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Ivy Series Teacher Student Romance - Boxed Set: Romance Boxed Sets for Kindle Unlimited (Ivy Series - Teacher Student Romance Book 7)

Page 62

by Suzy K Quinn


  There’s a sort of streaky splatter, then three long trickles running down the glass like rain drops.

  As my gaze falls to the balcony outside the window, I jump back in shock. There’s something red and meaty looking out there, glistening in the moonlight.

  I put a hand to my chest to steady my heart, and it’s then I hear the noises again – the strange, screeching sounds cutting through the still night air.

  As I listen to the sounds, they become words.

  ‘You’re dead, Sophia Rose. D.E.A.D, dead.’

  It’s Cecile.

  Perhaps not the Cecile I remember from Ivy College. She’s more than just angry and hate-filled. And she’s shrieking like an insane person.

  My heart is beating even faster now. How did she get into the college?

  I hear the ground floor accommodation door slam and Marc’s clipped footsteps head out into the night.

  The shrieking stops and turns into crying. I think I hear Marc’s voice, followed by the voices of other men – Marc’s security team I think. And then, silence.

  As I try to make sense of what I’ve just heard, my eyes grow used to the dark, and I focus once again on the meaty thing on my patio.

  Suddenly, I know what it is.

  I’ve seen something like it before in the village butcher’s shop, but I’ve never bought one. It’s a pig’s heart – huge and bloody. Cecile must have hurled it at the window. How on earth did she throw it so high?

  I shiver, and the shiver turns into a shake that just won’t stop, even when I wrap the duvet around myself.

  Cecile really has flipped. She could do someone some harm right now.

  Thank god Marc was here.

  My phone rings.

  I see Marc’s number on the screen and snatch it up.

  ‘Marc?’

  ‘Sophia.’ His voice calms me a little. ‘Are you still in the bedroom?’

  ‘Yes. Are you okay?’

  ‘You needn’t ever worry about me. It’s you and your safety that are important.’

  ‘Your safety is important too.’

  ‘I can take care of myself.’ He pauses. ‘Cecile was here.’

  ‘I know. I heard her. How did she get in?’

  ‘Someone must have given her a key. My guess is Ryan. But I don’t want you to worry. You’re safe here. The security team would never have let her get into the accommodation block. There are cameras everywhere.

  ‘Security were well on their way to intercepting her before I even got downstairs. She’s in a much more fragile state of mind than any of us thought. I should have known. I should have guessed.’

  ‘How could you have?’ I say. ‘Who’d have thought she’d have gone this crazy? To turn up in the dead of night, hurling meat at windows …’ I catch myself.

  ‘You’ve seen the balcony then,’ says Marc.

  ‘Yes,’ I admit.

  ‘I told you not to open the curtains.’

  ‘I know. I don’t know why I opened the curtains. Something just came over me. How did she throw it all the way up here?’

  ‘She used a catapult. Someone will come clean the mess up first thing tomorrow.’

  ‘Do you think this counts as breaching our one weekly phone call? Since this is our fourth call of the day?’

  ‘We haven’t spoken for more than half an hour. This all counts as part of the same call. Now. Listen carefully. I’ve given the security team a new password. Ask them for it before you speak to any of them or let them in your room.’ A pause. ‘The password is ivy.’

  My body feels all shaky and scared. ‘I’ll remember it.’

  ‘I hate to leave you alone up there. I hate it.’ I feel Marc’s frustration down the phone. ‘But I’ll be on campus all night. Seconds away if you need me. Sophia …’

  ‘Yes Marc?’

  ‘There’ll be some press about this tomorrow.’

  ‘About what?’

  ‘About Cecile. When we took her to the entrance gate, there were paparazzi outside. She went straight to them. They got a picture of me standing next to her. Talking to her. Chances are they’ll make some story out of it.’

  ‘Oh.’ I hate the thought of Marc being lied about in the newspapers, especially when those lies involve Cecile. But there are worse things that could happen. I mean, at least Marc wasn’t hurt. ‘Well, I guess we’ll just have to weather that storm when it comes.’

