A Feeling Like No Other: A Lesbian Romance Novel by Goswami A

A Feeling Like No Other: A Lesbian Romance Novel by Goswami A

Author:Goswami, A. [Goswami, A.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2021-03-12T00:00:00+00:00


Chapter Five

A fter a heated discussion, and a lot of negotiation, in which Grace played the ‘I got you laid, so you have to listen to me’ card, Josh finally agreed to let Grace choose their third teammate.

Grace knew all along who she wanted.

She knew it from the moment she had seen her, sitting all by herself in the corner of the lecture hall, her fingers working blazingly fast on her laptop, her eyes glued to the projector screen every time a Professor would throw up a question on it, and her hand being the first one to shoot up in the air, the answer almost always correct.

“I want the Indian chick,” Grace said, as she closed her eyes, and experienced the heavenly taste of the coffee served to her by Renee at The Dragon’s Den.

“She barely made it into the top twelve,” Josh argued.

“That is because she was sick that day. I have spoken to her. She is very intelligent, Josh. Perhaps a little more than you.”

“Pfft…” Josh smirked.

“Look at this man. He sleeps with the popular girl once, and thinks he is Ryan Gosling with the brains of Neil DeGrasse Tyson,” Grace squinted at Josh.

“I would be happy with Mr. Tyson’s looks as well. He is one handsome scientist.”

“Yeah, I agree. Anyway, I want her.”

“Alright, if you say so. I mean, how can you argue with someone who got you laid.”

“That’s my boy. Now, let’s get started on the project, shall we?”

The same day, Grace and Josh had approached the girl from India, named Radhika, and asked her to be their third teammate.

Radhika was happy to be included, as she was scared no one would actually pick her, although even when she claimed she was happy, her face bore no expressions.

And from that day onwards, the three would get together in the evening, sit in the library, or in Josh’s dorm room, or if the weather permitted, then somewhere outside, and would brainstorm ideas on how they can create a marketing campaign that would get millennials excited about diamonds.

“But that’s the issue. I don’t think Millennials and Gen Z care about diamonds that much. I don’t know a single girl around me that likes diamonds,” said Josh.

“And when you say, ‘girls around you’, you mean your sister, and now Hannah, right?” Grace joked.

“I have cousins as well,” Josh whispered.

“Okay, but I agree with you. I mean, I have all the money in the world, but I don't care about diamonds, so, how can we get an average girl, who is already in huge student debt, to care about an expensive stone that she can live without.”

After a few days of brainstorming, the three still did not have something concrete with them.

They had bits and fragments of ideas, but they had no idea how to bring them together to form a valid argument.

But during those few days, Grace became the most vocal student in Nicole’s class, always coming up with hard-hitting questions, answering some of the toughest questions that



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