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Big Shot ~ Kim Karr by Karr, Kim (5)

Ten Years Earlier

Hannah Michaels

THE 1967 COSMOPOLITAN story on women computer programmers was making the rounds again.

And the girls in my computer class were fired up.

The story last made its way around the Internet five years ago when I was a junior in high school.

Back then, a little known blog pointed out that years ago the article had wrongly appeared between story headlines about how to frost a cake and what to wear in the rain. The blog also noted that not much had changed since then, considering one of the biggest software companies in the country only had one woman on their technical staff — and she was an intern.

But the newest circulation of the article had an addendum, and it stated that that one woman, whom had been pointed out years ago, went on to become the head of Google’s analytics department.

Way to go!

For a select few of us, the party we were at was a celebration of how far women had come in the computer field. We’d gone to pay homage to the road that had been paved for us.

The off-campus party was actually being thrown as a kick off to Greek Week, but I ignored that fact. Fraternities and sororities seemed to take up way too much time. I was at college on a scholarship, and I had to maintain my grades to keep it.

My roommate had driven me, but soon after we arrived she abandoned me to go upstairs with a cute guy she’d just met. I had no choice but to wait for her, or walk back to campus, and it was a little too far to do that.

Even though I wasn’t much of a partier, I carried an empty red cup around and chatted with my peers to see what they were working on in their classes. I liked to hear their ideas and absorb the knowledge they had. I wanted to go far. Be someone who mattered.

Change the world.

Social media was where the computer world was headed, and I intended to create the next big Facebook.

I moved among the crowd, and once I’d spoken to the few people I knew, I went in search of the bathroom. It was a good place of refuge.

Having been told it was right through the kitchen, I walked that way, and then paused as soon as I entered the room.

Sitting on the counter next to the keg was a guy that nearly knocked me out of my Converse sneakers, and I instantly wished I’d dressed a little nicer. Perhaps not worn my ripped jeans and smiley face t-shirt. Or better yet, blow-dried my dirty blonde hair, instead of pulling it back with a glittery headband.

The dark haired guy flashed me a grin of perfect white teeth. Oh my God, that mouth. His mouth. It was perfectly shaped. My only thought was I want to kiss him. Obviously, I was instantly smitten. But I was shy, so I walked right past him and found that place of refuge I was in search of.

I didn’t stay long.

I was intrigued. Captivated. Curious.

Would he still be there?

When I returned from the bathroom, at first I didn’t see him, and my heart sunk. But then I spotted that messy, dark hair, and my heart pounded.

He had changed positions. He was leaning against the opposite counter with his hands in his pockets. Long. Lean. Hot. He wore jeans that hung low on his hips and a very worn Harvard t-shirt that showed off the most incredible build I’d ever seen.

“Want a refill?” he asked just as I was about to pass because I was way too nervous to stop.

Heat flushed my cheeks as I looked down at my cup, which I knew was empty, and then over toward him. That’s when I figured why not, and extended my hand with the cup. “Sure.”

Our fingers barely touched, and I felt a jolt of electricity travel through my entire body.

While he poured beer into my cup, he said, “I’m Jace.”

“I’m Hannah,” I said, my voice breaking from nerves.

“What’s your major?” he asked over the music.

“Computer Science,” I told him. “What’s yours?”

“Undeclared,” he sighed, as he offered me the full cup.

“Undeclared?” I questioned, taking a sip, and trying not to wince. I really hated the taste of beer, especially cheap, draft beer.

He nodded. “Just call me, Mr. Undeclared.”

My nervousness waned, and I felt at ease with him. “You should totally major in Computer Science,” I said, “It’s where the future is at.”

“Oh, yeah,” he smiled, with a raise of his brow, “Tell me more.”

And so I did. Sip after sip, I explained to him where the world was headed, and why our generation had to jump on the bandwagon and take the lead.

That was the first time in my two years in college that I got drunk. And I didn’t handle it well. Right in the middle of our conversation, I told him I had to go, and went running off.

When my roommate finally came back downstairs, she found me puking my brains out in the bathroom. Mortified. Humiliated. I left without saying a word to the guy with the great smile. Not that I could have even if I wanted to. In fact, my roommate had to practically carry me to our dorm room.

My brain was a little fuzzy when I woke up the next morning, but I remembered telling my roommate the night before that I was going to marry that guy some day, if only I knew how to find him.

We hadn’t even exchanged last names.

The next week was hell for me. With all of my courses well underway, and the work piling up, I didn’t have much time to think about my future husband. Or go in search of him. Not that it would have been an easy task on a campus with more than fifty thousand students. Still I asked around. No one in my circle seemed to know him. Then again, my circle was very small, and we were all geeks.

He, however, was certainly no geek.

A few weeks passed when one day I was in the library studying and a good-looking blonde-haired guy sat next to me with the same English book I had opened up in front of me.

