Read The Party Boy's Guide to Dating a Geek (Clumsy Cupids) Online
Authors: Xara X. Piper;Xanakas Vaughn
for everyone else, of course. Your geek will probably
eschew the manual in favor of trial and error. He will
make mistakes and possibly even crash the system before
he's through. Be patient with him as he absorbs the
information you are providing him.
2.1
No new messages.
Ash sighed, exited out of the
browser on his laptop, and shut the screen with a
quiet snap. Same as the last three times he'd
checked. It had been days since he'd tried to send
Fee a message through the RTFS blog. After some
searching, he'd found out it stood for "Read the
Fucking Source." The guidebook had worded it a
little differently, but the interpretation was the
same. Ash thought it was kind of hilarious,
especially when he considered how rarely anyone
he knew actually read directions. Most of his
friends were in the "experiment first, ask questions
later" camp.
Despite Ash's message expressing interest in the
blog and concern about whether or not Fee's hand
had healed up properly, there hadn't been any kind
of contact from Fee—not a message, a text, a
phone call. Ash was starting to feel desperate, and
that wasn't something he was used to feeling. Why
were things so easy with everyone else? He'd
never had to work so hard to get someone to go out
on a date before. Hell, getting people into bed or a
bathroom stall for a quick one-off was easier than
trying to get Fee to talk to him. It was baffling.
Could it be that maybe Ash suffered from a
misguided sense of vanity? Was it possible he
wasn't as hot as he thought he was? Ash had
always considered himself well above average in
the looks department. He'd rarely gotten turned
down in his life, and only then by people who
were already involved with someone else and
actually gave a crap about faithfulness and
monogamy. In the club scene where he spent most
of his free time, people were judged on their looks
first. Everything else was secondary. Things like
personalities
and
shared
interests
were
afterthoughts in the face a hot guy with a tight body
offering a fun time with no strings attached.
Judging by Fee's interests and the way he'd
turned Ash down without any real hesitation, Ash
got the feeling Fee wasn't an anonymous fun kind
of guy. What made the whole thing puzzling was
that Ash actually cared enough to want to find out
what kind of guy Fee really was. Fee had to be one
of the best looking men Ash had ever seen in
person, if not
the
best, and Ash could admit a lot
of his attraction was purely, basely physical, but
there was more to it than that. Fee intrigued Ash
for several reasons. Ash knew how to tell when
another man was interested in him—years of
experience had taught him that—and in the very
least, he knew that Fee found him attractive. So
why the refusal? Had Jackson or Marisol told Fee
about Ash's rep? It was the only explanation that
made sense to Ash. Otherwise, why fight the
attraction? It wasn't as if Ash had asked the guy to
move in. Dinner, drinks, maybe some dancing.
Totally casual, nothing major. If they didn't like
each other by the end of the night, they never had to
see each other again. All he wanted was a chance.
But how to get it?
Ash eyed his laptop contemplatively. The RTFS
book club had a meeting coming up toward the end
of the week, on Thursday night, one of Ash's rare
evenings off. They would be discussing some new
Star Wars
hardcover. Ash couldn't remember the
exact title, but the website had said the discussion
would be led by Fee N. and some guy named
Donovan S. If Ash read the book and showed up at
that meeting, well, Fee could hardly ignore him.
Then afterward, maybe Ash would be able to catch
Fee alone and strike up a more private
conversation, possibly even ask Fee if he wanted
to go grab some coffee. Maybe if it seemed
impromptu instead of like a formal date, Fee
would be more likely to agree. It was worth a shot.
Ash flipped the laptop open and signed in again.
He'd get the title, and then he had some shopping to
do. First stop? The bookstore.
2.2
Well, this is awkward.
Ash had never felt more out of place in his life.
People were eyeing him as if he were some kind of
strange fungus they'd found growing in the bottom
drawer of their refrigerator—but that was nothing
compared to the way Fee had looked at him when
he'd first walked into the meeting room. That look
had been pure annoyance followed by a healthy
serving of exasperation and told Ash quite clearly
that his attentions were neither welcome nor
appreciated. It wasn't that Marisol hadn't given Fee
his number, or that Fee hadn't gotten his message
from the website. He'd gotten both and chosen to
ignore them. Ash had been intentionally snubbed,
for the first time ever, and the blow to his ego hurt
more than he'd thought it would. It also made him
even more determined. He wasn't giving up, not
that easily, not until Fee agreed to at least one date.
Ash couldn't understand the animosity and
strange looks coming from the others, though.
Maybe he was a little overdressed, sure, but it
wasn't like he'd shown up in his tight, flashy club
gear with every tat on display. He'd done a bit of
research and given himself a geek-chic makeover.
Instead of his usual skinny jeans, he'd gone for
slim-fitting black slacks. He'd paired those with
his most conservative shoes (plain, black Doc
Martens), a deep blue button-up that almost exactly
matched his eyes, and a sharp, black vest that
emphasized his toned chest and narrow waist. Add
to that a pair of dark-rimmed costume glasses (not
unlike the pair Fee wore, although Ash knew Fee's
were probably real) and a black leather messenger
bag, and he thought he looked a bit like a hip,
young professor. Scholarly, but not entirely
without fashion sense. He'd even gone as far as
changing up his hair a bit, trading his typical,
stylized disarray for something sleek and preppy
with carefully side-swept bangs.
