Accueil / MM Romance / The Quarterback's Roommate / Chapter Three – The Shirtless Problem

Share

Chapter Three – The Shirtless Problem

Auteur: Aero Reads
last update Date de publication: 2025-08-23 07:50:19

Chapter 3: The Shirtless Problem

I’d read somewhere in some pretentious literary blog, probably that great literature prepares you for every human emotion. Joy, grief, rage, despair, even love in all its messy forms. Clearly, whoever wrote that smug little sentence had never had to share a cramped dorm room with a six-foot-three athlete who treats shirts like an optional personality trait.

The first time Dante peeled off his sweat-soaked practice jersey right there in the middle of our room, I told myself I’d be cool about it. Detached. Clinical, even. Just another human body. Shoulders, chest, abs perfectly normal anatomy, the kind you see in anatomy textbooks or gym mirrors. Nothing poetic. Nothing worth memorizing. Except my traitorous brain immediately launched into composing iambic pentameter about the sharp curve of his collarbone, the way the light from the desk lamp caught the faint sheen of sweat still clinging to his skin, the slow roll of muscle under golden-brown skin as he reached back to tug the fabric over his head.

And Dante didn’t just strip and call it a day. No, he had to stretch afterward arms overhead, back arching slightly, every line of him lengthening like he was auditioning for a slow-motion sports drink commercial at 3 a.m. My gaze was supposed to be glued to my book. Milton. Paradise Lost, of all things. Divine punishment, honestly. The irony wasn’t lost on me: here I was, watching paradise very much in the process of being lost, one deliberate stretch at a time.

“Why’re you staring?” His voice came out rough around the edges, gravel from shouting drills all afternoon, but not unkind. Not accusing. Just… curious.

Heat roared up my neck and flooded my face in record time. “I wasn’t.” My voice cracked on the second syllable like I was thirteen again. “I was… uh… rereading this passage.” I tilted the book toward him so he could see the proof. Which would’ve been more convincing if the damn thing hadn’t been upside down.

The corner of his mouth twitched barely, but enough. Like he wanted to smile but his pride wouldn’t let him commit. “Right. You do that a lot.”

“Do what?”

“Talk too much when you’re nervous.”

“I’m not nervous,” I said. The truest lie I’d ever told. My heart was doing Olympic-level gymnastics behind my ribs.

He dropped into his desk chair with the kind of careless grace that should be illegal, towel slung loose over his broad shoulders, dark hair still damp from the post-practice shower and curling slightly at the ends. The room filled with the faint, clean scent of his soap something crisp and cedary and underneath it, the ghost of whatever cologne he wore that made every frat guy on campus smell like a magazine ad come to life. I hated that I noticed. I hated even more that I liked it, that the smell made something warm and stupid unfurl low in my stomach.

The silence stretched between us, thick and heavy. Normally I filled silences like this with nervous chatter rambling about my lit seminar, how my professor seemed personally offended by happiness, how I still couldn’t decide whether T.S. Eliot was a genius or just the most pretentious man to ever wear a bow tie. Tonight the words stuck in my throat like dry toast. Every time I opened my mouth, I was afraid something mortifying would fall out. Something like, “Has anyone ever told you your back looks like it was carved by angry Renaissance sculptors?”

“Don’t you have a paper to finish?” he asked after a long minute, voice low.

“I do.” I tightened my grip on the pen until my knuckles whitened. My handwriting had devolved into frantic little squiggles, like my brain had gone on an unscheduled strike.

Out of the corner of my eye, I caught him leaning back in his chair, long legs stretched out, watching me. Not with the usual flicker of irritation he wore when I talked too much about dead poets. This was softer. More curious. Like he was trying to solve a puzzle he hadn’t expected to find in his own room. It sent my pulse into a full freefall.

I forced my eyes back to the page. One sentence. Just write one coherent sentence. My pen hovered, then traitor sketched the rough outline of his shoulders in the margin instead. Broad. Tapered. Ridiculous. Fantastic. Now I was doodling the guy like some lovesick high-schooler with a sketchbook full of secret crushes.

“You’re weird,” he muttered, almost to himself.

The word should’ve stung. It didn’t. The way he said it wasn’t cruel it was bemused, almost fond. Like he was turning the idea over in his head, trying to decide whether weird was a dealbreaker or something he could live with. Like maybe, just maybe, he was trying to figure me out too.

