Prologue
Chet Burrah prepared to die again. This time from boredom.
He stood on the clouds outside the pearly gates as the
angel Mike droned on about the rules. Chet tried to listen, but Mike spoke in a
high, nagging tone that made Chet want to sink into the clouds. He would’ve
made a break for the gates if Stacy—another angel who’d brought him here from
Earth—hadn’t been standing at his side. From the way she glared at him, Stacy
seemed angry enough to tackle him from behind if he bolted. Plus, deserting her
after she guided him all the way to heaven would have been an asshole move.
And I’m no asshole, Chet thought. I’m a dick. He remained
surprised that some people still didn’t know the difference—Mike being one of
them.
“Does this all make sense?” Mike asked, standing across
from Chet. His eyes were a piercing gold, his hair a stark white that fell
behind his shoulders and disappeared down his back. He wore a high-collared
white dress that covered his wrists and ankles. Pompously, his white wings were
stretched out behind his back on full display, though he merely stood on the
clouds with Chet. All for looks. Definitely an asshole move.
“For sure, bro. I totally get it,” Chet said, cracking his
back and leaning down to touch his toes. Skin a pale gold that could have been
mistaken for white, he wore the clothes he’d died in: a black tank top, tight
khaki shorts, and sandals with bottle-openers built into the bottoms. To match
Mike, Chet stretched out his own wings—which were the color of an American pale
ale—and flapped them a couple times. “All’s I got to do is help out this kid
with his problems. Then I come back here and chill out with you for eternity.
Easy money.”
“You need to be unobtrusive,” Stacy said, still standing
beside Chet. Her hair was the darkest black, and she wore a high-collared white
dress identical to Mike’s. Wings hidden, her expression was confident and
judgmental—just as pompous. Except she’s hot, so it doesn’t count.
“Yeah, totally. I’m as unobtrusive as it gets,” Chet
replied, not knowing what that word meant but trusting he’d figure it out when
the time came. He tried not to stare at Stacy for too long, but by far, she
remained the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen. If only she wasn’t
crazy—and didn’t want to kill me. To make his ogling less obvious, he
donned the pair of sunglasses he’d hung from his shirt. After brushing his
blonde hair to the side, he added, “I mean, how hard can this be?”
The two angels shared a concerned look before Mike said,
“Chet, I need to ensure that you understand the delicacy of this situation…”
Chet’s eyes glossed over as Mike continued to blather on
about golden scales, scrolls, and feathers. The angel probably explained what
they signified and why the items even mattered, but Chet was too busy rocking
back on his heels to listen. It’d be far easier to pay attention if I just
wasn’t so thirsty. Chet imagined a cold Red Sun beer in his hand, the kind
he’d lived off of during his college years. He could visualize the drink so
clearly that he tasted the amber liquid on his tongue.
Then the air stirred, and an orange can of Red Sun
materialized in Chet’s grip. Cold to the touch with beads of moisture rolling
down the sides of the can.
“What?” Chet gasped, cracking open the beer. He sipped it, and
while it didn’t taste as good as a natural Red Sun, he was too excited to feel
disappointed. “I can create beer just by thinking about it? Bro, this is a game
changer!”
“Technically, yes. You can create many things, but there
are caveats and limitations to your abilities…” Mike said, explaining something
about souls, electricity, and light. Ignoring the angel, Chet drowned his
boredom in beer. He finished four by the time Mike asked, “So, do you have any
questions?”
“Nope,” Chet said, creating a fifth beer and smiling. “Put
me in, coach. I’ve got this.”
Mike sighed as if Chet had somehow disappointed him. He
merely said, “Then may God be with you on your journey, Chet.”
“May God be with you,” Stacy echoed with a drawn-out sigh.
She leaned in closer and whispered, “I’ll be watching you very closely, so
don’t you dare screw this up.”
With an uneasy smile, Chet replied, “Me? Mess things up?
Nah, this’ll be the easiest test I’ve ever taken. Be back before you know it!”
Giving Mike a thumbs-up and Stacy a wink, Chet dropped through the clouds and
back to Earth. Laughing as he plummeted, Chet shouted, “Whoever you are,
Grayson West, your life’s about to become awesome, bro!”
Chapter One
Sixty-Three.
That was the number circled at the bottom of a list with
sixty-nine questions, the last of which was only a question mark. The other
sixty-eight were similar, asking about other life experiences that Grayson West
had mostly only read about or seen in movies. He frowned before looking back up
at the top of the page.
The VSU Purity Test, read the title in bold letters. Below it was a
small introduction: Welcome to your first day at Valley State University!
These next four to seven years will be the best of your life. Have fun, but not
too much fun. Check every item you answer YES to. And don’t forget: Go
Chipmunks! Beneath that, an underlined sentence issued a blatant warning: Don’t
be stupid. This isn’t a competition. Attempts to get a zero will likely lead to
death.
Grayson’s expression became a scowl, which had become his
default expression over the last six months. “My score hasn’t changed since
August. It feels like I failed, but at least it’s not for credit, I guess.” His
eyes glanced toward the computer, which rested on a cheap vinyl desk from IKEA.
