Everything Mark Evans owned fit in a 2016 Honda Civic. His ex-wife got the house, the furniture, and the narrative that Mark was "reliable but not exciting." He got eleven boxes of history books and a rental room in a stranger's duplex.
Mark expects his new roommate to be a passing acquaintance. He doesn't expect Theo Lane. Theo is a pragmatic, broad-shouldered landscaper who works until his hands blister just to forget his own recent, bruising divorce. Theo's ex claimed he was emotionally unavailable; Mark's ex claimed he wasn't enough. They are two men in their late thirties trying to rebuild from the wreckage, and they agree to a strictly functional, perfectly boundaried living arrangement.
But functional quickly dissolves into something else. It starts with shared pour-over coffee in the pre-dawn quiet. Then it's homemade dinners, shared laughter over terrible action movies, and a comfortable silence that feels safe instead of empty. For Mark, an anxious overthinker who has spent years shrinking himself to fit into other people's lives, Theo's steady, grounded presence is a revelation. For Theo, who is terrified of letting someone in only to be told he's loving them wrong, Mark's careful, devastating attention is an undeniable pull.
As the summer heat builds, the walls between themāboth literal and emotionalābegin to thin. A thunderstorm, a power outage, and a single, lingering touch on the couch push them to the edge of a line they swore they wouldn't cross.
But crossing it might be the only way to finally find home.
Room for Something Real is a heartfelt, slow-burn, roommates-to-lovers contemporary MM romance featuring post-divorce healing, domestic intimacy, a very opinionated cat named Basil, and a guaranteed happily ever after.
Everything Mark Evans owned fit in a 2016 Honda Civic. His ex-wife got the house, the furniture, and the narrative that Mark was "reliable but not exciting." He got eleven boxes of history books and a rental room in a stranger's duplex.
Mark expects his new roommate to be a passing acquaintance. He doesn't expect Theo Lane. Theo is a pragmatic, broad-shouldered landscaper who works until his hands blister just to forget his own recent, bruising divorce. Theo's ex claimed he was emotionally unavailable; Mark's ex claimed he wasn't enough. They are two men in their late thirties trying to rebuild from the wreckage, and they agree to a strictly functional, perfectly boundaried living arrangement.
But functional quickly dissolves into something else. It starts with shared pour-over coffee in the pre-dawn quiet. Then it's homemade dinners, shared laughter over terrible action movies, and a comfortable silence that feels safe instead of empty. For Mark, an anxious overthinker who has spent years shrinking himself to fit into other people's lives, Theo's steady, grounded presence is a revelation. For Theo, who is terrified of letting someone in only to be told he's loving them wrong, Mark's careful, devastating attention is an undeniable pull.
As the summer heat builds, the walls between themāboth literal and emotionalābegin to thin. A thunderstorm, a power outage, and a single, lingering touch on the couch push them to the edge of a line they swore they wouldn't cross.
But crossing it might be the only way to finally find home.
Room for Something Real is a heartfelt, slow-burn, roommates-to-lovers contemporary MM romance featuring post-divorce healing, domestic intimacy, a very opinionated cat named Basil, and a guaranteed happily ever after.