Olivia “Liv” James is done with
letting her insecurities get the best of her. So she does what any
self-respecting hot mess of a girl who wants to SMASH junior year does…
After Liv shows up to a Halloween party in khaki shorts—why, God, why?—she decides to set aside her wack AF ways. She makes a list—a F*ck-It list.
1. Be bold—do the thing that scares me.
2. Learn to take a compliment.
3. Stand out instead of back.
She kicks it off by trying out for the school musical, saying yes to a date and making new friends. Life is great when you stop punking yourself! However, with change comes a lot of missteps, and being bold means following her heart. So what happens when Liv’s heart is interested in three different guys—and two of them are her best friends? What is she supposed to do when she gets dumped by a guy she’s not even dating? How does one Smash It! after the humiliation of being friend-zoned?
In Liv’s own words, “F*ck it. What’s the worst that can happen?”
A lot, apparently.
#SMASHIT
After Liv shows up to a Halloween party in khaki shorts—why, God, why?—she decides to set aside her wack AF ways. She makes a list—a F*ck-It list.
1. Be bold—do the thing that scares me.
2. Learn to take a compliment.
3. Stand out instead of back.
She kicks it off by trying out for the school musical, saying yes to a date and making new friends. Life is great when you stop punking yourself! However, with change comes a lot of missteps, and being bold means following her heart. So what happens when Liv’s heart is interested in three different guys—and two of them are her best friends? What is she supposed to do when she gets dumped by a guy she’s not even dating? How does one Smash It! after the humiliation of being friend-zoned?
In Liv’s own words, “F*ck it. What’s the worst that can happen?”
A lot, apparently.
#SMASHIT
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Excerpted from SMASH IT! by Francina
Simone © 2020 by Francina Simone, used with permission from Inkyard Press.
CHAPTER ONE
Fuck.
I’m an idiot.
It’s Halloween and I’m the only one in a packed club
on Teen Night not wearing a costume. Girls are jumping and screaming
lyrics in cheap shiny wigs, and all the guys, dressed in a motley of cheap
polyester, are scoping out the dance floor, their gazes hopping right over me.
Even the bartender, slinging water bottles, has on pink bunny ears.
This isn’t an I’m seventeen and too cool for dress
up moment. I like wearing costumes. I just thought I’d look
like an unintentional clown doing it. We’re at a club. Who wears a Halloween
costume to the club? Apparently, everyone except this freak in an Old Navy
hoodie and khaki shorts. I’m wearing khaki shorts, like a nerdy loser.
Some girl bumps into me and does a double take at the
sight of my hoodie. It’s Florida; I know October everywhere else is like that
meme of the dog in a wig wearing a scarf because “it’s sweater weather,” but
we’re in Florida; the leaves don’t change here. They just fall off sometime
between hot-as-fuck and damn-where-that-wind-come-from? So even though this
white girl has on a mesh shirt over a nude bra—I don’t know what the hell she’s
dressed as—I can tell by her raised brows and attempt to act like she didn’t
see me that she doesn’t know what in god’s name I’m doing right now either.
Oh my god. Why am I like this?
This is what I get for not doing the yes thing.
My mom bought this book by Shonda Rhimes, Year of Yes, and—I’m not going
to lie—some rich black lady with a gazillion TV shows shouldn’t be able to tell
me, some sad black girl, how to be all, Say yes to the dress! But right
now, I’m really wishing I had said yes when Dré asked, Are you sure you
don’t want to put on something? It’s a costume party at a club. Don’t you have
something sexy? Sexy nurse? Sexy vet? Hell, cut up your hoodie and go as a sexy
hobo.
I’m wishing I had scissors or the foresight to go as
Sexy Hobo, because now, while my best friends are onstage at the hottest teen
club in Orlando, singing their asses off like rock gods, I look like the freak
who has no social shame.
The truth is I have too much social shame. So much
shame that it seeps out of me like fresh cut garlic on the back of the tongue.