On an open web page, Grayson stared at his Fall-semester grades:
CHEM 1020, General Chemistry II: A
CHEM 1020L, General Chemistry II Lab: A-
ENGR 1000, Connections to Engineering Seminar: A+
MATH 1920, Calculus II: A
PHYS 1220, Physics of Electricity and Magnetism: A
PHYS 1220L, Physics of Electricity and Magnetism Lab: A
PSY 1010, General Psychology I: A+
“At least I got all A’s,” Grayson said aloud to the empty
room, because talking to himself had become a habit. He glanced down at the
spring semester’s classes—ones that would begin tomorrow.
ENGR 1110, Introduction to Engineering Design: In Progress
ENGR 1120, Programming for Engineers in MATLAB: In Progress
MATH 2010, Linear Algebra: In Progress
MATH 2120, Differential Equations: In Progress
MUS 1030, Music Appreciation: In Progress
SOC 1220, Introduction to Sociology: In Progress
Instead of excitement, a sense of cold dread washed over
him at the thought of the new semester. Grayson leaned back, staring at the
off-beige and aged-yellow walls, looking more like a nineties Taco Bell than a
college dorm room, though it smelled more like dust than burned cheese.
Thumb-tack holes and mismatched paint were covered with red and white VSU
banners, giving the room a clownish theme. The marred flooring wasn’t any
better, tilting and bubbling from a water pipe rupture three years ago. Nor was
the bunk bed, whose exposed and sharpened steel had been deemed safe with the
addition of Styrofoam padding.
“Home sweet home.” Grayson tried to laugh, but the sour
words made his lips pucker. The statement had become more true since move-in
day, when his older brother had silently driven Grayson to campus, pushed him
out onto the grass, and left without so much as a goodbye.
Shivering as much from the memory as the January frost,
Grayson pushed himself from the desk over to the rusting air conditioning unit
that hung beneath his dormer window. With the roof sloping down through the
third floor, the window-facing wall slanted inward, giving Grayson another
reason to complain—not that he needed a reason. Barely bothering to look
through the window at the small lawn and the identical dormitory opposite him,
Grayson flipped open the control panel before remembering that the temperature
knob had been removed by administration years ago. He turned the fan speed from
low to off, but it still allowed cold air into the room.
Grumbling, Grayson kicked the unit with a bare foot, only succeeding in
smashing his toes. He hobbled back to his chair, cursing until the pain faded.
After minutes of silence, Grayson pulled his phone from
his pocket and called his father.
“Hello? Hello?” Grayson’s dad asked before
releasing a body-shaking laugh. “Sorry, this is just a recording. I’m not here
right now, but if you leave a message, I’ll respond as soon as I can.”
The tone buzzed.
“Hey, Dad.” Grayson whispered, his voice feeling even more
quiet than usual. “I, uh, I’m getting ready for the spring semester here. Don’t
know if you heard, but last semester I got all A’s.” He attempted to make his
voice sound cheerful, but instead the sound was hollow. His laughter was small
and off-balance. “I know you’re busy, but I’d love to hear from you. Even if
it’s just to lecture me, I just…” He scratched his head, uncomfortable with the
silence. “I just wish you’d call me—”
The door opened, and Grayson hastily ended the voicemail
and put away his phone as his roommate entered with a red suitcase and black
backpack.
“Oh, welcome back, Dalton.”
With close-trimmed auburn hair and freckled skin, Dalton
was thin but tone, skinny but strong. Grayson assumed that it was from a
lifetime of physically intensive chores on a farm somewhere, judging by the way
his muscles pulled beneath his skin. However, he had gained a few pounds over
winter break.
“Geez, still hung up about that test, Sixty-Three?” Dalton
asked with a shit-eating grin, eyes spying the paper on Grayson’s desk. He
didn’t laugh so much as snort. “You must be the only guy who gets paler over
breaks. What’d you do, stay inside the whole time?”
“You could say that,” Grayson replied, flipping over the
test and turning his chair toward his roommate.
“Did you even go home, Sixty-Three?” Dalton asked
in his southern drawl, morphing and elongating the words as he sloughed off his
backpack. He brushed his hair out of his eyes and fell onto the lower bunk in
the corner of the room, though the springs groaned.
Grayson didn’t bother to lie—Dalton always saw through it.
Instead, Grayson shrugged with hunched shoulders, staring down at the scuffed
vinyl flooring as his stomach churned. He hadn’t gone home, going so far as to
lie about having a research position over the break to avoid any additional
questions. Though his mom had come down a few times to eat with him, the
conversations had been more filled with silence than words. Horrible silences.
“You really stayed here the entire time? Wow. What
a nerd,” Dalton said, the words less venomous and more pitying, which was
worse. “I don’t know how you do it, man. Always so tense, always grinding.
You’re going to have a heart attack by the time you’re twenty-three, you know.
And… did you lose weight? You look like a buck twenty, man. What’d you lose,
twenty-five pounds? Jesus Christ. What you need is a drink. In fact…” Dalton
paused as if remembering something. Then he grinned. “I have an idea. Sigma Theta
Delta’s throwing a rager tonight. You should swing by.”
Grayson opened his mouth to argue, but Dalton continued,
“Before you say something stupid like, ‘We have classes tomorrow,’ think about
this: classes haven’t even started yet. No homework. Nothing you could stroke
out over. Just a fun night. You won’t even have to pay for the booze. My treat,
Sixty-Three.”
Having been depraved of social interactions for the break,
Grayson’s nod was too enthusiastic.
