Read The Party Boy's Guide to Dating a Geek (Clumsy Cupids) Online
Authors: Xara X. Piper;Xanakas Vaughn
Fee's father?
Why am I even thinking about him?
Ash
groaned and shook his head, and then immediately
regretted the action, which sent a jagged bolt of
pain shooting through his head. The aftereffects left
him feeling queasy. He stumbled across the hall to
the bathroom, grateful no one was inside. In a
place with four bedrooms and only one bath, that
was a rare thing.
He reached into the shower to turn on the water
and then dug around in the medicine cabinet above
the sink for some ibuprofen. He swallowed them
with a few chugs of water straight from the tap and
stripped out of his briefs so he could drag himself
into the bathtub. The showerhead was on its
strongest setting. The hot, stinging spray felt good,
loosening his muscles. For a while he just stood
there, head bowed, letting it wash over him until
the throbbing in his temples eased enough for him
to think about something other than chopping his
head off to get rid of the ache.
Life would go on. Jack had been dating Mari for
a year without Ash running into Fee. It was
doubtful he'd see him very often, if at all. Out of
sight, out of mind. He'd get over this crush or
whatever it was soon enough. He still hadn't spent
that much time with Fee. It wasn't as if he was in
love. Desire would fade, especially when it wasn't
reciprocated, just like a fire would die without
some kind of fuel source. He had an apprenticeship
to worry about. He couldn't afford to be distracted
by some geek, no matter how hot said geek might
have been.
"Forget about him." Ash nodded to himself and
reached for his body wash. Like it or not, he'd
wasted enough time on Fee already.
4.2
"You are spacing today, dude."
Ash jerked at the sound of Ty's voice behind
him. "Huh?"
Ty sighed and moved around the counter so he
could prop himself on his elbows in front of Ash.
"Are you still angsting about what's-his-face?"
"No."
Maybe.
"Uh-huh."
Ash's cheeks warmed under Ty's knowing stare.
He'd told himself to forget Fee that very morning.
Only problem was the forgetting had yet to start.
"I'm cool. Don't worry about it."
"If you say so." Ty shrugged and wandered over
to one of the display cases where a girl was
flipping through some of the tattoo binders. Ash's
own portfolio sat among them, and he did need to
get some more tats done if he wanted to complete
his apprenticeship anytime soon, but right then, he
wasn't in any kind of mood to try and sell himself
or his talents. Despite that, he'd gotten to his feet
and was about to join Ty and the customer when
his cellphone buzzed from its place beside the cash
register.
It was only one long buzz, which meant an email
instead of the two that usually signaled a text
message. He grabbed the phone and pressed the
menu button, opening up the app for his email even
as he left the front desk and started toward the
display case where Ty and the girl stood talking.
The name on the message that popped up stopped
him in his tracks.
Felipe Navarro.
The subject line
just said "Hey," but the mere sight of Fee's name
kicked his pulse into overdrive.
Jesus, calm down,
it's just an email.
Nevertheless, he held his breath
in anticipation as it downloaded.
The message was simple, but seeing it made
Ash feel as if he'd just won the multi-million
dollar Powerball jackpot. Okay, maybe not that
good, but pretty damn close.
Ash-
I'm off tomorrow and planning to shop for a
new motherboard. If you were serious about
wanting a computer, I could help you find the
best system for your money. My number is below.
Give me a call if you want to meet up.
-Fee
Ash had the number memorized in about five
seconds flat. Sure, he hadn't really planned on
buying a new computer any time soon, but Fee
didn't know that. He could go and spend the day
with Fee without committing to anything. It was the
perfect non-date, which could potentially lead into
an
actual
date if he played his cards right.
Part of him wanted to rush to the backroom and
call Fee before Fee could make any other plans,
but then he figured that would reek of desperation,
and that wasn't exactly the impression he was
going for. The offer was open. Fee wouldn't
change his mind if Ash didn't reply for an hour or
two, or at least, Ash hoped not. Regardless, Tank
would be back from his lunch break soon and Ash
had work to do. Shoving the phone into his pocket,
Ash went to join Ty.
4.3
Ash paced his apartment—to the windows to
look down at the street, into the bathroom to check
his hair, to the kitchen for a sip of water. Fee was
late. Only ten minutes, but still, he didn't seem like
the type to be late. Was Ash being stood up?
Because
that—that
would
be
especially
humiliating, being stood up when it wasn't even a
date.
He checked his phone for what must have been
the seventh time. No texts, calls, or emails.
Dammit.
Ash thought their conversation had gone well the
day before. Fee said he'd planned on going to some
huge electronics store out in the western suburbs
and asked if Ash might want to meet him there. Ash
could get there using public transportation—if he
wanted to take two buses, a train, and then hike the
last three miles on foot. Fee had laughed when Ash
read the directions off his computer screen and
offered to come pick Ash up instead. They were
both headed to the same place, so why not? The
offer had surprised Ash, but he wasn't one to look
a gift horse in the mouth. They'd agreed to head out
at noon, but it was nearly 12:15 and there hadn't
been any word or sign of the black Jetta Fee had
said he would be driving.
