Kelly Hill

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Authors: Laura Gibson

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Kelly Hill

 

by Laura Gibson

 

Kelly Hill

Copyright©2014 Laura Gibson

All Rights Reserved

 

No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer who may quote short excerpts in a review.

This book is a work of fiction, names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

 

Cover Image by Laura Wehde

Cover Model Lindsay Washburn

Proofread by E&F Indie Services
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Olaf and Kitty

(you know why)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

Phillips Academy

Charleston, West Virginia

August 6th 2008

 

Rachel

Rachel Gunn smoothed the lavender quilted duvet on her twin sized bed and sighed; moving in always left the oddest sensation in her chest, but once everything was unpacked and in their proper places she couldn’t help thinking this was the way things were supposed to be.

She could hear the noises of other early students moving in the hallway, saying goodbye to their parents for the semester. She wondered what it would be like to have someone to see her off. Fussing over her, making sure that she knew just where everything was before they left, promising phone calls and visits in the future months.

However, this being Rachel’s fourth year at Phillips Academy, her father had decided to stay in California, assuming that she would be able to take care of herself. Of course, Peter Gunn was never wrong about anything and Rachel was having a fine time making sure that she was able to get settled in completely. Rachel, in the usual Gunn fashion as it were, had even managed to acquire her class schedule early before anyone else had the time to clog up the admissions office with their delayed planning.

She moved over the empty box that sat in the middle of the floor and looked around the space she would call home for the next several months, perfectly content to be on her own when so many others her age were still hanging onto their parents.

Rachel felt like she didn’t need her parents, not really. Not in so many words at least. They had raised her well enough that when it was time for her to succeed on her own she was able to. And that was really all she could ask for, right? It wasn’t like she was her brother, Ethan, ever the disappointment in her father’s eyes, who managed to drop out of high school that very same year.

Of course, that had created quite the upset in the Gunn household. Peter had demanded that his son reach for higher education and their mother, Helen, persisted that it didn’t matter as long as Ethan was happy.

The differing opinions only aided Rachel in deciding what side she wanted to be on, although it did not influence her mindset. She had already made her choice years ago when the divorce was finalized and she had to choose which parent to live with. The rest of it was just formalities as far as Rachel was concerned.

The divorce had been very civil, or so she had been told. Both warring parties had opted to keep the kids out of the dispute until it was too late to do anything about it. Until Helen had bought a house in Connecticut to be closer to her family and Peter was looking to downsize his own nest.

Ethan and Rachel were given the choice of which they would rather live with. Either flighty, free spirited mom or grounded in reality dad.

Ethan went with the former where Rachel found comfort and stability in the latter. Her parents held a very high regard for personal freedom and seemed happy with the arrangement. She was eight when she made the decision and no one had held it against her. Or, never was it said outright, to her face exactly.

Christmas was the only thing that seemed like a problem, but they solved that issue quickly by supplying two Christmases. Neither of them fell on the actual date itself, a convenience that allowed Rachel more time to do what she actually enjoyed.

For Rachel, happiness was a relative term. Everything could be seen from a different perspective and nothing was ever really concrete. The only things she could be sure of in her life were what she could gain from being at Phillips. So she did the only natural thing she could think of when it came to the fighting amongst her family members, she shut it out. They would be pleased when she graduated with honors from Phillips, and they would be pleased when she managed to land a demanding, but respectful career. Everything else just didn’t matter and that was the way she saw it.

So when, Rachel heard the other students, her classmates, outside sniffling or bickering or doing whatever it was that normal teenagers did, she shut her door and pretended like it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter and that was that. If it didn’t matter, she wouldn’t focus on it.

The only thing that was worth her time right then, at that very second was just what she could do to fill her extra time. She had unpacked earlier than she expected and her roommate wasn’t scheduled to arrive for another week, leaving Rachel completely on her own.

Classes wouldn’t be starting until the thirteenth and so Rachel could do virtually whatever she wanted. But what she really wanted to do was get started.

People always wasted their time with the breaks and didn’t take full advantage of everything that was possible for them, a thing that Rachel had learned from her father to frown upon. Wasting time was possibly one of the more terrible things a person could do in their lives. Time was precious and fleeting and you could never get it back. The sluggish would fail and the quick would survive.

Rachel sat down on her bed and looked out the open window, feeling the warm august breeze touch her blond hair. She was ready for this year to begin. She had prepared and planned and done everything just so. Rachel knew just where everything was at Phillips was and she knew just exactly what she had to do to succeed.

Rachel heard a man’s voice laugh outside her doorway and say something odd. Something she couldn’t quite piece together. The residual tone stirred in Rachel’s gut and left a coppery taste in her mouth. Something told her that this year wasn’t going to be the same.

Something was going to change.

 

Jefferson

 

The August air was warmer than Jefferson’s attire would express but he didn’t mind, he’d much rather look put together than a disheveled mess. A dark mark on Phillips’s gorgeous campus.

