Read The Party Boy's Guide to Dating a Geek (Clumsy Cupids) Online
Authors: Xara X. Piper;Xanakas Vaughn
were just watching the Lions get slaughtered. As
usual."
Ash had absolutely zero interest in football. In
fact, if it were possible to have negative interest in
something, that would be the way he felt about
football and most sports in general. Still, with Fee
ignoring him and his hopes that Fee would show
up dwindling, he needed a distraction. At least his
brother and father would be entertaining as they
yelled at the TV screen.
After Ash popped into the kitchen to say hi to
Mari, he grabbed a beer and settled down on the
opposite end of the couch from Jack.
"Everything on schedule?" he whispered.
Jack took a quick peek over his shoulder to
make sure Mari wasn't around and nodded. "Yep.
Her parents and sister will be here for dinner.
They all know already."
Ash smiled to himself. Well, at least there was
one thing to look forward to, even if Fee didn't
show. He knew how much Jackson loved Mari,
and there was no way she'd refuse him. Ash was
excited to see her face. Mari could be a bit of a
hard ass, but he was betting there would be tears.
He was right.
When dinner had been cleared and they were all
sitting around the table, enjoying coffee along with
slices of the pies Carley had brought, Jackson
stood and announced he had a question for Mari.
Everyone hushed, and Mari stared at him wide-
eyed. Ash could tell the moment she figured out
what was coming. She gasped and covered her
mouth as Jackson walked over to her and got down
on one knee.
"Mari," he said, taking her left hand in his. "The
moment I met you, I knew my life would be forever
changed. My love for you snuck up on me in soft,
quiet moments, until one day I realized I could
never picture living my life with anyone else." He
paused to reach into his pocket, and Mari smiled
tearfully when he withdrew a black ring box. "I
love your strength. I love the way you give as good
as you get, the way you don't let me get away with
anything—ever."
A few people around the table laughed,
including Ash. He noticed his mom was already
crying and felt a little teary himself, overcome by
happiness for Jack and Mari, and pride in his
brother. Jack would do right by Mari. He wouldn't
fuck it up. Unlike Ash. He was pretty sure he'd
messed things up with Fee. Or maybe he and Fee
both had. Ash couldn't see any other reason for
Fee's not wanting to introduce Ash to his family, or
for his not being there sharing this moment with
Ash's family when Ash had all but begged him to
come.
Shame was the only thing Ash could think of,
and it made pain and humiliation burn in his gut.
As if sensing his sudden distraction, Carley
reached over and laid a hand on his thigh, bringing
Ash back to the present. He heard Mari say yes
and realized with a twinge of remorse that he'd
missed the end of his brother's proposal. Ash
cursed under his breath and forcibly put his angst
aside. Fee wasn't there, and that was his choice.
No sense worrying about it when he should have
been focused on his family and his brother, who
looked so thrilled it made Ash's chest ache.
He got up and went to congratulate Jack and hug
his future sister-in-law. Right then, that was the
most important thing. All other thoughts could
wait.
13.4
Ash was silent on the way home, and luckily,
Carley let him be, only reaching out to hold Ash's
hand as they rode the train together. It was still
somewhat early in the evening, as they had plans to
go shopping with Mari at some ungodly hour the
next day, but Ash doubted he would sleep, even if
he tried. How could he when every second that
passed led him further into the certainty that he and
Fee were over?
"You want to talk?" Carley asked once they'd
reached the apartment and put their coats and
leftovers away. "Or we could watch a movie."
Ash shook his head. "Not in the mood. I'm going
to try to go to sleep. Come get me half an hour
before you want to leave, okay?"
Carley pulled him into a quick hug and kissed
his cheek. "Okay, hon. You're going to hear from
him. I'm sure you will."
Ash returned the embrace and just clung to
Carley for a moment. "Thanks. Sorry for being a
drag the last few days."
"Don't worry about it. Believe me, I get it. I
know I kind of misjudged him at first, but Fee's a
great guy. Whatever is going on, I want you two to
work it out. You're good for each other."
Ash drew back and forced a shaky smile to his
mouth. "Good night."
"Night."
He left Carley in the living room and vanished
into his bedroom, where he flopped on the bed
without bothering to undress. Ash checked his
phone one last time, but still nothing—not an
email, voicemail, a text. It was like the beginning
of their relationship all over again.
Fitting, Ash guessed. He buried his head under
the pillows and dropped his cell over the edge of
the mattress.
It's going to be a long fucking night.
Chapter Fourteen
SYSTEM RECOVERY
How’s it going? Are you living happily ever after with
your geek, or has it all crashed? If you’ve hit a snag,
you're going to have to work together to recover your
systems. As long as you’re there with him and accepting
him for the lovable geek he is, there is no reason to
forfeit your hard work. Computer networks rely on
redundancy and backups. So should your relationship.
Keep reminding him you’re there for him and back that
up with your actions. Any glitch can be turned from a bug
into a feature.