Dalton’s red eyebrows raised. “Wait, you’re serious?
You’ll actually come?”
Grayson nodded. “Yeah, I need…” Some friends. He
thought but didn’t say, grateful that his lips hadn’t betrayed him. Instead,
Grayson finished, “A break.”
“Wow, new semester, new you, Sixty-Three. Maybe you’ll
lower that purity score you’re always jacking off to.” Another laugh. “The
party starts at 9:00 PM over at the Stud House—”
“The Stud House?”
Dalton snorted. “You really don’t know anything outside of
books. The Sigma Theta Delta house is the Stud House. We just
added the U for shits and giggles. And that makes us brothers the
Studs.”
Not the STDs? Grayson thought but didn’t say. Dalton wouldn’t see it as
a joke, most likely. And it wasn’t worth starting a fight over, especially not
when Dalton could kick his ass. Plus, Grayson needed to make some friends—not
lose the few he had any. Not that Dalton’s even a friend…
“Anyway,” Dalton eventually said, “our house party will be
dead until 9:30, maybe 10:00. Just show up when you start to see a line.”
Grayson looked over at the clock. 6:30 PM. With a nod, he
said, “Sounds good.”
“Great,” Dalton got off the bed and yawned before walking
to the door to leave.
“You’re already leaving?”
“Yeah. Got party stuff to do. Plus, I’ve got to drop off
my stuff.” When Grayson frowned, Dalton explained, “I’m a brother now,
Sixty-Three. I’ll be moving into the Stud House later this week, so there’s no
point in me leaving my stuff here.”
“Oh…”
“Yeah. Pretty soon you’ll have this shit hole all to
yourself, and you can study your little heart out.” He winked before pulling on
his sunglasses, despite the darkness outside. Opening the door, Dalton added,
“See you tonight, Sixty-Three, if you actually show up.”
Then it closed, and Grayson sat in silence, still
clutching the phone, until he could no longer stand it. He turned back toward
his desk and opened his computer to review his transfer application to
Kingsford University, which he’d started over the break. After re-reading his
essays, he stared at the last unfulfilled requirement:
Submit a letter of recommendation from an engineering
professor from your current institution.
“No way Dr. Elizabeth Hanson even remembers me from her
intro class.” He’d been a fly on the wall. Less than that, even, probably
closer to a bug under her shoe. “But I’ll make sure she remembers me this
time,” he said, having purposely signed up for her spring semester course on
engineering design and programming. “And when I get that recommendation, I’ll
leave this place forever. Off to Kingsford.”
***
Grayson left the room at exactly 9:00 PM, silently
observing the derelict dormitory: the chipped paint on the stucco walls, the
splintered wooden archways, the water damage around the water fountains, and
the mold growing in the community bathrooms. He avoided the shoddy elevator and
took the stairs. Stepping around the puddle that had formed on one landing,
Grayson passed the white-capped mushrooms in the corners of the stairwell and
pushed open the emergency exit door, whose alarm had been disconnected years
ago despite the warning sign hanging above the door’s push bar.
Outside, Grayson’s breath turned to fog as he stared at
the commuter parking lot that served as the backyard landscape. Following the
cement path to the front of the dormitory, Grayson glanced up at the pink and
brown night sky, lightless as the stars were hidden by light pollution and the
moon by clouds. Even in the dark, lamps lit the lawn adjoining the eight
first-year housing dormitories, revealing the moss-ridden water fountain at its
center and the clumps of dirt and yellow grass around it. From all directions,
freshmen hurried into dormitories with twelve and twenty-four packs of beer.
Grayson nodded to the few he knew and, instead of following them to a pre-game
or a party, walked across the rusted train track that separated first-year
housing and commuter parking lots from the main campus.
While the lawns were greener and the buildings were newer,
many complexes—from the dining halls to the science quadrangle—were under
construction despite long-passed completion dates. One construction banner he
passed was nearing its third year of delay. Others had even longer delays.
Still, the projects caused Grayson to leave the sidewalks and walk into the
street to travel around the fenced-off areas. During the day, it would have
been more difficult, but given the time of night, cars were few and far between.
Stopping in the middle of the road as his phone buzzed,
Grayson pulled it from his pocket with a too-excited smile, but the expression
faded as soon as he realized his mom was calling. Not his dad. He silenced his
phone and let the call go to voicemail. When a message alert came, he ignored
that, too, despite feeling worse for it.
“I’ll call back later, Mom,” Grayson told himself, though
even he didn’t believe the words. Instead, he let the thought vanish like the
stars overhead and walked to the opposite side of campus to Frat Row. He
followed the pumping music that vibrated the pebbles on the road and his heart
until he found a line of college kids in neon clothes standing outside of a
three-story frat house with the letters ΣTΔ.
A frat called STD, Grayson thought again, looking dubiously at the house. Seriously,
doesn’t anybody else see the irony in that?
Apparently not. The rest of the college kids waited
impatiently to be let into the party, because a fence had been rolled out
around the frat house’s perimeter. Its entrance remained guarded by two Studs
sitting at a white table beneath a pop-up canopy tent.
By himself, Grayson went to the back of the line and stood
awkwardly as excited cliques of students talked around him. When he eventually
reached the front of the line, Grayson pulled out his ID card and handed it to
the Stud guard.
