Match Me Up
Weston Parker
BrixBaxter Publishing
Contents
Find Weston Parker
Description
Dedication
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Epilogue
Insider Group
About the Author
Copyright
Find Weston Parker
www.westonparkerbooks.com
Description
The hottest nerd I know just became my roommate.
But it’s a no-go on the downlow, seeing as he’s my best friend’s brother.
The best part is that he’s a hunk and a half, but oh so smart.
How can one guy have all the good stuff? And now he’s in my face all the time.
I just needed a place to stay while I’m in grad school.
And it’s entertaining watching this sexy IT genius create a new dating app.
Not so fun being his guinea pig until something crazy happens…
He turns out to be my perfect match on the app.
We’re too good as friends to mess this up, plus my BFF is less than thrilled about all of it.
No matter how much I want this guy, he’s gonna have to match me up with someone else.
As if.
Dedication
To all of the nerd-lovers out there! Nothing more sexy than a smart person who is unapologetic about it. My wife is beautiful and SUPER smart. I appreciate all of you who support my books. You mean the world to me.
Weston
Introduction
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1
Lily
“Don’t skip, don’t skip,” I recited as I basically skipped to the mailboxes in the building. I smiled at Mrs. Peters with her usual scarf tied around her head to protect the curlers I was convinced were a permanent part of her head. I had never actually seen her without curlers. I wasn’t even sure she actually had hair.
“Good afternoon, dear,” she said with a toothy smile. Her dentures were just a little too big for her face.
“Hi, Mrs. Peters,” I said while praying she wouldn’t pull me into a long conversation.
“You look lovely today,” she said with an even bigger smile. She patted the little white dog tucked under her arm. That was yet another permanent fixture.
“Thank you,” I said and had to doublecheck to see what I was wearing. It was as I suspected. Old cutoff shorts, a T-shirt that was just a little too big, and my blonde hair was piled on my head in an actual messy bun. Not a cute, stylish, messy bun.
“Are you enjoying your summer?” she asked sweetly.
I couldn’t be rude to her. She was making conversation and usually, I spent a good fifteen minutes talking to her. “I am. I’m bummed it’s over so soon. How about you? Did you get that AC fixed?”
“I did. Thank you for helping me get the landlord in gear,” she said with a shake of her head. “I just don’t understand how he could be so cruel to an old woman.”
“I’m sorry you had to go without for so long,” I said. “You know where I live. If you have any other issues, you come find me and I will get on him.”
“Thank you, sweetie,” she said.
“I’ve got to run,” I told her. “My friend is upstairs waiting for me.”
“Okay, take care,” she said but didn’t move.
I gave her another quick smile before I rushed past her with my mailbox key in my hand, ready to slide into the lock. I was trying to keep my expectations in check, but I couldn’t squelch the hope. I had checked the mail every damn day with the expectation I would get the letter I was so impatiently waiting for. My future rested in that letter.
I jerked open the little door and lost my breath. A manila envelope curved inside the small box. There was only one thing it could be. I squealed and jerked it out of the box before slamming the door closed and locking it again. I jogged up all three flights of stairs back to my apartment.
“It’s here!” I exclaimed as I walked into my apartment. I struggled to catch my breath as I waved the envelope around. “It’s here. It came!”
“Well?” Tamlyn, my best friend in the world, asked. “What does it say?”
“I don’t know!” I practically shouted. I was so nervous I felt like I was going to vomit. I knew the letter was coming. I had been anticipating it coming, and now that it was actually in my hand, I couldn’t open it. “The admissions counselor said I was next up on the waitlist. What if they changed their mind? What if someone ahead of me changed their mind and decided to take the acceptance?”
“Open it and find out,” she said with a laugh. “That’s generally how I read my mail.” She came to stand in front of me.
“I can’t open it!”
I held the envelope in my hand. It was very, very thin. An acceptance would include paperwork. I was guessing this envelop held a single paper, maybe two. My college acceptance packet had been much thicker. I could actually see my future going up in smoke. I didn’t have a backup plan. Panic was threatening to take over.
“Take a breath,” she said calmly. “It’s just a letter. It’s not a snake. It is not going to bite you.”
“I can’t do it,” I whispered. “I’m scared.”
“You’ve been waiting for this envelope for months,” she said and pushed it against me. “Open it!”
“Oh god,” I groaned. “What if I didn’t get in?”
