For Brothers Best Friend (piper Rayne) Epub — Download Falling

Instead, Jax looked from the screen to me, his expression softening into something unreadable. "Falling for the best friend, huh?" "It’s just fiction, Jax," I squeaked.

"I can't believe you're actually doing this," Sophie muttered, her eyes glued to the tablet screen.

The silence was deafening. I waited for the laughter. I waited for him to call my brother and make a joke out of it. Download Falling for Brothers Best Friend (Piper Rayne) epub

"Your brother says you’re hiding. What are you reading that’s so important?"

The truth was, Jax had been the star of my internal monologue since I was ten. He was the one who taught me how to throw a spiral, the one who stayed up late helping me with pre-calc, and the one who currently looked like he stepped off a runway and into a woodshop. I clicked. Download complete. Instead, Jax looked from the screen to me,

"Doing what? Downloading a book?" I shot back, trying—and failing—to keep my voice steady. My finger hovered over the "Download" button for Falling for My Brother’s Best Friend . It felt a little too on-the-nose, considering my brother’s best friend, Jax, was currently downstairs in our kitchen, probably raiding the fridge. "It’s research, Sophie. Pure research."

Jax didn't pull away. Instead, he took a seat on the edge of the mattress, his gaze fixed on her with an intensity that made the fictional romance on the screen feel pale in comparison. The conversation that followed wasn't about books or tropes, but about years of shared memories, hidden glances, and the terrifying possibility of changing a friendship into something permanent. It was a beginning that no digital file could fully capture, starting with a simple, honest conversation in the quiet of a late afternoon. The silence was deafening

Downstairs, the sound of a closing front door and the muffled shout of a brother announced a departure for a quick errand, leaving a sudden, heavy quiet in the house. Sophie had already slipped away moments ago, sensing the shift in the atmosphere.