14.1
It was still dark out when Carley dragged Ash
out of the apartment. Mari would be joining them
for their traditional after-Thanksgiving sale shop-
a-thon that year. Freshly engaged, Mari was
looking forward to browsing wedding dresses, and
Carley was bouncing with excitement for her. But
after being stood up by Fee, Ash just couldn't share
their happiness. They stopped for breakfast shortly
after dawn, but Ash wasn't hungry. He sipped his
coffee while Carley and Mari planned the second
half of their expedition.
"Why are you trying to find a dress already?"
Ash asked. Jack and Mari hadn't been engaged
even twenty-four hours yet, so her rush to find a
dress was a little puzzling.
"We're looking at a February or March
wedding."
"That
soon?
You
don't
have
another
announcement to make, do you?" Ash was looking
forward to becoming an uncle, but he doubted
Mari would have said yes to Jack's proposal
simply because she was expecting.
Mari chuckled. "No, but you know Jack. Spring
training starts at the end of March, then it's
baseball season, and that goes straight into football
season. That leaves February or March if I don't
want to compete with the Cubs or the Bears for
every anniversary."
"He does get a little obsessed sometimes. Him
and Dad." Ash shook his head. He grew up
watching Jack and their father huddled in front of
the TV, cheering their teams on. "He is better than
he used to be."
"That's true, but still. Planning around it isn't that
big of a deal. So we have it in a few months, or we
wait a year."
"Then let's go get you a dress," Carley said with
a wide smile. He guided them from store to store
until Ash was ready to scream. He was thrilled for
Mari, but he couldn't hide his frustration over what
was going on between him and Fee. Or not going
on, if that was what Fee had decided.
"Why don't we break for lunch?" Carley said
after the fourth store. "Leroy's is around the
corner."
"Sounds great," Mari said.
Ash followed them to their booth, and Mari and
Carley sat down on either side of him. They were
taking pity on him, he knew, and he appreciated
them all the more for it.
"Sorry I'm such a downer today."
"Yes, you are completely insufferable," Carley
said.
"Intolerable." Mari sniffed, smoothed her hair
down, and turned her nose up before giggling.
Ash sighed, and Carley cut him off before he
could apologize again. "Have you called him?"
"No answer. Goes to voicemail." The fact that
Fee was avoiding him killed Ash. Even if he was
blowing Ash off, Fee could at least let him know
why.
"Jack and I were talking last night," Mari said
after their drinks arrived.
"I would think you talk about something every
night," Ash replied. Mari shot him a look and Ash
covered his smile by taking a sip of coffee. "Sorry.
You were saying?"
Mari bit her bottom lip and glanced at her cup.
"Well, you know that we're already settled in our
apartment."
"Yeah?" It seemed like forever ago Ash had
helped them move, lugging boxes all day long. The
day he met Fee. His heart lurched when he thought
of the way Fee had walked into his life, so far out
of his reach, it wasn't funny. And now Fee was
slipping away from him.
"Since we don't really need anything, we were
thinking of not registering anywhere."
"But that's half the fun of a wedding," Carley
said. "You should see the brides that come into our
shop and scan everything on the shelves. Mostly
crap they never needed or will ever use. And
people buy it for them." He shook his head.
"That's the point. Why should people buy us a
new set of dishes when our cabinets are already
full of stuff?"
"That makes sense," Ash said. His mind was
still on losing Fee.
"So we were thinking of encouraging people to
make a donation instead."
"To what?" Carley asked.
Mari plucked at her napkin and looked from
Carley to Ash. "Equality Illinois."
"I think that's a great idea." Ash reached over to
squeeze her hand.
Carley leaned across the table to give Mari a
hug. "Yeah. That's really cool of you guys."
She shrugged and looked at Ash. "We know how
you and Fee feel about each other. It doesn't seem
fair that it's all right for us to marry, but not you
guys."
Ash snorted and jabbed his spoon into his cup.
"It's not like my feelings matter."
"What?" Mari asked.
"He's ashamed of me."
"Ash, that's a crock of shit and you know it,"
Carley said.
"He couldn't even be bothered to show up last
night. What does that tell you?" Ash stirred his
coffee forcefully, making it splash over the rim and
onto his hand.
"Why don't you let him tell you what it means?"
Mari asked.
"Because I know what it means. It means I'm
getting dumped."
Mari put her hand on top of Ash's and squeezed.
"You know that's not true. He's crazy about you."
"Sure he is." Ash rolled his eyes. He really had
thought Fee was as head over heels for him as he
was for Fee, but that didn't seem to be true. After
Halloween, Ash thought he had something special.
What his parents had, what Jack had found with
Mari. His eyes burned and his heart ached, but he
wasn't going to lose it there at Leroy's. He shook it
off. "Anyway. Where to next?"
"We're going shopping, and you're going to
Fee's," Mari said.
"I don't think so. If he wants to break up with
me, he's going to have to come find me."
"Dumbass," Carley said.
"What?"
"I'm sorry, was that out loud?" Carley asked,
pretending to be innocent. "I said you are a
dumbass."
"Look, he didn't want to introduce me to his
parents. Which, by the way, I've already met his
mother," Ash pointed out. "He's embarrassed to be
seen with me. Then he never showed up yesterday,
and he knew it was a big deal to me." Ash leaned