Flat-Out Matt

Flat-Out Matt by Jessica Park

 

 

Flat-Out Matt

 

 

Matt is a junior at MIT. He’s geeky, he's witty, he's brilliant.

 

And he’s also very, very stupid.

 

When beautiful, cool, insightful Julie moves in with Matt’s family, why (oh why!) does he pretend to be his absent brother Finn for her alleged benefit?

 

It seems harmless enough until her short-term stay becomes permanent. And until it snowballs into heart-squeezing insanity. And until he falls in love with Julie, and Julie falls in love with Finn.

 

But … Matt is the right one for her. If only he can make Julie see it. Without telling her the truth, without shattering them all. Particularly his fragile sister Celeste, who may need Julie the most.

 

You saw Matt through Julie’s eyes in FLAT-OUT LOVE. Now go deeper into Matt’s world in this FLAT-OUT MATT novella. Live his side of the story, break when his heart breaks, and fall for the unlikely hero all over again.

 

Take an emotional skydive for two prequel chapters and seven FLAT-OUT LOVE chapters retold from his perspective, and then land with a brand-new steamy finale chapter from Julie.

 

 

 

 

Author’s Note

 

Two chapters, The Sleepover and Keep Going, contain more mature content than Flat-Out Love (Keep Going, in particular), and were written based on reader demand. They wouldn’t have fit in well with the original Flat-Out Love, but given that this is a fan-driven companion novella, I think they work. While the content here is upped at bit, the scenes are tastefully done. (So, you know, sorry to those of you who wanted lewd and graphic stuff.)

 

 

 

Dedication

 

Flat-Out Matt is dedicated to the fans who believed in Matt and who fell in love with this unlikely hero. This book is for you, from Matt, with his eternal gratitude (and embarrassment) at becoming a “book boyfriend” for so many readers.

 

This is also for geeky guys everywhere who are finally getting the positive attention they deserve. And maybe a little action.

 

 

 

In This Together

 

 

A Flat-Out Love Prequel Chapter

 

 

 

Matt Watkins is visible only in infrared.

 

 

 

Finn Watkins I WOULD LIKE TO ANNOUNCE A STRATEGIC ALLIANCE BETWEEN YOUR FACE AND MY ASS, INVOLVING A LOT OF KISSING.

 

Matt set his backpack down and retrieved a water bottle. It was in the mid-forties today on Mount Washington, so the water had stayed blessedly cold. They’d already done one hike today, and now they were in the midst of their second. Matt was sweaty, achy, and tired, and his feet hurt like hell. This was only the second time that he’d worn these hiking boots, and he knew that his feet were starting to blister. But he wouldn’t change a thing. When a third of the water was gone, he returned it to the backpack.

 

“C’mon, dude!” Finn shouted from twenty yards ahead. “We made it through the Fan. Keep going!” He lifted his sunglasses, rested them in his hair, and grinned. Finn was in his element.

 

The brothers were on the eastern side of the mountain, on the Huntington Ravine Trail that led to the base of an eight-hundred-foot headwall, and then to the steep slabs and ledges of Central Gully. It wasn’t a particularly difficult route at this time of year, but inexperienced climbers with bad judgment and little (or wrong) equipment could easily get into plenty of trouble during the winter months. Snow rangers had rescued more than one ill-prepared climber from this area.

 

Even without the danger factor that they both loved, Matt and Finn liked this hike. It had every sort of terrain, and they had already gone over large boulders, through rocky scrub, and across a small stream. Some sections, like the Fan, were scree fields, covered with dirt and gravel that could easily make hikers lose their footing. Even Finn wasn’t crazy about crossing those in wet weather, but they had dry air and sunshine today. They now had to tackle the ledges that would take them to Pinnacle Gully, and this next leg of climbing would be all about finding the perfect crevice for their hands to grip and relying on the high-quality soles of their boots.

 

Matt reached his brother. “Okay, I’m ready.”

