My Favorite Mistake

My Favorite Mistake by Chelsea M. Cameron Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: My Favorite Mistake by Chelsea M. Cameron Read Free Book Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
was broken, so I was pretty sure no one else was going to sit there. I pulled out my e-reader so I could finish the story that had made me late driving up yesterday. It was the latest in a paranormal series I'd gotten addicted to this summer. I was fully engrossed when someone tapped me on the shoulder.
    “Is this seat taken?”
    I had to blink a few times before my brain registered that Hunter was standing next to me and he was asking if he could sit next to me.
    “What are you doing here?”
    “Learning about human sexuality. Isn't that what you're here for?”
    I glanced down and then back up at him. Maybe he was a mirage. He smirked, clearly delighted.
    Nope.
    “You have got to be kidding me.”
    “Granted, I don't have much to learn, but I figured I could use my knowledge and get an easy A.” He slid by me and took the seat with the broken desk, setting his bag down by my feet.
    “You are not in this class.”
    “I am. You want to see my schedule? I'll prove it.”
    “Whatever,” I said, going back to my book and turning so that my back was as much toward him as I could make it in the small space.
    “You know, if you ever want to practice any of the techniques we're going to discuss, I'd be happy to be your study partner,” he said in a low voice. For some reason, his quiet voice made the proposition even more seductive. Not that I fell for it.
    “Screw you,” I said before I realized I'd walked right into that one.
    “I'd like to.”
    “I thought you didn't screw people you like.” I looked at him out of the corner of my eye. He stretched his arms over his head, his shirt riding up and showing just the tiniest bit of lean stomach. I snapped my eyes away quickly. It wasn’t like I hadn’t seen it the night before.
    “For you, Missy, I'd make an exception.”
    I glanced at my phone, but we still had at least fifteen more minutes until class started. The room was nearly full, and the chatter echoed in the acoustically tuned space.
    “I was thinking about making dinner tonight. You in?”
    What was wrong with him? Seriously, he had to be bipolar. Or he just really, really liked messing with me. Or maybe it was a little of both. I shouldn't respond.
    “What are you making?”
    “You tell me what you like and I'll make it.” His face was set in a smile, but it was different than his cocky smirk. This was more genuine. The smile you'd give a friend if you hadn't seen them in a while. Open, honest.
    “You'd really make what I wanted?”
    “Why not?”
    There had to be a catch.
    “You made me pay for a song, what do I have to do for dinner?”
    “Sit next to me while we eat.”
    “That's it?” That couldn't be it.
    “That's it,” he said, opening his hands.
    I narrowed my eyes, trying to root out the catch I knew was there. He just looked at me innocently, which made me want to laugh. I was interrupted by a teaching assistant shoving a stack of syllabi in my hands and telling me to pass them down. I took one and handed the stack to Hunter. Our hands brushed briefly, and I pulled away as fast as I could, grabbing my notebook and writing the date neatly in the corner.
    Our teacher was a woman with gray hair, who wore a long purple, gauzy top and matching purple pants. She reminded me of someone who had been a hippie and had never really gotten over it. There were a lot of those at UMaine.
    She called us to order as the TAs collected the last of the extra syllabi. There were four TAs for such a large class.
    Marjorie, she introduced herself as, got her Powerpoint up and running, and took us through her extensive lesson plan, including her personal history and educational credentials, the papers she'd published and the degrees she held. For someone who looked airy fairy, she certainly had a lot of degrees and accolades. I'd heard nothing but amazing things from other people who had taken the class and I had to admit the subject matter interested me. How could it not? Sex was interesting.
    “I'll bet

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