Wicked Games (20 page)

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Authors: Jill Myles

BOOK: Wicked Games
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And I dropped the slate into the voting box.

CHAPTER 13

 

I can’t wait for this to be over. Now maybe we can get back to being normal again. And I can’t wait to talk to Abby. It’s been a long three weeks without her. I miss her. – Dean Woodall, Last Day of the Game

~*~

 

Once the final vote was cast, the producers moved into action. The jury was separated and shuffled away, reminded of our non-disclosure agreements. We weren’t allowed to discuss our votes, or anything on the show until the finale would air on national TV a few months in the future. Each of the cast members was assigned a media escort that would follow us like a dog until we boarded the plane and went on with our lives. I was fine with that – I just wanted to get home.

So I quietly packed my things and closed up my cabin, and followed my escort out to the gravel parking lot where all the show’s vehicles were parked. One or two of the cast had already left, and more were getting ready to depart. I saw Chip chatting with one of the cameramen. A few of the others hung back, talking while their media escorts waited, analyzing every word of conversation with a frown on their faces. Waiting nearby was Lana, and she scowled at the sight of me.

I ignored her, climbing into the passenger side of the waiting jeep.

“Wait,” a familiar voice yelled, and I cringed.

Dean rushed to the side of my jeep, trailed behind by his media escort. “Abby? I’ve been looking for you. We need to talk.”

I examined my fingernails. “I really don’t have anything to say to you, Dean.”

“That’s bullshit,” he said, an angry tone entering his voice. “We need to talk about what happened at tribal council tonight, because I get the impression that you’re mad at me–”

“No talking about the council,” barked my media assistant. “You are contractually obligated.”

I gave Dean a tight smile. “Sorry. You’re out of luck.”

“Then give me your phone number–”

I shook my head. “I don’t want to talk to you. Understand?”

He gave me a shocked look, and it emphasized how hollow his cheeks were. He’d played the game for so much longer than I had – it wasn’t fair. “Abby, what the fuck?”

“She’s got all she needs for her little book,” Lana called from across the way. Both of us turned toward her. She was looking over at me with a look that mixed irritation and disgust. “Or didn’t you know that, Dean? She’s writing a nasty little tell all. Your little bed partner here was a media plant.”

He recoiled as if I was diseased. “You what?”

“That’s right, Dean Woodall, mister Olympian,” I said in a bitter, angry voice. “I’m writing a book for the show. And I work for
Mediaweek
. Don’t you think I’ll have lots and lots to write about?”

His jaw tightened with anger, and he glared at Lana, then back at me. “Don’t do this, Abby.”

I gave a hard, bitter laugh. “Don’t what? Don’t use you to further my own ambitions? Oh the irony.” I gestured at our vehicle. “Now, if you don’t mind, I’m going to be late for my flight back home.”

Dean took a step or two backward, the hard glint still in his eyes, clenching his jaw. But he said nothing else as the jeep backed up and slowly drove away, leaving behind my time at Endurance Island.

The assistant glanced over at me and gave me a cheery smile. “Bet you’ll be glad to get home, huh?”

“Thrilled,” I said in a voice that didn’t echo my enthusiasm. Tears threatened to escape, but I fought them back. I was done crying over Dean Woodall.

~*~

 

"I told you already, I'd rather watch the show by myself," I said to my friend for the tenth time that day, holding the phone against my ear as I flopped down on my sofa. I curled my legs up under me. "No watching party, no nothing. I just want to have some time to absorb what I watch without anyone staring at me. You understand, don't you?"

Todd made disappointed noises into the phone. "I guess. But you'll let me grill you over it tomorrow? I hardly ever get to see you anymore."

"Tomorrow over lunch," I promised. By that time I should have had the chance to adjust to whatever horrors showed on the TV tonight. "I'll buy.”

“All right,” Todd said, mollified. He chattered on for a few more minutes, discussing work and how things had changed around the office since I’d left. “I still can’t believe you turned down the book deal and the TV special, Abby. Girl, are you crazy?”

“Oh, they gave that to Chip,” I said, waving a hand in the air even though he couldn’t see it. “They hadn’t paid me anything up front, so as long as I agreed not to do any competing shows, it wasn’t a problem.”

