Chapter 6
Okayyyy. Let’s just slam on the brakes while I reroute myself. Because my brain was barreling in one direction, and hers was veering in another. Not gonna lie. I’d been furiously plotting whose home is closer, and whether a cab, Uber, or quick jog—make that sprint—would get us there faster.
Since jetpacks aren’t an option.
My phone buzzes. I grab it and open my messages, hoping it’ll help me redirect all the blood that’s flowing in one direction only.
I’m bored. Charlotte’s out with Kristen, and there’s nothing good on TV. Up for a drink?
Wow. That worked. But Spencer doesn’t need me to answer right away, so I ignore him, turning the volume off on my phone and sliding it into my pocket.
“You want me to teach you how to date?”
She nods and smiles. “You’re good at this. You know women. You can read men. You understand all the things I find completely confounding.”
“You want me to be your Cyrano?”
“You don’t have to come on dates with me and whisper from the bushes, but considering wanna-see-a-pencil-in-my-nose is my go-to opening line, and that I don’t even know what to write back to Simon, I think we can both agree I need a little bit of help,” she says, holding up her thumb and forefinger to show a sliver of space as she makes fun of herself.
I glance up at the ceiling, weighing her request. On the one hand, I can’t let her fumble through New York City so completely unequipped for conversation. On the other hand, she’s Spencer’s sister.
“I know it’s an odd request,” she says, fidgeting with her napkin, her words with a touch of worry to them. “But it shouldn’t be too weird, right? Since I know I’m not your type.”
Whoa. I frown in confusion. “What?”
“Well, you usually date older women, right?”
And the truth is . . . she’s right. Maybe not usually, and certainly not all the time, but J.
Cameron was ten years older, and the woman I dated before that was an entertainment executive in her mid-thirties, and as a sophomore in college I went out with a senior.
Come to think of it, the woman who took my V-card was five years older than me.
Hello, pattern.
Fine. Evidently, I’ve been known to appreciate not only women my age, but those who are fine wine, too.
Let me just say, though, one of the best ways to learn what women like in bed is to date older women.
Those ladies know how to communicate. They teach you, tell you to go faster, harder, slower, softer, there, right, yes, yes, right fucking there.
Maybe Harper’s right, but I want to tell her that just because I’ve dated older women doesn’t mean I don’t like her. There’s no point saying that, though, since she doesn’t feel the same. If she did, she’d be tongue-tied and twisted with me like she was with Simon.
And shit. That reality check slams into me like a piano dropped from the sky. Harper may be off-limits, but I still want her to want me. She doesn’t though. Instead, she wants me to help her. I straighten my shoulders and focus on that consolation prize.
“And Nick,” she continues, softening her voice, stripping away that layer of humor she wields so well, “there’s no one else I can turn to.
I can’t ask one of my girlfriends for help, because they’ll all just tell me I’m fine and fabulous.
But is this too strange a thing to ask?” Her voice rises, as if she’s anxious for my answer.
That mix of nerves and hopefulness in her question reinforces my hunch that her request isn’t about how to get laid or how to land a hot date.
It’s about how to connect with another person.
Best friend’s sister or not, Harper needs help, and I’m the only one she’s comfortable asking. “It’s not strange. And my answer is yes. I’ll help you figure out how to date.”
“Thank you.” She drops her hand to my forearm and squeezes. “But you better promise you won’t tell Spencer I asked for your help. He’d never let me live this down.”
“I promise,” I say, and I don’t feel bad in the least keeping him in the dark on this matter. No way am I telling him I’m becoming his little sister’s love guru.
“Tell me what to say to Simon, then. Can that be my first lesson?” she asks, sitting up straighter, all eager to learn.
I stretch my neck side to side, roll up my sleeves, and slide right into coach mode.
Hell, maybe coaching her through adventures with other men will cure me of wanting to get naked with her.
Nothing can dampen desire faster than knowing she’s into someone else, right?
This is going to be just what I need to get her out of my system.
A win-win for both of us. “Actually, your first lesson is you need to push him off another week or so. You’re not ready to see him yet.
He gets you too flustered. You need to learn the ropes with someone else first.”
She looks confused. “Okay. But who?”
“Jason. He’s into you.”
“But I’m not thinking of him that way.”
“Even better.”
“So I should learn the ropes with him, even if I don’t think of him like that?”
I nod. “Sure. You might wind up liking him. You’re not Princess Awkward around him. It’ll be good training.”
She raises an eyebrow. I can’t resist. I lean forward, run a finger across it, and brush it back into place.