  ‘Go to bed now, Sophia. I’ll be watching over you.’

  ‘I know.’

  58

  The next day, Keith drives me back to the cottage first thing.

  I’m sitting in the cottage garden reading my lines, when Jen comes hurrying outside with a wodge of newspapers.

  ‘Sophia, did you know about this?’

  I look up from my crumpled script. It’s cold outside and I’m huddled in the coat Marc gave me and wearing thick wool gloves.

  I see a dark, grainy picture of Marc and Cecile, blown up big on a front page.

  ‘Sort of,’ I say. ‘I mean, I knew they got a picture of Marc and Cecile last night. She broke into the college, and Marc and his team escorted her out.’

  ‘But these articles …’ She fans the papers out for me.

  I scan the headlines. ‘Oh my god.’

  Blackwell Love Child

  Marc Beds Student No.2

  Love Rat Blackwell

  ‘Can I see the articles?’ I take the clump of newspapers from Jen’s manicured nails and dump them on the garden table. Then I take off my gloves and flick through the papers.

  The articles are all about Marc fathering Cecile’s unborn child.

  Cecile is quoted in all of them – she must have run to every newspaper in London.

  ‘She’s totally flipped,’ I say. ‘I mean, she’s lied to the papers before, but this is different. These articles are complete fantasy land.’

  ‘I wish someone had told me,’ says Jen. ‘How can I stop the two of you getting bad press if I’m not told when these sorts of pictures are taken?’

  ‘I’d never have guessed the stories would be this bad,’ I say.

  ‘They’ve been clever,’ says Jen, wrapping her arms around herself and shivering in her thin blouse. ‘It’s all allegedly this and allegedly that. Nothing we can sue for. But I’m going to make sure a counter story is run, showing that Cecile refused a paternity test.’

  ‘She refused a paternity test?’

  ‘Not yet. But she will when I get Marc’s lawyers to demand she take one. I’ve got work to do.’

  ‘But you haven’t started working for Marc, yet,’ I say. ‘You’re on babysitting duty. Jen, this isn’t your problem.’

  ‘Of course it is. You’re my friend. Which makes your boyfriend my top priority. I’m not going to let someone badmouth him. I have a few hours here and there. Right now, Sammy’s sleeping. That gives me most of the afternoon to try some damage limitation.’

  ‘Has Dad seen these?’ I ask, nodding at the papers.

  ‘Not these exact ones,’ says Jen. ‘But he’s bound to pass a newsstand at some point. We should probably go talk to him before he does. So you can tell him what really happened, before he gets the wrong idea.’

  ‘Okay.’ I get up out of the wiry garden chair, scooping the newspapers under my arm. ‘Let’s go talk to him.’

  We find Dad by the front door, strapping on his money belt ready for work.

  ‘You’re going to work already?’ I ask, pleased that Dad is getting back to his old routine. It didn’t suit him, moping around the house.

  ‘I’m trying to get as many hours in as I can before next weekend.’

  ‘Why’s that?’ I ask.

  Dad suddenly becomes very interested in his money belt. ‘Oh, just that I was hoping to take Saturday night off. So I could take Denise out.’

  ‘Denise? As in, Denise from Ivy College?’

  Dad coughs and doesn’t meet my eye. ‘Yes. I mean, it’s no big deal. Just two friends going out to dinner.’

 
‘You two are going out to dinner?’ I say. ‘Like a date?’

  ‘I wouldn’t call it a date exactly,’ says Dad, his cheeks flushing. ‘There’s this 1950s diner Denise read about in Soho, so ... we thought we’d check it out.’

  ‘That’s great, Dad.’

  ‘It’s just a dinner. That’s all.’

  ‘Denise is a lovely lady,’ says Jen. ‘And very attractive too, don’t you think, Sophia?’

  ‘Yes,’ I say, catching Jen’s tone. ‘A very attractive lady.’

  Dad scratches his ear. ‘All I know is that she’s a very warm and friendly person. And I enjoy spending time with her.’