 

Finn squinted in the sunshine, his blond hair nearly glowing in the light. “You sure? Let’s just sit for a few minutes. Enjoy the view a bit.” Before Matt could stop him, Finn sat on a slab of rock surrounded by grassy patches. “Besides, we should eat again. This right here is the food of champions.” He pulled a plastic bag of granola, dried fruit, and chocolate chips from his backpack and held it out to Matt while he rummaged for the beef jerky. “We should get Mom to serve this for dinner. Even she couldn’t ruin trail mix, right?”

 

Matt sat down a few feet away and adjusted the brim of his hat, shielding his eyes from the sun. “I wouldn’t count on that. I’m quite sure that she could do something irrevocably awful. Perhaps pulverize everything in a blender and serve us a bowl of dust for dinner?”

 

“We could just snort it through straws!” Finn let out his typical loud, infectious laugh. “Let’s not suggest this to her because she’d do it for sure.” He leaned back on his elbows. “Damn, Matty, would you look at that view. The mountains, the trees, the perfect sky. What more could you ask for?”

 

“Not much,” Matt agreed. He watched his brother, well aware of how deeply and unabashedly he idolized Finn. Finn, who could do just about anything, and knew how to handle the world with excessive competence and charm. Finn had all the social finesse that Matt knew he never would. Not to mention Finn’s annoying good looks, made even more attractive by how unaware he was of his flawlessness. Even minor things, like the fact that Finn’s hiking pants fell in a somehow cool style while Matt’s legs looked the same as they did in any pants. It was endearing and exasperating.

 

Finn’s face was flushed from the cold, which just added to his vibrant aura. “I know this is a pretty easy trip for us. Hope you don’t mind.”

 

“Not at all. But why did you want to do this? We could handle this in our sleep.”

 

“I just… wanted to hang out with you. It’s kind of hard to chat when we’re hang gliding, you know?” Finn cupped his hands over his mouth. “Maaaatttty! How are youuuuuuu?”

 

“Okay, fair enough.”

 

“So, little brother, let’s hear about this girlfriend of yours. It’s your senior year of high school, you’ve got a sweet lady to sneak into the house at night, and I’m not living at home to help cover for you. So how’s it going?”

 

Matt rolled his eyes. “Everything is fine. I’m well aware of the creaky steps and how to get past Mom and Dad’s room without them hearing.”

 

“I trained you well.” Finn was clearly pleased. “Now, give me dirt. I have yet to meet this lovely creature, and all I know is that her name is Ellen and she’s shooting to get into Yale for next fall.”

 

“Both true.”

 

“And how did you two lovebirds meet?” Finn said, batting his eyelashes.

 

“Ellen and I were both selected to run an afterschool group for those who needed help with molecular biophysics and biochemistry. A number of students have been taking college courses to bulk up their resumes, so we’ve been tutoring them twice a week.”

 

“Scintillating. Tell me something more exciting than that. What’s she like? Is she funny? Do you love her?” Finn cocked his head to the side and overemphasized every word. “Do you make sweet love to her?”

 

“She’s going to major in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, if that answers your question.”

 

“It doesn’t answer my question. That either means that she’s too uptight to do it so she just reads about it, or…”

 

Matt smiled. “She’s not too uptight.”

 

Finn flopped back onto the ground and rubbed his eyes with his hands. “Oh my God, my baby brother is engaging in sordid activities with a woman he’s not married to! Or even engaged! It’s disgusting! Why didn’t you tell me about this sooner? Maybe I could have prevented this vile behavior. It’s all my fault. I’ll never forgive myself for failing to secure your virginity until you were of age.”

 

“Finn, shut up. You’ve been engaging in sordid activities with quite a number of women. And I’m pretty sure some of the things you’ve done are illegal in a few states.”

 

“Damn straight they are!” He clapped his hands together and looked at Matt. “I’m a sophomore in college, what do you expect? Seriously, so things are, uh, good between you and this unspeakably loose Ellen character?”

 

Matt nodded and fiddled with the bag in his hands.

 

“I see you trying not to smile,” Finn teased. “I’m happy for you. And she sounds just as nauseatingly academic as you are. Tell me more.”

 

“She’s hoping to spend the summer interning for a Harvard professor who is researching—”

 

“That’s not what I mean. Tell me more about her. You and her. You care about her? Does she make you laugh? Is she warm, and girly, and sexy, and sweet?”