I make eye contact with Eli. He’s on the keyboard,
belting out lyrics and twisting in and out of a rap. His voice is the love
child of Sam Smith and Adele. He’s all suave and mysterious to everyone here,
but I know him as the boy who shaved off half an eyebrow when we were thirteen
and those Peretz Hebrew/Palestinian hairy genes started coming in. His mom and
dad were on that Romeo and Juliet vibe back in the day, and even though it
makes for an epic love story, with real war and faking deaths to escape their
families and countries (epic as hell), their genetic combo gave Eli thick brows
and hair like nobody’s business.
He smiles at me with his dark brown eyes just under
his fedora. Of the three of us, he’s definitely the broody one, writing poems
about nostalgia and love.
Dré, on the other hand—he’s got on shades. Who wears
sunglasses inside at night? Dré. When we were in middle school, Dré used
to hide his Spanish and pretend his name was Andrew. I don’t blame him. Our
school had a lot of white kids, and they always asked dumb as hell questions. I
always got, “If you can’t get your hair wet, how do you wash it?” One kid asked
Dré if Puerto Rican meant legal Mexican in Spanish. The kid legitimately
didn’t know. I know our education system is shit, but come the fuck on.
High school has been a game changer for all of us. Our
magnet school pulls in kids from all over the county. But now there are too
many kids from way too many places. Now we have to be different to fit
in—cue Dré’s flashy, Spanish-heritage-day-is-every-day evolution. He’s a
self-proclaimed Puerto Rican papi, and he kind of radiates like a sunny day on
South Beach.
Then there’s me. In my hoodie, khaki shorts, and
Converse, stuck in the middle of a club with hundreds of kids basking in the
glory that is Dré and Eli. I look like an outcast from a bad ’90s movie. I’m
not uncool, but I do these uncool things as if I’m addicted to self-sabotage.
Mesh Girl looks at me again; she’s probably wondering
why Dré keeps pointing and making steamy eyes at me while he spits some rhymes
in Spanish. I know she’s thinking, How’d she get him? Girls have asked
me that. They see me, with my not-slim body and my brown skin, and say, No
offense, but damn, girl, how you got with Dré?
I’m not. Never have, never will. This flashy thing
that he’s doing is our signal for me to check his hair. My only job is to make
sure it still looks good. I nod and sway to the music, ignoring Mesh Girl’s
eyebrows, which are raised to the top of her blond head. Is it bad that I like
the attention? I enjoy her envy, even though I’m not the girl she thinks I am.
Some girl dressed like a pumpkin shuffles past me and
reaches out to touch Dré’s hand. What she doesn’t know is that he’s
transferring half a store’s worth of product onto her fingers. He spends so
much time on his hair, we have to speed to school—which is the last thing we
should do in Dré’s rusty old car, the Bat Mobile. It’s already two gearshifts
away from blowing up with us inside. We call it the Bat Mobile not because it’s
cool, but because it looks like a hundred bats dropped turds all over it and
eroded the paint.
Even though it’s pretty much trash on wheels, I’m so
jealous. I can’t even get my mom to let me practice my learners in her car.
The queen of burning out engines thinks I’ll mess something up. Then again,
here I am on Halloween, the only girl in the club not having fun because of my
shitty choices.
Mesh Girl bumps me with her shoulder. “He’s hot,
right?” She’s talking about Eli, and I do a weird laugh thing and nod, because
I’m the worst at small talk, and it’s too much to yell, Yeah, I’ve thought
that for years. I can like the way he looks, right? That’s normal, right?
She doesn’t seem to care that my laugh was borderline
psychotic. “Oh my god, we should totally dance for them. Guys love that shit.”
Suddenly this girl that I don’t know from Eve is pulling me toward the stage,
and I start freaking out.
I’ve watched enough romance movies to have this scene
planned in my head—but those are fantasies, and this is getting too real.
People are staring at us as she starts twerking and swinging her arms around.
She waves at me. “Come on!”
Nope. I just smile and
shrink back into the crowd. She’s clearly one of those people who really believes
in herself—like, no one has ever told her she can’t do a damn thing, because,
here she is, shaking her ass like she invented the booty pop.
