Read The Party Boy's Guide to Dating a Geek (Clumsy Cupids) Online
Authors: Xara X. Piper;Xanakas Vaughn
angled bangs out of his left eye. Ash watched as
they fell back into place, lying as if they'd never
even been touched. For a second, he was annoyed
enough to want to reach across the table and ruffle
the hell out of Carley's hair just to piss him off.
"Ash, I'm not trying to be a downer. Really. But
you and I were both there when the guy practically
bolted from the club.
After
a cheek kiss."
"So what?" Ash grumbled.
"That's a friend kiss, baby." Carley leaned back
in his seat with his coffee cup cradled between his
hands. "Besides, you guys are so different. He is
not of your little club-hopping, sex, drugs, and
bathroom blowjob world, okay?"
Ash stared at him, stung. "Damn. That's kind of
harsh, don't you think? Yeah, I like to go out, but
that's not all I do. It's not all I am."
Carley looked at him seriously. "Ash, I've
known you a long time, and in that time, the nights
when you were out clubbing far, far outnumber the
nights you spent at home. I'm not saying there's
anything wrong with that. I like to party, too. We
all do. But as much as I hate to use the cliché, you
and Fee are like black and white. I really do think
he tried for you tonight—honestly, I do—but I don't
think it's going to happen."
"But he did try," Ash pointed out. "You just
contradicted your whole argument. He tried. Why
would he do that if there wasn't any interest at all?
And he did build me that sweet ass computer."
"That's what he does for a living," Carley said.
"It's called being nice."
Jae, who had been listening to their
conversation in silence while he sipped his coffee,
set his cup down with a thoughtful look. "Both of
you might be right. There's only one way for you to
find out for sure, Ash. Back off. Maybe email him,
or text, say you had a good time, whatever. Then
leave him alone and see what happens. If he's
interested, he'll make the next move."
Carley nodded. "I agree."
Ash frowned down at his mug. Give up the
chase right when it seemed like Fee might finally
be starting to bend a little? He hated the idea. But
what if Carley was right? What if all Fee wanted
was friendship, if he wanted anything at all, and
Ash was just being a pushy bastard? He hated the
idea of that even more. "Yeah," he said finally,
leaning back when Marge appeared to deliver their
food. "Guess we'll see what happens."
6.2
The next morning he felt miserable. Taking Jae's
advice, Ash sent Fee an email thanking him for
coming out and saying he hoped Fee had a good
time. He kept it short and simple, only a couple of
lines, nothing suggestive, no invitations, no
pressure for anything more. Then he got dressed
and left for work and tried not to watch his phone
like a hawk the whole day through.
It didn't work. Anytime his phone buzzed, he
jumped, hoping for a response from Fee and
feeling disappointed time after time. It went on that
same way the following day and the one after that.
By the morning of day four, Ash had resigned
himself to the fact that Carley and Jae were right.
He didn't like it, but what could he do? Fee's
silence spoke volumes, and Ash had no choice but
to gracefully concede defeat. Thick-headed as Ash
might often be, he actually
could
take a hint.
And he was okay with it. After all, what did it
matter if they were over when they'd never even
gotten started in the first place? It didn't. End of
story.
Except Ash couldn't stop thinking about it. He
managed to push Fee and the entire situation out of
his head long enough to concentrate on designing
and inking a shoulder tat under Tank's watchful
eye, but after that … well, he went right back to
thinking about it. God, he was such a putz. Capital
P.
He was trudging the last couple of blocks home
after helping Ty close up the shop when his phone
buzzed. He ignored it at first, not rushing to check
it as he had been over the last few days—until it
happened again, and he realized he was getting an
actual call. Startled, Ash started digging around in
his pocket for his cell. Most of his friends were
texters, so he didn't get calls very often. When he
did, it was usually his parents or his brother, but
no one in his family would have been calling him
after 1AM.
Finally, Ash managed to drag the phone from his
pocket—damn those tight-ass skinny jeans anyway
—and then he almost dropped the thing in surprise
when he saw the name on the screen:
Fee.
Ash hurriedly slid his thumb across the bottom
of the screen to answer the call and lifted the
phone to his ear. "Hello?" he said, sounding a little
breathless from the sudden surge in his heart rate.
"Ash?" Fee's voice was soft, tentative. "Sorry, I
… I didn't wake you, did I?"
"No. No, I was just on my way home from the
shop, actually."
"I apologize for calling so late," Fee murmured.
"I would have waited until morning, but I thought
that might not be enough notice."
"It's okay," Ash said, his brows drawing
together in confusion. "Don't worry about it."
"There's a museum exhibit in town that I've been
wanting to see. I haven't had time before now, but
this is the last week before it moves on to Boston. I
know it's last minute, but I was wondering …
would you like to go see it with me?"
Ash would've liked to have said he hesitated,
that he took even a second to think it over after not
hearing from Fee for days on end, but his mouth
was already agreeing before his brain caught up.
"Yes!" he burst out. His cheeks went pink almost
immediately, and he spared a moment to be
grateful Fee wasn't there to see it. "I mean, yeah.
That sounds cool. I'm off tomorrow."