 

“Of course I care about her. She’s very smart and focused, and Ellen is extremely supportive of my plan to double-major.”

 

“Well,” Finn said, clearing his throat, “she sounds just wonderful.”

 

“What’s that condescension for?”

 

“Nothing. It’s just….” Finn popped a handful of granola into his mouth and kept talking. “I want you to have fun.”

 

“I am having fun.”

 

“In a controlled, regimented fashion, yes. But I think you could have more fun. It wouldn’t hurt you to hook up with someone a little less like our mother.”

 

“What an atrocious, puke-inducing thing to say.”

 

“Go date some girl with purple hair and tattoos. Someone emotional and funny and interested in you for something other than your book smarts. Someone who’d jump out of an airplane with you. You could give a lot more to a relationship than what I suspect you’re giving this Ellen chick. And you could get more, too. You deserve it.”

 

“Ellen and I are on the same page when it comes to a lot of important things. We have similar life goals, value the same social policies…. There is a lot of respect between us.”

 

“Ah, yes, the stuff great love stories are made of. I’m overwhelmed by the romance. Live a little, Matthew. Get a B instead of an A+ in a class because you’re so passionately in love and busy schtupping your brains out that you didn’t have time to study.”

 

“That’s you, Finn, not me.”

 

“It is you. You just have to let it happen. You’d love it.”

 

“I’m quite happy with Ellen.”

 

“You’re bored with Ellen. I know you. You’ll skydive, and hang into ravines by thin ropes, and go rafting in the rapids, but you won’t… what? Get crazy and reckless with an amazing girl? You won’t fall madly out-of-your-brains in love? Let your world as you know it be blown to bits because you fall heart-crushingly head-over-heels for someone?”

 

Matt laughed. “You go enjoy your tattooed nymphomaniacs, and I’ll be just fine the way I am.”

 

“I knew Ellen was uptight,” Finn muttered.

 

Matt laughed. “She’s not uptight! I’ll have you know that we… do it plenty.”

 

“Yeah, fine. At least there’s that.”

 

“And it’s not like there’s anything wrong with both of us focusing on school. You care about that, too, considering that you’re not exactly failing out of Brandeis.”

 

“True, but I’m not you, that’s for sure. You’ve got something that I could never have.”

 

“Yeah, right.”

 

“It’s true. Dude, you need to appreciate how goddamn gifted you are. You’re so smart that I don’t understand what you’re talking about half the time, and we all know how brilliant I am.” Finn winked. “Matty, you’re amazing.”

 

He shook his head. Finn was laying it on thick. “Yes, I know how I’m smart and how I’m not.”

 

“What are you not good at? You’re going to MIT next year. It doesn’t get any more genius than that.”

 

Matt sighed. “It’s not that. Fine, yes, if I get into MIT, I’ll do well there. We all know that.” He looked up and took in the skyline.

 

Finn was quiet for a while and Matt could feel his brother’s stare piercing into him.

 

Finally Matt looked over. “What? What is it?”

 

“Aw, Matt, knock it off. No one in the world could have as amazing a brother as I do. You’ve got a heart and a spirit like nobody else. Please try to remember that. You’re more than just the smart one.”

 

“I know that. I do. I’m also the hot brother.” Matt tossed the trail mix bag at Finn, hitting him smack in the head. “Sometimes I just need you to remind me.”

 

“Look who’s all cocky now, huh? Got the girl, got the fancy-pants college that’s going to chase after you for sure…. What’s next for you?” Finn asked.

 

Matt hung his arms over his knees and surveyed the skyline. He smiled. “I don’t know. But I can’t wait to find out.”

 

Finn got up and walked the few steps to stand near his brother. “I can’t wait either. I’m proud of you, man. I really am. Things are good for us now, huh?”

 

Matt hesitated. “Yes.”

 

Finn frowned. “What is it? Is it Celeste? Is she okay?”

 

“She’s great. I mean, she misses you, of course, but that’s normal.”