“You bring any girls with you?” the Stud asked as he
handed the card back
“Uh, no.”
“Then you need an invitation to come in. Name?”
Grayson frowned. He just had my ID card. “I’m
Grayson West.”
“Not your name,” the Stud said, sounding bored.
“Who invited you?”
“Oh, uh, Dalton. Dalton Cox.”
“Oh, you’re here to see Cocks?” The Stud grinned
mischievously, looked through a list of names, and crossed Grayson’s off. “In
you go, kid. Have fun.”
Grayson walked past the table and the throng of partiers
who were dancing outside. He pushed his way through the front door and into the
living room, bumping shoulders with a red-head.
“Hey, watch where you’re—oh shit! Sixty-Three, in the
flesh,” Dalton said, slapping his shoulder. “I can’t believe you actually came!
Hold on, man, I’ll get us some drinks.”
Dalton disappeared before Grayson could reply and was
quickly lost in a sea of students. Rather than dance or introduce himself to
others, Grayson stood stiff against the wall until Dalton returned with two red
plastic cups.
“Welcome to the Stud House,” Dalton drawled. “Ain’t she a
beauty?”
Grayson surveyed the room. It was trashed. Spilled soda
and alcohol caused his shoes to stick to the floor. The walls were marred with
scratches, hastily patched holes, and cracked pictures of fraternity classes.
Most of the furniture had been removed for the party, and the couches that
remained were wrecked from previous nights of debauchery. On the far wall was a
raised platform where the DJ performed, and oversized speakers boomed so loud
that Grayson’s heart rattled in his chest.
“Sure is,” Grayson said, still staring warily at his own
cup. “What’s in this?”
“Jungle juice.” Dalton shrugged as if it were an obvious
answer.
Grayson raised an eyebrow. “And that is?”
“Sixty-Three, how do you not know what jungle juice
is?” Dalton asked, shaking his head and rolling his eyes. “Mixture of blue
Gatorade, Everclear, and some Mio to cut the taste of the alcohol.”
Grayson smelled the liquid and almost gagged. “I think
I’ll pass.”
“Sixty-Three, would you lighten up?” Dalton asked, his
brow furrowing. He gestured with his cup, some of the liquid sloshing over the
rim. “Look at everyone else. We gave them the same shit. I have the same
shit.” Dalton took a long drink from his glass. “There. Satisfied?”
No, Grayson thought. Instead, he said, “Yeah.”
“Then just drink it like I am.”
Grayson frowned but drank. It didn’t taste as bad as he
expected, but it still burned his throat.
Grayson grimaced, seeing that Dalton’s frown tugged upward
and his tense shoulders relaxed. “Good man, Sixty-Three. We’ll lower that score
before the night’s over. Who knows, maybe I’ll have to start calling you
Sixty-One!”
They wandered about the room, walking closer to the
gathering mass of college kids in front of the DJ booth. Dalton said a few
things, but Grayson couldn’t hear anything above the noise of the EDM and trap
music. Girls and guys danced around him. He was bumped more than once, sloshing
alcohol onto his shoes and others. Dalton talked with other brothers of the
fraternity, introducing Grayson as Sixty-Three each time. For a reason
Grayson couldn’t express, the Studs looked at him strangely—as if expecting him
to grow a third arm. To avoid their gaze, he drank more.
Dalton pointed over at the mantel on the wall adjacent to
the DJ booth. “See that?” A giant golden chalice emblazoned with the ΣTΔ letters shined with the display
lights around it. Having a handle on either side, it looked more like a trophy
than a drink container. Dalton stared at it lovingly. “That’s the Holy Grail, Sixty-Three.
When brothers are initiated, we drink from that chalice. It’s our most prized possession. Want
to drink from it?”
“No,” Grayson said, thinking of all the lips that had been
on it already.
“Good, because I wouldn’t let you,” Dalton said with a
wheezing laugh. He pushed Grayson toward the stairs leading to the basement.
“Come on, Sixty-Three.”
Dalton dragged him downstairs into the basement of the
frat house, where low lights showed a couple of beer pong tables that had been
set up. Pledges watched from the sides as brothers played, drank, laughed, and
even made-out with some of the girls. As it had been upstairs, everyone in the
basement wore neon, and Grayson felt even more out of place. He took yet
another sip of his drink as the room swayed. Then he staggered a step, catching
the edge of the table and causing the beer pong cups to shake before settling.
Three Studs glared at Grayson as he said, “Hey, Dalton. I don’t feel so good. I
think I’m going to—”
“Stay,” Dalton said, sloshing his drink. “You’ll feel
better if you keep drinking, Sixty-Three.”
“Would you stop calling me that?” Grayson mumbled.
“I will if you prove me wrong, Sixty-Three. Drink
the drank and shoot your shot. Play a round with us.”
Grayson’s head pounded. His cheeks felt warm. “One game.”
“My man.” Dalton placed his VSU student card on the table
to reserve a place in line. “There’s a bit of a wait. I’ll get us another round
in the meantime.”
“I don’t think I want—”
“Sure you do,” Dalton said, leaving for several minutes,
though it felt like only seconds to Grayson.
As his stomach roiled, Grayson drank from the new cup and
coughed, juice spilling on his cheeks. He kept drinking until Dalton eventually
shook him and said, “Sixty-Three! Game time!”
