How to Lose at Love (Campus Legends #1) Read Online Sara Ney

Categories Genre: College, Contemporary, New Adult, Romance, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Campus Legends Series by Sara Ney
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Total pages in book: 102
Estimated words: 105306 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 527(@200wpm)___ 421(@250wpm)___ 351(@300wpm)
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I hear the doorbell exactly ten minutes later.

Hear the sound of my brother opening the door, Drew’s enthusiastic greeting. “Hey, come on in. We’ve heard a lot about you.”

What the fuck? He hasn’t heard shit about her, other than her name and that bit about Diego paying me to dump her. Freaking Drew, meddling in my business already.

Get your ass down there then.

Too late. There’s a hesitant tapping at my door; it seems to glide open of its own volition. Then Ryann is standing there in her hat and mittens and, “Dude, why are you so bundled up? It’s not like it’s squallin’ out there.”

Ryann ignores me, plopping down into my desk chair and twirling in it toward the window.

“Cute room.”

Cute room? There’s nothing cute about my room and she knows it. Gray walls, gray bed, black furniture. It’s masculine, and I found most of it on the curb last year after everyone on campus was throwing out the shit they didn’t want.

Look at me, saving the environment by living sustainably! Ha.

“So.” Ryann crosses her arms and her legs, looking ridiculous in her bulky jacket. “Let’s cut to the chase.”

“Er. Want to take that coat off first? It’s distracting me.”

“How is my coat distracting you?”

“You don’t look comfortable.”

“What do you care?” she volleys back.

“I don’t.”

“Then why’d you bring it up?”

“Are you always this argumentative?”

Ryann removes one of her mittens and tosses it on my desk. Holds up one finger. “One, you invited me over.” She holds up a second finger. “Two, you’re the one who’s distracted by my jacket—not me. How does that make me the argumentative one?”

She raises a very valid point.

“Fine. Never mind.”

Laughing, she spins around in my desk chair for the second time, removing the other mitten as she does.

“Never-you-mind is right.” She sighs, plucking the hat off her head and setting it on top of her mittens. Ryann goes about smoothing her hair, the flyaways, hand running down the long layers. Her fingers rake through it like a comb, and I hadn’t realized how long it was until this moment, mostly ’cause I’m trapped in my bedroom with her.

And the color…

Not black but not brown. No idea how I’d describe it, and I have no idea why I’m bothering to try considering it hardly matters what she looks like or what color her hair is. Or her eyes. Or the fact that she has freckles across the bridge of her nose.

She’s not freezing cold for once.

That’s the only reason you’re noticing this shit, Dallas, I tell myself.

Obviously, Ryann Winters is attractive—it’s not as if I hadn’t noticed she’s cute. I have eyes, don’t I? But if we’re comparing her to the chicks next door, it’s an entirely different kind of attractive.

Is it?

Or is it the fact that you’ve only ever seen her bundled up?

Whereas I’ve seen the neighbor girls in bikinis, for fuck’s sake. They’re such thirst traps…

Stop.

Focus.

Black leggings peek out of the bottom of her coat, high gray socks yanked up mid-calf. She’s removed whatever shoes or boots she had on to be polite, but she needn’t have bothered because the last time my brothers or I cleaned the floors or swept was never.

This girl does not like to be cold…

“So,” she begins, lifting a bronze trophy off my desk and studying it this way and that. Reads the small print at the base. “Third Place, Pee Wee League.” Ryann glances up. “What is this?”

“Pee Wee League.”

“I can see that, but what sport was it? Tee-ball?”

Baseball? Don’t insult me. “No, football.”

“How old were you?”

“I don’t know.” I know exactly how old I was. “Maybe seven?”

Six.

Why am I lying? Jeez.

“What’s so special about this trophy that it’s the only one you have in your room?” She sets it back down on the desk. “Can’t be the only trophy you have.”

No, it’s not the only trophy I have.

In fact, I have dozens. And yes, that’s the only one that seems special because when I was six years old…football was fun. I enjoyed it.

It was my first year playing; it wasn’t work or a chore or an expectation set by my father, and coming in third place was still the best day of my life.

After that? Shit got real.

We weren’t playing for bronze; my father wanted gold. First.

He wanted me to be the best, my brothers too. Can’t forget about them.

His four athletically gifted sons.

Duke was always the golden child, but then again, he’s the oldest and was the first to do everything purely because of the hierarchy. While Dad was on the road, it was up to Ma to get us to practice, make sure we threw the ball around the yard, ran drills. Never missed a game, not even when we were sick.

Dad wouldn’t allow it.

Sure was a hovering control freak considering he was only around in the off season and barely even then.



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