18+ I shouldn’t have made it past the first round. I don’t know how I did; I’m not special like the others. When I ask Daniel, he just tells me it’s complicated. Then he talks about brain chemistry, how love and sex are an addiction. He tells me how wild animals claim mates, and how he’s claimed me.
Publication date: March 1st 2016
I’ve been in this billionaire’s game for a month — but something changed when half my competition was eliminated.
It feels less like a contest now … and more like an experiment.
I shouldn’t have made it past the first round. I don’t know how I did; I’m not special like the others. When I ask Daniel, he just tells me it’s complicated. Then he talks about brain chemistry, how love and sex are an addiction. He tells me how wild animals claim mates, and how he’s claimed me.
The stakes are higher.
The competition is fiercer.
I should have been kicked out long ago, but Daniel tells me I might be the needle in the haystack the company has been looking for.
Sometimes I’m afraid of them all, even of Daniel.
But It’s like I’m on a tether. I couldn’t leave if I wanted to.
EXCERPT
“I want to
show you something.” Jessica flops sideways, grabs one of my pillows, and then pulls me down
by my wrist so I’m lying
beside her. She puts the pillow on the bed and rolls so she’s perched on
it. Her head ticks, nodding halfway, as if to beckon me closer. I come, and she
doesn’t stop
gesturing until I’m close
enough to smell the almond in her shampoo.
Her
mischievous eyes watch me. Then she reaches for the covers, which I’ve piled to
one side after rising. I’ve never been a bed maker. Because fuck that.
She drags the
covers over us. We’re facedown on the bed, our faces above the pillow. Jessica shoves her
face into the pillow and moans.
Or, now that
I listen more closely, mumbling.
“Put your face
in the pillow.”
“I’ve heard that
line before,” I say.
“Just do it,
Bridget.”
So I do. And
then Bridget mumbles again. This time I clearly hear her say, “They can’t hear sound
that doesn’t hit the
walls.”
I don’t know what
to make of that. I raise back up, so she pulls me back down, her arm draped
across my back.
“Do you
remember how they said there were blind spots from the cameras? The southwest
corner of the kitchen, the front lawn, thirty yards equidistant between the
fountains.”
“Between the
fountains,” I repeat,
nodding into the pillow, feeling stupid.
“Thirty yards equidistant.
Not just directly between them. There’s only forty-five yards between the fountains.
You have to come away at an angle, to the south. It has to be to the south
because the wall is at the same angle to the north.”
“I just
remember ‘between the
fountains.’” And I’m lucky I
remember that. That first night, they listed so many rules and details, I
stopped listening. But Jessica apparently didn’t. She lists another eight or ten
places, most of which barely sound familiar.
“Were you
taking notes?”
Instead of
answering, she says, “The mics also have dead spots — too much ground to eavesdrop everywhere.
I was out back and spotted one near the peeing fountain thing. You know the
peeing fountain?”
I nod.
“Then I found
two more. They’re hard to
find without looking like you’re looking, if you know what I mean.”
I don’t. Not
really.
“I got the
model number. They seem to all be the same. And that model is semi-directional,
probably because if they’re not selective, they’ll hear all the birds whistling and
pots banging and clocks ticking and stuff. The noise profile is … ” And for a
second it’s like I’m back in my
studio, studying technical manuals.
“Are you a
sound engineer or something?”
“I read a
catalog once.”
“What kind of
catalog?”
“I was bored,” she answers.
Jessica’s eyes flick
toward the ceiling, and she runs her fingers through my hair. “Sorry,” she says
about the touch. “But if we don’t do
something to justify lying here in bed, they’re going to pay closer attention than
we want.” And then her
hand goes under the covers, starts disturbing the sheets without actually
fondling me — though surely, that’s what it’s supposed to look like from the cameras’ point of
view.
My eyes scan
what of the room I can still see, ass up and face in the pillow as I am. I know
the cameras are there, and microphones with them. And I have to admit Jessica
is probably right. They’d have to use mics with a reasonably narrow profile, or there’d be too much
noise to make the recordings worthwhile. Talking into a noise dampener like a
big lump of foam and fabric will absorb most of what we say, keeping any little
echoes from bouncing around and being heard. It’s a risk I wouldn’t take
without research into what’s watching and listening to us, but Jess is acting
like research isn’t necessary.
She saw a model number and somehow already knew everything about that specific
model … and,
apparently, everything else in the catalog. It’s fucking weird. But what the hell?
It’s not like I
wanted to be here in the first place, so screwing up and getting booted now
doesn’t bug me as
much as it bothers the others. I guess it’s no more risk to trust her than anything
else.
“So,” Jessica says,
speaking into the pillow. “Let’s talk about Daniel for you, Trevor for me, and how
the hell you’re still
around.”
About the author:
I love to write stories with characters that feel real enough to friend on Facebook, or slap across the face. I write to make you feel, think, and burn with the thrill that can only come from getting lost in the pages. I love to write unforgettable characters who wrestle with life's largest problems. My books may always end with a Happily Ever After, but there will always be drama on the way there.
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