Misfits Like Us (Like Us #11) Read Online Krista Ritchie, Becca Ritchie

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary, Romance Tags Authors: , Series: Like Us Series by Krista Ritchie
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Total pages in book: 135
Estimated words: 132933 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 665(@200wpm)___ 532(@250wpm)___ 443(@300wpm)
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Right now, nothing really does.

I’m about a month away from turning nineteen. College-aged. I’ve already jumped off the precipice of high school, but I haven’t touched the ground yet. I’m in the air.

Floating.

Wondering if I’ll ever fly. I thought you find your wings in high school. Once you graduate, you soar right into everything you’re meant to do. At first, I figured maybe I was a high school outlier. The screw up who’d never achieve what everyone else does.

Either I am a screw up or…

You don’t find your wings in high school.

It’s sad to think that maybe I might not find them at all.

My mom says this is the time to try new things. To figure myself out. That it’s okay to plummet to the ground and pick myself back up. I can’t be afraid of falling, even if that’s what people expect Hales to do: fall and fail. The inverse is that I just keep floating along.

I listened to my mom.

And I tried out Andrew Umbers. (Okay, I’m not positive this was her exact advice, but I just rolled along with it.)

Andrew seemed sweet at first. He had a soft smile, a gentleness whenever his fingers grazed mine, and he loved sci-fi like me. When other people were around us, that was the trouble.

He became standoffish. He’d cast side-eyes if I replied to his friend with a sing-song voice. Flush would creep up his neck. He’d say I looked hotter without makeup, but that was only when I wore glitter.

He’d remind me that only kids draw on themselves with marker.

When I swung my arms too dramatically while I walked, he told me I was cuter if I just kept them at my sides.

I could tell he was embarrassed by me. By so much of my outward and less of my inward. I thought: well, that’s an easy fix.

So I tried out being a new me. New clothes. New hair. New style. New demeanor.

It was okay for a little bit. It made Andrew happy, and I think that’s what a girlfriend is supposed to do for her boyfriend. Make him happy. But his happiness never really felt big enough to fill mine.

Maybe I’m just not girlfriend material.

It’s what I’ve concluded in my short time as someone’s girlfriend.

One-night stands. That’s where my heart lies now. It’s nice having sex without the pressure to be the best girlfriend. To say the right things all the time. To make someone happy. I’m not even sure I can probably do that correctly. Sex, I think I can do alright. At least, I haven’t had complaints yet.

Not that I give them a survey to fill out at the end of a fuck.

Whoaaaa, maybe that’s an idea…

Biting the end of my gel pen, I try to shake away that thought and take notes as Professor Morton rattles on. He’s inside my computer. Not literally, obviously. But sometimes I like to pretend that my professor was hit with Ant-Man’s red Pym Particles and now he’s about two inches tall. I pretend that this class isn’t held over Zoom where fifty other students watch him on their own laptops at home. I pretend that Professor Morton is just tiny and giving me an exclusive live lecture.

My imagination makes it more interesting at least.

Balding with small spectacles, Professor Morton stands beside a blank whiteboard that he rarely uses. “Next class there might be a pop quiz.” He makes a show of winking. “So please read through Life on the Jovian Moons by Monday.”

I flip open my Life in the Universe textbook and put a star-shaped sticky note beside the chapter on Jovian Moons. Last year, when I turned eighteen, my mom and dad asked what I wanted to do after graduation.

I was just happy I graduated high school and didn’t flunk out.

My older brother is the one who paved the way for grand, ambitious things. Harvard. CEO of a whole charity that he started. And yes, he did drop out of Harvard, but Moffy still became legendary despite saying no to a prestigious school—and well, it’s a lot to live up to.

People online prophesize that all of us Hale children are destined to be fuck-ups, and while my brother has blasted those low expectations away, I figure I’m going to fall into them like an epic face-plant.

I know my parents will say it’s okay. My mom will remind me to pick myself up after I’ve fallen, and I’ve been so used to that all my life. Being teased, ridiculed—you learn to dust your knees and stand up again. I didn’t think life in my early twenties would consist of more falling.

More failing.

Maybe that’s why floating sounds better. Even if it is sad.

So when my mom and dad asked what I wanted to do after graduation, I simply said, “Can I just wing it?”


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