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Chapter 1: Move in Day
By the time I lugged my third overstuffed box up three flights of stairs, I was already sweating through my favorite “Support Your Local Coffee Shop” hoodie. The late-August heat had turned the stairwell into a sauna, and each step felt like climbing a small mountain with a boulder strapped to my chest. My arms burned, my bangs stuck to my forehead in damp clumps, and the cardboard edges of the box kept digging into my forearms like tiny cardboard teeth. I paused on the landing to catch my breath, muttering curses under it, then shouldered the door open with all the grace of a drunk toddler. I stumbled into what would apparently be my new home for the next nine months. And promptly tripped over a duffel bag the size of a small country. “Seriously?” I wheezed, windmilling my arms as I caught myself on the edge of the nearest desk before I could eat carpet. The box slipped from my grip and landed with a heavy, dramatic thud that probably registered on the seismograph in the geology building across campus. I glared down at the black monstrosity that had nearly ended me on day one. Bold white letters stitched across the top: **CRUZ**. Oh no. Everyone on campus knew that name. I straightened slowly, brushing sweaty hair out of my eyes, and finally took in the room properly. The right side—my side, according to the housing email—was still blissfully empty: naked mattress, bare desk, one lonely chair waiting for occupation. The left side looked like someone had already moved in and claimed territorial rights with military precision. Neatly stacked textbooks towered on the desk—giant, intimidating tomes on kinesiology, sports psychology, and advanced biomechanics that looked heavy enough to double as free weights. A couple of worn hoodies were draped over the back of the chair like they’d been placed there with intention. Under the bed, a pair of football cleats sat at perfect right angles, laces tucked inside, gleaming faintly like they’d been polished yesterday. And then there was the guy himself. Dante Cruz sat on the edge of his bed, forearms braced on his knees, posture relaxed in a way that somehow still screamed coiled power. His dark hair was slightly mussed, like he’d run his hands through it too many times, and those icy blue eyes were locked on me with the kind of focused intensity usually reserved for game film breakdowns or staring down a defensive line. Quarterback. Team golden boy. Six-foot-three (maybe four) of lean muscle, swirling black ink visible on his forearms and creeping up one bicep, and an aura that said *don’t test me unless you want to lose*. I’d seen him around last semester always moving through crowds like gravity bent around him, teammates orbiting, admirers trailing at a respectful distance. The kind of guy who probably never had to carry his own gym bag and whose I*******m comments section looked like a thirst-trap convention. And now… my roommate. “Oh,” I managed, because apparently my brain had short-circuited. “Uh. Hi.” He didn’t respond immediately. Those piercing eyes tracked me in slow motion: from the cardboard carnage at my feet, up to the coffee stain on my hoodie that had mysteriously appeared during move-in chaos, down to my skinny jeans rolled at the ankle over scuffed Vans. His jaw flexed once, a tiny muscle ticking. “You’re Summers?” His voice came out low and rough, like he’d swallowed gravel and decided to keep it. “Eli. Yeah.” I attempted a casual smile, though my stomach was currently auditioning for the Olympic gymnastics team. “Your new partner in crime. Or, you know… cohabitation specialist. Roommate. Whatever works.” One dark eyebrow arched slowly. For one heart-stopping second, I was convinced he was about to stand up, grab my box, and yeet both me and my belongings back into the hallway. Instead, he leaned back against the wall, crossing his arms over his chest. The motion pulled his T-shirt tight across his shoulders and made his biceps look like they were planning world domination. Fantastic. I was going to be living with a literal human mountain range. Needing something to do with my hands before I started fidgeting like a caffeinated squirrel, I dropped to my knees and began unpacking. Out came the chaos: three spiral notebooks already covered in doodles, my laptop plastered with pride flags and band stickers, a ceramic mug shaped like a smug cat wearing sunglasses. I arranged them on the desk with exaggerated care, turning the mug so the cat faced outward like it was judging the room. I could feel his stare burning into the side of my head the entire time. “You always bring this much crap?” he muttered after a long minute. I gasped theatrically, clutching the cat mug to my chest like a shield. “This isn’t *crap*. This is *personality*. Big difference.” His lips twitched just the barest hint of movement at one corner. Not quite a smile, but the ghost of one. Progress. Emboldened, I stole another glance at his side of the room. Minimalist. Controlled. Intimidating. Folded shirts in perfect stacks, a single framed photo of what looked like a younger him with an older