Everyone is Watching by Heather Gudenkauf
About the Book:
The Best Friend. The
Confidant. The Senator. The Boyfriend. The Executive.
Five contestants have been chosen to compete for ten million
dollars on the game show One Lucky Winner. The catch? None of them knows what
(or who) to expect, and it will be live streamed all over the world. Completely
secluded in an estate in Northern California, with strict instructions not to
leave the property and zero contact with the outside world, the competitors
start to feel a little too isolated.
When long-kept secrets begin to rise to the surface, the
contestants realize this is no longer just a reality show—someone is out for
blood. And the game can’t end until the world knows who the contestants really
are…
Excerpt
One
The Best Friend
Maire Hennessy squinted against the bright October sun as
she drove down the quiet Iowa county road. The fields were filled with the
stubbled remains of the fall harvest and stripped bare by heavy-billed grackles
and beady-eyed blackbirds eating their fill before the cold weather set in. It
made her a little sad. Winter would be coming soon, unrelenting and
unforgiving.
That morning, she had packed up her
girls and Kryngle, their four-year-old Shetland sheepdog, to drop them off at
her former mother-in-law’s home. Maire, who hadn’t traveled more than a hundred
miles away from Calico since she abruptly dropped out of college over twenty
years earlier, was embarking on an adventure that could change the course of
their lives forever. Ten-year-old Dani kicked the back of Maire’s seat in time
to the throbbing beat coming from her older sister Keely’s earbuds. Keely, a
twelve-year-old carbon copy of Maire, had the hood of her sweatshirt pulled up
over her head, her red curls springing out around her sullen face, as she
silently pretended to read her book.
Maire tapped her fingers nervously
against the steering wheel. “You’re going to be just fine,” she said, turning
onto the highway that would take her children to her ex-mother-in-law’s home.
Shar was a decent enough person. Except for the fact that she smoked like a
chimney and gave birth to a shit of a son, Maire knew she would take good care
of the girls while she was away.
“I don’t want to go,” Dani
murmured. “I like my own bed. Grandma’s house feels weird.”
Both Dani and Keely dreaded the two
weeks that they were going to stay with their grandmother, a bland, unexcitable
woman with steel gray hair and stooped shoulders. There would be no movie
nights, no special outings, no grand adventures, but they would be well-cared
for, safe. And that’s all that Maire wanted.
“I thought you liked Grandma
Hennessy,” Maire said. “You’ll make cookies and she’s going to teach you both
how to crochet. You’ll have a great time.”
“Why are you going to be gone for
so long?” Dani asked, staring at Maire through the rearview mirror, her eyes
filled with hurt. A wet cough rumbled through her chest and she buried her
mouth in her elbow.
That familiar cloud of worry that
materialized every time Dani had a coughing fit settled over Maire.
“It’s only for two weeks and it’s
not that I don’t want to see you,” she said. “You know that. I would be with
you every single day if I could. It’s kind of a work thing and I can’t pass up
the opportunity.”
“You work from home,” Keely said,
briefly pulling out an earbud.
Maire didn’t mind lying to Shar but
lying to her children was different. She had the chance of a lifetime and in a
way, it was work related. Money was involved. Lots of it.
“It’s like a contest,” Maire
explained. “And if I win, well, that would be nice. And even if I don’t, a lot
of people will learn about my Calico Rose jewelry and might want to sell it.”
“Like Claire’s in the mall?” Dani
asked.
“Yes, Claire’s, Target, who knows?”
The lies slid so easily off her tongue now. Dani’s kicks to the back of Maire’s
seat slowed as she mulled this over.
“I’m sorry,” Maire said. “I know
it’s hard.” Her voice broke on the last word. Hard wasn’t anywhere close to how
things had been for the last year. Terrifying, humiliating, devastating,
soul-crushing were more like it.
Bobby had never been much of a
husband or father, but his health insurance had been a lifeline for Dani. When
he lost his job at a local grain elevator and then took off with the
nineteen-year-old waitress from the Sunshine Café, gone was the health
insurance and any hope of child support. When the first $3,000 notice for
Dani’s nebulizer treatments came in, Maire ran to the bathroom and vomited. It
was impossible. Too much.
Between the implosion of her
marriage, the impact it had on the kids, her bank account that was dangerously
low, the unpaid medical bills, the jewelry she made for her Etsy shop, and the
search for a job that provided decent health insurance, Maire was exhausted.
Things couldn’t go on this way. “It
will get better,” she promised.
Maire glanced over at Keely and
caught her accusatory glare. Out of all of them, the divorce hit Keely the
hardest. Despite his drawbacks, Keely was a daddy’s girl, and she was suffering
in his absence.