Finally, just when Ash's stomach had started to
roil from nerves, his cellphone buzzed. It was Fee
saying he was double parked out front. Ash sucked
in a deep breath and released it slowly, trying to
calm himself down. Jesus Christ, he was all
sweaty already. He toyed with the idea of
switching into a different shirt, but then changed
his mind, grabbed his keys, and left the apartment.
"I'm so sorry," Fee said when Ash opened the
passenger door and slipped inside. The interior
was blessedly cool after the brutal heat of the short
walk from his building to the street. He hated days
like these, when it was so hot even being outside
for a few seconds felt like torture. "There was an
accident, and I got stuck in traffic. I would've
texted, but I don't like to text or be on the phone
when I drive. It doesn't seem worth the risk."
Ash nodded. "Yeah, I get that. No worries. It's
cool."
"Hopefully traffic isn't bad going toward the
'burbs," Fee said as he checked his mirrors and
pulled out onto the street. He looked gorgeous, as
per usual, with his hair falling in thick, dark curls
over his glasses and his thin, well-worn graphic
tee stretched tight across his torso. His jeans were
baggy, which was disappointing, but Ash could see
his ripped abdomen through the material of that T-
shirt, and God, he wanted nothing more than to
reach over and touch, slide his fingers under the
hem and feel the hard muscle beneath.
He looked away before Fee caught him staring.
Fee was already skittish around him. The last thing
he needed was to catch Ash ogling what would,
from Fee's angle, appear to be his crotch. Instead
he watched as the crowded city streets opened up
into the rambling sprawl of the suburbs.
Ash expected the drive to be full of awkward
silence, but the ease of their conversation
surprised him. Fee told Ash he could scroll
through his iPod if he wanted to put on some
music, and while doing so, Ash discovered they
had a few bands in common—Smashing Pumpkins,
Led Zeppelin, Muse, The Killers, and several
others. There wasn't any techno, dance, or house
on Fee's iPod, but that was okay. There was plenty
for them to discuss—concerts attended, favorite
songs. He got so caught up, the forty minute drive
seemed more like ten.
He followed Fee into the big electronics store,
and since Fee already knew what he wanted, they
went directly to the computers to look for
something Ash could work with. Ash hadn't
intended on buying anything, not really, but as Fee
showed him around, talking about hard drives and
memory and the things he could do with his
artwork if he had this program or that scanner, Ash
started to think maybe buying one would be a good
idea. When he and Ty opened up their own shop,
they'd have to set up a website as well. He could
justify spending a few hundred on something he
could use for showcasing his art and their shop,
but so far the systems and tablets he liked most
were way out of his price range.
"Well," Fee said eventually, "if you want, you
could pick up a motherboard, a hard drive, and a
chassis as a bare-bones system. I have an extra
video board and a sound card and some spare
RAM from another system. You'll still have to buy
the OS, but you can always upgrade the parts later
to build something comparable to these high-end
systems. That way you could even splurge and buy
a tablet if you wanted something portable, too.
iPads are cool but tremendously overpriced. For
your needs, some of the cheaper tablets would
work just as well."
Ash blinked. "I … I got that last bit, but can you
repeat the first part in English, please?"
"Sorry." Fee chuckled and reached up to brush
his bangs off his forehead. "What I mean is, you
can build one. Buy the parts separately and put it
together yourself."
"Yeah, of course." Ash laughed. "Except I don't
have the first idea about how to build a computer."
Fee shrugged lightly. "I do. I have a few custom-
built systems at home. I could put something
together for you."
"You would do that?" Ash asked, meeting Fee's
brown eyes in surprise.
"Sure." Fee's cheeks darkened under Ash's stare.
He glanced away, fidgeting a bit, clearly
embarrassed. "I mean, it's no big deal. I like to do
it."
Ash grinned. If Fee was volunteering to build a
system for him that had to mean he wasn't against
the idea of spending more time together, right?
Even if it was only as friends, Ash could work
with that. It was better than being shut out entirely.
"Show me what I need to get."
Fee looked back at him with a slight smile.
"Yeah?"
Ash nodded. It might cost a good chunk of his
savings, but it would be worth it in the end. He
wasn't buying the parts
just
for Fee, but partially
as a business decision as well.
"Come on," Fee said. "Let's go check this stuff
out."
An hour later they were headed back into the
city with their purchases in the trunk of Fee's car.
The damage to Ash's savings account wasn't nearly
as bad as he'd been expecting. He offered to buy
Fee dinner as a thanks for all the help, and Fee
picked a Thai place right down the street from
Grounds For Thought. They ordered a few dishes
to share and spent so long talking they eventually
noticed they were getting dirty looks from the
waitstaff and decided to wander over to the
bookstore so someone else could have their table.
There they settled into a pair of plush, purple
chairs with lemon-berry bars and steaming cups of
coffee—heavy on the sugar for Fee, extra cream
for Ash—and talked until they heard the
announcement that the store would be closing.
Ash was amazed how simple it was to talk to