“Girl, you know you’re going to get in,” she said. “You’re freaking out for nothing. You have an amazing GPA. Your essay was amazing. You interviewed well. You’ve got this.”
I worried my lower lip. “I don’t know. There were a lot of people applying for this program. I was told the competition was intense. I’m sure there are people that went to great schools applying for the program. I went to a school that no one has heard of. Being waitlisted was a kick to my ego.”
“And you are one of the best applicants,” she said. “Open it. It doesn’t matter what school you went to. You are just as qualified. Probably more qualified, Miss Smarty-pants.”
Her compliments were kind, but they were not sinking in. “If I didn’t get in, that’s it,” I said. “I have put everything on this one letter.”
“Okay, I’m not going to go negative with you, but if you didn’t get in, you apply at another school,” she said.
I pouted and felt my excitement deflate. “I don’t want to go to another grad school. I w
ant this school.”
“You’re not going to know if you get to go to that school if you don’t open the damn letter,” she scolded. “Stop being annoying and open it.”
“I can’t,” I shoved it at her. “You do it. If it’s bad news, don’t tell me.”
“Do you want me to lie?”
“No, but I don’t know. I just can’t handle bad news,” I said and walked away from her.
My palms were sweaty, and I felt weird. I had been looking forward to getting this letter and now that it was here, I was panicking. For the last four years, I had a plan. I worked my ass off to keep on track. Grad school was the next step. I knew it was a lot. I knew I was young, but I didn’t want to stop when I had momentum. I wanted to keep going until I reached my goals. I wanted my master’s by the time I was twenty-five at the absolute latest.
“Do you want me to open it?” she asked.
“Yes. Just don’t tell me if I didn’t get accepted.”
Her soft laughter from behind me made me want to laugh and cry at the same time. I was making myself crazy. I knew I sounded certifiable. Obviously she had to tell me what was in the damn envelope. What was I going to do come September? Show up on campus without being accepted, or not go to class when I had been accepted?
“Ready?” she asked.
I spun around and covered my face with my hands. I didn’t want to see her reaction when she read the letter. I could hear the paper from the envelope being torn open. I could barely breathe. I didn’t dare look at her. I knew her too well. I would be able to see right through her. If she tried to hide her reaction, I would pick up on it.
“Well?” I squeaked.
She screamed, which made me scream. I pulled my hands away from my face. She screamed again and started jumping and down. “You’re in! You’re in! You got accepted!”
Everything stopped at that moment. I stood staring at her. “I’m in?” I gasped. “For real?”
“Yes! You’re in! You made it! You’re going to grad school!”
“I can’t believe it!” I screamed and joined her in jumping up and down. “I’m going to grad school! This is the last step on my climb to the top. I’m going to do it. I’m going to make it.”
“As if there was any doubt,” she said. “I knew you would do it. Anyone that knows you knew you would do it.”
“I didn’t,” I said and snatched the paper. I needed to read it for myself. My eyes scanned the paper. It was definitely an acceptance. My heart started to pound in my chest. I wanted this more than anything and to physically hold the confirmation of my dreams coming true was overwhelming.
“We have to celebrate,” she said. “This is huge. I’m so happy for you.”
“I have to move,” I exhaled.
“What?”
“I didn’t move to Austin because I wasn’t absolutely certain I would get in. Now, I’m going to be scrambling to find a place. I procrastinated. I bet all the cheap places are already taken. I’m going to be stuck with what’s left. Dammit!”
“Relax,” Tamlyn said and put her hands on my shoulders. “You only live an hour from the campus. You could drive there. You’ll have classes what, two, three days a week? That’s not terrible. The commute will get you used to being an adult. That’s what life’s all about.”
“Commuting?” I said with a laugh. “I think people go out of their way to avoid commuting.”
“If you work in the city but you want the house and yard with a picket fence, you have to live in the suburbs. The farther from the city, the bigger your sprawl. You’re going to be wealthy, and you’ll be able to afford a big fancy house. Commuting is going to be a part of your life.”
I shook my head at her idea. “It might be in the future, but right now, I can’t afford to commute. I’ve got to be closer so I can get to class on time. I need to be able to participate in any extracurricular projects as well. Driving not only costs gas money but time.”
“Are you planning to work still?” she asked as if that sounded crazy.
