The afternoon sun hit the courtyard of Harrison High like gold dust, catching on the shiny cars and loud laughter that ruled the place. It was the kind of school where looks and reputation mattered more than anything — and Zack Siler had both.
Captain of the soccer team, straight A’s, rich parents, perfect hair — Zack was the guy everyone wanted to be or be with. He had the attention, the charm, and the girl — Taylor Vaughan, the most talked-about senior on campus.
Until the day she dumped him.
It happened after spring break, right in front of the whole school. Taylor came back with a new tan, a new attitude, and a new boyfriend — a reality TV “star” named Brock Hudson, who barely remembered her name half the time.
Zack tried to laugh it off, pretending it didn’t sting, but inside he was fuming. His friends, Dean Sampson and Preston, only made it worse.
“Yo, Z. You okay, man?” Dean smirked, tossing his soccer ball in the air.
“I’m fine,” Zack muttered. “It’s just Taylor. She can do whatever she wants.”
“Whatever she wants?” Dean raised an eyebrow. “You’re telling me Miss Drama Queen walks out on the king of Harrison High and you’re not even gonna flinch?”
Zack didn’t answer. He hated how right Dean sounded.
That afternoon, the boys hung out by the bleachers, watching the crowd scatter across the field. The talk shifted fast — from Taylor to prom, to who would take the crown this year. That’s when Dean dropped the idea that would change everything.
“You know what, Zack?” Dean said, leaning back. “I bet you couldn’t make anyone prom queen. Taylor was your ticket. Without her, you’re done.”
“Anyone?” Zack repeated, crossing his arms.
“Yeah, anyone,” Dean said with a grin. “Pick a random girl from this school — and I mean random. No makeup, no popularity, no style. I bet you couldn’t turn her into a prom queen if your life depended on it.”
Zack laughed. “You’re serious?”
“Dead serious. Let’s make it interesting.”
Dean scanned the courtyard until his eyes landed on a figure walking past the art room — paint stains on her hands, an oversized hoodie, thick glasses hiding half her face. Laney Boggs.
Everyone at school knew her, but no one really knew her. The quiet art student. The girl who didn’t talk unless she had to. The one who saw the world in colors no one else bothered to notice.
“Her,” Dean said, pointing.
“Who?” Zack asked.
“Laney Boggs. The art freak. You’ve got six weeks before prom. Make her prom queen — and I’ll admit you’re still king.”
Zack stared at the girl walking away, completely unaware of the storm heading her way.
He smirked. “You’re on.”
And just like that, the bet was made — a stupid game that would change everything.
Because what started as a challenge was about to become something real.
Something Zack never expected.