  ‘Well you enjoy away,’ I say. ‘You deserve a nice night out.’

  ‘See you girls later.’

  ‘Hang on a minute, Dad,’ I say. ‘Can I talk to you? The newspapers are running a story today. About Marc. And before you hear about it from someone else, I just wanted to tell you that it’s total rubbish. All made up.’

  ‘What story?’

  I look at Jen and she looks at me.

  ‘You may as well see for yourself,’ I say, handing him a newspaper.

  Dad unfurls the paper and scans left and right. He’s never been the fastest of readers, so it takes a few moments before his eyes widen, and he starts shaking his head.

  ‘I’m so sorry, love.’

  ‘Dad, it’s okay. Really. These articles don’t bother me. I know they’re all lies. But I just wanted to make sure you knew the truth before you read them on some newsstand somewhere.’

  Dad frowns. ‘Soph, love. Are you sure they’re lies? I mean, you haven’t seen Marc for a while. And he’s photographed right next to this girl.’

  ‘They took that picture at Ivy College last night,’ I say. ‘I was there. Cecile broke in and threw a pig’s heart at my window. And Marc went down and escorted her out of the building, with his security team. That’s when the picture was taken. Look, you can see them in the background.’ I point to two men in black uniforms.

  ‘She threw a pig’s heart at your window?’ Jen asks, her eyes widening.

  ‘I know. She really has flipped.’

  ‘So this Cecile girl was at your college last night?’ Dad asks.

  I nod.

  ‘And Marc was there too?’ Dad says the words slowly.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘And so were you?’

  ‘Yes.’ My stomach drops as I begin to realise what Dad is thinking.

  59

  ‘The two of you are supposed to be separated,’ says Dad. ‘That was our agreement.’

  ‘We have been,’ I say. ‘But … something happened last night, and Marc came over to check that I was okay. He was about to leave when Cecile turned up. I didn’t even see him—’

  Dad’s lips go all thin and white.

  ‘Honestly, Dad. We were keeping to your rules. We’ve been apart this whole time. Just phone calls. That’s kind of what last night was. An extended phone call. Like I said, I couldn’t see him—’

  ‘Well then,’ says Dad. ‘There’s an easy solution, isn’t there? No more weekly phone calls.’

  ‘But Dad—’

  ‘Do you want to stick to this agreement or don’t you?’

  ‘If it means you giving us your blessing to marry, then of course I do.’

  ‘Then from now on, no phone calls. There are only a few weeks left before you can see him again. I’m sure you’ll manage.’

  I feel sick to the stomach.

  ‘Please, Dad. There are things I need to tell him. About Annabel. She needs our help. Dad, wait.’ I put a hand on his arm. ‘Can you at least let me call him today? To tell him what’s happening?’

  Dad frowns. ‘You can email today. To let him know the new arrangement. But after today, that’s it. No more contact until the three months are up.’ With that, he storms out the door.

  ‘You’ll be all right,’ says Jen. ‘You’re tougher than you look.’

  ‘That’s what you think.’

  ‘That’s what I know. You’ve already toughed out over two months. And at least you can email Marc today. That’s better than nothing, isn’t it?’

  I find myself nodding at that little bit of light at the end of the tunnel. ‘Yes,’ I say. ‘I guess that’s better than nothing.’

  From: SophiaR

  To: MarcBlackwell

  Dear Marc,

  I don’t know how to start this email. But here goes.

  I love you.

  I love you so much it hurts. In fact, everything hurts right now. Being away from you hurts, not hearing your voice hurts, thinking about you hurts.

  I have some bad news. Dad has read the newspapers and found out that you were at Ivy College last night. And now he says we can’t phone each other any more. We can only talk by email, and only today. After that, nothing until this last month is up.

  I need to tell you about Annabel. I was looking over the forms she has to fill in, and what she has to do to get her son back. She needs somewhere to live. And I thought, could she live near us? Could you get her a place? That way, I could help her with her son.

  I’m typing this in the garden, wearing the coat you gave me.

