Alphas Like Us Read Online Krista Ritchie, Becca Ritchie (Like Us #3)

Categories Genre: Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: , Series: Like Us Series by Krista Ritchie
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Total pages in book: 149
Estimated words: 146548 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 733(@200wpm)___ 586(@250wpm)___ 488(@300wpm)
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I solidify. “Are you okay?” I ask immediately.

Luna doesn’t look like Luna. Her light brown hair is pulled into a pin-straight pony. No marker streaks, no neon green makeup or star stickers on her cheeks. Black mascaraed lashes shade her amber eyes, and I realize she removed her earrings and tongue piercing.

She’s wearing a pink sundress—Jesus, I’ve never seen my sister wear a pink sundress.

“Uh-huh,” Luna nods, and I step onto the third-floor landing where she stands. It’s a small space before the stairs drop.

Farrow leans his shoulder on the doorframe and cracks the door behind him. Shutting out her view of our bedroom.

Our bedroom.

Never gets old.

I’d almost-maybe smile but I’m dealing with my eighteen-year-old sister who’s been body-snatched. Possibly by aliens. Maybe this is a bizarre role-playing theater thing—I don’t know.

I’m concerned. In case you weren’t aware.

“Hi, Farrow.” Luna throws up a hand in greeting.

“Hey, Luna.” Farrow skims her in a quick sweep, brows spiking. “What’s with the new look?”

Luna tugs at the hem of her dress like it’s uncomfortable. “Just…you know, thought I’d try something out.” She shrugs; a soft smile appearing as she looks at our unkempt hair and clothes. “Sorry to disturb your date night.”

Farrow smiles wide and loosely crosses his arms.

“It’s okay,” I tell my sister, just happy she’s not in serious trouble. “What do you need?”

Luna fixes the spaghetti strap of her dress. “A condom.”

I process. At a snail’s pace. My brain has short-circuited.

Farrow is turned towards me, full-on entertained. Wanting to see how I’ll handle this.

I prepare for a lot of situations. But I can honestly say I did not prepare for my sister to ask me for a condom. That’s on me. She’s living with me now, and I should’ve known. Because she’s not a little kid anymore, and when I left home, she was only fourteen. Four years later, and yeah, things change.

People change.

I’ve been starting to realize that.

Just as I go to respond, she adds, “I know that you know that I have a boyfriend.”

“You know?” My brows furrow. Farrow told me what security discussed, and I wanted to wait for Luna to tell me herself.

“Quinn felt guilty and spilled everything he said to SFO,” she explains. “I didn’t care that he said anything…except I really don’t want Mom and Dad to know until me and Andrew are serious, serious. We’re still in that middle phase, you know?”

I don’t know about middle phases.

I don’t know what the fuck that means.

Farrow nods. “Make sure you’re on the same page with this guy. Middle phases can be tricky.”

Luna smiles. “Yeah, I will.”

I glance at Farrow. I’m glad he has experience in this and can help my sister when I can’t. I don’t know…it feels right. Like this is how life is supposed to be.

“Andrew’s coming over?” I ask Luna. “Or is he already here?”

“He’s coming here in a bit.” She bobs her head. “So? Condom?”

I adjust my sling on my bare chest, the material cutting into my shoulder. “Didn’t Mom take you to get birth control?”

“I want to be extra prepared.” She looks between us. “I don’t want another scare, okay?”

Farrow nods. “Fair enough.” He tips his head to me. “We don’t have any condoms that this guy can use.” That realization dawns on me, too.

Luna scrunches her brows. “Why not?”

“JANE!” I call down the stairwell.

Farrow taps the doorframe, considering withholding the truth, but he tells her honestly, “The probability that this guy is the same size as us is low. And you’re not going to want the condom to slip off.”

“Aren’t there just three condom sizes?” Luna asks, and as Jane ascends the stairs in a purple tutu and knit sweater, cupping a mug of coffee, my sister repeats the question, “Jane, aren’t there just three condom sizes?”

Janie smiles brightly at me like I’m dealing with the most curious, intriguing familial dilemma that’s occurred in the past 24 hours. We would both prefer a condom crisis over any of our siblings or cousins being emotionally or physically hurt.

“Ma soeur a besoin d'un préservatif,” I say to Jane. “Le jour est venu.” My sister needs a condom. The day has come.

Three stairs below, Jane props her hip on the wall. “Ils grandissent si vite.” They grow up so fast.

We’re the oldest of these families, and everyone just seems young to us. I can’t change that.

Jane answers my sister in a breezy voice. “There’s a great and terrible variety, but the main sizes are small, regular, and large. How can I help…?” She trails off, smile fading at Luna’s odd appearance. But Jane tries not to draw attention to it.

Luna steps down a stair. “I need one.”

“More than one,” I tell Jane. “Her boyfriend is coming over.”

“I have every size,” Jane notes, sipping her coffee. “I’ll give you all of them.”

All of them? I know why, and my face falls. “Janie.”


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