Mesh Girl isn’t looking at me anymore. She’s dancing
and looking at Eli, and—he’s looking at her. I know I’m not supposed to
care, because he’s just my best friend and he and Dré are supposed to interact
with the crowd—that’s part of the gig—but he’s looking at her and smiling like
he’s impressed. He thinks this girl’s half-baked dance moves are cool. He
thinks she’s cool.
I can dance better than that. I could be that
cool.
Except I’m not.
I’m the girl who hides in the crowd. I’m the girl who
isn’t even in costume. And now, the guy I maybe-sorta-like is smiling and
singing to the girl who is doing the scary thing, even though she’s not that
good at it.
Fuck my life. My crush is about to go up in tired-ass
flames like the rest of my dreams. This isn’t the first time I’ve passed up
doing what I want because I’m afraid of looking like a clown. It isn’t even the
tenth or the hundredth.
Hell, just this morning I walked by a flyer for the
school musical auditions, and when the drama teacher offered me one, I did the
weird laugh, and—let’s just say she’ll probably never make eye contact with me
again.
All I had to do was say yes. All I had to do
was tell myself I’d try.
Why am I so chickenshit?
I make my way to the bar and order a soda.
The guy at the bar eyes me as he sprays Coke into my
glass. He puts the Coke down in front of me, and just when I want him to walk
away and leave me in my despair, he pulls off his pink bunny ears and puts them
next to my bubbly soda. “Take these. I don’t want you to stand out.”
I shake my head. Honestly, he’s got long hair and it’s
kind of greasy, so there is no way I’m putting that on my head. “I’m cool.
Don’t need pity ears, but thanks.”
He laughs, and it’s low-key judgmental. “Yeah, because
cool people don’t wear costumes, right? You must be a blast at parties.” He
looks around at the club behind me. “Oh, wait.”
Rude. “Look. I happen to
be a very cool person, thank you very much.” I shouldn’t talk when I’m in my
feelings, because my voice goes up an octave and I can never get my eyebrows to
stay still. They’re up in my hairline now, showing the whole damn world that I
have no chill.
Dude puts his bunny ears back on and leans on the bar.
“Yeah, it’s so cool sitting by yourself at a Halloween party with no costume.”
He shrugs. “I’m not saying high school is going to be the best time of your
life, but you should get over yourself enough to have a little fun while you
can. Otherwise, you’ll be a cool adult sitting alone at a bar wondering why
your life sucks.” He stands up, crosses his arms and looks proud of himself.
Is there a sign on my head that says, I’m having a
hard time. Please do pile on? I take a deep breath and hate myself, because
my first reaction is to smile and nod. But I stare him dead in the eye and say,
“Because being a bartender at thirtysomething is so great.” I feel a little
badass for saying it, but also super guilty for being a bitch.
“Well, one of us is having fun.” He wiggles his bunny
ears. “And the other one is at a party full of kids and only has the bartender
to talk to.” He pulls the white towel off his shoulder and starts wiping down
the bar. “Don’t forget to tip.” And then he’s moving away and pulling out
waters for a group of guys in some anime costumes.
I drop my head to the bar, which, regrettably, is
sticky. That turd of a bartender doesn’t know me, but he’s kinda right. Some
girl on YouTube—the one with the minimalist white walls that look chic instead
of broke as hell—said everyone has a moment in life when there are two paths
before them. The cool one where you change your pathetic ways and everything
gets brighter and better. And the other one where you die sad and alone.
She obviously knows what she’s talking about, because
she manages to make millions of people listen to her talk about hacking
procrastination and how to make your room over with just a succulent and a
few black-and-white photos strung up on the walls.
I don’t want to be sad and alone, or to freeze every
time my moment comes to shine. I want to be the fierce inner beast I know I am.
I want Eli to look at me like I’m the only one in the room.
Something has to change, because that bartender and
the succulent girl are right. If I don’t, I’m going to disappear like I was
never here.
About the Author
Francina Simone believes in one thing:
authenticity. She writes YA stories full of humor and hard life lessons with
sprinkles of truth that make us all feel understood. Her craft focuses on
stories about girls throwing caution to the wind to discover exactly who they
are and what it means to love. Francina is also known for her BookTube channel,
where she discusses controversial topics in books.
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