The worry never ended. At the top
of the list was Dani’s health. Her cystic fibrosis was stable for the moment,
but she was fragile. Her last infection required a two-week hospital stay, a
PICC line with multiple antibiotic infusions, therapies, and nebulizer
treatments. It was so much that Maire had to put together a binder for Shar
filled with in-depth directions for Dani’s care, and she hoped she wasn’t making
a huge mistake by leaving. A lung infection that may be mild for most children
could be deadly for Dani. And poor Keely. Quiet, shy Keely was getting lost in
the shuffle, becoming more removed, isolated from them. Another thing to worry
about.
A month ago, when she got the email
about the show, she almost deleted it. Maire had been online, scanning
articles about the newest cystic fibrosis research, when she heard the ping.
Grateful for an excuse to tear her eyes away from the words like Fibrinogen-like
2 proteins and cryogenic electron microscopy, she tapped the email icon on her
phone.
CONGRATULATIONS—YOU’VE BEEN
NOMINATED, the subject line called out to her. She scanned the rest of the
email. Trip of a lifetime, groundbreaking new reality show, $10 million. Scam,
Maire thought and went back to reading about clinical trials and RNA therapy.
But an hour later, she was still thinking about the $10 million. She opened the
email again to read it more closely.
Congratulations, you’ve been nominated to take part in the
groundbreaking new reality competition show One
Lucky Winner! Set in the heart of wine country, you, along with the other
contestants, will battle for $10 million through a series of challenges that
will test you physically, mentally, and emotionally. Competitors will spend
fourteen days at the exclusive Diletta Resort and Spa in beautiful Napa Valley.
When not competing, spend your time in your lavishly appointed private cottage,
swimming laps in the 130-foot pool, or head to the spa for our one-of-a-kind
vinotherapy-based treatments—massages, wraps, and scrubs made from grapes grown
in the La Bella Luce vineyard. As a special treat, each contestant will receive
a case of Bella Luce’s world-famous cabernet sauvignon with an exclusively designed
label just for you!
Maire snorted. It had to be a joke.
A rip-off. She closed the email, even sent it to her trash folder, but an hour
later, she pulled it up again. Ten million dollars. Maire was one month away
from not being able to pay the mortgage on the house, from not being able to
make the car payment, from not being able to put money in the kids’ school
lunch accounts, from not being able to pay for one dose of Dani’s medication.
She should probably should just
sell the house, take the loss, start over, but this was her home, the kids’
home. There was no way she was giving it up without a fight. She didn’t need
anywhere near $10 million to save the house, but that is what it was worth to
her, and that kind of money would change her life, all their lives.
Who would have nominated her? And
how did that actually work? Hey, I know of someone who could use $10 million.
The entire thing had to be fake. The email was signed by someone named Fern
Espa, whose title read Production Assistant, One Lucky Winner.
Anyone could send an email. Maire trashed the message again.
Then, over the next three days, the car started leaking oil,
Kryngle ate a sock and had to have emergency surgery, and Dani’s hospital bill
came in. Her credit cards were maxed out and she’d given up on any help from
her ex. Maire needed money, fast. Burying her humiliation, she called her
parents and asked for a loan. It wasn’t nearly enough.
Maire hung up and went to the garage,
sitting in her leaky car so that the kids wouldn’t hear her crying.
Maybe this was the email she was
waiting for. The sign she needed to finally take control of her life. Maire
wasn’t a fool though. She did her due diligence. While sitting in the waiting
room at the vet’s office, she looked up One Lucky Winner and found a website
and an IMDB entry—both short on details—but it clearly was a real show. She
searched for the name Fern Espa and found a LinkedIn entry that looked legit.
And the Diletta Resort looked amazing.
And now, under the guise of a work
trip, here she was, dropping her kids off at her mother-in-law’s house for two
weeks, hopping on a plane to Napa to take part in some Survivor-type reality
show for the off chance she might win $10 million. It was ridiculous, over the
top, maybe even irresponsible, but it ignited a spark of hope that she hadn’t
felt in a long time.
“You’ll be okay,” Maire said to the
kids as she turned onto the cracked concrete of Shar’s street. Shar was waiting
for them, standing on her rickety front porch, a cigarette dangling from her
knobby fingers. With hail-pocked, dirty white aluminum siding and a
crabgrass-choked yard in need of mowing, the home her ex-husband grew up in was
grim and depressing. But her mother-in-law was a sweet woman who loved her
grandchildren. Maire scanned the street. Every house was in the same state of
disarray and neglect. A jolt of fear shot through her. If she didn’t turn
things around, they would end up living in a place like this, or worse.
Jesus, Maire thought. I’m making a
huge mistake. She fought the urge to drive right on by. Instead, she gave the
girls her bravest smile. “It’s okay. We’re all going to be okay.”
Ten million dollars would make
everything okay.
Excerpted from Everyone Is Watching
by Heather Gudenkauf. Copyright © 2024 by Heather Gudenkauf. Published by
arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
She's a legend in this genre. The book looks great! Congrats, Heather!
ReplyDelete