The Year of the Great Seventh

BOOK: The Year of the Great Seventh
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The Year of the Great Seventh

by Teresa Orts

KINDLE EDITION

≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈

Published by Drayton Press, London

Copyright ©2013 by Teresa Orts

 

 

License Notes

 

This ebook is licensed for your personal use and enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or if it was not purchased for your use only, please visit amazon.com and purchase a copy for yourself. Thank you for respecting this author’s work.

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.

 

ISBN-13: 978-0-9889684-0-0

 

 

 

www.teresaorts.com

Follow me on Facebook:

www.facebook.com/teresa.orts.9

 

Edited by:

Carolyn M. Pinard

 

Cover by:

Keryn Christiansen

 

 

DEDICATION

To Hamish

 

 

 

Table of Contents

 

CHAPTER I

CHAPTER II

CHAPTER III

CHAPTER IV

CHAPTER V

CHAPTER VI

CHAPTER VII

CHAPTER VIII

CHAPTER IX

CHAPTER X

CHAPTER XI

CHAPTER XII

CHAPTER XIII

CHAPTER XIV

CHAPTER XV

CHAPTER XVI

CHAPTER XVII

CHAPTER XVIII

CHAPTER XIX

CHAPTER XX

CHAPTER XXI

CHAPTER XXII

CHAPTER XXIII

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

 

THE YEAR OF THE GREAT SEVENTH

CHAPTER I

 

TODAY WAS THE FIRST day of my junior year, and I already knew what was about to happen. It was as if my life had been previously written for me. Before turning the corner, I knew who would be hanging out behind the gym. The exact same people as the previous year.

Thankfully, I also knew that the only people able to light up my day would be there, too. A smile spread across my face when I saw Megan and Emma chatting on the same bench where we left off before the summer.

The school had a beautiful campus, but for some reason everyone loved hanging out in the little alleyway between the gym and the street. The chain-link fence was our peephole to the real world.

“Hi, girls!” I waved to Emma and Megan as I walked along, trying not to stare at the other students. For the last two years, my survival technique had been to go unnoticed, and so far, it worked.

“Sophie!” They both shouted at once, getting up and melting into a group hug.

“You guys are awful! You ignored most of my emails this summer.”

Even though Megan and Emma were my best friends, I hadn’t seen them for two months. They were actresses and had been working on a low-budget movie in the New Mexico desert.

Megan and Emma rolled their eyes at each other and Emma, bursting into a laugh, replied, “Believe me. We were working twenty-four-seven! But we did think of you all the time.”

I knew they weren’t joking. They normally worked hard. Megan had the movie’s lead role, and since she loved to work with Emma, she pulled some strings to get her a part. Megan had never been in a blockbuster, but she’d been working nonstop since she got her first role in an independent movie at age eight.

“Did you like New Mexico?”

“We didn’t get to see much of it. Low-budget movies mean you don’t get paid much, but you still work hard.” Megan gave me her trademark smile.

I knew one day she would take Hollywood by storm. Every time she went to a casting, she always scored the role. She was gifted, and her flagrant look certainly didn’t hurt.

“For me, it wasn’t too bad.” Emma folded her legs under her on the bench. “I didn’t have many lines. At least I was always in the frame.”

Emma wasn’t as talented as Megan, but she still managed to get work.

“Well, no more movie talk. We’re finally back at school.” Megan said. “Believe it or not, I’m glad to be back.”

Megan and Emma managed a healthy balance between their acting careers and their school life. People in L.A. desperately craved their fifteen minutes of fame, but Emma and Megan were different from the L.A. cliché. With their social status, they could’ve hung out with the popular girls, but instead, they chose me.

“What about you, Sophie? How was your summer?” Megan asked.

“I finished the internship at the Getty Museum. They’re going to write me a great recommendation letter for next year’s college application.” I grinned from ear to ear.

“You’re so paranoid! We’re still in our junior year, and you’re already collecting recommendation letters for your college application.” Emma joked.

My real passion was history, and in two years, when I graduated from high school, I wanted to move away from the mecca of film to the mecca of history—New York City. All my time and energy was focused on two targets: getting a scholarship for New York University and scoring an internship at the Metropolitan Museum.

The school was coming back to life after the summer. Packed school buses drove down the street toward the main entrance. West Hollywood High School operated for the last fifty years as a middle-class school and was considered one of the best public high schools in Los Angeles. However, the original buildings and facilities were still in use, and the wear and tear was visible to the eye. We often griped that the facilities at our rival school, Beverly Hills High, were all cutting-edge.

“Hey, girls, I can’t believe you’re back at the same spot,” someone said behind us.

I looked back to find Tyson and Chase.

“Hey! I can’t believe our junior year is starting already,” I said, standing up to hug them.

Chase and Tyson had befriended us in our freshman year, and the five of us were inseparable ever since. We always went to parties, movies, or shopping together.

The most lethal weapon at school was starting an unfounded rumor about someone. It could literally destroy their social life. That’s why we were so protective of each other, and if we ever heard anything about each other, we would always deny it.

