The Geeks and the Socialite
Page 1
The Geeks and The Socialite
A Love Equation Novel
Allyson Lindt
This book is a work of fiction.
While reference might be made to actual historical events or existing locations, the names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2016 by Allyson Lindt
All Rights Reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Acelette Press
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Blurb
Other Stand Alone Love Equation Books
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
The Second Chance and The Auctioneer - Chapter One
Also By Allyson Lindt
About the Author
Blurb
Trade show stunts. Melt-your-screen fan fiction. Tentacle Porn—Jordan and Chloe’s brash, geeky attitudes have made them tech-blog darlings. But as the media asks what’s next for the camera, the two find themselves wondering the same thing in the bedroom, and it's tearing their relationship apart.
Liz is tired of doing what others expect for no good reason other than it’s expected. When she meets open and carefree Chloe and Jordan, she seizes the opportunity to explore the unknown and her sexuality. The three agree to one night of what turns out to be incredible, scorching sex.
Then Jordan is falsely accused of assault, and everyone from his employer to the tabloids turn on him. Liz is the only person willing to stand by him and Chloe, and face the full-scale backlash.
The clock is ticking toward annihilation for Jordan’s career as well as his relationship with Chloe, and Liz’s help could either be their saving grace or the final nail in their coffin.
Other Stand Alone Love Equation Books
The Rival and The Billionaire
The Geeks and The Socialite
The Second Chance and The Auctioneer
The Virgin and The Kingpin
The Nerds and The CEO
The Boyfriends and The Matchmaker
Love Equation Box Set #1 (Books 1-3)
Love Equation Box Set #2 (Books 4-6)
For my eternal dragon...
and Sotia, Becks, and Mires.
This one is thanks to you.
Chapter One
Jordan leaned against the corner of the hotel-room wall, watching Chloe work. Her hair was swept into a loose braid, and tendrils escaped to curl around her long neck. It was another of many reminders of why she was one of his favorite subjects when he drew. An invisible fist clenched around his lungs at the thought.
This was their tenth year at E3, one of the largest trade shows in the world for video game companies. It was the first year they struggled to keep their relationship together. Or maybe they never noticed all the cracks in its foundation before. Either way, he hoped—and she said she agreed—they’d take a little time for themselves while they were here, and figure out what they needed to do, to make them work as a couple. He didn’t want to lose her, but he couldn’t figure out what was at the heart of their disagreements lately.
“If you draw a picture, it’ll last longer.” Chloe didn’t look up from where she sat at the desk in the corner where she hunched over her laptop, but a teasing current undercut her words.
That was a better response than he expected. She’d seemed... off, since they checked in last night. Not angry, but also not quite here.
“I thought you liked to be watched.” He hoped to keep the mood light.
It took several seconds before she replied. “I do. I’m just...”
“What’s wrong?” He crossed the room, stopped behind her, and brushed her hair aside, to trace his fingers up her neck.
She leaned into his touch with a light sigh, her head tilting enough he saw the smile play on her lips. “Nothing. Everything. I can’t stop thinking about what a big deal this show is. But don’t stop what you’re doing.”
He understood her tension all too well. It was a big event for any video game company, but their employer, Rinslet Enterprises, had turned it into a ritual. A decade ago, a presentation gone bad led to the collapse of the company and a hostile takeover. A year later, the owners came back with a new company and a drive to make things work right the second time around. Chloe and Jordan played a huge part in a media spectacle that kept them in the public eye.
Since then, every year Rinslet was expected to have a better showing than before. They tried easing off a few times, but it never went well. Bloggers, reviewers, and magazines pushed for bigger. And this year, the pressure was back on Jordan and Chloe to deliver. Their panel demo was solid, though, and pouring stress into it now wouldn’t make things go more smoothly.
Could he convince Chloe of that?
He dipped his head and kissed along her soft skin. The faint honey of her shampoo filled his thoughts. “We’ll be fantastic. Don’t overthink this.”
Sometimes she was as bad as her sister—focusing on business before anything else and losing herself in the grind, instead of remembering the rest of the world existed.
“I guess.” The gasp that escaped her throat was intoxicating, making his pulse race.
“Better.” He trailed his lips over her shoulder and up her jaw, to her ear. “You’re too wound up.”
“Lot on my mind.”
Which was why he wanted her to unwind. Was he not conveying that, or was she not listening? A new idea sparked and danced in his head. If he drew Chloe into a fantasy, could he have her here with him tonight? A bit of verbal foreplay, some interactive teasing... His cock stirred at the building visuals. “What did you think of new sales rep they’ve got over at DM?”
She gasped when he nipped her earlobe. “Can’t say I talked to him long enough to form an opinion.”
