Crushing It
THE CRUSH CONTEST
“Hmm.” She tapped her finger on her lips. “Everyone’s had a crush on someone, right? It wouldn’t be the most embarrassing revelation in the world. Could you find something like that?”
I thought about it. I really did not want to stand up in front of total strangers—or worse, former classmates—and get laughed at, but Aida was right that an admission of a decade-old crush on a boy in a college class wasn’t the worst thing I might reveal. Besides, everyone had a crush on pretty boy Tristan back in the day. That might work well for this kind of contest.
“Would that be enough to win the prize?” And a guaranteed trip to Germany.
“Why don’t we forget about the prize, okay? I’m more interested in helping you work through your anxiety.”
Right. My forced therapy. “I just don’t see how muscling through one reading will achieve that.”
She bit her lip. “Okay, so here’s the deal. It’s not a one-night contest. It’s an elimination-style competition. Like American Idol.”
“Oh.” That changed things considerably. I just wanted the money, but I couldn’t imagine doing this week after week. Staying home and playing Undertale on the genocide route was sounding better and better.
Aida stood, one hand bracing her back. “Look. It’s right up the street. Let’s just go check it out.”
When she left, I skimmed the journal, hunting for something safe and boring. I didn’t believe reading something embarrassing was going to magically cure me. Nor was I going to win a weeks-long contest. But as Mr. Shepherd, my cross-country coach, used to say, “Running begins, not with the feet, but with the mind.” Maybe just preparing to do the contest, imagining myself succeeding, would be therapeutic on its own.
I took a deep breath and pretended I was actually going to go through with it.
CRUSHING IT
Lorelei Parker
KENSINGTON BOOKS
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
THE CRUSH CONTEST
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
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
Epilogue
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, or events, is entirely coincidental.
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2020 by Lorelei Parker
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4967-2571-4 (ebook)
ISBN-10: 1-4967-2571-9 (ebook)
ISBN: 978-1-4967-2570-7
First Kensington Trade Paperback Printing: July 2020
To my gamer kids,
Eve and Zoe,
for the extra hearts
Acknowledgments
This book owes its existence to Wendy McCurdy and her continued faith for which I am deeply grateful. Together, we strategized on a game plan and the basic rules of combat, but then she trusted me to go off alone into the battlefield.
I died several times as I trained up during the initial drafting, but my faithful friends kept me supplied with free lives to power through to level one. As I finished each round, I enlisted the help of Kelli Newby, Kristin Wright, and Elly Blake, very special people who are always ready to read for me, like the bosses they are. They challenged me with firepower, identifying weaknesses and forcing the book to grow stronger.
I’m so lucky to have an amazing support group, including Ron, Summer, Jen, and Kelly, who are willing to give me all they’ve got. To all of you, thanks for always being there when I need to take a break and recharge or when I’m doubting my skills. You guys always have my back in the end.
I’m constantly awed by the team at Kensington for everything they do to bring books to life and shepherd them into the world. Thanks especially to Carly Sommerstein, Jane Nutter, and Lauren Jernigan.
Thanks also to my agent, Mike Hoogland, for all you do.
And to my kids, Eve and Zoe, who constantly show me how the game is played.
Chapter 1
I didn’t want to die. Not today. Especially not in front of my coworkers.
Dying would only make this ordeal more embarrassing than it already was.
The earth could swallow me up, but that would also be too conspicuous.
And curling into a fetal position at the foot of the podium would only prolong my shame.
Nope, I wanted to disappear as if I’d never existed. Game over.
I risked a glance at Aida whose eyes were frozen in wide-open horror before she blinked her expression back to normal, polite for once in her life.
But while she wasn’t laughing at me, her husband, Marco, sat behind her, one finger strategically draped across lips, biting back a smile by supreme force of will.
Reynold Kent, the only one whose opinion mattered, sat at the back of the room, giving nothing away, arms crossed, stone-faced.
“Guys, it’s just my stomach.” I lifted the mic attached to the placket of my shirt to prove it was my gut not my butt. I knew what it had sounded like, the gurgle of nerves churning in my bowels—like a strip of bubble wrap being popped in rapid succession followed by a balloon losing air. Those dulcet tones ended in a high-pitched curlicue, as if my stomach had asked a question. Pffft? The rumbling hadn’t been enough to register on the Richter scale, but it had most certainly imitated a fart.
I shouldn’t have been surprised. Every single time I spoke in front of people, something awful befell me, which only made my stomach twist into knots of self-fulfilling prophecy.
I didn’t want to be here, but I needed to be here.
