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The Academy (The Academy Saga Book 1)

Page 19

by CJ Daly


  normal teenager.

  “Yeah, I know! All the guys around here are, like, so beyond boring,” she

  complained with a distinctly Ashley-Leigh twang in there.

  “Right.” I was sure everyone’s perspective on the “hot” new guy was most

  likely completely skewed because they were simply starved for new blood.

  “So,” she leaned in conspiratorially, “can you find out?”

  “Find out?”

  “His schedule.” She said this like it was the most logical thing in the

  world. “Don’t you, like, have access to all the students’ records?”

  “Um . . . we’re not really supposed to do that,” I hedged, sounding like

  my unlikely hero Saturday night, who ended up giving me a ride home from

  the pharmacy after all.

  “Oh come on, Katie! Please,” she wheedled. “Just this once?”

  I switched tactics. “Well if you don’t even know his name, I’d have to sift

  through all the students alphabetically, and it could take a while. Mrs. Greer

  will kill me if I don’t get these books done.”

  She seemed to notice the stack of books for the first time and gave me a

  cartoon-worthy frown. “Okay. I just thought it would be fun if I—I mean

  we, were the first ones to know his name and schedule and stuff.” An Ashley-Leigh disciple if I’d ever seen one . Maybe I could salvage what was left of my

  time if I could just get her moving. I picked up another book.

  “I heard he’s from Roswell—from that military institute there. What’s it

  called? Somethin’ with lots of Ns and Ms?”

  “New Mexico Military Institute,” I provided.

  She snapped her fingers and pointed at me. “That’s the one.”

  I started tapping in numbers again, only half listening.

  “And that he’s living with a relative here now,” Steph mused aloud, not

  budging from her perch. “Maybe he was kicked out of regular school, and

  his parents sent him to military school to straighten him out, but he was

  • 117 •

  expelled there, too. So his parents sent him to live with his, ah . . . uncle because nobody can deal with him on account of him being such a badass!”

  she finished, eyes shining.

  Ugh. She was piercing my fortress of solitude with all this talk about

  military schools and badasses. Brought back the queasy, sinking feeling in

  my stomach I’d had since Saturday night.

  “Uh, Steph, don’t you have to get back to class?” I snatched the forgotten

  slip from her. “I’ll give this to Mrs. Greer. I didn’t see any boxes this morning,

  so I’ll have to wait for her to get back from the office before I can ask.”

  “Don’tja just love a bad boy?” Like I hadn’t even spoken.

  “Yeah, badass . . .”—I rolled my eyes—“what every girl dreams of.”

  “Katie!” She guffawed like a mother does the first time her toddler mimics

  a naughty word. I stood up to shoo her away and her mouth flew open. “Katie

  Connelly, are you, like, wearing actual jeans now?”

  I looked down, as if having to check. “Yup.”

  “Bad ass!” Steph nodded her approval. “You should get contacts next.”

  “I’ll take that under advisement,” I replied, straightening my replacement

  glasses.

  She laughed. “I’ll catch you up on everything at lunch,” she said before

  sallying away.

  “Okay,” I agreed, already preoccupied. Actually, I was planning a library

  lunch to email Reese and get more info on that school, since I didn’t have time

  now. A few minutes later, I was mowing down the second stack of books still

  ruminating about how to thwart Daddy.

  So far, my biggest act of rebellion consisted of wearing jeans to school.

  But I’d need to arm myself with something more than a new pair of pants. It

  was information I needed; knowledge was power. Daddy had cut me off from

  any information about the school, the mentor, what kind of testing Andrew

  was going to be subjected to. Everything. Despite profusely apologizing and promising not to interfere (with fingers crossed behind my back) I was still

  getting bupkis from Daddy.

  All I knew was that I was picking Andrew up from school today, where he

  was meeting his “mentor” for the first time. Other than that, I was clueless.

  Arg! Frustrating. A sick feeling akin to swallowing too many bitter pills overcame me when I thought of a stranger probing around inside my brother’s

  brain to assess his talents and abilities. It seemed downright invasive, especially knowing how Mama took such pains to hide us from the world. Mikey had

  never even set foot in public, not even to go for an ice cream, before I enrolled

  him in preschool.

  • 118 •

  But I didn’t have time to stress for long, because the bell rang. I had PreCal next. Ugh . . . Guess it’s better to get it over with early. I slipped into the sea of students swimming their way to second-hour, trying not to get eaten by

  sharks. Pre-Cal was in the same building as the library, so I had time to hit

  the restroom to wash my dusty hands before class. Pushing through the door,

  I was instantly accosted by piercing squeals from a huddle of girls in front of

  the mirrors. Ashley-Leigh stood, front and center, smoothing down her flat-

  ironed hair and prattling around a sparkling wand of lip gloss.

  “Katie!” she gushed, clicking shut the tube before turning around to face

  me. “Tell me you were able to get his schedule!”

  Of course she already knows al about it; it was probably her idea. I shrugged my shoulders . “No such luck.”