His black blazer was unbuttoned, if only to show off his pressed white shirt and sleek tie that matched his black slacks. He had shined his dress shoes just that morning and knew they were almost sparkling as he walked across the green, lush grounds, one hand in his pocket, the other hanging loose.

He was clean shaven that morning, although that summer he had experimented with a more a rugged look, one that didn’t fit him right, it seemed, or at least not the angle that he was going for this year. He had managed to keep his physique at a trim seven percent body fat and was quite pleased with the sharpness of his cheekbones, creating a more severe look than he had been able to accomplish in the past.

Jefferson smoothed his tie and looked down at his watch. It was almost time.

Jefferson Williams was a man of impeccable timing. Whether it be planned or on accident, he always managed to be in just the right place and the right time. This being Jefferson’s last year at Phillips Academy, he knew exactly what he was going to be doing with his time.

His blue eyes scanned the crowded campus, looking for Caleb Bronen and Ryan Prescott, two people he would describe as his friends if pressed. They both had assured the eighteen year old that they would be arriving today and now Jefferson found himself slightly perturbed that they hadn’t shown themselves yet.

Of course, he knew that not everyone could measure up to his standards, but would it really be so hard if they tried? Time wasn’t something to waste after all. Time was all anyone had.

Jefferson finally spied the blond head of Caleb bouncing along next to the equally blond Ryan. If Jefferson didn’t know any better he would think they were brothers.

In the eight years that Jefferson had known both Caleb and Ryan he always looked at Caleb as the more gullible out of the three of them. His mouth smiled too much. He laughed too easily. He had an annoying voice that made Jefferson just want to punch him in the throat sometimes.

Jefferson smiled as the two young men approached him and went in for the handshake while Caleb went in for a hug. Out of the corner of his eye, Jefferson saw Ryan smirk and he returned the sentiment with a nod that went unnoticed by Caleb.

Jefferson felt closer to Ryan than he did to Caleb, and he knew that Ryan knew it too, but it was something either party had kept from Caleb in their years together. It was just easier that way. Three was always a better number than two, so they completed their group with Caleb, who always seemed to be down for whatever Jefferson had planned for them. And what a year it would be.


How was your summer?” Caleb asked, looking around at all the returning classmates mulling about.


It was decent,” Jefferson said with a sly smile. “Can’t complain too much, how about you?”

Caleb shrugged, “Oh you know, same as ever.”

Jefferson looked at Ryan, “And what about you, Mister Prescott? Anything new and exciting happen to you?”

Ryan laughed, a hollow forced laugh and Jefferson looked at him, wondering what he had to be nervous about. Ryan was rarely ever nervous.

The fact that Jefferson didn’t bother to keep in touch during the summer months had always been a non-issue. Both Caleb and Ryan lead seemingly boring lives and Jefferson had never found any reason to try to keep up, but now there was something in Ryan’s mannerisms that he just didn’t find appealing.


What is it?” Jefferson pushed, knowing that Ryan would tell him eventually.


Ryan’s got a house guest,” Caleb answered for the Prescott legacy.

Jefferson felt his eyes narrow as he looked at Ryan now, slightly offended that Caleb would know before him. Didn’t their bond merit something when it came to interesting information? Or was it something that Ryan wanted to keep hidden from him?

“Uh yeah,” Ryan rubbed the back of his neck, glancing at the ground before holding eye contact with Jefferson, “You remember my cousin, right?”

Jefferson felt his back molars grind together in immediate agitation. Of course he remembered Ryan’s cousin. Who could forget him? He had single handedly tried to ruin Jefferson’s life before he had been forcefully removed from it. Like cancer.

“What about him?” Jefferson swallowed his anger and tried to make his face as placid as possible, not giving away the fact that he was feeling nothing less than rage.


Well, apparently, his parents have fallen on some harder times.” Ryan cleared his throat, stalling “So he’s staying with me while they work things out in Connecticut.”


So you’re to be punished because other people can’t take care of themselves?” Jefferson raised an eyebrow. “What an entirely selfish thing for them to do.”


Well, they are family,” Ryan chuckled nervously. “And you know how it goes with family.”


Mm.” Jefferson grumbled in the back of his throat. “I know the sentiment, but I wouldn’t say that I understand it.”

Ryan’s features relaxed and he clasped a hand on Jefferson’s shoulder, laughing. “Of course you wouldn’t.”

Jefferson rolled his eyes and shrugged off the friendly gesture, “So what has your cousin been up to these days?”


Kelly? Eh. Who knows?” Ryan turned away from Jefferson and they began walking to the girls’ building at the far end of the campus, “He mostly keeps to himself.”


How very fortunate for you.” Jefferson tried to smile but couldn’t find it in himself to feel any better about the issue that he was presented with. This was going to put a damper on his year. He could just feel it.

Ryan’s family lived in town, which meant that Kelly could be around here anywhere, lurking.

Jefferson shuddered; he would just have to keep an open eye out for the little bastard.

 

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