People snickered, hearing the name. Grayson’s heart sank. The
nickname’s already stuck. He followed Dalton to the side of the table.
“Eye to eye,” Dalton said, handing him a ball.
“What?” Grayson asked.
“I’ll be damned…” Dalton laughed. “Of course you’ve
never played before. All right. You need to look at that guy”—Dalton pointed to
the senior standing across from him, a Stud with bloodshot blue eyes and greasy
blonde hair that was pulled back in a man bun—“in the eyes as you throw the
ball and try to land it in a cup, but not the middle cup because that’s a bitch
move.”
“Sure.” Grayson threw the ball, not waiting for the Stud,
though his ball bounced against the table six inches in front of the first cup.
The Stud’s ball sloshed into the front cup.
“You lost, so you chug,” Dalton said, voice filled with
glee and ridicule.
So Grayson drank—and kept drinking. He missed every shot,
and while Dalton made a few cups, their opponents never missed. By the end of
it, Grayson was holding himself up on the table, his legs weak and rubbery.
“Well, better luck next time.” Dalton laughed, slapping
Grayson on the back, albeit too hard. “How are you feeling?”
“Sick.”
“Oh suck it up, Sixty-Three. You’re fine. Let’s get
another drink.” Dalton grabbed him by the shoulder and pushed him toward the
table of alcohol, where a Gatorade dispenser sat beside several empty hard
liquor bottles. A few girls were standing around it, chatting in their neon
sports bras and athletic shorts.
“They let anybody into these parties nowadays,” said the
brunette wearing a purple headband in lieu of a greeting. She was as
comfortable in the fraternity as she was beautiful and confident. Tall and
graceful, her hazel eyes were quick despite her relaxed posture. She stared at
Grayson for but a moment before dismissing him, as if he wasn’t worth her time.
Grayson swallowed the urge to skulk away.
“Sixty-Three, this is Heather.” Dalton gestured to her
with his cup. “She’s the queen of Phi Mu Sigma.”
“Don’t you forget it, freshmen,” Heather said, offering a
teasing smile.
The Queen of PMS, huh? Grayson held out his hand, trying to maintain some
form of dignity even as the world swayed. His chest fluttered, his heart
pumping, his pants lifting—
Lifting? Grayson’s eyes widened in horror. Oh God. Not a boner.
Not here. Not now.
Cheeks flushing, he managed to say, “Nice to meet you.”
Cocking an eyebrow, Heather replied, “A bit too nice. Keep
it in your pants, Sixty-Three.”
Grayson broke his gaze, aware that his pants continued to
rise, and the girls beside her laughed. Grayson looked over at Dalton
helplessly, all-too-aware of his unbearable laughter.
“It worked!” Dalton said. “It actually worked!”
Grayson shrank back, turning on Dalton with a snarl. “What
do you mean, it worked? What’d you do to me?”
Dalton howled, his laughs echoing as more people turned to
look. “I crushed up a Viagra and put it in your drink!”
“You what?”
“Relax, Sixty-Three,” Dalton wiped laughing tears from his
eyes. “It’ll be gone in like four hours.” Then he threw his head back and
laughed again.
“Piss off. That wasn’t funny.” Grayson slurred. He shook
his head, which made the room spin more, and clenched his fists.
“Goddamn, you’re such a loser, Sixty-Three.
Learn to take a joke.”
Grayson wanted to punch something, punch Dalton,
but he was too afraid of the consequences. Holding a trembling fist, he turned
and stumbled away toward the stairs, but Dalton shoved him from behind.
Grayson’s hands broke his fall. So did his dick, which might have snapped in
half. Immediately vomiting, Grayson struggled to his knees and groaned as Studs
grabbed his arms and legs, carrying him up the stairs.
“Bye, bitch!” Dalton shouted just before Grayson was out
of earshot. Paraded through the Stud House, partiers, and those lined up
outside the fence, he was thrown onto the sidewalk face-first as students
laughed at him. As a reflex, Grayson threw up again, clutching his crotch.
“Get lost, Pinocchio-dick,” one Stud said, throwing a solo
cup at Grayson’s back, chilling and momentarily sobering him. Six more
followed, as did jeers and taunts.
Long after Grayson pushed himself to his feet and limped
away, laughter haunted him.
And because he was alone, nobody else heard him whisper,
“I knew I should have just stayed home.”
Chapter Two
Grayson limped back across campus and the lawns to Rumble
Hall, but not before tripping on the rusting train track and falling again.
Grayson dry-heaved, having long-since purged his stomach of its contents.
Saliva dripped from his lip as he stumbled to the grimy bowl fountain displayed
in front of Rumble Hall. Clinging to the water basin as he was too dizzy and
out of breath to make it inside the dormitory, Grayson shut his eyes and wiped
away the budding tears before reopening them. Amidst the floating beer cans and
debris, he stared at the reflection in the water: a boy with wispy brown
hair—once soft but had grown coarse and rough from lack of care—baggy eyes
formed from many sleepless nights, and a mouth that resembled a thin, pale
line. The shirt he wore hung looser on him now than it had last semester,
having lost thirty pounds since summer.