 

The truth was that Celeste hated that Finn lived in the dorms. She had a tendency to get overly irritable with Matt, clearly for not being as in tune with elementary school children as his brother. He did the best that he could with her and tried to engage her in activities he thought she would enjoy. So far his attempt to ignite interest in his mineral club had not gone over well, and had only produced a rather bemused, “Oh, Matty.” But he wasn’t about to follow Finn’s lead and waste a Saturday at that horrible Canobie Lake amusement park. He had no tolerance for the crowds, and lines, and the awful blaring music that was piped over loudspeakers. The idiotic rides held no appeal and he couldn’t understand why anyone found a day there to be anything but grotesque. As far as Matt was concerned, it was American culture at its worst. Finn, on the other hand, braved the insanity a few times a year, and he and Celeste always returned home with an armful of cheaply made neon-colored stuffed animals that Finn had won for her. Thank God that Finn was around to give their sister the fun that she needed. Matt wished he knew how, and he envied Finn’s ability to become so childlike at a moment’s notice. Finn could play, and giggle, and swoop Celeste up in his arms with such ease. Maybe when she was older he would be a better big brother. He’d figure out a way so that she would love him the way that she loved Finn.

 

Matt smiled. “It’s good that you come over every Sunday and hang out with her. She admires the hell out of you.”

 

“I miss that munchkin, I really do. Is she not the happiest damn kid you’ve ever seen? I don’t suppose our parents would let her move into the dorm with me, do you?”

 

“Probably not. Besides, she’s a lousy beer funneler. Gets halfway through and starts gagging. Very unseemly.”

 

“Useless ten-year-olds. Fine, you get her to practice a little more, maybe with a nice lager ale, and I’ll work on Mom and Dad.”

 

“You and Celeste are going to abandon me and leave me alone in that house of horrors?” Matt tossed up his hands. “Thanks. I appreciate the support.”

 

Finn paused and set his hands on his hips. “What’s going on, Matt?”

 

Matt thought for a moment, trying to figure out if he should say anything. “Mom is not… right. I don’t know how to explain it. She pulls it together when you come home, but….”

 

“It’s happening again.”

 

Matt nodded. “I think so. I can’t keep track of the ups and downs.”

 

“Aw, hell.” Finn picked up a small rock and stood, hurling it as far as he could over the side of the mountain. “Is she off her meds?”

 

“I’m not sure. Maybe.”

 

“I know she doesn’t like them.” Finn paced in the small rock area behind Matt. “She told me they flatten her moods too much, but I don’t think she has a choice.”

 

Matt listened to Finn’s muttering and sighing, and heard him kick some pebbles.

 

“What’s Dad doing about this?” Finn asked.

 

“What do you think?”

 

“His usual ineffective grin-and-bear-it method?”

 

“Yup. She certainly doesn’t make it easy for him, though. I don’t know that I blame him.”

 

“You should blame him. He’s got children to worry about. He’s got responsibilities.” Finn sighed again and swore under his breath. “You’ll be out of there soon enough, Matt.”

 

“And what about Celeste?”

 

“She’ll be funneling at keg parties with me, remember?” Finn hurled another rock. “I know, I know. Not funny. You’re right, of course.”

 

“Celeste isn’t wired like Mom. She is exhaustively cheerful all the time. I wouldn’t want to see that change.”

 

“No,” Finn said firmly. “We’re not going to let them take that from her. We won’t.”

 

“Maybe you could talk to Mom? She’ll listen to you. She responds to you the most.”

 

“Knock it off with that talk. That’s not true.”

 

“It’s okay, Finn. Really. It’s how it’s always been. “

 

“You don’t get it, Matt, do you?”

 

“Get what?”

 

“The reason that she’s tougher on you is because she sees you as competition. You’re smarter than she is, and she can’t stand that.” Finn plopped down next to Matt again. “She’s jealous. Plain and simple.”

 

“Huh. You think?”

 

“She’s always going to be harder on you to try to bring you down a notch or two. I love Mom, but… ignore her garbage. I know she is giving you a hard time about MIT, telling you that you won’t get enough of a well-rounded education. But that’s not true. She could never get in there, and she knows that you will. You’re going to do fantastic things.” He sat down again next to Matt and beamed. “It’s gonna be fun to watch.”