man (dad? coach?) on the nightstand, everything arranged with ruthless efficiency. My half already looked like a craft store had thrown up during a blackout. “You’re… neat,” I observed, waving vaguely at the crisp lines of his belongings. “Like, military-neat. Did they send you to quarterback boot camp over the summer or something? Teach you how to fold socks into lethal weapons?” That earned me a low, rumbling grunt. I decided to interpret it as amusement rather than contempt. Silence settled again, thick and curious. He reached for a water bottle on his desk, twisted the cap off with one hand, took a long drink. I kept unpacking: string lights with tiny golden bulbs, a croissant-shaped throw pillow I’d impulse-bought at 2 a.m. on Etsy, more notebooks, a small potted succulent I was determined not to kill within the first week. When I finally turned back, he was still watching—head tilted slightly now, expression unreadable but no longer openly hostile. Like he was trying to solve a puzzle that had just walked in wearing fairy lights and cat merch. I cleared my throat. “So… ground rules? Should we make a chore chart? Color-code the fridge shelves? Or do you already have a secret girlfriend who’s going to show up at midnight and throw my stuff out the window if I leave dishes in the sink?” The almost-smile flickered again, sharper this time. “No girlfriends. No chore chart.” He paused, eyes narrowing just a fraction. “Just don’t touch my stuff.” “Noted.” I snapped a mock salute, fingers brushing my forehead. “In return, you don’t mock my fairy lights.” “Fairy lights?” He sounded like the concept personally offended him. “Obviously.” I held up the tangled strand like a proud parent showing off a child’s finger painting. “Ambience matters, Cruz. Without it, we’re just two dudes breathing the same recycled air and slowly losing our minds. Fairy lights are basically therapy in bulb form.” This time the grunt definitely carried a thread of reluctant amusement. And just like that, something shifted in the air between us—small, fragile, but real. Dante Cruz might look like he bench-pressed cars for fun and scowled at sunshine, but there was a crack in the armor. Maybe more than one. I stood on my desk chair to string the lights along the wall above my bed, stretching precariously until I could hook the final clip. When I stepped down and plugged them in, soft golden light bloomed across my half of the room, turning the harsh fluorescent overhead into something almost cozy. I glanced toward the window to check the reflection—and froze. In the glass, Dante’s face was illuminated in warm honey tones. His jaw was tight, arms still crossed, but his gaze wasn’t on the lights. It was on me. Steady. Unblinking. Intense in a way that made my pulse stutter. It wasn’t annoyance. It wasn’t indifference. It was something else entirely something that felt dangerously close to curiosity, maybe even interest. And for the first time since I’d walked through that door, I wondered if surviving a year with Dante Cruz might be less about survival… and more about whatever happened when two completely opposite worlds collided in one tiny dorm room.What if Bonus Chapter 20: What If They Met at a Beach at Sunset? Dante POV The beach was almost empty as the sun dipped toward the horizon, painting the sky in deep oranges and pinks. I’d come here after a long week of training camp to clear my head, barefoot in the sand, letting the waves wash over my ankles. At six-three, I stood out against the open shoreline, but tonight I wanted the quiet. A little further down the beach, another figure stood watching the same sunset. Slimmer build, messy hair tousled by the sea breeze, silver nail polish catching the last rays of light on his fingers. He was noticeably shorter than me, wearing a simple white linen shirt that fluttered in the wind and rolled-up shorts. There was something peaceful yet quietly chaotic about the way he stood there, arms wrapped loosely around himself, lost in thought. I walked closer, the sand shifting under my feet. “Beautiful, isn’t it?” I said, stopping a respectful distance away. He turned, surprised, th
What if Bonus Chapter 20: What If They Met at a Beach at Sunset? Dante POV The beach was almost empty as the sun dipped toward the horizon, painting the sky in deep oranges and pinks. I’d come here after a long week of training camp to clear my head, barefoot in the sand, letting the waves wash over my ankles. At six-three, I stood out against the open shoreline, but tonight I wanted the quiet. A little further down the beach, another figure stood watching the same sunset. Slimmer build, messy hair tousled by the sea breeze, silver nail polish catching the last rays of light on his fingers. He was noticeably shorter than me, wearing a simple white linen shirt that fluttered in the wind and rolled-up shorts. There was something peaceful yet quietly chaotic about the way he stood there, arms wrapped loosely around himself, lost in thought. I walked closer, the sand shifting under my feet. “Beautiful, isn’t it?” I said, stopping a respectful distance away. He turned, surprised, th