  “Aw man!” She spun back around to her minions. “Okay, so what do

  we know so far . . . other than the fact that he’s drool-worthy gorgeous, just

  moved here, and is a senior?”

  “Drea heard he was an army brat,” a minion supplied, hoping to be of

  service.

  “Who moves to a new school their senior year?” a hidden voice wondered

  behind a stall.

  “I heard he got kicked out of his former school for fighting.”

  “No way!” Ashley-Leigh argued. “I saw him in the front office this

  morning—he’s definitely way more of a lover than a fighter type!”

  This clever was followed by high-pitched laughter and high-fives. I just

  backed out the door and headed to class feeling world-weary. It would be nice

  to get caught up in the excitement of a new boy. I sighed . . . in another life.

  I managed to be one of the first students in class and sat near the front.

  Two seconds after the bell, Ashley-Leigh and her groupies came prancing in

  after spit-shining themselves up for an appearance from Mr. Wonderful. I had

  to roll my eyes. They clumped together in the back all jostling for position.

  I remembered when I was right in the middle of all that; it seemed like a

  lifetime ago.

  First day classes rolled by in a predictable pattern of seat jockeying, new

  procedures that felt very old, and directions for online resources, which I

  would access via the library’s computers. Obviouly. I was in AP English, my favorite class, when I heard more tidbits about the famous (or infamous,

  depending on whose tale you were listening to) new guy.

  “So he like rolls up in this fat daddy, Humvee, man, and I was like, ‘Dude,

  nice wheels, bro.’”

  • 119 •

  Oh great . . . now the guys a
re talking about him. Good Lord, make it stop!

  Hands over my ears, I plunked my head on my desk. Soft laughter erupted

  from the desk next to mine.

  “Don’t tell me . . . it’s gettin’ to you, too?”

  “Oh, hey, Miguel,” I greeted, cheek still plastered against scarred wood.

  “You’re not goin’ all faint on me now like the rest of las chicas locas?” he teased.

  I snapped my head upright. “As if!”

  Miguel laughed, his eyes slitting up, crescent creases appearing in his

  cheeks. “How ya been, Katie-kat? . . . Long time no see.”

  “Yeah I know . . . family duty and all that.” I smiled to take the edge off.

  “Word,” he replied with a smile. Miguel could sympathize with my lot

  in life since he had to work at his family’s restaurant to help make ends meet.

  “So . . . you into this new dude, too, or what?”

  I snorted lightly. “Hardly. I don’t really see what all the fuss is about.”

  “That’s because you haven’t seen him yet!” Ashley-Leigh slid imperiously

  into the desk behind me. “Because when you do see him, you’ll totally, ‘get

  what all the fuss is about,’” she mocked me. “God, Katie! Honestly . . . you

  sound like my grandma sometimes.”

  “I doubt it.” I shrugged my shoulders dismissively. “Oh, and by the

  way . . .” The bell rang, so I leaned over to whisper, “I like your grandma,

  usually a little better than you.”

  Miguel laughed, but Ashley-Leigh was prevented her comeback because

  Mrs. Jenkins began calling roll. She opted to poke her tongue out at me

  instead, flipped her hair over her shoulder, and took out her shiny phone.

  Miguel and I exchanged smirks.

  English Lit always flew by too fast. The bell rang again, signaling the end

  of class and the beginning of lunch for juniors and seniors. Everyone popped

  up like prairie dogs from their holes, animatedly talking about lunch plans.

  I was still sitting, idly perusing the reading list when Miguel tugged at the

  end of my hair.

  “You hear the bell or what, Connelly?”

  “Um . . . yeah.” I rose to my feet to join my fellow juniors for the mass

  exit out the door.

  “So whatcha doin’ for lunch?” As if by joint agreement, Miguel and I

  ignored the new-guy mania sweeping the school like the plague. I didn’t have

  a chance to answer because loud screams erupted behind me. I turned around

  to see Ashley-Leigh and her crew hovering over her phone.

  “Black SUV, south-end of the parking lot! We’re hot on the trail now,

  • 120 •

  girls!” Ashley-Leigh grabbed a disciple by the arm, nearly stampeding over us on her way out.

  “Excuse you,” Miguel said.

  “Oh, Katie . . .” Ashley-Leigh called from the doorway. I looked up

  automatically. “By the way—nice jeans! It’s good to see you out of your nun

  habit every-once-in-a-while.” Tittering giggles and her gang followed her out

  the door before I could gather my wits about me.

  Miguel was faster. “It take you all class to think that one up? . . . Poor

  bastard,” he murmured. “I almost feel sorry for him.”

  But she was long gone. Figures. She would spend her entire lunch chasing

  some hot, new guy in a— wait a second! I stopped walking mid-step while

  students rolled around me like a rock in a river.

  Holy crap! Thunder clapped over my head. Black SUV, Humvee, hot,

  gorgeous, athletic, military—words I hadn’t really been paying attention to

  all morning just clicked together. Realization hit me, like a bolt of lightening.

