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Daring Hearts: Fearless Fourteen Boxed Set

Page 233

by Box Set


  He gave me a look, his right eyebrow raised.

  “What?” I asked. “Did I say something wrong?” I suddenly had a panic attack that he had fallen from a horse and had some sort of PTSD or something.

  He shook his head and grinned. “No. Nothing’s wrong. Yes, I ride a little. Come on, let’s distribute your goodies and then I have to lock up. As much as I’d like to hang out here all night with you, I do have an early day tomorrow.”

  My heart fluttered in my chest at his words. Was Brady flirting with me? No, he was staff here and that had to be against the rules, even if he did seem kind of young; he was probably older than he looked, anyway.

  Probably he was just being nice to the new girl who’d cried on his shoulder over her childish problems.

  Yes, that had to be it. But why didn’t my pounding heart believe it?

  Love Rekindled

  “I don’t know what I was nervous about, but you were right, Brooklyn: it was fine. No. It was better than fine, it was amazing! Dave is amazing.”

  It was the sixth time Emmie’d used the word amazing since she’d returned from her stables rendezvous, kicked off her shoes and threw herself onto her bed, almost two and a half minutes before. It was tempting to point out that she was going to qualify for the ‘overused word drinking game’ if she wasn’t careful, but her excitement was infectious, so I just let her ride it out. Realizing I wasn’t going to get back to reading my textbook anytime soon, I wondered if I’d get any work done this year with Emmie as my roommate. I might have to figure out somewhere else to study for exams, but for now, before the workload got too heavy, I didn’t mind.

  And I loved her energy; I hoped maybe some would wear off on me.

  She bounced a little on her bed. “He looks even better than I remembered, since his hair’s grown out. I mean, you just can’t see it on Skype, you know? And it’s so soft and he smells exactly how I remembered; clean and masculine and kind of like leather and just pure goodness, you know?”

  I nodded, getting the feeling if I opened my mouth, she’d just talk over me anyway.

  “And the kissing,” she said, fluttering her lashes, her fingers rising to touch her lips. My face heated up as I guiltily remembered hearing them making out, but she didn’t seem to notice and went on. “He is such a good kisser. I think I may have missed that more than anything else. Although, the talking was nice. Not that we talked about much of anything.” She giggled sheepishly. “But hearing his voice first hand while he was touching me…” she trailed off, all swoony.

  “So, you’re breaking up then?” I asked, joking.

  She rolled her eyes. “Of course. I’m pretty much done with him; you can have him next.”

  I laughed, but didn’t say anything. I mean, Dave sounded perfect; nice and good-smelling and of course, the good kisser part, but secretly, I was still thinking about Will.

  “And, the best part? I’m going to get to work with him through my CSA—he’s doing school liaison, too. How lucky is that?”

  I wasn’t sure luck had much to do with it, but I was happy for her and hoped that if I ever got a boyfriend, that she’d be happy for me if we got extra opportunities to be together.

  “Oh no!” she said suddenly. “Wait! Your guy. I completely forgot to ask about him.” It was like she’d been reading my mind, or maybe I had a neon sign on my face or something.

  But compared to her real relationship, my little flirtation with Will seemed stupid and insignificant now, at least out loud. I waved her off. “It’s no big deal. He was just a cute guy who helped me with my luggage, that’s all. I’m sure it was nothing.” Because it was going to amount to nothing, if my past history with guys was any sort of indicator. But he had smelled good, and his hair looked soft and I would have loved to have found out if he was a good kisser, too.

  She gave me a look. “What? What’s going on with you?”

  I avoided her eyes, smoothing out my bedspread over my legs and picking at the corner of the textbook I’d put down when she’d burst into the room. “Nothing.”

  “What happened at the stables? You seem…I don’t know, different.”

  I told her about the equestrian team conflict, but when I was done, she frowned at me.

  “What?” I asked.

  “That’s not it,” she said. “Something…you’re unsettled or something.”