 

“Thanks.” Matt dropped his head and fussed with his shoelace. “Thanks, Finn.”

 

“What about Celeste? What do you think she’ll do with her life?”

 

“Maybe she’ll stick with the piano? Or something else creative. Can’t you picture her as an artist of some sort? We’ll go to her gallery showings and listen to her explain the symbolism found in some bizarre sculpture that she’s spent months forming out of pinecones and zippers.”

 

“Totally,” Finn agreed. “It’ll be weird and wonderful.”

 

“Yes, it will.”

 

“Just like her. Yeah, she’s a little too smart for her own good and not exactly like all of the other kids at her school, but she’s got potential to do something great, too. Something really unique and outstanding. Don’t you think?”

 

Matt nodded. “I couldn’t agree more.”

 

“Can you imagine her as a teenager?” Finn groaned. “Ugh, it’s only a few years away. That mess of blonde hair is going to have the boys knocking down the front door.”

 

“No kidding. We’ll have to set up some sort of security system. I’ll take care of the background checks, and you can rig the booby traps. I’m thinking something to do with nets and pulleys?”

 

Finn high-fived Matt. “Deal.”

 

“So, you’ll talk to Mom?”

 

“Yeah. Don’t worry about anything. I’m going to fix this.”

 

“You and your Don’t Worry, I’m a Jedi shirt?” Matt smiled.

 

“With a little help from you and your Friends Don’t Let Friends Drink and Derive shirt.”

 

“You don’t need me, Finn.”

 

“I do need you, Matt. You’re my best friend, and we’re in this together.”

 

Matt’s shoelace continued to be in desperate need of attention. “I love you, Finn.”

 

Finn laughed and threw his arm around Matt’s neck, pulling him in close. “Aw, Matty, you big sap. I love you, too, bro.” He held him tight for a few moments. “Everything is going to be just fine. I promise.”

 

Matt nodded. “Should we get going?”

 

Finn squeezed his arm around Matt one more time. “Yup. Let’s do it.”

 

They both put on their backpacks, and Matt turned to take in the spectacular view one more time before he started focusing on getting up the steeper slabs of rock ahead of them. This wasn’t a challenging climb for the two of them now, but the winter months would bring excellent opportunity for ice climbing here.

 

“Hey, Finn?”

 

Finn raised the hood of his fleece over his head. “Yeah?”

 

“We should come back here when we’ve got ice.”

 

“Dude, I’m so all over that. We’ll get new equipment for Christmas! New ropes, new ice axe…. We need a really good weather tracker, too. Did you know Mount Washington has some of the craziest weather anywhere? Unpredictable. Changes in a flash.”

 

“That’s the fun, right?” Matt followed Finn over the craggy rock.

 

“Well, yeah. But we’re going to be careful. Right now, this is only a Class 3 climb. Throw in snow, ice, and God knows what kind of weather? Total game changer. There are a few different gully options to ascend. We’ll have to be smart about this.”

 

“That’s unfortunate, since neither of us is too bright.”

 

“I know. Especially you. Tragic.” Finn looked back and winked at Matt. “Tragic.”

 

They hiked for a bit and then Finn stopped, steadied his footing, and pointed off to the right. “There. That’s our ravine. What do you say, Matty? February? Give ourselves a real challenge.”

 

“They do say February is the harshest month.”

 

“And by harshest they mean best.”

 

“Hell, yeah,” Matt said.

 

“So you’re in?”

 

“I’m in,” Matt agreed. He took in the sight of his brother, totally at ease on this terrain, the sun reflecting off the rock onto Finn’s eager face. He would go anywhere with Finn. Drop-off cliffs, gnarled jungles, deep oceans…. Matt would be safe and loved. Matt would be treasured. “All in.”

 

Finn let out a joyous whoop and raised both hands triumphantly in the air. “See ya in February! We’re coming for you! Me and my brother, you hear me? Me and my brother.”

 

He turned and winked at Matt.

 

 

 

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