The Bookish Life of Nina Hill - Abbi Waxman Page 0,46

forward to beating you.” He paused. “That sounded weird.”

Nina frowned up at him. “Good luck with that. We’re on fire this evening. We’ve been warming up with Galaga and have successfully defended our planet for a solid hour.”

He laughed. “If you’ve been here for a while and now you’re doing shots, it’s going to be an easy win for my team of highly trained, entirely sober intellectual giants.”

“Want to bet?”

“Sure.”

“Twenty dollars?”

“Dinner.”

Nina studied his face, but he wasn’t joking. “Dinner it is. If I win, you can take me to Denny’s.”

“Really?”

She nodded. “I love Denny’s.”

“Moons Over My Hammy?”

“Every time. And if you win?”

“Chicken and waffles.”

She laughed. “We’re a classy pair.”

He nodded. “I wonder what else we have in common apart from lowbrow tastes?” He smiled slowly at her, and she had no comeback at all. She swallowed.

Suddenly, Howard’s voice filled the bar. “Good evening, brave competitors and cowardly observers. It’s time for tonight’s challenge. In the first round we have Book ’Em, Danno up against Menace to Sobriety, and if last week’s performance is anything to go by, Menace has nothing to worry about.”

“Gotta go,” said Nina, and hurried back to her table.

Tom watched her go, noticing the way she curved herself through the crowd, small and deft. Denny’s had never seemed more appealing.

In most pub trivia leagues, or quiz leagues, or whatever they’re called in your neck of the woods, teams are given written lists of questions and a limited time to complete them. Cheating is strongly discouraged, but of course it happens, especially now that you can search the Internet from your phone. In response to this, the organizers had changed things up for the Quiz Bowl qualifiers. Competing teams sent single members up to battle face-to-face, like on a TV game show. Questions were posed, buzzers were pressed, and points were awarded. If the first one to answer was correct, she got two points. If not, and the other competitor knew the answer, she would get one point.

Teams were invited to bring their own buzzers, which had led to some very strange noises. Tonight, Leah had been in charge of the buzzer, and she’d brought a vintage train whistle she’d found on eBay. Its action was a little sticky, and questions were raised about her judgment until Lauren revealed she had a miniature can of WD-40 in her purse and the problem was solved. Then questions were raised about why Lauren was carrying aerosolized hydrocarbons in her purse, and then questions were raised about why Nina used that phrase to describe it. The whole discussion took nearly thirty seconds of time, which, fortunately, was how long Howard was taking to describe the rules, so it was fine.

“Category one: World Geography. Teams, please choose your champions.”

This one was easy for Book ’Em, because Leah was scarily good at geography. She had been homeschooled by a mom who believed in memorization as a form of relaxation, and she could still recite all the states (with capitals, state birds and flowers, major rivers and landmarks), countries in the world (including all the African ones, even though they changed a lot), books of the Bible, presidents and first ladies (and pets, including Coolidge’s raccoon), and every actor who’d played Doctor Who since the beginning. That last one she’d done on her own.

“But wait,” said Nina, concerned. “What if history comes up next and we can’t play her then?”

Leah shrugged. “Play Lauren instead; she’s pretty good at geography.”

“I’m not,” said Lauren, in a furious whisper. “Last time I got confused and said the longest river in the world was the Mississippi and then spelled it like a five-year-old at the Scholastic Spelling Bee. I even repeated it at the end.”

“You spelled it correctly.”

“Yes, but that’s not the point. I got the question wrong, and I can never go back to that bar.”

Nina conceded. “Leah, you go.”

Howard had recently taken things a notch further in his quest to create a trivia league YouTube channel, and had built a podium. Leah and a guy from Menace approached it.

“Don’t touch the podium,” Howard hissed. “It’s still wet.”

“From what?” asked Leah, stopping immediately.

“From being painted, of course. I added the glitter too soon and it slowed it down.”

“That’s what she said,” said the guy from Menace, and guffawed.

Leah rolled her eyes and clutched her whistle.

Howard looked at his friend, Don, who was live-streaming the contest. “Ready, Don?”

“Ready when you are, Mr. DeMille.” Don was a jokester who enjoyed old movies, poetry slams, and pretending to be a

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