

I enjoyed both their personal struggles as well, and thought it was done well without being overly angsty. I loved their banter, and that their friendship was very much core to their romantic relationship.

I loved their romance, not only was it filled with heat but humor as well. Them reuniting years later and them both still feeling that pull to the other showed how strong that connection was. I really loved the connection Peyton and Levi felt for eachother from the beginning of their somewhat awkward foray into their first sexual experience with someone of the same gender, and how each tried to play it off as not being a big deal to try and basically look cool in front of the other. I’m hoping it can be with him, but everything I’ve heard around campus points to Peyton not having the same life-changing revelation I did.Īnd if that’s the case, did I just move across the country for a straight guy? We said that high school didn’t mean anything, but the truth is, that night made me realize who I truly am, and since then, I’ve been trying to find that sense of freedom again. I haven’t had to think about him for four years, but now I can’t get him out of my head.Ĭoming to Franklin University for grad school to follow a boy I hooked up with once is the stupidest thing I could have done. I’m happy to accept that until he turns up in California.

And while it was fun, we agree that being with guys isn’t for either of us. The last place I thought I’d find my release is at Levi Vanderbilt’s graduation party. I usually thrive under pressure, but as senior year looms, it all gets too much, and I need an outlet. I’ve been destined to follow in my NFL-playing fathers’ footsteps since the day I was born. My whole life I’ve had the pressure of being Marcus Talon and Shane Miller’s football prodigy. If you never fooled around with someone of the same gender, did you even go to high school?