  Even though I’d been thinking about Will, Emmie made me think about Brady back at the stables and how he’d made me feel exactly that: unsettled. “It’s nothing.”

  Emmie got up off her bed and sat down on mine, digging her legs under the covers and poking me with her toes. “It’s not nothing. I’m very intuitive and I’m never wrong.” She studied my face, making me blush under her scrutiny.

  “Was there a boy there?”

  My face got even hotter.

  “Well that answers it,” she declared with a snort, nudging me with her foot again. Her eyes went suddenly wide. “Wait. It was him, wasn’t it? The trunk mover! What happened?”

  I knew I wasn’t getting away from the interrogation, so I figured best to just tell her and get it over with.

  “No. It wasn’t him. It was the stable guy. Brady.” I shrugged. “We’re friends, I guess. We met last night when I went out to hang out with the horses. But it’s nothing.” I thought about him standing so close to me and how it had almost felt like he’d been about to kiss me. But it had to have been just my imagination, and I wasn’t about to make myself look like an idiot by saying something about it to Emmie.

  She stared at me and blinked three times. “Brady?”

  “Yes, Brady.” Dread washed over me at her expression. She must have thought I was into him or something. “But of course he’s staff and obviously older; it’s not like that. We’re just friends. He said he was going to talk to the coach about getting me on the team and getting my community service assignment changed. And I just met him. Like I said, it’s not like that…” I clamped my mouth shut, realizing I was babbling like a crazy person who might be overcompensating for something that she wasn’t willing to admit to her roommate or herself.

  Emmie closed her eyes and shook her head for several moments. Frowning, and with her eyes still closed, she said, “Wait, what? He was going to talk to what coach?”

  All that kissing must have scrambled her brain, I thought, wondering if I wasn’t speaking clearly. “The equestrian coach: Fleming. Brady said he would talk to him about getting me on the team and seeing if the dean would change my community service assignment.”

  She opened her eyes and looked straight into mine. “Brooklyn,” she said, looking at me as though I was daft. “First of all, the dean changes community service assignments for NO ONE. Ever. And secondly, and, I think, most importantly, so pay attention: Brady is Coach Fleming.”

  My brain seemed to stall out for a moment, but when her words started to make sense, I did a double-take. “What? No. He’s older than us, but he’s too young to be a coach.”

  Emmie put her hands on my cheeks and held my head in place, inches from hers, when she said, very slowly, “Brady Fleming is our equestrian coach. He attends Westwood as a student and works here part time in the stables and teaching equestrian. He’s going to the next Olympics.”

  “Olympics?” I croaked.

  She nodded, not letting go of my face. “Yes. The Olympics. You know, that sport event thing that happens, I don’t know, every four years or so. It’s kind of a big deal?”

  “He’s going to the Olympics,” I repeated. “In what?”

  “Dressage.”

  Of course. That makes all the sense in the world. “If he’s going to the Olympics, why is he working here at Rosewood?”

  She shrugged. “He goes to Westwood on an athletic scholarship. I imagine going to the Olympics isn’t free, neither is training or paying for a horse and vet bills and all that.”

  It took a moment for this all to sink in. And then I remembered, “Oh. My. God!” I looked at her. “Emm
ie!”

  “What?” she asked, but she was laughing. I could hardly blame her; if it wasn’t me who’d made a total fool of myself in front of our equestrian coach, I’d be laughing, too.

  “I bragged about my stupid blue ribbons and even asked him if he rides at all. He must think I’m a total idiot. No wonder he gave me that look.”

  She let go of my face to laugh and throw her arms around my shoulders and give me a squeeze. “You are so cute. What did he say?”

  I smirked, in spite of myself. “He said he rides a little.”

  She snorted. “Ha! That’s awesome. But more importantly,” she dropped her voice and gave me a pointed look. “Isn’t he delicious?”

  “Emmie!”

  Feigning shock, she suddenly let me go. “Oh come on. Tell me you didn’t notice. He’s beautiful and broody; what’s not to like?”

  “Broody?”

