Billionaire's Fake Fiancé (An Alpha Billionaire Romance Love Story) (Billionaires - Book #10)
Page 119
I shifted my weight from one foot to the other, looking around me constantly. There didn’t seem to be any end to the students who milled around, standing in line, calling out to people they already knew or making conversation with people they didn’t. I wondered how it was even possible for the school to feed so many people at one time. I was definitely hungry; and I was more than a little interested to find out what all was available on the menu. As we got closer to the service area, Gigi pointed out a big, broad bulletin board announcing the different soups and the theme with little placards underneath advertising the different options.
It was both like and unlike my high school cafeteria. There were people lined up behind the food—some of them students, a few of them older people—and there was the unquestionable similarity in the smells that came rolling in the air. My school had had a pretty decent cafeteria program, but the different stations here were a big change. Georgia and I looked over the menu and decided that while we were hungry, none of the “international fare” of the theme really appealed to us. Fortunately, there was a grill station with burgers and chicken breasts—even a secondary grill with vegetarian and vegan options. There was also a big salad bar with more stuff than I could name off the top of my head, so we split off with the other people who were headed to the grill and waited our turn.
I got two chicken breasts, and Georgia ordered herself a grilled cheese. With that on our plates, we went over to the salad bar and chatted while we compared the different things that we wanted from what was available. At least there was a good selection; I made myself a big, complicated salad with lots of different vegetables and dipped some of the bread sticks into the different salad dressings to figure out which one I wanted.
While we were playing around, I noticed a group of girls walking into the food service area, all dressed in purple and gold, their coordinated look screaming that they were members of one of the sororities. I nudged Georgia and pointed to the chattering group, and both of us rolled our eyes, grinning at how ridiculous they all looked together. “If I ever think that’s a good idea,” I said to Gigi lowly, “smack me upside the head as many times as you possibly can until I’ve come back to my senses.” Georgia laughed.
“Ditto,” Georgia said, glancing at the girls one more time and shaking her head. We headed out of the service area and into the seating portion of the dining hall.
If I had been impressed when I first walked in by just how many students were piled into the building, the loud shouting, talking, laughing, moving crowd of students at the tables blew my mind a second time. Gigi and I looked around for a quiet table somewhere; neither of us particularly wanted to jump into a crowded one with a bunch of screaming people, even if we weren’t anti-social. There was only so much of a crowd that either of us could take at any given time. I scanned the tables, trying to find somewhere we could both sit and eventually just shook my head.
We stood off to the side, watching as more and more students trickled through the archway leading from the service area to the dining room, and finally Georgia found a relatively clear area close to the door. I shrugged when she pointed it out to me, and we both headed that way, setting our trays down with our food and drinks and quickly claiming the end of the table before anyone else could get in our way.
“Oh my God, there are so many people,” I said to Georgia.
My high school had been kind of small; Georgia told me that she’d gone to a magnet public school—it wasn’t huge, but her graduating class had been much bigger than mine. We compared notes on our different salads and the other things we had gotten, and I thought to myself that I fully planned to try all of the various juices the cafeteria dispenser boasted; after all, I knew what the different sodas tasted like already. Georgia and I were talking about what we were most looking forward to in our classes and some of the different clubs that we might be interested in, and I finally started to relax.
“Hey look,” Georgia said, pointing towards the entrance. “Hockey players.” She grinned at me, and I rolled my eyes, looking obediently in the direction she gestured to. The guys who were coming into the dining area were all in matching jackets bearing the school colors, and they were somehow louder even than the people around us, shouting and laughing, shoving each other playfully as they made their way out of the service area. It was obvious that they felt like they owned the school. I laughed at them, shaking my head at Gigi again; it seemed like jocks were the same thing in college they seemed to be in high school. I started looking again and picked off the names from the backs of the jackets, curious in spite of myself. There was a Smith, a Locke, a Havers, and finally, my eyes lit on one pair of broad shoulders bearing the name Steel.