“He’s handsome. Kind of cocky, but I bet he’s half-talk.” Talking about someone else as foreplay would be an instant turn-off for most people, but it was one of many things he loved about Chloe—the same thing that drew them together when they were eighteen. They both had an open perspective on sexuality. Everything was up for discussion, and nothing was taboo as long as they both agreed. Sometimes that involved a wicked fantasy about whoever caught their eye that day.
“Rumor is, he’s coming off a bad divorce.” Chloe’s response wasn’t quite as enthusiastic as he hoped for.
If he could keep her distracted, they could stay in the moment. “Which means he’s single.”
“Yeah. But I’m not.” No question this time. Chloe was annoyed.
Jordan pulled back, but kept his hand on her shoulder, thumb tracing lines along the exposed skin. “Tell me what’s wrong.”
She final
ly spun to look at him. “I’m just wondering if you were thinking we might have sex, any time in the near future, without you needing to think about someone else in order to get off.”
The words stung. The delivery and that she attacked something she always said she enjoyed notched his irritation. “That’s not fair. You know I’m here with you.” He couldn’t help speaking between clenched teeth.
“Do I?”
“What brought this up?”
“Today. Last week. It’s been there for a while.” She dragged her fingers through her hair.
At least this argument was different from previous ones. “The option to talk is always on the table. You never have to let it gnaw at you.”
She narrowed her eyes and pursed her lips. “What makes you think this is okay?”
This wasn’t. Whatever was going on here was far from acceptable. “Because you said it is. You told me over and over, for years, that you enjoy it. The naughtiness. The kink.”
“What if I want something else?”
“Then tell me what that is.” His calm and creeping arousal vanished in a cloud of frustration.
“What if it’s boring and simple? Like confirmation you’re here with me, not simply using me while you fantasize about someone else. And don’t you dare talk to me about kink. What would all your squealing fans think if they knew Mr. Master-of-Tentacle-Porn art has only ever seen one pair of tits in person?”
That was a low blow. “Sorry to be so hands-on boring. Is that what this is about? You want sex to be more real?”
“I don’t know what I want.” She turned her gaze to the carpet. “I just know it’s not this.” She stood and brushed past him.
He grabbed her arm. “No. We don’t do this. Walking away isn’t us. We talk things through.” Except, apparently what they actually did was pretend to talk and brush everything under the rug until it became a festering wound.
“And that’s all we do.” The frustration in her words reflected that spilling through him. “Talk and talk and talk.”
“And fuck. And have fun. And enjoy each other’s company. And make an amazing team. How is that not enough for you?”
She wrenched free of his grip. “It’s not. I can’t be here right now.”
He clenched his jaw until it ached, and still barely checked the desire to have the last word. If she wasn’t going to finish the conversation, there was no point in chasing her down. The door closed behind Chloe. She’d never done that before. Almost ten years together, and neither of them ever walked away in the middle of a disagreement. Fuuuuuck! The scream echoed in his head, digging for an outlet and not finding one.
CHLOE SAT AT THE HOTEL bar, blinking back the tears and trying to ignore the sting in her throat. She hadn’t wanted to pick a fight with Jordan, it just came out that way. He must think she was nuts, going from zero to pissed off in a matter of seconds.
When he started down the familiar path of fantasy though, it dove straight to her insecurities. All the questions that had taunted her for months that she couldn’t put words to finally had a form. Was there more to them than just talking about being adventurous? Did he want to be there with her, or was she just a hole while he thought about someone else?
No. She knew the last one wasn’t true.
She hadn’t told him everything. It didn’t make sense until she stormed away. They’d put on this persona for the public for so long, her biggest worry was that what they did behind closed doors was just as much of a show. They never acted on it. Were they just frauds?
She didn’t have any idea what the answers were. It was so much easier to find resolution in angst when she was writing it for game characters.
On top of that, the stress of their looming demo still gnawed at her gut. Even if she had the focus to dive into it to distract herself, she left everything upstairs in her rush to put some distance between her and Jordan. Things wavered between them for months. This trip was going to be their chance to figure it out, and what happened upstairs felt like a revelation. Except she did a shitty job of explaining her logic, and made things worse instead.
She’d been nursing a single Coke and not-crying for almost an hour. She should either find someplace else to clear her head or go back upstairs and... What? She wasn’t ready to face Jordan yet. Didn’t have any idea what to say to him.
Someone sat on the stool next to her, but she ignored them. The bar was full of executives and salespeople here for tomorrow’s show. Most of them recognized Chloe, but if she kept her head down, stared blankly at her phone, and pretended she was doing important work, no one bothered her.
“Are you all right?” A pleasant female voice wove through and disrupted Chloe’s woe-is-me-dom.
