Loving you is a losing game (ONC 2024)
  • Reads 397
  • Votes 98
  • Parts 20
  • Time 1h 41m
  • Reads 397
  • Votes 98
  • Parts 20
  • Time 1h 41m
Complete, First published Feb 02, 2024
Mature
Imogen thinks she may have found The One. For years she's been waiting for the right guy to come along. But now that he has, she's realised something about herself. Something that might ruin their relationship forever, she's Asexual. Most people don't even know what it means, so how will her  boyfriend understand?

Liam is a straight D student, his parents suck and he wants nothing more than to escape the family home. He thinks he's found the right one with Imogen, but he can tell she's hiding something. He just hopes it's not what he thinks it is. She wouldn't cheat on him, right?


Cover made by the wonderful @meha-k
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add Loving you is a losing game (ONC 2024) to your library and receive updates
or
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
The Riveting Lives of Russell and Sal cover
Whirlwind cover
Will The Moon Ever Hear The Stars? cover
I'm not me  cover
Evie's Job cover
What you wont do , someone else will . cover
Loving Alice cover
Mask of Celibacy cover
Be My Only One (Completed)(Lesbian) cover
two weeks cover

The Riveting Lives of Russell and Sal

42 parts Complete

[Newly edited and rewritten!] Russell is a virtuous goth with a Christian upbringing. Sal is a carefree slack-off who would rather work retail than go to college. It was hate at first sight. Until they were forced to partner up in class. After their true feelings surface, Sal learns just how different he is from Russell, and all seems hopeless. How can their relationship last, if Sal is asexual? And that's not their only problem. Surprisingly unpredictable, The Riveting Lives of Russell and Sal is about two social outcasts that become the most unlikely couple imaginable. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A/N: There is some foul language and adultish themes. Nothing that requires marking this as mature, but I feel it's worth noting anyway. Winner of the LGBT+ Wattys 2016 for Best Overall Gay Fiction. [Highest rank: #52.]