  Leo thinks that—

  I pause, my cold fingers hovering over my iPhone keypad. No. Better not talk about Leo. Delete, delete, delete.

  Some people think that space can be healthy. But to me, it feels like I might just die during these last weeks. Our weekly calls were what got me through the days, but now we don’t have them I’m lost. Totally, utterly lost. Please write back quickly.

  I love you,

  Sophia.

  My thumbs ache because I typed so fast. It’s cold out here, but I’m understanding now what Marc means about liking the cold. It’s helping me feel something, because otherwise I’d be numb.

  I sit staring at my phone, waiting, waiting for a reply. After twenty minutes, I realise that the email is still waiting in my inbox and my signal bar is low.

  I head into the house, but the signal is no better in there. Jen is playing with Sammy in the lounge area, and she looks up as I come in.

  ‘Did you send him the email?’

  ‘No reception.’ I wave my phone at her. ‘I’m going to head to Ivy College. The phone reception around this village is too hit and miss.’

  ‘How are you going to get there? Didn’t you say Keith had the morning off?’

  ‘Bus and train. Just like the old days.’

  60

  As I walk through the little cobbled streets of our village, past greengrocers and butchers, I finally get phone reception and the email leaves my inbox.

  I watch my phone anxiously as I walk, waiting for Marc’s reply. It comes within five minutes.

  Sophia.

  Let me speak to your father and try to explain. And apologise.

  And I’ve been trying to persuade Annabel to move to Richmond for years. I’d buy her anywhere she wanted. The problem is, a part of her is still attached to Daniel’s father and her old friends.

  I love you too.

  Marc.

  I hurriedly write a reply, tripping over a cobblestone in my rush to respond.

  No, no, don’t! You don’t know Dad like I do. He’s angry about us seeing each other last night, so he won’t change his mind. This is just how it has to be.

  And I don’t think Annabel wants that life any more. But she’s feeling a little depressed about having to lean on people. She wants to be independent. We need to find a way to give her a place without her feeling like she’s taking charity.

  Within moments, Marc fires back:

  Re: your father, I’ve never been good at accepting things. But for you, I can accept anything. If this is how it has to be, then we’ll get through it.

  Tell Annabel to find somewhere suitable, and I’ll buy it for her. She can choose the place. And then, when she gets back on her feet, she can pay me a monthly rent until the place is paid off. She won’t be leaning on anyone. Just taking out a loan.


  You never cease to amaze me. I bring in Jen and Rodney to make sure you’re not overstretching yourself. And then you go and make my sister into your new project. Don’t tire yourself out.

  I’ll be watching over you. Keeping you safe.

  I love you,

  Marc.

  I spend the whole bus and train journey emailing Marc and reading his replies. We write about how much we love and miss each other, and we talk about the wedding – and what we’re going to do on our honeymoon.

  I get pretty hot reading and writing the honeymoon emails, and hope the other train passengers can’t see the blush spreading up my neck. When I tell Marc I’m on my way to Ivy College, I receive the quickest response ever.

  Not alone you’re not. I’ll send a driver to wherever you are. Keith isn’t working this morning, but I have a replacement.

  I message back:

  Too late. I’m already at Liverpool Street. I have to get the tube now, so no reception. Don’t worry – I’m in public the whole time.

  Before I hop on the Central Line tube train, I receive a reply:

  Did I ever tell you how much I both love and hate your independent side, Miss Rose? It gets in the way of keeping you safe. I’ll have security sent to watch you, and no arguments.

  I smile as I read that last message. When I get off the tube at Oxford Street, I see Marc has already sent me another email:

  Sophia,

  Where are you now?

  I reply:

  Walking to Ivy College. It’s okay. I’ll be there in twenty minutes.

  Marc replies:

  You’d better be. Or I’m coming looking for you. Since we at least have a day where we can email each other, I’ve arranged to have something waiting for you in your room at Ivy College. Because you like surprises.

  I smile at that message too, and nearly walk out into a line of traffic. I catch myself on the pavement and wait for the green man. Then I reply:

 

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