There couldn’t be more than one or two people with that particular last name—not at a school this small. From behind, he didn’t look that exceptional: broad shoulders, sure, and some obvious muscle under the jacket he wore, but that was every guy in sports. He turned to head towards the tables, and at the sight of him from the front, I was mesmerized. Johnny—if it was him and not his brother or someone who happened to share the same last name—was gorgeous. He had short, dark blond, curling hair and a smiling face. His eyebrows were a little darker, over a pair of bright eyes, and his whole face looked surprisingly gentle in the instant before he laughed at something someone else on the team said. He was definitely the most gorgeous guy I had seen in my first hours on campus, and I couldn’t help but stare. “Look,” I hissed to Georgia. “That’s got to be him, I mean there can’t be two guys who are that gorgeous with the same last name, could there?” Georgia looked over at the group again and laughed.
“Yeah, I think that has to be Johnny.” She stared with me for a moment and grinned. “Man, if he wanted to come up to our room and spend the night, I’d let him—RAs and rules be damned!” I laughed and tried to look away, even though I knew that I was watching him way more intently than I wanted anyone to know. I was a little star-struck, to tell the truth; he was a gorgeous guy who I would have noticed no matter what, and it didn’t hurt at all that he apparently had some reputation on campus not only for the sport he played, but for being a hottie.
Georgia and I finished up our salads and grabbed some fruit, swiping a few cookies to take with us back to the dorm, which we slipped into a wad of napkins and tucked into our bags. We didn’t really feel like lingering in the dining hall—it was too crowded and way too noisy. “Let’s head back,” Georgia suggested; I was only too ready to agree—there were more and more students pouring through the archway from the service area into the dining room, and pretty soon, all of the tables would be fuller than full.
We picked up our trays and followed the signs around the corner to the dish area, talking about what we still had to do that night. Georgia had gotten a nice-sized flat-screen TV as her birthday present from her parents, and she was suggesting that we could hook it up in the common area of our room, so we’d both have the freedom to watch TV whenever we wanted. I put my tray on the conveyor belt and laughed at a joke that Georgia made about binge-watching TV instead of getting our work done, shaking my head; I had already concluded that I had lucked out big time with my assigned roommate.
I took a step backwards, not even looking—a stupid idea, I knew even as I did it. Immediately, I collided with someone and half-yelped, turning on my heel to apologize to whomever I had run into. I looked up—and up. When my gaze lit on the face of the guy who I’d managed to bump, I felt my cheeks burning with the blood that rushed into them. It was Steel. Johnny Steel. I exhaled, trying to think of what I could say. “I am, gosh, I’m such an idiot. I’m sorry,” I said, laughing nervously.
Johnny shrugged, grinning down at me. “Should we exchange insurances? I don’t think you did more than ding my fender—I’d hate your rate to go up.” I found myself laughing more easily at the joke, and my blush started to recede. Off to the side, in the corner of my vision, I could see Georgia standing there, staring at the two of us, almost openly gawking
at the gorgeous man I’d had the bad luck to run into. “I’m Johnny—Johnny Steel,” he said. I smiled, still a little nervous at the confirmation of my suspicions. “What’s your name?” I tried to shake off my shock and nervousness.
“Becky,” I said, smiling again, feeling the warmth still lingering in my cheeks. Johnny smiled down at me, his bright eyes—up close they looked like they were blue—looking me up and down.
“Well, Becky, I’m glad to meet you. What’s your major?” My brain froze over. What was my major? I glanced sideways at Georgia, as if she could help me.
“Uh, my major…” I licked my lips, my heart pounding in my chest faster and faster.
“You know, that thing you’re here for?” Johnny’s playful smile took any sting out of his joke. “You know, other than parties and clubs.” I laughed and shook my head.
“English. I’m planning to major in English.” There was a quick silence, and I tried to think of something funny, or at least smart, to say to him. But before I could, one of his friends called a question out to him, and Johnny looked away from me for a second, raising a hand to acknowledge the call and shouting back that he’d be right there. He looked down at me with another big smile on his face.