“You’re in my class,” he said, lifting his own book.

I nodded. I’d seen him sitting in the back of the lecture hall, flirting with whichever girl was beside him.

“Mind if we study together?” he asked.

Shyly pulling my hair behind my ear, I shrugged. “Sure.”

He smiled at me. “I’m Ethan Miller.”

“I’m Hannah Michaels.”

Ethan was a flirt, but he was also sweet, cute, and although I couldn’t believe it, interested in me.

Mr. Undeclared was nowhere to be found, and I had come to assume he didn’t really attend Michigan State. Perhaps he was a local boy from East Lansing, or maybe he actually attended Harvard, in which case I knew I’d never see him again.

Three weeks later, Ethan and I were officially dating. Four weeks later, I was blowing him. Five weeks later, we were fucking, and I was still blowing him. Blowjobs and hand jobs were something he couldn’t get enough of, and I wondered if he’d been neglected in high school.

Ethan was my first boyfriend, but not my first lover. That title would always belong to a big shot. You know the type—an influential person who thinks he’s all that. Adam Crestfall was the rich, stuck-up kid I’d grown up with in Grand Haven, and the one who had humiliated me.

His family name dated back to the days of fur trading and lumberjacking, and they still owned the majority of lumber mills in the northeast.

From the day my mother had turned sixteen years old, she worked in the Crestfall mansion. Because of all the years of service she’d given them, once I was born, the family allowed us to live in a small cottage on the edge of the property. Whoever my father was, my mother never said, and I’m not sure anyone else knew.

Because I spent a lot of time in the big house growing up, I was around Adam most of my life. I’d thought he was the one Crestfall I knew, but in the end I hadn’t really known him at all.

Turned out he was no different. After he’d asked me to prom, and I’d said yes, we had sex. He told everyone about it. And when I’d said we were dating, that we were going to prom, he denied he’d ever asked me, and went with the most popular girl in school.

Lesson learned, or at least I thought it was. Time would prove I hadn’t learned anything at all.

Thank God, Ethan was nothing like him. He’d grown up in Kalamazoo. He came from a middle class, hardworking family, and had to pay for school himself. Like me, that meant he worked. Ethan was motivated, smart, and easy-going. He was also a senior, and a pre-law major. Because he carried a heavy load, we often went days without seeing each other.

This was mostly because he lived off-campus, and since I didn’t have a car, I preferred him to come to my room, which he couldn’t do that often.

My roommate was always gone, so it was like I had my own place. This was a good thing because every once in a while Ethan liked to watch porn before we had sex. He was a little obsessed with threesome storylines. I had to admit, they were kind of hot. And I was intrigued.

Just before Thanksgiving break, Ethan was going crazy filling out law school applications. I hadn’t seen him in days, so I decided to surprise him one night with a visit.

Needing transportation, I borrowed my roommate’s car. It was the first time I’d done that and she didn’t seem to mind at all, as long as I agreed to fill the tank. Along with the gas, I spent a good portion of my paycheck from the Smart Bar, a computer technical support station where I worked on campus, to purchase a sexy new bra and panties. Ethan was a bit kinky, and I knew he’d like the sheerness of them.

The house that Ethan rented was run-down. Not that most off-campus college housing wasn’t, but that one looked especially so. The stairs creaked as I ascended them, and the window in the door had a piece of plastic duct taped over it. There were shards of glass on the peeling wooden planks under my feet and I wondered if someone had recently broken it.

Loud music was playing, which seemed so unlike Ethan. He never liked to listen to the music I played in my dorm room, and in fact, he often turned it down. I think it was the Sex Pistols, or maybe the Ramones. Not that the band mattered. Either way, I had to knock, and knock, and knock.

“Cool your jets,” a voice hollered from somewhere in the house.

It wasn’t Ethan’s. The voice was huskier, deeper, and a tad bit familiar. All of sudden, I felt a prickle behind my neck.

When the door swung open that place in-between my legs started to ache. And that wasn’t all. My throat clutched. Every one of my nerves hummed. And my heart beat faster than it ever had.

Standing in front of me, shirtless, was Mr. Undeclared. In one hand was a computer science textbook, and in the other a beer.

He flashed me that smile of his, and it made me feel drunk all over again. “Hey, I know you,” he said.

Between the slow ticks of the clock, my knees nearly buckled beneath me.

“You’re Anna, no last name. I asked around about you, but no one seemed to know where I could find you.”

As if tongue twisted, I managed to say, “It’s Hannah. My name is Hannah, not Anna.”

“Hannah? Not Anna?”

I nodded.

His face went white. “As in Ethan’s Hannah?”

All I could do was nod again. I didn’t want to be Ethan’s Hannah. I wanted to be his Hannah.

And I knew I’d burn in hell for that.

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