After the taping, the producers had cornered me and tried to get additional details about my relationship with Dean for the show. They wanted to use our ‘romance’ as a major storyline and harassed me for details. All kinds of details. Very
personal
details. When I’d balked, they’d tried to sweeten the deal with offering me the hosting duties for an exclusive ‘making of’ special for Endurance Island. I turned it down as well. My heart still hurt.

Being on Endurance Island had completely broken my heart and it had taken months to get over it. I still wasn’t sure if I was over it.

I smiled into the phone. “I must be crazy to pass on all the big money gigs, right? I just…I don’t know. I didn’t want to air my dirty laundry? It’s bad enough that everything is going to be on TV.”

He laughed at that. “I can only imagine what I’m going to see on TV tonight. You’re being all sneaky and evasive, which means it’s worse than I thought.”

He had no idea. The nervous flutter in my stomach that had been present for the last week was going non-stop. “Listen, Todd, the show’s about to start so I’m going to let you go, all right?”

“Tomorrow! Details at lunch!” He said and hung up.

I curled up on the far end of the couch in my apartment, reaching for the Pepto Bismol as the opening credits began to play with a blare of trumpets. They’d created a montage of all the players, flashing their cast photos back and forth as they zoomed in on wilderness shots.

My face flashed onto the screen, pale and round-cheeked compared to the other women. I wore a bright, sunny smile and my brown, coiling curls had been pulled into twin ponytails that rested on my shoulders. I wore the tankini that displayed my name in hot pink, and it was clean and bright. This must have been prior to us landing on the island. I didn’t get a chance to dwell on how I looked, because Dean’s photo moved onto the screen next. It was an action shot of him rising up out of the ocean, rivulets of sea water pouring down his tanned abdomen. He looked amazing.

Just seeing that depressed me. Why had I ever thought a guy like that would be interested in a girl like me? He was a freaking Olympian, for crying out loud. I should have seen it coming. My stomach gave an unhappy gurgle and I chugged more Pepto.

Then the show started, panning in over the crystal blue waters of the ocean, and I was hooked. I watched, fascinated, as Chip’s voiceover explained the rules of the game. The camera zoomed in on the twenty contestants scrambling for goods on the surface of the boat, and then the mad rush to get to shore. It was breathtaking to watch, and I settled in for the ride.

A few minutes into the show, it was evident that I was going to get a lot of face-time, and I cringed at the thought. The camera kept zooming in on my scowl. I scowled at Chip. I scowled at the others. I scowled at Dean when he picked me for his partner. My face flushed with embarrassment every time the camera zoomed in on my angry body, hands on hips. Had I really been that upset to be there?

Dean seemed to think so. The camera cut to a confessional interview, and Dean scratched his head, looking perplexed. “Abby hates me. I’m not sure what I did to her, but she genuinely hates me. I think if she could hold me underwater and drown me, she would.”

I chugged Pepto again. Where was Dean’s scheming? Where was the part where he vowed to use me to get my vote?

Instead, it showed us sleeping separately that night. Dean had another confessional with the cameras, and he expressed his dissatisfaction with how we were reacting to each other. “I just want to win and do well at this game, but I don’t know how to talk to Abby without her getting mad at me. It’s like we can’t speak to each other without snarling.” He gave the camera a rueful grin. “She’s lucky that she’s cute or I’d have asked for a different teammate already.”

It was painful to watch as the camera showed us sniping at each other, showed us breaking down at the challenge, and the paint I threw on him. It showed our dejected faces at the first Judgment Day, and then our surprise when we weren’t the first ones voted off.

The credits rolled, and I stared at the TV in shock.

Was that all just good editing? Or was Dean really not the monster I had thought he was?

~*~

 

Weeks passed. I watched every episode like a starving woman presented with water, fascinated and horrified at the same time. Once each episode was over, I hit the replay button on my Tivo and watched it all over again. The days between episodes went by agonizingly slowly, and I found myself stalking my fellow castaways online to see if anyone had shared tidbits about the game. Everyone was quiet, as online contact was forbidden until the finale of the show. I hadn’t bothered to get anyone’s numbers, so I felt isolated watching the game play out.