Aida rolled her hand to urge me to continue with the presentation, and so I shuffled the index cards. Reynold checked his phone.
I squeaked out the words on the next card. “The mage can command a variety of mystical weapons.”
Like an amateur actor on a local car commercial, I gestured to the video playing on the screen behind me where a badass staff-wielding mage cast balls of flame that erupted, boom-boom-boom.
“Among her arsenal, the mage possesses the power to detonate her enemies with explosions of magical gas.”
Marco snickered, and my courage crumbled.
I pulled the microphone off and dropped it on the table.
Reynold said, “Thank you, Sierra. That was . . .” He winced. “That was not great.”
I didn’t know what to say. I was blowing my one chance to prove I could demo our new video game at Gamescon in a couple of months. As lead developer of Extinction Level Event Game Designs, I should have been a shoo-in. Nobody knew the game like me. But the prospect of presenting to a room full of strangers made me sick with dread. I’d barely made it through this practice run, and I knew all three people present.
Aida ran a hand over her round belly. “Sierra, why don’t you try again?”
If she weren’t due to drop her spawn at the end of June, she’d be the one going to the trade show. She had a face made for showbiz and the charisma to charm the pants off reviewers and investors. With her out of the picture, the company needed someone to replace her, and that opening ought to have given me a chance to get a free trip to Cologne, Germany, to geek out on everything I loved, surrounded by other nerds. But like a hero in an adventure game, I first had to prove my mettle.
Sadly, my mettle had long ago abandoned me.
Reynold stood. “Look, if you can’t do this, we’ll have to find someone else who can.”
No other developer was ready for prime time, and the sales staff wasn’t yet well versed in the game. Yes, I sucked, but so did everyone else in some way or other. I’d have to pray for an extra life.
I picked up my things and left the conference room, defeated.
In the hallway, Wyatt from customer service emerged from the coffee nook carrying a mug in both hands, like an offering. The scent of cheap French roast mingled with his Drakkar Noir. One of those two things tempted me. I needed some caffeine.
“How’d it go?” he asked.
He wore khakis and a crisp pink Oxford that might have flattered him if he had a little more skin color. His styled blond hair had benefited from a decent salon cut and expensive products. He looked like every guy who worked in the office: unoffensive but unremarkable. Only his crooked front teeth set him apart. I’d once found his imperfect smile charming.
I shrugged. “Same as always. Epic fail.”
“You’ll get it right.” Working the help desk had taught him optimistic ways to rephrase failure.
“Thanks?” Everyone else had more confidence than I did that I’d conquer this hurdle.
“So maybe we could go get a drink after work?” His expression left no doubt that a drink meant more than a drink. He had some nerve.
“And after?”
“Who knows?” Now his expression read full-on lech. My stomach hadn’t quite recovered from the earlier presentation, and it churned at his implication.
“Wyatt, you have a girlfriend.”
He tilted his head. “She’s out of town.”
Gross. A few months ago, I’d hooked up with him after one too many drinks but before he’d met Karen. Ever since, he thought he could coax me back for a booty call. Yeah, no. I didn’t do cheating. Or cheaters.
Why did these jerks act like I owed them anything?
“Go home, Wyatt.”
“Come on, Sierra. You didn’t play so hard to get St. Patrick’s Day.”
True. I never played hard to get. I might balk at hooking up with a guy who was off the market, but my standards had fallen despairingly low when it came to emotional availability. I had a tendency to climb into bed with guys who weren’t offering anything longer than a night, at least not to me. Maybe that was why I only got the sex while people like Karen got the boyfriend. Not that I’d want a Wyatt for a boyfriend.
Sadly, I was surrounded by Wyatts. At least, I wouldn’t knowingly be a part of his philandering.
“You don’t deserve Karen.” I turned and walked away.
He called after. “You’re a four, Sierra. You should take what you can get.”
Despite his insult, I expected he’d send me a dick pic any minute now.
Asshole.
Back in my own office, my tension unwound. I made a beeline for my comfort zone—my Alienware gaming laptop, docked beside a pair of widescreen monitors. Before Aida invited me to the meeting room, I’d been in the middle of resolving a fascinating defect where a character’s inventory suddenly blipped out. I un-paused the action and entered my world.
Inside the game, I was a goddess, even if I had to fight off an armored giant carrying a flaming mace. Inside the game, I had control and power. It didn’t matter if my enemies were CGI or avatars played by real live opponents in some far-flung living room. It didn’t matter if they were men or women, tall or short, rich or poor. We were all as powerful as our gaming skills allowed.
In virtual space, no one could hear my stomach scream.