If any of his friends had seen him this way, Ash
was sure they would have done a double-take and
then laughed their asses off. He didn't look bad.
Just … different. And it would've taken them less
than a second to figure out he'd dressed to impress
someone. Not that it had done him any good.
Beyond that first annoyed glance, Fee hadn't even
looked in his direction. He'd stayed on the
opposite end of the meeting room, locked in a
conversation with a tall, gangly blond wearing a
shirt that read "Han Shot First," which Ash didn't
get at all, while Ash lingered near the snack table,
his outfit making him feel embarrassingly
conspicuous in the sea of grubby jeans and faded
graphic T-shirts.
From what Ash remembered reading on the
blog, the RTFS book club met at this same location
every month, the second floor of a local used
bookstore/coffee shop called Grounds For
Thought. Ash had never been there before, but he
liked the place. It had a mellow, friendly vibe,
with high, haphazardly organized shelves, a
smattering of comfy chairs and cushions scattered
throughout, and a small café area that had been
entirely packed when Ash first walked in.
The signs, chalkboard menu, and bookshelf tags
had been drawn by someone with a decent artistic
hand, which added to the laid-back, homey
atmosphere. Ash could have taken those signs from
cute to awesome and helped them come up with a
really memorable logo as well, but he wasn't there
as an artist. He was there trying to win over a guy
who had yet to give him the time of day. It was
kind of pathetic when he thought about it, but he'd
already come so far. At this point, it was a matter
of pride to see the whole thing through.
"Okay, everyone," Fee announced from the front
of the room, jarring Ash out of his musings. "I think
we're all here. Let's get started."
Ash moved toward the table and sat down at the
far end. A chubby girl with a mop of ginger curls
and an overabundance of freckles plopped into the
chair next to his with a muttered "hey." Ash
returned her greeting with a bit more enthusiasm
and got a small smile for his efforts. He smiled
back and started digging in his messenger bag for
the book he'd purchased earlier in the week while
casting a surreptitious glance in Fee's direction.
Fee had settled in a seat about midway down the
table and the gangly blond he'd been talking to had
taken the seat on Fee's right. Ash wondered briefly
if the blond was the "Donovan S." mentioned on
the blog. He didn't want to consider any other
possibility, like how maybe the guy was actually
Fee's boyfriend, not just his book club co-captain.
Blondie was sitting pretty close, after all, and
seemed to be leaning toward Fee in the familiar
way of a close friend or maybe even a lover. The
thought made Ash's stomach churn. But if Fee was
dating someone, surely he would have just said so
that first day, or told Marisol to pass on that little
bit of info so Ash wouldn't contact him again,
right?
Ash liked to think so. He wasn't one to push
once the boundaries of a relationship were drawn.
If Fee had said he had a boyfriend, Ash would
have backed off, but he had a feeling that Fee
wouldn't be the type to hide something like that
when he was being approached by another guy.
No. If Fee had a boyfriend, Ash was fairly sure
he would have said so the day Ash asked him out.
Unless Fee and Blondie had hooked up since then,
Ash figured they were probably just friends. Of
course, there was only one way for Ash to find out
for sure, and that was to continue with his plan.
Ash tried to pay attention when the blond started
talking—he
was
Donovan, Ash realized after a
couple minutes—but it wasn't easy. His gaze kept
straying to Fee and occasionally he caught Fee
looking back.
Yeah, no way is Donovan his
boyfriend. Not when he's checking me out with
the guy sitting right next to him.
He allowed himself a smile, ignoring the
discussion going on around him until a question
was directed at him—by Fee, who along with the
rest of the group, was staring right at him
expectantly.
Ash cleared his throat and sat up a bit straighter.
"I'm sorry, I missed that."
Fee's eyebrows arched above the frames of his
black glasses. "Many reviewers in the
Star Wars
fandom have stated that
Darth Plagueis
could be
seen as a prequel to
The Phantom Menace
, even
though an official prequel already exists. What do
you think about its place in the Expanded
Universe?"
Say what?
Ash blinked. Now would probably
be a bad time to admit he hadn't been able to read
the entire book, right? He'd tried, honestly he had,
but he'd gotten confused only a few chapters in.
There were so many characters that didn't match up
with the ones he knew in his head. Where was
Luke? Leia? Han Solo? He didn't have a clue who
Darth Plagueis was, or Darth Sidious for that
matter. Maybe he should have paid more attention
during the movies or watched them more than
once, but aside from the main characters, he
couldn't actually remember all that much. Sci-fi
had never been his thing.
"Um," Ash eventually forced out. "I—I, um—"
"Personally," the curly-haired girl beside him
interrupted, "I'd never had much interest in the
story of Palpatine or his master, but I really
enjoyed the book. It seems like every new Sith
master had his own vision of the Sith and the dark
side of the Force. I think with how strong a