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The Blitzed Series Boxed Set: Five Contemporary Romance Novels by JJ Knight (134)









Chapter 6



I squeeze my hands together as the countdown clock reaches zero. Blitz and Mack are talking intensely. Right as the theme song starts up, Blitz backs into the wings again, over near Devon.

I let out a sigh of relief and so do the girls. I can see from the tight set of their shoulders that they’re anxious.

The spotlight falls on Barry, and he talks about the journey this season that led to the finale. There are clips of Mack with each girl. I can’t see the screens backstage, but I can hear the audio.

I realize Felicity wasn’t part of the swans. They didn’t invite her back for the live finale. They must have feared she would do something. Or Mack would.

This business is hard, hard, hard. I wonder what Felicity will do next. She was a good dancer, more contemporary, best at jazz. I don’t know what opportunities are out there for what she does.

I should convince Blitz to ask the other producers to nix that three-year non-compete clause. It’s not fair to dancers who barely get by as it is. It should be six months at most. Or maybe end as soon as they’re cut. Only the winner should be contractually obligated to anything other than maybe a nondisclosure agreement about what goes on behind the scenes.

Barry turns to Mack.

“Are you ready to find out your dance partner?” he asks.

Mack nods.

“Will there be a proposal tonight?” he asks.

To Mack’s credit, he puts on his sly smile and says, “I guess we’ll have to wait and see.”

I let out a breath. He seems recovered. I’m not sure what Blitz said to him, but it seems like it helped.

“Let’s bring the girls out!” Barry says, turning to our side of the stage.

Dolly, Veronica, and Beth Ann step out onto the stage. Dolly and Beth Ann join hands, but when Beth Ann tries to clasp with Veronica, she jerks her arm away.

The crowd notices and gasps.

Great. That’s going to be an animated GIF meme within the hour. The one of me stomping on stage in season two has never fallen out of popularity. Occasionally I’ll be out in public and some ten-year-old will see me and mimic my walk from the GIF.

Fame is a beast.

Beth Ann looks over at Dolly. She smiles and nods. They let go of their hands as well.

Mack has missed none of this, and his gaze flickers for a second. But this is live TV, and the show literally must go on.

Barry heads over to the girls and speaks with each of them to stretch out the suspense. Another countdown clock at the base of the stage lets him know how much time to spend on each segment.

Finally, he turns to Mack. “We’ve come to the moment for Mack to see his winner and let the world know who she is.” He opens his jacket and pulls out an envelope.

Huh. This is new. They just had Blitz say it.

It’s also fake. We all know that Mack has already been told.

That’s show business.

Barry holds the envelope in the air. “This won’t be a Miss Universe moment or a Best Picture mistake,” he says. He waggles his eyebrows. “I already verified it myself.”

I glance out at the audience, what little I can see due to the blinding lights facing the stage. Some lean forward, hands clenched. Others clutch each other. It amazes me, how caught up people can be about perfect strangers.

Barry walks over to Mack and hands him the envelope. “It’s your lucky day,” he tells him.

Mack nods and lifts the flap.

Barry moves to the edge of the stage, out of the light.

Dolly and Beth Ann instinctively hold hands again. Only Veronica stands alone.

The room is quiet as Mack pulls the card from the envelope. Then a slow drum roll begins, quickly picking up momentum. A cymbal roll adds a new pitch, increasing the tension. The sound people are on point.

Mack scans the crowd, drawing the moment out. I’m sure he practiced this over and over with Devon. He looks down at the card and does a little nod with his head. It looks like he is pleased, but we know better.

His gaze travels up and lands on the three women. He says in a level voice that betrays nothing, “The winner is Veronica.”

Reactions are mixed. Some boos, lots of cheers. The screens flash on above the stage, casting a brighter light over the audience. I can’t see what they say, but there’s definitely a reaction, more mixed boos and cheers.

Mack picks up the flowers from the stand and takes them to Veronica. Blitz stays back in his wings, so I stay in mine.

Dolly and Beth Ann are quickly escorted off stage by Barry.

The T-shirts drop, and while many of them are quickly grabbed, a few get tossed on stage. Amara pushes a couple stage hands out to fetch them.

There’s supposed to be a final dance now, but I can see why Blitz and I were asked to be close, because everyone is unsettled. The boos start to outnumber the cheers, and more T-shirts land on the stage.

Blitz walks out, holding out his hands. Amara presses against my shoulder. “Go!” she says.

As I head out, I glance up at the video screens to see what got everyone so riled.

And there it is. The vote tallies.


Veronica:  16,540,000

Dolly:        16,539,942

Beth Ann: 12,350,309


Wow. Veronica won by barely 100 votes. Out of millions.

And it’s an oddly even number. Like it’s been rounded up.

That does seem a little strange.

A chorus of “Dolly! Dolly! Dolly!” starts up.

More T-shirts land on the stage.