“It was great meeting you, Becky. I’ll see you around, I hope.” I nodded, unable to think of what else I could possibly say, and watched as he turned and walked away quickly, meeting back up with his friends. Georgia came back to my side, shaking her head with a star-struck grin on her face.
“Girl, you have got to be the luckiest person on the planet!” she said, managing somehow to keep her voice low enough to not be heard by the entire cafeteria. I rolled my eyes as we started to walk towards the exit. “Johnny Steel knows your name—and he’s… Damn, Becky, he’s gorgeous. You’re lucky.” I shrugged.
“I’m sure he just…he’ll forget about me altogether in twenty minutes. I’m not going to let it turn my head.” I didn’t know what to think of the crazy random chance that had made me back up into Johnny. In my mind, as we walked back to the dorms, all I could think of was how gorgeous he was, the way his smile seemed so sweet and nice, and his playful joking. I probably wouldn’t see him ever again—or at least, rarely—but it was a nice little twist on my first day on campus. I quickly discarded the idea that anything could possibly happen, but in spite of that, I wasn’t sure what to make of how charming he’d been to me. Probably just nice to everyone, I told myself as we walked across the quad towards the dorm buildings. Don’t think about it anymore. You’ve got way more important things on your plate. But I had to admit to myself at least that it was fun to have been noticed at all, even if I was pretty sure that I’d be forgotten in a matter of moments.
Chapter Four
By the time we were back in the dorm room, Gigi and I had finally managed to calm down a little bit about our run-in with Johnny—or rather, my run-in. We had both decided that it was high time to start organizing and unpacking the last of our things. Mom and Dad had set up my room for me, but of course, I wasn’t a child anymore—I could put away my own clothes and take care of a few things for myself. Georgia had more of her own stuff to tackle than I did, and of course there was also the common area to take care of.
We called across the room to each other as we went about the different chores we had in our own spaces, asking each other questions about what our lives had been like, what our parents were like—the sort of things you talk to your new roommate about. “I swear, my mom’s nuts,” I told Gigi while I was putting the last of my things in the shower. “All she cares about is money and status—she and Dad both hate that I’m planning to major in English. They’d much rather I did business or something like that.”
Georgia laughed. “My parents are pretty okay,” she called back from her bedroom. “I mean, if I had wanted to be an English major, they’d probably be a little bit wary of it…” I laughed. “But they’re okay with me studying whatever I want, as long as I’m prepared to work hard.” That was the thing, I thought; my parents didn’t want me to work hard—they wanted me to keep having everything more or less just handed to me. I knew for a fact that Mom still harbored the delusion that I was going to meet some wealthy trust-fund kid in college and never have to work a day in my life. Part of why I hadn’t chosen Brown University had simply been that I wanted out of that crowd.
“Everyone at my school was, like, shocked that this place even existed,” I told Georgia while we were taking a break from our unpacking, lounging in the common area. “All my friends were going to Yale or Harvard. One of the kids in my class is going to NYU for film; someone else is going to UC Berkeley. Big-name schools, precious networking opportunities.” I rolled my eyes.
“Well, you’re already doing pretty well on the networking,” Gigi said with a little grin, raising an eyebrow. I rolled my eyes. “What? Do you have a boyfriend?”
I shook my head. “I haven’t dated anyone in months.” I shrugged. Georgia looked at me in shock.
“Why the hell not? You’re hot as hell, and you’re smart and funny. Obviously Johnny even thinks so.” I blushed and shook my head.
“At best, he thought I was some dumb, cute freshie. What about you?” Georgia shrugged and looked at her hands.
“I had a boyfriend, but I broke up with him like…a month ago.” She shrugged again and sighed. “I miss the big dummy, of course.”
“Why did you break up with him, then?” I shook my head at her. “I mean obviously you liked him a lot.” Gigi laughed.