“You’re such a loser,” Grayson told the reflection,
his shoulders sagging even farther forward. He slapped the water as he tried to
think through the haze that clouded his mind. When the ripples faded and the
same scared reflection returned, Grayson tried to push himself away from the
lip of the fountain, but his hand slipped on the grime. He fell into the water
headfirst, and the cold brought with it an ounce of sobriety and shame.
God, can’t I do anything right?
Just before he was going to push himself out of the
fountain, Grayson’s eyes glimpsed an orange cannister resting at the bottom of
the basin among a pile of dirt, moss, and leaves.
What the hell?
Grayson’s hand closed around it just as a hand ripped him
out of the water. He sputtered, blinking away the water from his eyes. His
vision cleared, revealing a tired senior in a purple and black drug rug, khaki
shorts, and sandals: Marty, his RA. His brown hair curled up into an afro and
his chin grew small tufts of hair that formed a grotesque goatee.
Grayson clenched. Shit. He’s going to write a report.
“Hey, you good, man? You looked like you were—” Marty’s
eyes flicked down to his pants and took a quick step backward. “Jesus Christ,
you need a minute alone, man?”
Grayson self-consciously cupped his hands around the
bulge. “Spiked drink,” he said with a shiver, the cold gripping him tighter
than the stench of alcohol on his breath. “Viagra.”
“For real? Shit, man. That’s rough. Do you know who your
RA is? I’ll give them a call to help you out if you need it.”
Grayson blinked, eyes furrowing. He doesn’t recognize
me? Taking a deep breath to control his shuddering, he said, “You’re my RA,
Marty.”
“I am? Shit, I totally forgot. Wait, yeah! I think
I do know you. You’re…” Marty looked up at the sky before snapping his fingers.
“Graylin, right?”
Grayson almost winced. The name sounded too much like his
older brother’s: Jaylin. Kingsford is for people with futures, and you don’t
deserve one… If you need something from me, don’t bother, Grayson. We’re
done. Those words—the last ones Jaylin had said to Grayson after dropping
him off at VSU—echoed through his mind. “No. My name’s Grayson.”
“Oh, right! I remember now… Grayson the 420 kid.” Marty
nodded to himself and grinned before remembering the situation. “But hey, do
you want to file a report? Tell me anything?” Grayson hesitated, and Marty
seemed to notice it. “Look, man, I’m not here to bust you. Just want to make
sure you’re all right.”
“You’re not?” Grayson asked skeptically.
“Look at where we live,” Marty pointed over at Rumble
Hall. “That place was built in the fifties, mushrooms are growing in the
stairwell, you can’t change the temperature on your AC unit, and you share
showers with fifty other dudes. Half of those crackheads only shower once a
week… Technically, I’m supposed to write a report, but technically, I’m also
supposed to get paid for this job, which I’m not. I just want to make sure that
you’re all right. That’s my actual job. You want to tell me anything?
About where you were or who might’ve spiked—”
Grayson shook his head violently. Can’t rat on the guy
I share a room with.
Marty put up his hands in mock surrender. “Okay, man,
that’s totally fine. But I need to know a couple of things just to make sure
you don’t die, all right? How much did you have to drink?”
Grayson struggled to remember because everything was still
blurry. “Four cups.”
Marty relaxed. “Oh. That’s it? Four beers is better than
I—”
“Jungle juice, not beer.”
Marty grunted. “Never know how much alcohol is in that
stuff. Anywhere from seven to ten drinks. Not as great, but it depends on your
tolerance. How much do you usually drink, Grayson? You know what your limit
is?”
“Never drank before.” When Marty gave him a curious look,
Grayson stared at the ground and added, “Look, can we just go inside?”
“Sure, man. We’re going to use the other door, so the
guard doesn’t see. Sound good?”
“Great.”
Clutching onto Marty, Grayson stumbled to the side
entrance and took the elevator to the fourth floor. He walked in every
direction except the right one as the world spun, but the RA pulled him to his
room. Embarrassed, Grayson missed the lock twice and handed the key to Marty,
who opened the door. Stumbling inside, Grayson collapsed in his chair.
“Stay here, man.” Marty retreated only to return with
three bottles of water and a bag of pretzels. “Here. Drink at least one bottle
and half the pretzels.”
“Thanks.” Having threw up most of the alcohol in his
stomach, Grayson felt his words slurring less now.
“Sure, man. I can stay here if you want—”
Grayson found his head already shaking, closing his eyes
so he couldn’t see Marty’s pity. He smiled, but it wasn’t heartfelt. “No, I’m
good. Thanks, though.”
“Okay, well, if you want some company, I’m just down the
hall. Room 428. I always keep my door unlocked, so help yourself, man.” Marty
might have said something else, but Grayson’s focus was on maintaining the
smile. As soon as the door closed, it fell.
Grayson clenched his hand before realizing he was still
holding what he’d found in the fountain: an orange beer can, depicting a red
sun setting on a yellow horizon. Red Sun, it read, An American Pale
Ale. The thought of drinking it made Grayson convulse, so instead he
dropped it onto the floor, denting the side.
“Ow!” came a tinny and warbled reply. “What the shit, bro?”
Grayson froze. “No way…” Slowly, he reached down to the
beer can and picked it up, hearing nothing. Grayson shook it close to his ear.
“Stop shaking me around and just pull the tab!”
Grayson shrank back, dropping the can again.
More obscenities rang from inside the drink.