  “Yes. Broody and moody, snarling all the time. Tortured. So hot.”

  I wasn’t sure we were talking about the same guy. “I didn’t get that from him.”

  “Tall guy, black hair, honey brown eyes?”

  I nodded. Definitely Brady.

  “Was he wearing tight pants? His best assets are below the belt.”

  “Emmie!” I exclaimed again, raising my palms to my hot cheeks.

  She winked and got up out of my bed. “Relax, I meant his butt and thighs from all that horseback riding. You have such a dirty mind, Brooklyn Prescott.” She gave me a wave over her shoulder. “I don’t think you’re as innocent as you let on.”

  Indeed I was, but her comment was rhetorical, so I didn’t respond. And anyway, by the time I would have thought of something to say, she had taken her pajamas into the bathroom and shut the door behind her.

  But as I sat there, still stunned from learning Brady was actually the equestrian instructor, something nagged at me. Why hadn’t he told me? He’d had several opportunities: when I first met him and then again tonight. And it couldn’t be an oversight—he’d said he would talk to Coach Fleming on my behalf. He could have come clean right then. So much for us being friends as I’d thought.

  So much for me liking Coach Fleming as he’d said I would.

  He had intentionally deceived me.

  But why?

  The Dean

  The next day I was in French class, easily conjugating verbs about ten minutes before the bell was to ring, when I got called to the dean’s office. My heart pounded in my chest and the girls around me started whispering, but I couldn’t be in trouble already, could I? I was the good girl. And I’d just gotten to Rosewood.

  Then I realized maybe it was about the equestrian team. Maybe, despite his little deception, Brady—Coach Fleming—had followed through on his promise to get me on the team.

  Nervous, I packed up my things and left the classroom, pulling the dog-eared campus map from my backpack to find the dean’s office.

  Once I got there, I realized it was exactly what I would have expected the office of the dean of students of a very exclusive girls’ school to be: all rich wood and ceiling-high shelves of books, many leather-bound. There was a large but utilitarian wood desk placed strategically in front of the ornately carved door with a plaque that read “Dean Haywood”. Sitting at the desk was a bespectacled secretary. As my eyes landed on her, I startled a little; she was staring at me over the top of her reading glasses.

  The entire scene was so cliché, I almost laughed.

  Almost.

  “Um, hi. I’m Brooklyn Prescott,” I said. “Here to see the dean.”

  The woman pointed at a chair behind me against the wall. “Sit. I’ll let her know you’re here, Ms. Prescott.”

  The secretary didn’t move or pick up a phone, but turned her gaze to her computer screen and I figured in today’s day and age, she must have e-mailed or IMed her.

  Several minutes later, long enough for me to consider starting to bite my nails again, the brass doorknob turned. I held my breath as the dean came out.

  She looked a lot taller here in her office than she had on the stage, speaking from the podium. She wore a well-tailored suit, maybe Chanel, and her silver hair was wound around her head in a complicated twist that looked like it was compiled from a long braid. If I had to guess, she had hair midway down her back, but chose to pile it up on top of her head. Why bother? I wondered.

  “Ms. Prescott,” she said, her eyes landing on me, her expression unreadable. “Come in.”

  I took a deep breath as I stood up and hooked my backpack over my right shoulder, following her back into her office.

  “The door, please,” she said, although it sounded a lot more like a demand than a request. I carefully shut the heavy door behind me and came to stand at the desk, not daring to sit down until told to.

  She took a seat in her large leather chair and leaned forward, her elbows on the blotter as she steepled her fingers. She did not invite me to sit. “Coach Fleming came to see me today.”

  “Yes, ma’am,” I said because she’d stopped talking and seemed to be expecting something from me.

  “He tells me you want to join the equestrian team.”

  “That’s correct, ma’am.” I shifted my weight from one foot to the other and glanced at the two chairs in front of me. Had she forgotten they were there? What do I do now? It felt so awkward to stand there, but she hadn’t said anything, so I stayed where I was.

