Chào các bạn! Vì nhiều lý do từ nay Truyen2U chính thức đổi tên là Truyen247.Pro. Mong các bạn tiếp tục ủng hộ truy cập tên miền mới này nhé! Mãi yêu... ♥

Speed Dating

Word count: 916 words.

I'd never done this speed dating thing before. But when push comes to shove and you're the only one in your friend circle left single . . . you take what you get. At least you do if you're me.

Anyway, Robbie told me speed dating was all the rage these days. Robbie likes to keep well-informed about fads — just don't ask her who the state senator is or it won't be pretty.

So far as I understood it, speed dating is basically live Tinder. If you don't know what Tinder is . . . good for you!

I've had some seriously horrible experiences using that app. One time my date — whose online profile flaunted a hotter version of Bettie Davis (she was the Jennifer Lawrence of my generation) — showed up wearing shit on her forehead when we met for real.

Shit. On. Her. Forehead.

I sat through the entire date failing to draw attention to the elephant(-shit) in the room. What's worse is she already had a boyfriend, and was just looking for another guy so they could have a threesome.

Had she been half as attractive as Bette Davis, I would maybe have considered the offer.

The length people go to these days . . . especially when they're in their thirties and about as attractive as mud caked on boot.

In other words, people like me.

I tossed my car keys over to the valet, a handsome man in a red-white uniform. Looked about the same age as me, actually. "Sweet ride," he whistled.

I smiled. It's always nice when people appreciate your tastes — I'm really into books and cars especially. I even have a name for my car: Mrs. Smokey. Lame, I know, but I like it. Feels vintage.

"Hope she's safe in your hands," I said to the valet, and took a deep breath, and stepped into the world of speed-dating.

Moments later I was sitting on a plastic chair, a name-tag saying

"Jack :)"

stapled to my suit, the first victim of my singular charm seated right opposite me.

She was a pretty blonde in maybe her late-twenties with an "I was my highschool cheerleader so make way for me bitches" air about her. Her name-tag read Rachel but in my head I just called her "the blonde".

Side-note: I think these name-tags are frankly insulting. We are humans, not rats, to be labelled. Whatever happened to good old-fashioned "What's your good name?" "Mine's Jack, what's yours?"

If there was any chance I'd drive Rachel home with me that night, I blew it by saying: "So, you like reading?"

The next five minutes were torture, but we pushed through. And then I shifted chairs to sit opposite another girl, not so pretty as the blonde but much more homely and mature looking, if you know what I mean.

Turns out, she wasn't so homely. And she had about the maturity of a really horny teaspoon. "You got a big one, Jack?" was the first question she asked me, after which I had to plod through another five minutes wishing I were back on my couch eating popcorn and crying over fictional characters.

My third victim: a gum-chewing girl who looked very much like a younger version of Robbie.

"How . . . how old are you, exactly?" I said to her.

"Fifteen," she replied in a monotone.

"Who let you in here? You're underage! She's underage!"

Everyone else swivelled their heads to look at me like I were a loon. My teen "date" rolled her eyes.

A man who looked older even than me took her home at the end of the night. I hope he bought her ice-cream and that was that, but I doubt it.

I walked out the realm of speed dating just the way I'd entered it: alone.

The valet in red-and-white brought Mrs. Smokey around, patting her hood appreciatively. "Man, the interiors don't disappoint either," he remarked.

"Yeah," I said dully.

The valet stepped out of the car, a measured expression on his face. "No luck tonight . . . Jack?"

I realized I was still wearing the bloody name-tag and tore it off my chest. "Different days," I grumbled.

The valet nodded, shoved a thumb at Mrs. Smokey the car. "You should just ride around Manhattan in her, man. Chicks would dig that."

I chuckled. "Robbie — uh, a friend of mine — she says I should just sell her. Says standing next to her makes me look like a grandpa."

"Please tell me you're not gonna!" The valet sounded positively aghast.

"I won't. Screw them."

"Who's them?"

"You know." I pointed at Rachel the blonde, making love by a battered old Ford with a man whose jaw seemed to have been chiseled by Zeus himself. "Them."

The valet laughed. "They're like Scrooges. Can't appreciate the spirit of Xmas."

"Dickensian metaphors," I said, nodding approvingly. "Always appropriate."

"He was ahead of his time," said the valet.

"He was," I agreed. "Your good name?"

"Ryan," said the valet, extending an arm. "Ryan's the name."

I took his hand. "You already know mine."

Ryan the handsome valet shrugged.

I knew then that I loved him. That shrug sealed it for me. I don't know. I guess love happens as and when it wants to happen, with no logical why or how to back it up.

I looked at him, then at Mrs. Smokey, then back at him. "When does your shift end, Ryan? Maybe we could go for a ride, discuss some Dickens."









I just wrote this on a whim, but I guess that's what discovery writing is: writing on a whim.

How'd you like it [that is, if you liked it☠️]?

Bạn đang đọc truyện trên: Truyen247.Pro