Misadventures of a Rookie (Misadventures #11)(67)







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Misadventures with the Boss

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Excerpt from Misadventures with the Boss





My Netflix account was judging me.

At least that was how it felt every time I had to insist Yes, Netflix, I am still watching Absolutely Fabulous, thank you very much. I imagined it asking even more invasive questions—questions my sister would ask if she were here.

Are you sure you want to keep watching?

Didn’t you move to the city for all the exciting nightlife?

And, more importantly—what kind of twenty-something spends their evening watching so many old sitcoms?

I grabbed the throw pillow beside me, tucked it under my chin, and snuggled it close to my chest, ignoring the clunk of my phone as it tumbled to the floor. It wasn’t like anyone was going to call and ask me to hang out anyway. I was so new to the city that I was still surrounded by boxes that desperately needed to be unpacked.

But not tonight. Tonight I was determined to sit like a stubborn bump on a lazy log and do nothing.

Raising the remote, I turned up the volume as the theme song faded and the show began. But just as the dialogue was really starting to heat up, my phone broke into the jazzy, happy tone I’d selected for one caller in particular—my sister.

Think of the devil.

I let it play on a bit, debating whether to answer. I then reached for the floor, snagged my phone from the carpet, and pressed it to my face.

“Hello?” I said, waiting for Hailey’s chipper voice to fill the speaker.

“Piper,” she deadpanned.

“What?” I asked, already feeling defensive and biting back a groan.

First mistake?

Answering the phone.

“Where are you right now? I don’t hear anything going on behind you. No music. No chatter. Tell me at least you’re at some gallery looking at glorious paintings and sipping champagne,” she demanded.

If things were quiet on my end, the same could definitely not be said for hers. As usual, bass-filled music blared behind her voice, getting softer as she moved through whichever bar was the flavor of the week. There were a lot of things a person could say about Hailey, but nobody could ever accuse her of not knowing her way around a party. To be perfectly honest, I was shocked I didn’t hear people chanting her name in the distance, begging her to join them for another shot.

She was like a people magnet, and I was…well, what’s the opposite of a people magnet?

Whatever the answer is, that’s me.

“I’m home.” I stared at the stack of brown cardboard boxes and forced a white lie from my lips because the truth was just too depressing to say. “Unpacking. And can you go outside or something? The music wherever you are is so loud.”

“Right.” I could practically hear her roll her eyes, but in a matter of minutes, the music had dimmed to practically nothing. “Why aren’t you out?”

“Who am I going to go out with?”

“I don’t know. You just go out. Find people along the way.”

I sighed. “I’m not like you. I don’t just enter a room and have people flock to me.”

“But aren’t you lonely?”

I bit my cheek. “I never said I wasn’t.”

“So what are you going to do? Just sit around your apartment and hope friends magically appear?”

“I just got a new job. I’ll meet people there when I start.”

Hailey blew out a frustrated sigh. “This isn’t like college or high school. You can’t just expect to hang with the people you see all day. We’re in the modern age, Pipes. You’ve gotta throw yourself into it. Take risks. Get wild.”

“What, like, join a chat room or something?”

“No, you weirdo. Use an app. All the dating sites have find-a-friend features,” she replied, matter-of-fact.

“Well, ideally I wouldn’t find my friends where people are also trying to get into my pants,” I said primly.

“And why not? I’m willing to bet nobody has gotten into your sensible slacks in a good long while, either,” my sister said with a snort.

“Hailey,” I warned, but she pressed on.

“Come on, everybody’s doing it,” Hailey said. “What could it hurt?”

My pride?

I should have said it aloud, of course, but just like everyone else, I had fallen under the magic spell that Hailey cast on everyone she met. I wanted to please her—to let her have her way. She was just so cool. So everything I wasn’t.

“Exactly,” Hailey said into the silence. “Even you can’t come up with a reason not to. I’m putting you on speaker so I can make you an account right now.” There was the sound of fumbling, and then my sister’s voice came back over the line again. “Okay, ready. You still have the same email address?”

Sucked into the whirlwind that was Hailey and at a loss to come up with a reason why I shouldn’t do this, I nodded, and then catching myself, I said, “Uh, yeah. Same one.”

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