1. First Day
The entire gym was alive with the hum of excitement and nerves. Two hundred freshmen were crammed onto the bleachers in front of two haggard looking men and a tall, fresh-faced looking woman with a clipboard in her hand and a bright smile on her face. Her nametag said she was Sara, our new guidance counsellor.
"Finally," Rachael grinned, "we get to put our sex education into practice."
I rolled my eyes. My best friend, Rachael Hareton, had been waiting for this day since the beginning of middle school. She felt personally betrayed by the education system here in Maycrest simply because they forced us to play nice with members of the opposite sex in elementary school when we were more interested in playing dress-up than kissing boys. Then, when our hormones finally kicked in, they chucked us in a building where boys and girls were divided by a chain-link fence which, for all intents and purposes, might as well have been the Berlin Wall. They called that period of social exclusion "middle school". Today, in Rachael's eyes, felt like a personal apology. We'd finally made it to high school.
"And look at the selection we've got to practice on," Lauren Mortensen joked as she pretended to fan herself. "This is going to be a fun four years, girls."
By some unspoken agreement, all of the boys had graduated to the left of the gym while the girls sat on the right, giggling and laughing amongst themselves. It was like the Berlin Wall still existed in our minds. Until we were fully introduced to this new, interesting world, we were still poised on two sides of a coin.
However unintentional, the divide provided the perfect opportunity to spy on our new classmates, and both sides were taking full advantage.
I swept a curious glance over the boys' side, but none of them stood out dramatically. I could pick out a few future football captains, a handful of band geeks and the occasional metal head, but none of them screamed future boyfriend material. I understood what Lauren meant, though; there were more than a few majorly cute guys.
"Hey, Vicky, isn't that your twin over there?" Rachael pointed at a tall, scrawny individual sitting in the middle of a group of boys, his brown hair slicked back with gel. He looked up, catching Rachael's stare, and nodded his head as if to say, "'Sup?"
Vicky Sinclair, the girl sitting directly in front of us, swivelled around and glared at Rachael. "Thanks, Hareton. It wasn't like I was planning to deny all claims that we share the same DNA or anything."
I giggled. "You guys are identical. I'm pretty sure someone would have figured it out eventually, Vic."
"Not for a while," she moaned.
"He's hot," Lauren mused. "In a dorky sorta way."
Vicky gagged. "Ew. Brothers are so off limits."
"Yeah," Rachael agreed, even though her brother, Peter, was in college and the likelihood of him having anything to do with a bunch of fourteen year olds was slim to none. "It's not like there isn't a hundred other boys to choose from."
"All right, kids, listen up!" The hum of conversation and laughter slowly died as students turned to focus on the small, red-faced man in a tracksuit as he stepped forward, a whistle poised between his lips. "I'm Mr. Roland, but all you hooligans can go ahead and call me Coach."
A few boys chuckled at the word "hooligan" but otherwise, his words were met with silence.
"I'm going to be your Head of Year for the next forty weeks," he continued. "Anytime you lot step out of line, you're going to answer to me." He glared for effect, and, for a rule-abiding girl like me, his words were exactly what I needed to hear to instil a little bit of fear. "Now. After Principal Keller, here, gives his introductory speech, Sara is going to divide you into six different base classes. You'll meet for homeroom every morning, and study hall and gym every evening."
YOU ARE READING
A Beautiful Torment
Teen FictionIsabel Devane finds her fate irrevocably entwined with a boy whose secrets are more dangerous than most.