Devon was wearing the green tie. The one Cora had given him for Christmas two years ago, saying something about men with green eyes needing something green to make them pop. He couldn’t think of any situation in which he’d want his eyes to pop at all, but she’d seemed so adamant about it that he’d kept it. Until today.
It looked nice over the white shirt he’d put on that morning for work, but maybe Cora was right and it did make him look too serious.
Or too formal.
Or too something.
But oh well, he didn’t know what he was in for after all, so he might as well wear something neutral like that. It was his first date in months –he hadn’t been in the mood for dates after his last fiasco, - and the guy had seemed chill. A shirt was fine.
Walking through the door of the café they’d chosen as their meeting point, Devon felt his heart pounding in his chest. Oh God he was nervous. This had been a stupid idea. Everyone sitting there were much younger than him. Were college students supposed to be so tiny? He didn’t even know what the guy looked like, and he was beginning to think he’d been set up.
This couldn’t be the right place. But he’d checked google maps a few times, and even his taxi driver had confirmed it, but this- this was almost like a university cafeteria.
And nobody seemed to be sitting alone.
Fuck. He’d probably been stood up, hadn’t he? And now he was blocking the entrance to this college café wearing a dress shirt and his suitcase and he didn’t know what the fuck to do.
So he selected a table by the entrance and sat down at one of the armchairs, taking his laptop out of his bag. At least he’d pretend he was working and nobody would notice anything wrong with the scene. Shit, maybe he’d even actually get some work done and he’d allow himself an extra hour at the gym the next morning.
A text from him.
[Kennyvareck says: Sorry, 5 min late. Are you at the café already? Order up, I’ll be there.]
Dev stared at his phone for a long second and slowly closed the laptop with his other hand, his eyes still trained on the little square box on the screen. So he hadn’t been stood up. Right.
His heart picked up its pace. This was so stupid. It’s not like he had high expectations about this. The guy seemed great; smart, fun, even handsome if his description was anything to go by, and that had never worked for him before. He was here pretty much only so Cora wouldn’t give him crap about his dick falling off or something like that. He wasn’t here because he thought he could score.
He wasn’t, really.
But still, he put the laptop back in his suitcase and ordered a large chia while he waited for his date to arrive.