Chloe looked up to find a gorgeous pair of blue eyes studying her, attached to an attractive brunette. The woman’s straight hair fell to her shoulders, framing a round face, and she looked about the same height and age as Chloe. Fellow short-girl. Chloe wasn’t sure if she wanted to ask how the woman got her hair not to frizz in this heat and humidity, or tangle her fingers in the dark strands, lock lips, and find out what flavor drink the stranger had.
Chloe shook the random impulse aside and tried to summon a smile. I’m dandy. The sarcastic retort slid into Chloe’s skull. I’m sitting out here because my boyfriend and I are fighting over you. Well, not you specifically, but the concept of lusting after people who aren’t us. How fucked up is that? “I’m good.”
“If you’re sure...” The woman fiddled with her wine glass. Even in the dimly lit bar, she looked immaculate. Jeans without a crease, a sweater that probably cost more than Chloe’s entire T-shirt collection, and not a single hair out of place. If she was with the E3 group, she was working for a company in such a different league from Rinslet, Chloe had probably never heard of them. “I’m Liz, by the way. I’m sorry to crash your night, but”—she gazed around the room—“I thought I was in the mood for company, and I’m not.”
Chloe furrowed her brow and studied her. “Chloe. And how does that make sense?” At least the strange statement gave her a new place to focus.
“I was going to go back to my room, but it’s too quiet up there. Which is confusing, I realize. I can’t explain it. I want people around, but not to have to talk to them.”
“But you’re talking to me. Not that I mind, but it disrupts the concept of not having company.”
“I was over there”—Liz nodded at the other end of the bar—“and people kept trying to talk to me. No one’s approaching you. Or rather, they start to, and then they stop. I was hoping if I sat next to you, they’d leave me alone too. Not that I understand why they’re steering clear of you. You’re cute.”
Chloe’s cheeks heated. When was the last time such a simple compliment caught her off guard? When was the last time she got one that sounded sincere? “I’m also scowling. And most of these guys see me as one of the boys.” The reality of the words jarred her and soured in her gut.
“I see.” Liz fiddled with her left ring finger, making twisting motions though there was no jewelry. “Do you mind if I sit here anyway? And if you want to talk, I’m happy to listen. You look like maybe you could use a friend.”
Chloe had friends—an office full of guys who got her quirks and loved gaming as much as she did. And who were also Jordan’s friends. It was as if her job at Rinslet made up her entire adult life. “You said you didn’t want to talk.”
“This is a thank you for passively saving me from everyone else.”
Chloe smiled. “You’re welcome to join me.”
“Do you want another drink? God, that sounds like I’m hitting on you. I just noticed you made that glass last a long time.” Liz waved the bartender over.
How long had Liz been watching her? Chloe wasn’t a big drinker on most occasions, but especially not during the week. “They don’t have anything on tap I like. My red of choice is fizzy, full of sugar, and comes in twelve-ounce cans.”
“And they’re all out of Code Re
d? The horror of it.” Liz’s wink and accompanying smirk were enough to make Chloe smile. Liz looked at the bartender. “Another glass of the house red for me.”
Chloe looked at the bottles lining the wall. “On second thought, I’ll have the same.” Maybe it would knock loose whatever was stuck in her head. Or clear out the stubbornness keeping her from going upstairs.
Seconds later, two glasses were placed in front of them. Chloe hesitated, not sure what came next. She felt like a little girl, out of her element, and wasn’t sure why. It probably had something to do with the attractive, elite woman, sitting next to her as if this were the most natural thing in the world. An awkward silence descended between them, as they sipped slowly not making eye contact. Chloe racked her brain for words of any sort.
“Are you here with them?” When Liz spoke, it startled Chloe. “You said most of these men know you. I apologize; I’m new to the industry. So if you’re one of the voice actors or something...”
At least she didn’t ask if Chloe was a booth babe. “I’m Senior Vice President of Community and Writing for Rinslet Enterprises.”
“Wow.” Liz’s surprise sounded genuine. “They’re huge, aren’t they?”
Chloe wasn’t sure if she was grateful or a little wounded her title didn’t carry more weight here. Was she trying to impress this woman? “We make a lot of games.”
Liz fiddled with her glass. “I didn’t realize.”
“It’s okay. I can’t tell you who the rock stars of the investment world are, either.” Chloe took a sip of her wine. It was sweeter than she expected. Pleasant. She drained the rest of the glass before she realized what she was doing. “But I promise, we’re popular. My brother-in-law is part owner of the company, which has everything and nothing to do with why we’re here.”
“Oh.” Liz’s enthusiasm vanished in a flash. “Be careful with that.”
Defensiveness spilled through Chloe. She wasn’t in the mood to defend the fact she earned her job. “It’s not like it’s favoritism.”
“What? No, I didn’t mean that at all. I bet you’re crazy talented, but working for family can be complicated.”