I glance at the wings. Devon is red-faced, speaking angrily into his headset.

Blitz takes my hand as we approach Mack and Veronica.

“Congratulations, you two,” Blitz says, pouring on more charm than I’ve seen since his own dance show days. “Can I cut in?”

Blitz lets go of me and pulls Veronica into a quick whirl. The chanting stops. Mack takes my arm. “Looks like we’re doing an unplanned dance.”

My heart hammers.

Music comes on, fast-paced and upbeat. It’s a foot-stomping, hand-clapping sort of song that engages everyone immediately. Soon the room is filled with a party atmosphere. The boos stop. No more T-shirts hit the stage.

Blitz links arms with Veronica and does a quick square-dance move. I see where he’s going and do the same with Mack.

Blitz and I meet in the middle and we spin, then we’re off again with Mack and Veronica.

The crowd stands to cheer, and the dance goes on. It’s not what the show creators had planned, but the four of us are able to ham it up. We add feet kicking lifts and a few impressive twirls, making it up as we go along.

At some point more dancers filter in, and it’s wild and loud with the four of us in the center.

Finally, the music gets a little softer and Barry talks over us. “Thanks everyone for being a part of the finale of Season Four of Dance Blitz! We’ll be introducing our new dance bachelor very soon. Let’s hear it for Blitz and Livia and Mack and Veronica!”

He threw us in there to avoid another round of boos.

Everyone’s ready to live it up at this point, the shock worn off. The noise is deafening as we keep dancing through the chaos. When the countdown goes off and the cameras stop flashing, we continue a bit more for the live audience, then Blitz and I dance ourselves off stage.

The other former contestants keep going, linking arms and turning in circles, not wanting the moment to end. I glance behind to see where Mack and Veronica have gone. They smile and wave their way off stage, but the moment they’re in the wings, they drop hands and immediately part.

“That’s going to go well,” Blitz mutters.

“At least we’re not involved,” I say.

We head back to the viewing room with the other producers. They’re murmuring quietly and look up when Blitz and I enter.

“What do you make of this?” Taya asks. She’s not dancing a jig now.

“Disaster,” Blitz says. “Who authorized that vote count number? Nobody in their right mind believes the winner would have that many even zeros in the final count.”

Taya exchanges a glance with Drake Addler, another of the producers who looks small and lost in his navy suit, his curly brown hair a riot over his bushy brows.

Blitz lets out an annoyed sigh. “Please tell me you did not fudge the numbers.”

“I don’t know who authorized that number on the board,” Taya says after a pause. “But in a case where the vote is too close to call, we agreed that we would discuss the repercussions of each choice and make a decision.”

“I was not part of that discussion,” Blitz says.

“Lance, Drake, and I handled it,” Taya says. “We had a majority and were unanimous.”

Red creeps up from Drake’s neckline. “Sorry, Blitz,” he says. “Your vote wouldn’t have mattered.”

A couple women in the viewing room glance over at us, and Taya pulls Blitz over to the corner. He hangs on to my hand, so I go with him.

“Here’s the thing,” Taya says. “Dolly has a boyfriend who started threatening to talk to the tabloids after she was named a finalist. It was too late to blue card her. She couldn’t win.”

“What about Beth Ann?” I ask.

Taya shakes her head. “We should have taken her out early on. We really didn’t need another ballerina. She was skating on Livia’s fame. She wasn’t what the franchise needed as we go into season five. We’re barely holding our ratings position as it is.”

“So you rigged it?” I ask. “You made Veronica the winner?”

“It was stupidly close already,” Taya says. “It didn’t really matter.”

“And nobody thought to at least rough up the numbers?” Blitz says. “There were four bloody zeros on that tally. Anybody can see it was rigged.”

I nod. “I’m sure Twitter is going nuts.”

“We’ll put out a statement,” Taya says. “It will be forgotten in a week.”

“Yeah, like Giselle,” Blitz mutters.

“What do you mean by that?” Taya asks. “Is she back?”

“She’s been skywriting over the studio,” I say.

Taya waves her hand to dismiss the idea. “That’s nothing. Talk to me when she does something people will actually notice.”

With that, she waves at a man across the room and takes off. Drake glances over at us, taking another long swig of his drink.

“I guess in the end, it doesn’t really impact us,” I say.

Blitz shrugs. “If they plan to tank the show, I guess it doesn’t.” He rubs his eyes, and I wonder if he’s thinking about all the money he paid to buy out Bennett as producer. It shouldn’t matter. We have more than enough to live on in San Antonio, well, forever, as long as we’re not stupid.

“We should go,” I say. “Have a nice night in LA before we fly home.”

Blitz takes my hand. “I hear you on that.”

We walk out of the studio as the crew rushes around to clear everything. I glance anxiously up into the sky, but darkness has already fallen. No skywriting.

By this time tomorrow, Dance Blitz will be packed away for another season.

And we can live our lives in peace again.

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