What if Bonus Chapter 19: What If They Met at a Charity Auction – Dante “Bought” Eli for a Date? Dante POV The charity auction ballroom glittered with soft lighting and quiet chatter. I was there as a favor to my team’s foundation — one of the athletes up for auction to raise money for youth sports programs. I stood on stage in a fitted black suit, feeling slightly ridiculous as the auctioneer called out bids for “a private dinner with our star quarterback.” Bidding climbed steadily until a voice from the back called out a number that made the room hush. “Ten thousand dollars.” The gavel came down. I scanned the crowd and found the bidder — a slimmer man standing near the back, silver nail polish catching the light on his fingers, messy hair, wearing a simple navy suit that fit him perfectly. He was noticeably shorter than my six-three frame, but the confident little smile on his face made something low and warm curl in my stomach. “Sold to bidder number 47!” the auctioneer anno
What if Bonus Chapter 18: What If Eli’s Bike Broke Down Near Dante’s House? Dante POV The evening was warm, the kind of late summer night where the air still held the heat of the day. I was just getting home from a long practice, duffel bag slung over my shoulder, when I spotted someone on the side of the quiet residential street struggling with a bicycle. The guy was crouched beside the bike, tools scattered on the pavement, muttering under his breath. Slim build, messy hair falling into his eyes, silver nail polish catching the streetlight on his fingers. He was noticeably shorter than my six-three frame. His t-shirt clung slightly to his back from the effort, and there was something endearingly chaotic about the way he was trying to fix the chain. “Need a hand?” I asked, stopping a few feet away. He looked up, startled, then offered a sheepish smile. “Yeah… Eli. Chain keeps slipping and I have no idea what I’m doing. I was just trying to get home after a long day.” “Dante. Co
What if Bonus Chapter 17: What If They Met at a Concert – Mosh Pit Chaos? Dante POV The outdoor concert venue was packed and pulsing under the night sky. The band was midway through their set, bass thumping through my chest like a second heartbeat. I stood near the edge of the crowd, tall enough at six-three to see over most heads, enjoying the energy without getting crushed in the center. Then the mosh pit surged. A wave of bodies pushed forward, and suddenly a slimmer guy was stumbling backward, losing his balance right in front of me. I caught him instinctively, one arm wrapping around his waist to steady him. He looked up, breathless, silver nail polish catching the flashing stage lights on his fingers. Messy hair, flushed cheeks, noticeably shorter than me. “Shit—thanks. Eli.” “Dante,” I said, still holding him for a second longer than necessary. “You okay?” “Yeah. Just got swallowed by the pit. Not my usual scene.” We ended up standing together as the music roared on. T
What If Bonus Chapter 16: What if They Met on a Hiking Trail Mix-Up? Dante POV The hiking trail was supposed to be a quiet escape after a brutal week of two-a-day practices. I’d driven up to the mountains alone, needing fresh air and silence to clear my head. The path was well-marked, but after an hour of steady climbing, I realized I’d taken a wrong fork somewhere. The trail narrowed, trees closing in, and I was clearly off the main route. That’s when I heard rustling ahead and a frustrated sigh. A guy was standing in the middle of the path, map app open on his phone, looking lost. Slimmer build, messy hair slightly damp from the effort, silver nail polish catching the dappled sunlight on his fingers. He was noticeably shorter than my six-three frame, wearing a simple t-shirt and shorts, backpack slung over one shoulder. “Lost too?” I asked, stepping closer. He looked up, surprised, then offered a sheepish smile. “Eli. Yeah… I was trying to find the overlook, but the app keeps
Chapter 41 – Hospital Vigil (Eli POV) The call came at 2:17 a.m. I was half-asleep on the sagging couch in the common room downstairs—textbook splayed open across my chest like a tent, pages creased from where I’d dozed off mid-sentence. The fairy lights I’d dragged down from our dorm were strung
Chapter 37 – First Fight (Eli POV)The fight didn’t start with yelling.It started with silence—the kind that grows teeth.It was a Wednesday night, two weeks into Dante’s injury recovery. His ankle was down to a dull ache, crutches mostly abandoned for a walking boot he hated. He could put parti
Chapter 34 – Injury Setback (Dante POV)The first real practice after break was supposed to be light—just conditioning, route timing, a few walk-throughs to shake off rust.It wasn’t.Halfway through the third period, I dropped back to throw a deep out to Jax. The pocket collapsed faster than it
Chapter 40 – Public Slip (Dante POV The walking boot was finally gone by mid-February, traded for a sleek black compression sleeve and a set of orders Coach delivered with his usual no-bullshit stare: “Ease back in, Cruz. No hero shit.” He’d said it while tapping my chart against his clipboard, th

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