Trembling, Grayson reached down to pick up the can again.
He hesitated, pulling back his hand. Could Viagra cause hallucinations?
“Maybe my drink was spiked with something else.” Grayson
picked up the can, despite his gut telling him not to. He held it with only two
fingers, in case it tried to attack him. “Are you a talking beer can?”
“Bro, that’d be ridiculous… I’m in the beer can!”
When Grayson only stared with his jaw hanging open, the voice added, “What are
you waiting for? Shotgun this shit! Pull the tab!”
“I can’t believe that I’m actually going to do this.”
Grayson gripped the top of the can and pulled the tab.
Foam sprayed from the top like an erupting geyser, and
Grayson dropped it as the amber liquid sprayed across the walls, desk, and
floor. “What the hell is happening?” Grayson said, backing away. He tripped on
his backpack and fell to the floor with a thud.
Then the foam changed. It coalesced into a figure—a
shorter, mid-twenties male stood wearing a white tank top with the words Sky’s
Out, Thighs Out, short salmon-colored shorts, and Chaco sandals. His eyes
were hidden behind a pair of black wayfarer sunglasses, and his short blonde
hair was styled upward in a golden wave. Letting out a groan, he stretched,
each vertebrae in his back popping like shotgunned beer cans. Behind him, a
pair of golden wings unfurled, each the color of a Belgian white ale.
“So,” the winged man said in a vaguely Californian accent,
“all those angels come down in a halo of light to get a standing ovation, but
when I do it Aladdin-style, you drop me? What? I don’t get even a
single clap for my entrance?”
Grayson blinked, opening his mouth to speak but closing it
when only a squeak emerged from his lips. Then he tried again. “You’re an angel?”
“Not quite, bro, but close. I’m like an angel but not the
singing-praising type, you know? I’m the partying type. I’m a wingman. Your
wingman.”
“This isn’t possible,” Grayson whispered, scooting away
until his back hit the corner of the room.
“I need a drink,” the wingman said, reaching past the mug
of water for the Red Sun on the ground. “Five second rule.” He chugged its
contents before crushing it on his head and letting the can fall to the ground.
“Not going to lie, I got stuck in that can when I jammed myself inside. Not
sure what would have happened if you hadn’t opened it… Guess that’s how the
genie felt. Just stuck in a lamp. Tragic.”
“What’s happening?”
“I’ll tell you what’s happening, bro. We’re going to have
an incredible time. You and me, we’re going to wreck shit Aladdin-style!”
The wingman lowered his shades and winked with an eye that was the same golden
color as his wings. Then he placed the sunglasses back on the bridge of his
nose.
“I don’t understand… Who the hell are you?” Grayson
managed, his voice a little stronger.
“Heaven, and the name’s Chet Burrah. Like I already said,
I’m your wingman, and since we’re doing this Aladdin-style, that means
I’m going to grant you three bitches.”
Grayson paused. “Three… bitches?”
“Yeah! Like chicks.”
“Did I… summon you?” Grayson asked.
“Kind of, but not really,” Chet said, looking around the
place and grimacing at the poor decor. “My guess is that God thought you needed
my help.”
“You guess?”
“Not going to lie, bro, I didn’t pay too much attention
during the angel orientation stuff. Kinda dipped when I got the gist of it from
my boy Mike. The way I see it, we’re just going to wing it.” Chet shook his
head and laughed. “Wing it, like my wings? Get it? Classic. Damn, first
time back, and I’m already too good at this. Check it.” Chet wiggled his
fingers, and a Red Sun beer magically appeared in his hand. “Abracadabra,
bitch!”
“How?” Grayson asked, jaw agape.
“You know how Jesus turned water into wine? Well, I also
have some sick ass powers, bro. I can do a lot of shit with beer, aside from
drinking it.” Chet shotgunned the beer, immediately created another one, and
added, “So, here’s the thing. I’m trying to get into GOD and—”
Grayson froze. “Into God? What does that even
mean?”
“Relax, not God. GOD. You know, Gamma Omega
Delta—it’s Frat Heaven. Big difference. You understand now?”
Grayson nodded, thinking, Dalton drugged me. Put LSD in
my drink or something. That has to be it. Or, I’m already sleeping. He
smiled. Of course I’m sleeping. He breathed a sigh of relief. This is
all a crazy dream, and it doesn’t matter because I’ll just wake up. “Sure,
Chet. That makes sense.”
“I knew you’d get it,” Chet said with a smile. “That’s why
this is going to be a piece of cake. Except, screw cake, because we only eat
protein from now on—and drink, of course.” Another beer appeared in his hands,
which he chugged.
“Oh,” Chet continued after he’d polished off the drink. “I
guess I should probably also tell you why I’m here and all that. To get into
GOD, I have to prove myself as a pledge, you know? At least, that’s what Mike
said. He was like, ‘Chet, thou must help thy bros, beginning with Grayson.’ And
I was like, ‘All right. Bet.’ So I immediately flew down here. The way I see
it, all I have to do is help you out, then bam! I get to join GOD.”
Yep, definitely a dream.
“So, you’re pledging for a fraternity in heaven,” Grayson
said. “Of course. I get it now.”