I longed to meet the actual players on the other side of the monitor. My people. Ever since I’d first learned about gaming conventions, I’d wanted to attend one for myself, but I could never justify the expense. And here I was blowing a free trip to one of the biggest cons in the world because my head and my body couldn’t make peace with each other long enough to allow me to overcome my nerves.
Short of Xanax, there was no way I’d shake the crushing performance anxiety that had plagued me for nearly ten years.
The knock came on the doorframe sooner than I’d expected.
“Beware of dragons,” I hollered over my shoulder.
“Can we talk?”
I paused the game and spun around without getting up. I pulled my feet up and rested my elbows on my knees, chin on fists.
Aida ventured in, grabbing a rolling chair from beside the unused desk, sighing as she sat. “My God. I’m going to pop if I get any bigger.”
“Do you want to ask me not to kill the messenger?”
“Reynold says you’re just not ready yet. But he’s open to changing his mind.”
I chortled. “Oh, and how am I supposed to do that? Finger puppets?”
She didn’t laugh. “You know he’s considering Gerry.”
“Old Man Morris?” Things must be bad if he’d rather send the resident network guy instead of a scrappy young developer. “How? He doesn’t even program.”
“Neither do I.” She raised a brow, chiding. “Gerry has a pleasant demeanor.” Somehow I knew she was quoting Reynold, not stating her own opinion.
“I should find a way to knock him out of the running. I’ll switch his coffee with decaf, and he’ll fall asleep while Reynold’s auditioning him for the spot.”
“You of all people would never do that.”
She was right. Not just because coffee was a sacred and untouchable source of joy and I’d never mess with anyone else’s elixir. But also because I’d once been the victim of a sabotage that had left me with this crippling fear of public speaking.
Aida used her heels to roll her chair closer. “Besides, I think you’d rather get that spot on your own, right?”
“That was what I was trying to do earlier. You saw how that went. How am I supposed to overcome my own body turning on me?”
“I had an idea.” She unlocked her phone, and her thumbs clicked and scrolled. “I saw a post on Facebook the other day that caught my attention at the time because it was so . . . weird, I guess. But I got to thinking—”
“What? Is someone selling healing crystals this time?”
Her maroon lips pressed together in judgment of my quippy sarcasm. I coveted whatever brand of lipstick she had on—something more practical to my everyday life than this conversation.
Aida persisted in the belief that there had to be a magic cure to this mental block. When therapy went nowhere, we’d tried guided meditation videos, herbal teas, and a workshop on using imagination to boost confidence. But I wasn’t lacking confidence exactly. It was more that I could picture every kind of humiliation that awaited me if I stood in front of a group of people, with all eyes on me, and attempted to speak on any topic upon which I was supposed to be an expert. I could lead a yoga class at the local YMCA, but ask me to stand behind a microphone and I froze.
If I somehow overcame my
resistance, calamity—or unusually loud gas—struck.
She sighed. “Hey, the aromatherapy might not have worked, but you have to admit our town house smells great.”
“Sure.” I picked up a Sonic the Hedgehog Funko that had fallen on the floor and stood to place it back on the credenza. “It’s like strolling through a cool forest meadow at sunset in our bathroom.”
She angled her phone toward me. “Do you remember Alfred Jordan?”
I squinted, trying to place the name. “Alfred? No.”
“He’s in this Facebook group I joined for Auburn alums who live here in Atlanta now. Anyway, listen to this.” She read the post on-screen. “ ‘The Vibes Taphouse presents its first annual Chagrin Challenge. Bring your embarrassing anecdotes, diary entries, poetry, or other past shames for a chance to win prizes, up to the grand prize of one thousand dollars. All participants will receive a free drink and all the chiding.’ ”
“Uh-huh?” She couldn’t have been suggesting I volunteer as tribute. I could only assume she was thinking of winning herself an extra grand. “So what? You’re going to reveal your most mortifying secrets to a roomful of strangers?”
She’d do it, too. Aida had gumption to spare, not to mention an unending supply of stories that would have an audience clutching their guts. She wouldn’t hesitate to expose her embarrassment, especially if there was a competition involved. They might as well write the check out to her right now.
“I’m not going to do it.” Her eyes bored into mine, begging me to get a clue.
My heart sank. “No way.”
“Sierra, we’ve tried every gentle option we could think of. We haven’t tried trial by fire.”
“You mean death by a hundred snickers.” I crossed my arms. “No. What you’re describing isn’t just humiliation, it’s humiliation squared.” I combed through the possible anecdotes I might share and heard a record scratch. “What am I supposed to tell them? About the time I neglected to wear a bra under a white shirt on a day of a heavy downpour?”