  “I’m to understand that you’ve won over a dozen blue ribbons in dressage.”

  Over a dozen? That was a stretch. But I had no way of knowing who was exaggerating, and wasn’t about to call her on it. “I was very successful,” I said, figuring that was enough of the truth. “I worked very hard.”

  She inclined her head slightly; respect, perhaps?

  “He also tells me that the practice schedule conflicts with your community service assignment.”

  I nodded.

  “What do you intend to do about that?”

  What do I intend to do? Huh?

  “I’m sorry, ma’am. I don’t understand.”

  She leaned back in her chair and crossed her arms over her chest. “You can’t be at two places at once, unless I’m more behind on reading my scientific journals than I thought. So how are you going to handle this situation?”

  “I…I had hoped maybe you could excuse me from my community service assignment?”

  When the dean laughed humorlessly, I knew I’d said the wrong answer.

  “Try again, Ms. Prescott.”

  I opened my mouth, but nothing came out.

  “Let me give you a hint, young lady,” she said, smirking. But not in an evil way, just sort of like she was amused. Yes, I realize there’s a fine line in this situation between amused and evil, but I didn’t get the feeling that she was really trying to be a dragon, despite the outcome being that she was, well, being a dragon.

  “Most of the girls here at Rosewood come from privilege, you included, of course, since you’re not on scholarship. And with privilege often comes a sense of entitlement and the belief that anything can be bought or influenced to desired results. That may be true in some aspects of life, but not all, and I do you no favors if I make your life perfect. What we try to foster here is an appreciation for life being difficult and unfair and not always what we sign up for. There are consequences to our actions and nothing we do is ever in a vacuum. Do you understand me?”

  Sort of. “You’re saying no one gets off easy here.”

  She nodded. “In essence, yes.”

  “So you’re not going to let me get out of the community service assignment.”

  “That is correct,” she said, leaning forward again, resting her forearms on the desk. She continued to stare at me, waiting.

  I cleared my throat. “Ma’am, would you please provide me with a different assignment? One that is at a different time, so I may attend the equestrian practices?”

  “No.”

  What?

  “Ma’am, I’m not trying
to get out of doing an assignment, but if you could...”

  “Stop!” She slapped her hand down on the desk blotter, halting me mid-sentence and almost making me pee my pants. She exhaled loudly and then continued, thankfully in a more reasonable tone. “Ms. Prescott, I understand your predicament, but I am not going to do anything to make this easy for you. I can’t change things for every girl who comes in here and wants to adjust her schedule, can I?”

  “No, ma’am.”

  “So. What are you going to do?”

  Besides wish I’d ditched French? “Um, not join the equestrian team?”

  She frowned, looking disappointed, almost making me burst into tears on the spot.

  “Is that truly your only option?”

  I swallowed as I stood there, fidgeting from foot to foot and trying desperately to figure out what she wanted from me. But maybe…maybe what she wanted from me is exactly what she was saying: that she wanted me to figure it out, find a solution on my own.

  But what? Shifting my weight again, I looked around the room as though her diploma-covered walls would offer up suggestions.

  Sadly, they didn’t.

  “Ms. Prescott?”

  I looked at the dean again.

  “I’m a very busy woman. I am responsible for this entire school and all of the pupils and staff in it. Are you wasting my time?”

  “No ma’am,” I said, but feared it was a lie. She continued to stare at me, her eyes unwavering.

  She opened her mouth and I was sure she was about to throw me out when I said, “Wait! Would it be acceptable if I could trade assignments with one of my fellow students?”

  The smallest of smiles tugged at the corners of her mouth. “If you were able to find a student to trade assignments with, under these circumstances and this one time, I would find that acceptable and allow it so you could join the equestrian team. However,” she gave me a pointed look, “If I find out that you used any sort of negative coercion or threats, you will be off that team in a heartbeat. Do you understand me?”

  My heart danced in my chest. I was going to get to join the team! “Yes, ma’am,” I said, managing to keep my excitement in check.

 

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