“Let me guess; you three are in the exact same classes again,” Tyson said, looking at me.

“Good guess!” I replied. Every year Megan, Emma, and I orchestrated our schedules to match perfectly.

“Please, Sophie, pinch me. Is that Curtis Wayne driving down the street with Ethan Dulwich?” Chase mumbled.

Automatically we all turned around, and our jaws dropped when we saw Ethan Dulwich in rapper Curtis Wayne’s convertible red Lamborghini. Curtis Wayne was only in his teens and had sold something like three million copies of his first hip-hop album. Tattoos snaked over each other around his arms, and a sublime diamond crucifix, which looked so heavy it would probably give him back problems in the future, hung around his neck.

We were stunned at this year’s glamorous arrival by Ethan. As Curtis Wayne drove past us, he surveyed the staring students behind the gym. Then he dedicated a sparkling, gold-toothed smile to all of us.

“Ethan is so annoying. He always has to stand out.” I groaned, crossing my arms across my chest.

Ethan was the son of mogul film producer William Dulwich. His father dominated the film industry and was the founder of one of the most powerful production companies in the United States. He was known as “the godfather of the film industry” and for his lavish lifestyle.

Minutes later Ethan appeared behind the gym, slowly dragging his feet and enjoying the attention as though a spotlight followed him along the little alleyway. I aborted my mission of complaining about his attitude because he was walking toward us.

Ethan suddenly came to a halt in front of our bench and hesitated for a moment. “Mmm, fine, there you go. The kickoff party for the school year is at my place on Saturday,” Ethan said, handing Tyson a yellow flyer.

One word materialized in my mind when I thought of Ethan’s party:
trouble
. Ethan Dulwich, wanting to continue his father’s legacy, hosted a party each year at his estate in Malibu that probably cost more than Dad’s entire annual salary.

Last year I skipped it because I heard Ethan’s parties were always soaked with substance abuse, alcohol, and police appearances. However, I had to confess I regretted missing it because that was pretty much the only thing anyone spoke about at school for weeks afterward.

Ethan moved on to talk to the next group of people, and Chase brought his hands together, looking up into the sky as though he were talking directly to God. “I thank you for the day Ethan Dulwich got expelled from that private school.”

When Ethan Dulwich appeared at West Hollywood High the previous year, the entire student body—and some faculty—went into a state of delirium. No one could understand why Ethan’s parents doomed their son to coexist with middle-class people like us when they could afford to buy him an entire school.

It didn’t take long for the rumor about Ethan to spread. Supposedly, Ethan attended an elitist private school, but he was expelled for drug problems. The rumor was his parents had enough by then and decided to place him in a public school to teach him a lesson. To make matters worse, their zone school, Beverly Hills High, didn’t have any spaces in his grade, so Ethan was rezoned to West Hollywood High.

“Sophie, you have to come this year! I promise we won’t get in any trouble,” Megan said under her breath, her eyes twinkling.

I was literally itching to go to this party. This wasn’t a common high school party, with cheap wine and paper cups; this party was probably at the level of the Oscar after-parties, with bouncers, valets, performers, a DJ, bar, and celebrities. On the other hand, I knew there was a possibility of getting caught up in Ethan’s troubles if I attended. Last year, the neighbors called the police, and four people got arrested for underage drinking.

“The flyer says it’s an ‘80s themed party, but we don’t need to wear costumes. You can’t say no, Sophie,” Emma tempted.

My hypothesis was that Ethan hosted his parties to prove to us the chasm between his social class and ours. However, no one cared about Ethan’s motive. Everyone was dazzled by the idea of living in Ethan Dulwich’s fantasy world, even if it was for one night.

“I really want to go, but if the police show up and I get in trouble, that will kill any chances of getting my scholarship,” I stated. Everyone was staring, waiting for my final verdict.

“I heard that Travis Roy might be there,” Megan teased.

I had a major crush on Travis Roy, the singer. I definitely could not skip this year’s party if there was any possibility that Travis Roy might appear. Maybe for once it was okay to stop worrying about what could happen and appreciate the opportunity. I didn’t like living in L.A., but I shouldn’t barricade myself from the enjoyments life in this city had to offer.

“Okay… I’ll go this time, but only this time,” I said, pressing my lips together to stop myself from smiling.

A spark of victory shone in Megan’s eyes. Then all of us were smiling at the idea of everyone being there this year, and I could tell we were already daydreaming about that night.

“I guess no one’s going because the flyer is mine,” I said. I sprang to my feet, yanked the yellow flyer from Tyson’s hand, and ran behind the bench. Tyson was scrambling behind me to get his invite back.

After taking a tight corner around the bench, Tyson caught the back of my jacket. We were wrestling over the paper and laughing aloud. Tyson was holding both of my hands with his right hand, and I was swirling around, keeping the flyer from him with my body.

“You guys, stop it! You’re making a scene.” Megan complained, covering her face with her hands to hide her embarrassment.

BOOK: The Year of the Great Seventh
2.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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