And as it played out, I realized I’d been wrong about a lot of things.

I cringed when they showed the peanut butter moment on camera – I hadn’t even realized that the cameraman had been nearby, taping us. It immediately cut away to a confessional. Dean’s face, angular and just a bit unshaven, filled my television, and I felt a shameful twinge. He was so handsome, and his mouth was doing that sideways quirk that I loved, as if he were laughing at himself.

“I have no idea why I licked the peanut butter off of her finger,” he admitted to the camera. “One moment she’s just standing there, taunting me, and the next, I’ve got her finger in my mouth and I’m licking her with my tongue and I’m getting turned on. And now I can’t stop looking at the way her butt looks in those bikinis.”

I blushed, but felt warm on the inside. At least it wasn’t just me that felt that way. The attraction had been mutual.

Our back and forth bickering – and subsequent flirting – was a heavy theme of the first two months of episodes. Our cabin where we’d shared the sleepover reward had obviously been wired with cameras. Luckily, the network chose to show things tastefully, and I only cringed with shame a few times, thinking of what my parents would say when they saw the episode.

From there, it got worse. We were constantly all over each other, and the cameras played that up. There wasn’t an episode that we weren’t giggling and falling into each other’s arms, or sharing a romantic moment. Every time there was a night shot, the camera zoomed in on our feet, tangled together and sticking out of our small shelter.

It was so obvious, and very painful to watch. We’d been so happy. At least, I had been.

And judging from his confessionals, Dean had been too.

One particular confessional shattered me. It was after we’d completed a challenge, and had returned to our beach and spent time just chatting and putting bug oil on each other. We’d played in the surf for a bit, then laid on the beach, my head propped on his shoulder. We’d looked blissfully content. Dean’s voice came over the shot, narrating from one of his confessionals. “You know, I like Abby. I like Abby a lot. She’s different than most of the girls I’ve ever met. I never thought I’d find someone so stubborn and determined…or that I’d like it. But I really like her. I like hearing her laugh. I like catching her when she trips, or the cute way she sneezes. I like waking up next to her. When we first got here, I thought I couldn’t wait to get home. But…now I don’t know. All I know is that I’d like to keep waking up next to her.”

Tears brimmed out of my eyes and slid down my cheeks. They were beautiful words. But was it the truth?

I started to grow nervous, waiting for the episode that I knew was coming – the tribal merge and my big betrayal. On the day it arrived, I turned off the phone and stocked up on Pepto Bismol, and didn’t leave my couch, just in case there might be a commercial that would show me Dean’s face, or an instance of us laughing and hugging again.

I’d grown to crave seeing those moments. I wasn’t sure if it made me a sad sack or just sad that it hadn’t worked out.

The episode began, and I watched with my gaze glued to the screen, hardly daring to breathe. It played on, and I watched my ankle give out in the challenge, and Dean carrying me, stroking my hair and comforting me. It went by in a blur of tears at that point, and as I watched the tribal council, I was not surprised by the results.

Dean held his slate up to the camera. He’d voted for Heather.

Lana held her slate up to the camera. It said “Abby.” She made a sad face at the camera, then smiled. “Sorry girl. I love you to death, but you and Dean are way too close, and I want that money for myself. If I break the two of you apart, I get control of the game again, and Dean’s got no choice but to be with me until the end. No hard feelings.”

The votes were read. Rather than close in on my face alone, the camera split-screened and showed my face on the right, Dean’s on the left. I looked confused as the votes were read, but Dean’s reaction was immediate. He was shocked, and then furious. As I watched, he bent and started questioning Lana immediately, while I wandered off the stage and out of the game.

He hadn’t betrayed me. Lana had lied.

CHAPTER 14

 

I don’t understand what happened…Abby won’t even talk to me. What happened that she’s so upset about? I can’t even get near her without production crawling all over us, worried we’re going to share answers. I just want five minutes with her, to see if she’s all right. If we’re all right. Ugh. Listen to me. I sound like a weepy girl. – Dean Woodall, Post Game Interview

~*~

 

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