“I have to,” I said. “I like food. I like running water and, of course, all that fancy electricity.”
“Ha, ha,” she said with a roll of her eyes.
“I have to pinch pennies,” I told her. “I’m so close to the finish line. I can eat ramen and live frugally a little longer. Walking to campus saves money. I’ve got to try and find somewhere to live in a hurry. I should have looked earlier. I was beginning to think I wasn’t going to get in.”
I groaned and flopped onto the ugly sofa that was older than the dinosaurs. Finding a new place meant another security deposit and application fees. That was going to put a serious dent in my finances. I should have planned better. I was a planner, and I dropped the ball.
“Hey,” Tamlyn said and came around the couch. She moved my legs and sat down. “I thought you had a full-ride scholarship?”
“I busted my butt, and I did get a scholarship for the actual school but nothing for living expenses,” I said. “I get a small subsidy but it’s up to me to pay for the rest. I appreciate the scholarship. It makes this all possible, but I don’t want to live in my car.”
“Living in Austin is going to cost a lot more than it does here,” she said. “You can’t live in a dump. It isn’t safe.”
“I need to start looking,” I said. “Like yesterday.”
“You know,” she said and got a sneaky smile on her face, “I think I have an idea.”
That was never a good phrase. Tamlyn was my other half. She was the wild one; I was the nerd. How we ever became friends was still a mystery. She was beautiful, athletic, and everything I was not. She was long and lanky while I was decidedly not.
I had done every diet in the world. I had tried running, but that just didn’t make sense to my body. I embraced the curves. Worrying about them and trying to fit into a size two was just not conducive to happiness. I wanted to be happy, which meant I had to accept and embrace the body God saw fit to give me.
“I don’t think I want to know,” I said. “If it has anything to do with selling my body, it isn’t going to work. Maybe we can sell your body.”
She threw her head back, her long, sandy brown hair falling over her shoulders. “Good plan, but we’ll save that as a last resort. You know I would do it for you, though. I’ll take one for the team.”
2
Thomas
“Mr. James,” I heard someone calling my father. I looked around trying to find him. “Mr. James!” A young woman rushed toward me.
She was talking to me. “Yes?”
“Hi,” she breathed.
“Hello.”
“I’m Kristen,” she said with a bright smile.
She was young. Technically, I was young, but she was younger and nerdier if that was even possible. Her mousy looks combined with her small stature made her very easy to look past. “Hi, Kristen,” I said and was about to walk away when she cleared her throat.
“Mr. James, I’m Kristen, your new assistant,” she said with a hint of pride.
“My new assistant?” I asked with confusion. I didn’t know I was getting an assistant. I was the CEO of the company and I didn’t know I was getting an assistant. I didn’t know I needed one. I was a CEO but not of a big company. I had a small company. Very small.
“Yes,” she said while bobbing her head up and down. Her black-rimmed glasses slipped down her nose. She quickly pushed them back up. “I tried to find you earlier. Missy? Mandy? Maisie?” She looked confused as she squished up her nose.
I gathered she was trying to refer to Marissa, the receptionist that handled everything from answering phones to filtering emails. That was when I remembered she said she needed help. I told her to do what she needed. Apparently, that meant hiring me an assistant.
“Marissa,” I said.
She snapped her fingers. “Yes! Marissa! She told me to find you. She gave me your schedule for the day. Do you need anything from me? Coffee?”
I held up the cup of coffee
in my hand. “No, I’m good.”
“Oh, duh,” she said with a goofy smile. “I am going to be sitting in the pool.”
I raised an eyebrow. “You’re sitting in the pool?”
More nervous laughter. She pointed to the area in the center of our headquarters that housed small cubicles for my developers and tech writers. “I have a little cubicle in there. Marissa says she’ll get me closer to your office soon, but for now, I’ll be in there if you need me.”
“Okay,” I said. I wasn’t sure why I would need her.
“You have a meeting with the developer team two,” she said.
“I know.”
“That’s part of my job,” she said with a sigh. “I’m supposed to tell you your schedule every day.”
I cocked my head to the side and looked at her. “What exactly is your job?”
“I’m your assistant.”
I slowly nodded. “What are you going to assist me with?”
Her nervous laughter reminded me of myself when I was young and insecure about who I was. I was still a little insecure but my success in the IT world had certainly helped. I felt a kinship to her. Nerd strong.
Match Me Up Page 1