  It couldn’t be, could it? I’d thought that once before . . . and was proven wrong. And then I knew: It could be and probably was. What were the odds

  of anybody else fitting that description? Everyone was well past the point

  of being excited about this “new, hot guy.” It was practically mass hysteria

  in here. And I’d only ever met one person (okay two) who could incite such

  idolatry.

  Miguel was a few feet ahead still talking right along, oblivious to the

  fact I was somewhere else. “Katie?” He backtracked a few paces to take my

  elbow. “Don’t let her get to you like that. You’re way above that crap, and she

  knows it.”

  I looked at Miguel, bewildered for a second because I was on a different

  page. Heck, I was in an entirely different book! “Oh. It’s not that Miguel . . .

  I’m hardly ever bothered by her.”

  “Then what is it?”

  I just shook my head. Way too weird and involved to go into.

  “Wanna grab some lunch and talk about it?”

  I peered into Miguel’s hopeful eyes and shook my head again. It would’ve

  been nice to confide in someone, but it sounded cray-cray even to me. “No

  thanks. I’m just gonna head to the library. There’s somethin’ important I

  need to look up.”

  “Now?”

  “Right now.” After throwing a wave at his puzzled face, I raced back into

  the building everyone else was leaving (which seemed a little symbolic to my

  life). There were a few straggling students and some wired teachers clustered

  • 121 •

  by the vending machines. I quickly bypassed them, and rounding the corner to the library, I nearly smacked into the vice principal. I forced myself into a

  brisk walk, but it was hard to slow down because my body was trying to keep

  tempo with my racing thoughts.

  Maybe I’m wrong? I mean girls get worked up by any new guy. But not

  like this. Everyone was acting like the latest cover hottie was gonna pop up in class any moment. This was probably just a weird coincidence, like all the

  bizarre occurrences that had been happening lately. My gut was telling me it

  was something more. I almost sprinted to the computers until the sour look

  on Mrs. Greer’s puckered face paused me.

  “Katie, you know better than that,” she scolded.

  “Yes, ma’am. I’m sorry. I just wanted to use the computers, if I may?” My

  voice sounded trembly and far away.

  She eyed me suspiciously from behind her jeweled spectacles then let it

  pass. “Just be sure to log out before you leave.”

  “Yes, ma’am.” I darted to the last computer facing the back wall and a

  poster that read: When You’re At The End Of Your Rope, Tie A Knot And Hang

  On. Someone had already drawn a mustache and devil horns on the hapless

  monkey hanging upside down.

  Hands shaking, I typed in my student ID and clicked the search engine,

  holding my breath. I really had to get a hold of myself or I’d go into early

  cardiac arrest. After retyping it twice, I finally found what I was looking for. On the computer screen, right in front of me, making it as real as the

  hard-backed chair I was sitting on: The International Elite Academy in Marin

  County, just over the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco. I read on. The International Elite Academy repeatedly received the highest rankings among

  private boarding schools. No surprise there.

  I reflected on the two egotistical IEA cadets I’d met and couldn’t picture

  them at Clovis High. Besides, they’re too old for high school. Right? An

  image of Ranger came to mind, and my heartbeat picked up. He had to be

  somewhere in his mid-twenties. I allowed myself to exhale. The other one . . .r />
  my heart fluttered in my chest. I could definitely deal with the thought of seeing him again.

  I chastised myself for my momentary lapse and concentrated instead

  on the aggravatingly little amount of information I could find about them.

  According to the website that rates these schools, not much was known about

  what goes on behind the walls of “the world’s most exclusive boarding school.”

  I continued reading until I found their mission statement: “The International

  Elite Academy exists to advance the physical, social, and environmental

  • 122 •

  wellbeing of mankind.” Blah, blah, blah . . . “Turning elite and responsible young men and women from around the globe into future world leaders since

  1939.”

  Oh please. I wanted to puke. I scrolled down, looking for the admissions process. There wasn’t one. Apparently, you couldn’t simply apply to the school.

  They had to pursue you. A chill ran up my spine at this revelation. It was rumored that you had to score in the top one percent on several standardized

  tests before you could even be considered for their testing process, which

  reportedly included a thorough physical exam and biological history.

  Hmmmm . . . that’s a new one. I read on, intrigued. Apparently, candidates were put through a rigorous testing regime, the contents of which weren’t

  specified, but was speculated to include intensive mental and physical

  conditioning designed to weed out anyone except for the very brightest and

  most physically-abled. Less than one percent of recruits—who were already

  considered the top one percent—made it beyond the testing portion. And

  those who did were added to a remarkably exclusive waitlist that allegedly

  included four-star generals’ children, one of the King of Saudi Arabia’s

  daughters, and the Chief Executive of Hong Kong’s only son. There was,

  however, no published documentation to support these claims. Surprise,

  surprise . . . everything about this school seemed to be classified information.

  I extrapolated information in a zombie-like trance, learning very little

  about the school except that it was considered to be the most renowned

  military academy in the world, and was ultra-exclusive to the point of “almost

  anonymity.” Consequently, rumors swirled about the great lengths to which

  billionaires, diplomats, and even royalty went to acquire an invitation for

 

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