"Great," Fee said, and even though it was
probably at his expense, Ash was happy to hear the
obvious smile in his tone. "Would you like to get
some breakfast first? I can pick you up at eight, and
we can stop somewhere."
"Sure."
"Great," Fee repeated, and it was Ash's turn to
smile. "So, I'll see you in the morning then. Good
night."
"Yeah. See you then. Night." Ash disconnected,
locked his screen, and shoved his phone back into
his pocket, his grin broadening. Fee's call had
come out of nowhere, and Ash was undoubtedly
surprised by both the call and the invitation, but he
was also excited. Fee's contacting him lent some
plausibility to his theory that Fee was at least
mildly interested. Why else would he have called?
Ash still wondered why exactly it had taken Fee so
long, but that was something he could mull over
later. Right then he was too pumped to think about
it.
He did feel kind of ridiculous for being so
happy about an invitation to a museum, though. Ash
couldn't even remember the last time he'd gone to
one. Back in high school maybe, and he was pretty
sure it had been The Art Institute. Ash doubted that
was where he and Fee would be going. Fee didn't
really strike him as the artistic type. It would
probably be the Field Museum or possibly the
Shedd. Ash didn't really care as long as he got to
spend some alone time with Fee. True, he
would've preferred that alone time to happen in the
privacy of his bedroom, but at this point, he wasn't
about to be particular.
If Fee
was
attracted to him, they would get to
that point eventually. He hoped. Patience was a
virtue and all that other crap. Not one he possessed
much of outside of when he was tattooing, granted,
but he could work on that.
Baby steps, Ash
, he told himself as he reached
his apartment building and started inside
. Baby
steps.
6.3
The next morning, Fee was there exactly on
time. Ash felt a little flicker of guilt for being glad
that Carley had already left for work and Jae was
still asleep, but he didn't want to have to deal with
their questions until he actually had some answers.
Speculating hadn't gotten him anywhere, and it was
exhausting besides. He hoped by the end of the day
he'd know how Fee felt, one way or the other. He'd
been so sure before, at least of the physical
attraction, but he'd never dealt with someone who
might be sexually attracted to him, yet still fighting
the pull. Most people he knew were all about
instant gratification. When desire was mutual, why
fight it? But he supposed that was a rather shallow
way to look at things, wasn't it?
Fee greeted him with a shy smile when Ash slid
into the passenger seat. "Hey."
"Hey yourself," Ash returned. For only the
second time since Ash had met him, Fee was
wearing something other than a geeky, pun-
emblazoned graphic tee and baggy jeans. Instead,
he wore slim, dark-washed jeans and a rust-
colored, linen button-up that did amazing things for
his brown eyes and olive skin tone. He looked
sexy as hell, especially with his hair a little messy
and still damp from a recent shower and those
dark, thick-rimmed glasses framing his face. Ash
had never been a fan before, but on Fee, they
worked. Definitely worked. So much that if they
ever got around to having sex, Ash would probably
insist that Fee keep them on.
"Any place in particular you want to go?" Fee
asked as he pulled away from the curb.
"Well, there's Leroy's over by the shop, but I'm
good with wherever you want to go. It's hard to
mess up breakfast food, right?"
"True." Fee looked thoughtful for a moment.
"You know, I think I've been to Leroy's once, if I'm
remembering right. Red vinyl seats? Great
coffee?"
Ash grinned and nodded. "Yep. That's the
place."
"Let's go there then."
Leroy's seemed different during the day, more
hustle and bustle and less chill than Ash was used
to, but the coffee was amazing, as always, and the
food hot and delicious. He and Fee chatted for a
bit, mainly about work, the unbearable heat wave
that had descended on Chicago a few days before,
and a couple of upcoming albums they were both
looking forward to. Nothing serious or deep, but it
was comfortable, easy. Ash didn't bring up the
question weighing most heavily on his mind
because he wanted to keep it that way.
When they finished their food, they didn't linger.
Twenty minutes later Fee pulled his Jetta into the
Museum of Science and Industry's underground
parking garage. Ash grinned and shook his head at
himself, unsurprised but feeling slow for not
having guessed earlier. Of course this was the
museum Fee wanted to visit. Of course.
"What are you thinking?" Fee asked suddenly.
He'd just turned into a spot and cut the engine
before glancing sideways at Ash.
Ash looked over at him, still grinning. "I was
just thinking I should have known this was where
you would bring me."
Fee's expression changed from curiosity to
uncertainty. He chewed his lip for a second. "You
don't like it?"
"Oh, no, that's not what I meant," Ash said in a
rush, wanting to reassure him. "I've actually never
been. I just … I was thinking the Shedd or the
Field Museum at first, but this seems more your
style. I'm excited to check it out."
Relief washed over Fee's features, and he gave
Ash a hesitant smile. "I love this place. My mom
brought me here all the time when I was a kid. She
made it into a tradition. Coming here is what
sparked my interest in science and techy stuff. I
don't know if I'd even be in IT without this place
and my mom's encouragement."
"Oh, yeah?"
"Yeah. I actually wanted to be a pilot when I
was really young, thought I would go into the
Marines like my father. Make him proud. But then,
when I was fourteen, my mom bought me my first
iMac, and well … it was love, you know?"