“Don’t raise that eyebrow at me. You are in need of some serious training, and Jason is perfect.
You like him as a friend, so that’s enough for now.
I won’t let you lead him on too far. I promise, Okay? ”
“If you say so.”
“I do. Trust me. We’re not going to yank him around. We’re just going to practice your . . . conversational skills,” I say diplomatically.
She laughs and then draws a deep breath. “Let’s conversate.”
“Do as I say. Open Facebook.”
She takes out her phone and taps the app.
“Accept his friend request.”
She nods and slides her thumb over the screen. “Done.”
“Now, post on his wall.”
She draws another breath and gives a crisp nod. “What do I say?”
“So great seeing you tonight. Exclamation point.”
She types, posts, and turns the phone to me, like a proud student eager to show her teacher the assignment.
I pat her shoulder. “You did good. Now, if my calculations are correct,” I say, pretending to look at a wristwatch, “you’ll get a message from him in about twenty minutes.”
I leave a twenty on the bar as a tip for Julia, and we head out into a warm October night.
“Nice night. I’ll walk you home,” I say.
“That sounds perfect.”
Twenty minutes later, we round the corner onto her block, and she nearly smacks into a tall dude wearing a Columbia T-shirt and laughing at something his goateed buddy says. I grab her elbow and yank her closer before the guy walks into her.
“Oh, sorry!” The apology comes from the T-shirt guy, who’s about my height. “Totally didn’t see you. My bad.”
“It’s all good,” Harper says with a quick smile. My arm is around her back still.
The guy swings his eyes to me, furrows his brow, then points at my face. Something like recognition dawns in his expression. “Wait . . . wait . . . you’re . . .”
His friend cuts in, a huge fan-boy grin forming. “Mister Orgasm.”
“That’s me,” I say casually.
“Holy shit. Your show rocks,” the tall guy says. “I went to a fan meetup you did a couple years ago. Dude, I followed your show back when it was just an online strip.”
With my free hand, we knock fists. “Love hearing that.”
“I can’t believe I just bumped into you walking around the city. I would ask you to sign my T-shirt, but that’d be weird, so let’s pretend I didn’t say that, but you’re awesome,” he says, practically bouncing.
“What he said,” his friend chimes in.
“He’s the best.” Harper beams, taking her turn on the compliment train.
“You guys rock. Really appreciate the support. Great meeting you,” I say, and we continue on our way.
Once the guys are out of earshot, Harper turns to me, her eyes lit up. “I’ve just witnessed a Mister Orgasm sighting in the wild, and it was kind of amazing. Does that happen often?”
I shake my head, laughing lightly. “Once or twice a year. I swear it’s not that frequent.”
She can’t stop grinning. “And they love you. They think you’re a stud.”
“They’re obviously right,” I deadpan, and she bumps her shoulder into mine. When we reach her building, her phone beeps. She grabs it from her purse, and I say, “I bet that’s the Jason reply.”
She slides open the screen, clicks on the message from Jason, and shows it to me. Hey Harper. So great seeing you! Want to get a cup of coffee?
I mime dunking a basketball. Nothing but net. “It’s a gift. Really it is,” I say, as we stop near the stoop of her building.
“You’re good, Nick. You know just what to do and how to behave. This is why you attract women in droves.”
I kind of want to protest. I feel like she has this impression of me that I don’t necessarily want her to have, but I’m not sure how to deflect this. “Because I have a gift?”
“That and several other reasons.” She waves broadly at my arms. It’s October, but it’s not chilly tonight so I don’t have a jacket on. “First, there are the arms. All that ink and muscle.”
She roams her eyes over my biceps. “I mean, your ink is awesome,” she says, pointing to the shapes and swirls I designed myself. The tattoos are abstract lines and curves, but inside them there’s a sun, a moon, and stars, because those were the first things I realized I was good at drawing.
“Then, the body. Mr. Men’s Health-I’m-so-fit,” she says in this mocking tone, but it’s not me she’s making fun of. It’s the article.
“You read it?”
“I read everything. I devour information,” she says, and we’re right back to that place I seem to inhabit with her, where she compliments me, but she could be saying it like I’m a car she’s considering buying. And this one has one hundred seventy horsepower.
“And then, there’s your face, and you have all this awesome scruff on it.”
I run a hand over my jaw, and the neat, trim beard that’s like an additional sex toy I can bring to the bedroom. “Women like the beard,” I say, with a lopsided grin.
“I bet they do,” she says under her breath. She doesn’t say anything else right away. She presses her teeth into the corner of her lip and then speaks, more softly than before. “Can I feel it?”
FUCK, YES.