This is the fifth in the Loft Game series. If you haven't read any of the first four, I fear some things might not make sense as there isn't a lot of backstory here.
The reading order starts with
The Loft Game: Kermit
, where we met Charlene "Chips" Maguire and her new friend Emily Frazier, who introduced her to what they called the green game, the "lite" version of their strip poker club. That was followed by
The Loft Game: Barney
, in which Chips got an invitation to join the main game when the second semester started.
The Loft Game: Elf on a Shelf
told about some Christmas holiday shenanigans, and the fourth was
The Loft Game: Hula Girl
where she braved that main game plus had a few spring break adventures.
Of course, life isn't always adventures.
—C
─────────
Victoria's group text came during my accounting class. It was the first week back from spring break, and I was still trying to shake Florida out of my system.
≪ Kevin's proposing Josh for the main game.
≪ Owen and I calling meeting 7:00 Wednesday at loft.
≪ Who can't make 6:30 for just us?
I clicked to see who "just us" was, though the group title of "MG Bitches" was a big clue. Carrie, Megan, Sara—
Wait, is that the Sara I met?
—the rest were names I expected.
Another text appeared, sent only to me. It was from Hannah, not Victoria.
≪ Fwiw Kevin and Josh were roomies last year
Shit!
Hannah knew about the side-bets I had had with Josh, hence the heads-up. Back then, she'd grinned conspiratorially when she heard, even though she hadn't known who the guy was at that point. She'd guessed that later from Josh's behavior. And I was pretty sure she knew I'd called them off after a few times because she'd tossed a convenient excuse out for me when she thought I might need it.
But we'd never really talked about why I'd wanted to stop. We were friends but not quite share-everything friends yet.
Julia would've been a perfect sounding board for the confusing tangle of the game and side bets and the whole edginess I'd discovered once I acknowledged the twist in my libido.
Well, perfect once she got done screaming, "You joined a WHAT!?" and teasing me like a zillion times that most college freshmen joined the school newspaper or a theater group.
In Daytona, I'd told her about those wagers in a vague, "I bet a guy" way that named no names. She'd met the revelation with nothing more than a laughing "You bitch!" at how I'd collected my winnings and a pronouncement of "wicked stuff." The thing that made her my best friend for life was knowing—reaffirmed in both directions during that trip—that we could share anything and never get judgment in return.
But, Rule #1.
What about Em? She's in the game, so the rules wouldn't stop me talking to her.
On the heels of that stray thought was a mildly surprising realization.
I could talk to her 'bout most anything too. She's become my best friend after Julia
.
Someone I'd known only a few months had slid past high school buddies I'd known for years.
Two peas in a pod.
I could hear Mom's voice repeating one of her favorite expressions.
The thought brought a mental grin.
Maybe Mom wouldn't be so blasé if she knew the details about our little peapod.
Then I had a brief flash of a thirty-five-year-old bartender juxtaposed beside an eighteen-year-old soon-to-be-college-freshman. M
aybe two peas except when it comes to guys' ages. Ryan's a
total
snack and I get why Em is into him, but Ethan...
My reverie was interrupted by a pointed look from the TA, and after a hasty reply that I'd be there, I pushed my phone into my backpack. I'd figure it out after class. Or maybe I wouldn't, and I'd just wing it in the meeting. I wasn't sure if my opinion about Josh would matter anyway since I was new, but I had one.
I was at the loft at the appointed hour. The others trickled in one by one.
"We've got a little less than half an hour before the guys show," Victoria said. She was talking to me, the only one who hadn't been through inviting a new member. "I don't like surprises, so we come a little early and talk. Anyway," she continued to the group at large, "I barely know him since I don't play green. Call me neutral." She swiveled to Carrie. "You?"
"It's okay with me."
"Hannah?"
"Mm. Uncertain. I'd like to hear from Chips."
That earned a raised eyebrow from Victoria and a pause. Then she nodded and moved on. "Megan?" I realized she was going downward in seniority. I knew Megan had voted on my acceptance into the main game, but she'd declined the girls' night out that followed because she didn't play anymore, even though she could.
I bet there's a story there.
"Sara?" It was the Sara I'd met in the green game.
Another frickin' story I wonder about.
The straw poll marched on. "Emily?"
"I was gonna say, 'I dunno but could be talked into it.' But after what Hannah said..." She was looking at me with a "What do you know?" expression.
Logan and then it came around to me, new girl.
"Umm." I hesitated, unsure. Victoria read my uncertainty correctly.
"Once you're in, your opinion counts the same as everyone else's. And this isn't the time to be bashful. If you know something, spit it out."
"Then, umm, I'm not sure it's a good idea."
"Do you want to say why?" There was no trace of the bitchy Victoria who had confronted me on the steps.
I thought about privacy. Then I thought about the trust that went into what we did. So I explained minimally, just enough that they'd understand where I was coming from.
• • •
"What the hell?" Kevin's outburst came hard on the heels of Hannah's comment that it was likely a no for Josh. "I know him better than anyone here, and he's perfect for this."
"No, he's not." Hannah's tone was calm. "You remember the green game before Christmas? Josh bitched about the fact that he lost just because of Girl's Hat. And it wasn't just kidding around. You had to tell him to 'Man up.'"
It was obvious that Kevin remembered. "It was one time, and there're no hats in the main game, so it's not gonna—"
"The issue," Victoria interrupted, "isn't whether there are hats or that he thinks it's unfair. For example, we know you think it's a total bullshit rule, and you're in the game."
"So what? He was upset 'cause he got beat. I've heard you people bitch about things. It was
one
time!"
I think it was the "you people" that got to me. It was obvious he meant "you women," and I didn't like being pigeonholed just because I had interior plumbing instead of exterior.
"It wasn't just one time," I said.
"What do you mean?" The words sounded calm, but his expression said otherwise.
"Josh and I had side bets after a few of our games last semester. He complained about losing and demanded that I guarantee him a win.
And
"—I raised my voice to talk over his protest—"when I decided I didn't want to do it anymore, he complained that I'd won twice to his once. It was like I owed him another win. I think he's a sore loser. That makes me a no."
"What kind of side bets?"
Something in Kevin's voice caught me. Looking at his expectant stare, I smothered my "None of your business" before it emerged.
I think you know, Kevin. In fact, I'm pretty damn sure you do. That's not curiosity in your eyes.
You got a graphic description of me paying off, didn't you? Not even a shred of the dignity I gave Josh with my friends. I didn't mention his name. Hannah guessed from Josh's own actions, but I never confirmed it. And I
certainly
didn't go into detail about Josh's payoff.
But you got my name, and I'm betting that smirk means some pretty raunchy color commentary to go along with the facts.
The picture of two boys snickering over some variation of "had that bitch on her knees and my cock halfway down her throat" was what lit my Irish.
Him knowing we'd bet and I'd lost once wasn't the infuriating part. It was the smirk and, even worse, the leer that came when I hesitated.
You want me to squirm.
I forced myself to get over it.
All that flickered through my mind in a heartbeat. I was left with a choice.