wrists to make me stop fidgeting. “Summer, shut up. You look stunning. That skirt shows off the legs you usually hide under baggy sweatpants. Trust me, it’s perfect. It’s exactly what a guy wants to see when he comes back from a long trip.” I swallowed the lump in my throat, glancing down at my black ankle boots. “I just feel exposed.” “The only person who’s going to look at you is Brooks, and he’s going to realize what a total idiot he’s been for the last three years,” Ali said firmly, giving my shoulder a reassuring squeeze. She adjusted her own purse strap. I took a deep breath, my eyes scanning the room, searching for the one face I actually wanted to see. I spotted him across the room before Ali could point him out. Brooks Hunters was easy to find. Tall, looking relaxed, wearing a grey shirt with the sleeves pushed to his elbows. Then he laughed at something the person beside him said. “There he is,” Ali whispered, pointing toward a booth in the far corner. My heart did a violent dance against my ribs. He looked happy, exactly like the boy next door I had spent a lifetime yearning for. “Go get him,” Ali whispered, giving me a gentle push forward. “I’m going to go sit at the counter. Good luck, Sum.” Something in me pulled toward him the way it always did. “Go,” Ali said quietly. “I’ll be right here.” He saw me coming and his face shifted into that easy smile. “Summer!” Brooks slid out of the booth, stepped forward and wrapped his massive arms around me, pulling me into a heavy hug. “Wow!! You look….good.” A shy smile spread across my face. I had to hold my skirt tight. “Thanks. I just wanted to look different tonight” “Well, it suits you,” he gestured for me to sit across from him. “Sit. Man, I've missed you.” I slid into the vinyl booth. As much as I was nervous, seeing Brooks' face made me feel relieved. “So, I heard what happened between you and ....Taylor” I said, as soon as I sat down. I slid back a strand of hair that fell off behind my ears. “Oh, yes. It was really a hard decision though. We were just going around in circles, toxic as hell…..” This was it. The door was wide open. I swallowed hard, my heart hammering against my ribs. I squeezed his hand back before he pulled it away. “Actually.” He started again. “Taylor and I….” “Brooks….I…I have something to tell you. Something I've been….“ I said, cutting him off. Just before I could proceed, someone behind me lurched, and I felt the cold hit before I understood what was happening. Someone had poured a Champagne down the back of my dress. “Oh, my God, I'm so so sorry” The waitress apologised, bending down to clean it off, but I stopped her halfway. “It's.. it's fine. I'll just go clean it off in the bathroom” I stood up. I excused myself and found the bathroom, working at the fabric with paper towels under the harsh lights, telling myself it was fine. The fabric would dry. Few minutes later, I went back out. Something about the room had shifted — the light, the mood of the crowd. People were looking toward the centre of the diner and I followed their gazes. There were Neon lights, and Candles on tables that hadn’t been there before. Flowers along the bar in small white vases. The whole atmosphere was rearranged. Brooks was standing in the centre of the room. He was facing my direction, and for one suspended second, I thought ... .I believed he was going to propose to me. Then, a woman walked past me. Her perfume trailing behind her as she walked, toward the centre of the room, and toward Brooks. Confusion moved through me. Taylor. That was Taylor, walking through the candlelight toward Brooks, who stood in a room full of flowers with his hands at his sides and his eyes on her. Brooks reached into his jacket pocket, and he dropped to one knee. Brooks was on one knee with a ring box open in his hand, and Taylor was walking toward him, and I was standing at the edge of the room holding a folded piece of paper in my bag with all the things I’d wanted to say to him. My brain refused to pick up what was happening. What was Brooks doing on his knee with a ring box in his hand while his ex-girlfriend approached him?Ace's POVMiller wouldn't shut up about it.“I'm just saying,” he said as we crossed the gym parking lot, gym bag slung over one shoulder, “you put your hand on the girl's face in the middle of a lecture and made Harrison lose control of his own classroom. That's not tutoring, man. That's a circus act.”“It worked, didn't it?”“It worked at getting the whole campus talking about you. It did not work at getting Summer Quinn to agree to spend her Tuesday afternoons explaining sociology to you.” He shouldered the gym door open. “She's going to drop you as a partner before she ever agrees to be your tutor. I told you, that girl is immune. Two years around the team and she's never once looked twice at any of us.”“She's not immune to me.”Miller snorted, dropping his bag on the bench. “Right. Because you're so different from the rest of us meatheads.”“We're dating.”The words came out flatter than I meant them to, but I wanted to see his face when he heard it. It didn't disappoint. Miller
Summer's POVI stood in front of my mirror the next morning, turning sideways, then turning back, trying to figure out why I even cared what I looked like today. It wasn't like today was different from any other Tuesday. Except it was, because somewhere out there, Ace Hunters was walking around acting like we were actually together, and I still hadn't figured out how to survive being seen next to him without my whole face giving me away.I smoothed down the front of my sweater for what had to be the tenth time. *You're overthinking this. It's fake. It's a project. It's nothing.*The TV was on in the background, low, more noise than anything else. I wasn't even really listening until the anchor's voice sharpened, and I caught the tail end of it.“…found early this morning near the east side of campus. Authorities have not released the identity of the victim, but sources close to the investigation say the injuries are unlike anything typically seen in—”A reporter stood in front of caut
Ace POV:“Leave me alone, Ace,” she whispered, her voice thick. “I don't have time for whatever game you’re playing.”“I’m not playing a game, Summer. I’m making a business proposition,” I said, my tone turning serious. My gray eyes held hers with intensity. “Here’s the deal. I’m failing Professor Harrison’s sociology class. If my GPA drops below a 2.5 by the end of the month, I’m academically ineligible to box. Scouts from Boston and Chicago are coming to our home opener in a few weeks. If I’m on the bench, my draft future is dead.”She blinked, absorbing it. “And what does that have to do with me?”I stated firmly. “You’re going to make sure I pass Harrison’s final project with an A. And in return, I’m going to clean up my bad-boy reputation for the scouts by showing them I have a steady, respectable girlfriend. You.”She let out a breathless gasp. “You want me to fake date you? Are you insane?”“Think about it, Summer,” I pressed, leaning in close enough. “I want a wholesome image
Ace POVThe project didn’t interest me. The partner did.I’d walked away from that notice board knowing one thing for sure: Summer Quinn and I had unfinished business, and a whole semester working together was the perfect excuse to settle it. She’d slapped me in a freezing parking lot and then strolled off like I was nothing. That wasn’t going to stand.I changed and headed straight to the gym.Miller was already there, wrapping his hands. He gave me the usual nod. I taped up, rolled my shoulders, and stepped into the ring. We started light, circling and throwing easy shots, just finding our rhythm. The familiar smell of sweat and canvas, the creak under our feet—it was the one place where everything else faded away.I landed a clean combination and Miller grinned behind his guard. “There he is.”I pushed harder, feeling loose and strong, until it hit me out of nowhere.A brutal pressure slammed into my skull. I stumbled back against the ropes, blinking through it. For a second it eas






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