I decided to push back. Humor was my only reliable weapon in situations like this. “Weird is just another word for interesting,” I said, forcing a grin I didn’t feel. “You’re welcome.”

That earned me a huff of laughter short, quiet, but real. It rumbled low in his chest and landed somewhere in the center of mine like a touchdown in a game I hadn’t even known I was playing. Victory. Pathetic, beautiful victory.

The room settled again into that charged quiet. He leaned forward, elbows braced on his knees, scrolling through his phone with one thumb. The screen light painted blue across the sharp line of his jaw. I pretended to study, eyes fixed on the same paragraph I’d been rereading for twenty minutes, but every few seconds my gaze betrayed me darting back to the slope of his back, the way the muscles shifted subtly under his skin when he breathed, when he shifted his weight.

I wondered what it would feel like to trace those lines with my fingertips. To follow the dip of his spine, the flare of his shoulder blades, to map every inch like I was trying to memorize a poem I’d never be allowed to recite out loud.

And then I hated myself for wondering.

Because Dante Cruz was a walking, breathing complication. A closed book with a language I didn’t speak and no business trying to translate. We’d only been roommates for a handful of weeks, but already I knew the truth: he was the kind of story you couldn’t put down, even when every chapter hurt. The kind that ended in ashes or epiphanies or both, and either way left you changed.

So I buried my head deeper in Milton, whispering the line that suddenly felt too perfect, too cruelly accurate: *The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.*

Yep. Hell of heaven. Exactly.

Continuez à lire ce livre gratuitement
Scanner le code pour télécharger l'application

Latest chapter

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What if Bonus Chapter 20: What If They Met at a Beach at Sunset?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What if Bonus Chapter 20: What If They Met at a Beach at Sunset?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What if Bonus Chapter 19: What If They Met at a Charity Auction – Dante “Bought” Eli for a Date?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What if Bonus Chapter 18: What If Eli’s Bike Broke Down Near Dante’s House?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What if Bonus Chapter 17: What If They Met at a Concert – Mosh Pit Chaos?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    What If Bonus Chapter 16: What if They Met on a Hiking Trail Mix-Up?

    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

  • The Quarterback's Roommate    Chapter 60: shared Dreams

    Chapter 60 – Shared Dreams (Dante POV)The guest room was quiet except for the faint tick of the wall clock and the occasional creak of the house settling.Eli was asleep—curled against my good side, head on my chest, one leg thrown over mine like he was afraid I’d disappear if he let go. His br

    last updateDernière mise à jour : 2026-03-26
  • The Quarterback's Roommate    chapter 65: Making it Right

    Chapter 65 – Making It Right (Eli POV)I bought the ticket at 1:14 a.m.Not impulsively. Not exactly.I’d spent the previous four hours staring at the ceiling, rereading our last text thread until the words stopped making sense, then rereading them again anyway. The silence after “I’m sorry” h

    last updateDernière mise à jour : 2026-03-26
  • The Quarterback's Roommate    Chapter 62: Rookie Reality

    Chapter 62 – Rookie Reality (Dante POV) The locker room smelled like Bengay, new cleats, and adrenaline that hadn’t burned off yet. I sat on the bench, elbows on my knees, towel draped over my head like a hood. Water dripped from my hair onto the tile. Drip. Drip. Drip. Steady. Predictable. Unlik

    last updateDernière mise à jour : 2026-03-26
  • The Quarterback's Roommate    chapter 64: First flight 2.0

    Chapter 64 – First Fight 2.0 (Dante POV)The call dropped at 10:47 p.m.Not on purpose. Not exactly.I’d been in the film room until almost ten, then dragged myself back to the apartment the team put me in—still smells like new carpet and someone else’s cologne. I showered fast, sat on the edg

    last updateDernière mise à jour : 2026-03-26
Plus de chapitres
Découvrez et lisez de bons romans gratuitement
Accédez gratuitement à un grand nombre de bons romans sur GoodNovel. Téléchargez les livres que vous aimez et lisez où et quand vous voulez.
Lisez des livres gratuitement sur l'APP
Scanner le code pour lire sur l'application
DMCA.com Protection Status