“Oh God, yeah—I mean, he was my first, so of course I liked him. But he’s going off to school in another state, and we were never going to be able to see each other, at least not until break…” she shifted on the couch and smiled. “I just decided that it didn’t make sense to try and play some long-distance relationship game, and it would be better for both of us if we were both free. He can do his thing, and I can do mine. Besides, if it’s meant to be, we’ll end up together, and if it’s not, why put myself through all that heartache for no reason?” I had to admit that it made sense; if I’d had a boyfriend when I’d left for college, I’d probably have broken up with him, too.
“Yeah, if you’re really that far apart, there’s no reason to drag it all out.” Georgia nodded, and we were both quiet for a few minutes.
“So why the hell don’t you have a boyfriend?” She raised an eyebrow, grinning at me. “Not that it isn’t a good thing, but—I mean, is it just that you don’t want one or…” I laughed.
“No, I’m definitely into guys and definitely into the idea of dating.” I pressed my lips together, remembering the reason I wasn’t dating—and the reason that I was so glad to be at college. “My mom’s kind of a snob,” I said. “My dad, too. Though usually he’s not quite as bad as Mom is.” Georgia tilted her head to the side, silently asking me to elaborate. “She was always after me to date these like, country club boys—the kids of the families she and Dad hang out with every weekend. People with money, you know? I kind of got sick of all the pressure they were putting on me and just decided that I wasn’t going to date until I was away from them. So here I am.” I shrugged and grinned.
“Here you are, getting flirted with by Johnny Steel.” Georgia lowered her voice dramatically when she said the name. Already, the RA’s comment in the orientation meeting was a joke between us, and the fact that we had both met the source of the comment made it even funnier.
“Ah, I’ll probably never see him again. You saw how many people there were in the dining hall. What are the odds I’m going to end up running into him again? Not that great.” We continued talking about our classes and everything we’d seen on campus, moving the furniture around and arranging things the way we wanted them, installing Gigi’s TV on the entertainment center, and doing all the little things that make a room at least a little bit like home.
We finally started to get exhausted; I knew the different excitements of the day had drained me totally, and that was without moving furniture
around and unpacking. Georgia said goodnight, and I closed the door to my bedroom, smiling to myself. It had been a good first day on campus, all things considered. I was incredibly lucky that my roommate wasn’t some wealthy snob or some airhead I couldn’t stand to be around. Eventually, I’d know my way around campus and would get used to being surrounded by so many people all the time.
I stripped out of my clothes and crawled into bed without even bothering to change into pajamas. I smirked to myself as I reached over to turn off the light in the room, thinking that already I had so much more freedom than I was used to having. At home, I would never have thought of sleeping naked. My mom had a tendency to open the door right after knocking, without even waiting to hear me say “come in.” I definitely didn’t want to have the awkward moment of her seeing me naked—I knew she would freak. But here in the dorms, with my door safely locked behind me, in the dark, it didn’t matter. No one was going to just barge into my room.
My bed was so comfortable that I should have fallen right to sleep; instead I found my hands wandering over my naked body under the covers, feeling myself up. It felt so weird, and yet so comfortable. As I played with my breasts a little, jiggling them under the covers before I let my hands wander a little lower, I couldn’t help thinking of Johnny. I knew I shouldn’t. After all, like I’d told Gigi, there was practically no chance that anything would ever happen with him—I probably wouldn’t even ever see him on campus. He was an upperclassman, in totally different classes from mine, and on a team. But I couldn’t stop myself remembering his sweet-looking, gorgeous face. I remembered the sight of his hands, too—big, strong hands. I shivered, biting my bottom lip while I thought about what it would feel like for him to touch me with those big hands, cupping my breasts, moving down between my legs, caressing me everywhere. I shook my head at myself, knowing I was being ridiculous, but as I started to drop off to sleep, it was impossible not to think about the look in his eyes when he’d introduced himself, the way he’d laughed to his friends before that, the way he smiled at me, and how good it probably would feel to have him right there with me.