“Exactly, bro. Damn, you’re pretty smart, and that’s going
to make this so easy. Like, one day tops. Two on the outside. Three days
max.” Chet put out a hand, and Grayson clasped it. His arm nearly came out of
its socket as the wingman pulled him to his feet. “Hey, since I’m going to be
helping you out with the chicks, what’s your type? Thick chicks? Skinny chicks?
White chicks? Asian chicks?”
“Smart girls, I guess,” Grayson said, still smiling.
“So like, chicks with glasses? All right, I can work with
that. Won’t be too hard…” He trailed off, staring down at Grayson’s pants.
“But, speaking of hard, what happened to you?”
“A guy crushed a Viagra into my drink.”
“No way. You serious?” Chet laughed. “That’s hilarious.”
“No, it’s not,” Grayson said too quickly. Taking a breath,
he added, “It was humiliating.”
“Oh, so it wasn’t a bro who pranked you? All right then.
How are we going to get him back?”
“Screw him,” Grayson blurted out at the same time Chet
asked his question.
Chet raised an eyebrow in confusion. “Huh?”
“Not like that. I mean, screw him over.”
“Oh, I gotcha.” Chet slapped him on the shoulder and
laughed. “You don’t have to worry about a thing. Know why? Because I’m your
wingman, and I’ve always got your back, bro. Just tell me where he is, and
we’ll punk his ass.”
“Dalton’s my roommate.”
“Seriously? He lives here? What an idiot! This is going to
be so easy.” A beaming smile overcame Chet’s face, revealing his
too-straight, too-white teeth. He pointed toward the bunk beds. “Which one is
yours?”
“Top one.”
“Cool.” Chet removed the pillow and all the bedsheets from
the bottom bunk before tossing all of it through the open door.
“What are you doing?” Grayson asked.
“What’s it look like, bro? I’m helping Dalton move out.”
Chet went to the desk, grabbed a piece of paper, and wrote FREE! on it.
Using tape, he opened the door to the room and slapped the sign outside
against the wall. “If somebody fires at you, you’ve got to fire back.”
“Chet,” Grayson started, horrified. “We can’t just throw
him out.”
“You sure? Because I’m pretty sure nobody’s stopping me. Yeet!”
Chet tossed Dalton’s luggage into the hallway.
“But it’s wrong.”
“Wrong?” Chet snorted as he grabbed more stuff from Dalton’s side
of the room and tossed it outside. “Was it wrong for me to take a shit
in Jared’s backpack after he ate my lunch? Was it wrong for me to bang
my professor’s wife after he accused me of cheating?”
“Well, did you cheat?”
“That’s besides the point,” Chet said. “The answer is no,
it’s not wrong. It’s just the rule of escalation. If somebody pushes you, you
punch them in the dick. They punch you back? Then we get creative. So, if a
douche spikes your drink, we toss him out. That simple.”
“Chet—”
“Listen, if you let people push you around without
throwing a punch back, they’ll be pushing you around all your life. You want
that?”
Grayson sighed. “No.”
“So then we have to escalate,” Chet said. “Dalton hits us.
We hit back harder. It’s not like he’s going to rat on us. If he did, then all
you’d have to say is that he spiked your drink. He’d get in way more
trouble and admin would kick him out anyway.”
“Okay.”
Chet turned toward him, almost looming over him. “But
let’s be straight about this: you only snitch if he snitches, okay? Because
snitches are bitches, and you aren’t a snitch. Or a bitch. Right?”
“Right,” Grayson said, sound less sure of himself than he
wished.
“Then just trust me, bro—this a win-win situation! Dalton
moves out. I move in. Done deal, my guy.”
Grayson cocked his head. “Wait, you’re moving in?”
“Yeah. I can’t really leave until I help you out. Part of
the whole pledge process, you know? I don’t think it’ll be long, though. A week
at most.” Chet looked around the room, investigating. “So, now that it’s
settled, where’s the rest of his shit?”
I shouldn’t do this, Grayson thought. But why does it matter? This is
all just a dream. Might as well have some fun, right? He nodded before
jerking his head at Dalton’s dresser. “Most of his stuff is in there. But he
has more clothes in the closet. I’m sure he has some things in his backpack
too.” Grayson spied Dalton’s room key on his desk and put it in his pocket.
“But we’re keeping his key. I don’t want him getting back in.”
“Bro, that’s a big-brain move.” Chet chucked the backpack,
and Grayson heard something shatter in it. Probably cologne. Chet handed him a
couple of collared shirts. “Here. If you want to feel better, you have to get
your hands dirty.”
Grayson stared at the shirts in his hand and remembered
being thrown from the Stud House onto the street. “Screw it.” He grit his teeth
and tossed the shirts into the hallway, just beneath the sign that said FREE.
“Nice job.” Chet grinned. “Let’s get to work on this
bitch.”
This concludes the preview of Wingman: College Craze…
Aladdin meets Animal House in this buddy comedy for the ages!
When college freshman Grayson West cracks open a magical beer can, he releases a wingman—Chet, a frat angel who promises to help him win the girl of his dreams. But Grayson will soon learn that dreams aren’t perfect and neither is his wingman.
To get his life back on track, Grayson must now stumble through college to learn the value of friendship, family, and happiness—all while Chet attempts to lower his purity score by throwing parties, inciting riots, and humiliating the Studs of Frat Row.
Buy Now to join Grayson’s adventure—before he’s expelled.
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