Read Taking The Reins (The Rosewoods Book 1) Online
Authors: Katrina Abbott
Tags: #Boarding Schools, #young adult contemporary romance, #Young Adult, #Humor, #Young Adult Romance, #Love, #coming of age
I didn’t mention the diamonds she’d been wearing the night before could probably go a long way toward funding a third world well-digging project; maybe they were a gift or something.
“Anyway, like I said, the dean is a dragon, but with this she’ll leave off and it’s not a big deal. It’s actually easier for them that I’m
not
demanding like my parents; I just need to reassure her it’s not a problem where I am.” She looked over at me. “I don’t mean it that way—not that you’re a problem. Oh you know what I mean.”
I did and waved her off with a smile.
“So what do your parents do?” she asked. It was a simple enough question, but one I couldn’t answer honestly. I hated lying to people, but by now it was a regular enough occurrence that I was able to let the lies roll off my tongue.
“They’re both professors. Mom teaches English and my father is a professor of mathematics. They’re both on sabbatical—she’s studying at Oxford, which is why we were in London.” Part of it was true in that Mom was studying at Oxford part-time and used to teach English before she quit her job to follow Dad around on assignment. Without a job, she attended classes and accumulated more degrees, which I guess is as good a way to keep busy as any.
It seemed to satisfy Emmie, anyway, which wasn’t surprising—it was a boring enough story to discourage more questions.
We stepped inside the auditorium then, hit by a wall of voices as the girls awaited the call to order. “Where should we sit?” I asked.
Emmie scanned the crowd and then nodded toward the front. “Down there; Kaylee’s got seats for us.”
We made our way down the aisle and excused ourselves past a bunch of girls, me going first and trying not to bash into anyone. I smiled and nodded at the girls as I shuffled past, while Emmie greeted the ones she knew.
We finally got to our seats and settled in, Emmie on one side of me, Kaylee on the other. Celia was nowhere to be found, but as the dean walked up the few steps to the stage, Chelly came rushing in and plunked herself down beside Emmie.
“Hi,” She huffed out, breathless.
The dean called everyone to order and the dull roar in the room lowered to a buzz and then just a few whispers as she scanned the crowd pointedly.
Finally, everyone quieted down and she began.
Sure, I was interested in getting good marks, but after three sentences the dean lost me and pretty much everyone else in the hall. You’d think after however many years doing this, she’d clue in. But maybe it was the respectful silence that made her think people were paying attention, when really, as I looked around, it was obvious everyone was just texting.
Including Emmie beside me. I nudged her with my elbow.
She tilted her head so she could give me a look, sticking the tip of her tongue through her lips.
I gave her a disapproving look back.
She angled the screen at me showing me she was texting Dave, as justification for blowing off the dean. Not that the bar was high.
Mss you. Can’t wait to c u.
was his last text.
Awwww
, I mouthed. How sweet.
Emmie grinned and texted back while I watched over her shoulder:
2nite
b
ehind the stables at 8
I looked up at her, eyes wide. I wasn’t sure of all the Rosewood rules yet, but I had a feeling sneaking out of the dorms to meet guys was against at least one or five of them.
Not that Emmie cared, obviously; she rolled her eyes and continued typing with her thumbs.
I turned back to the front of the room, since reading her texts might be a bit creepy, when Kaylee grabbed my arm and squeezed. When I looked at her, she nodded toward the right side of the auditorium at the front. I glanced over, my eyes scanning the faculty, and then finally saw what she was looking at.
Mr. Stratton, the new science teacher.
“Rowr,” Kaylee purred under her breath and waggled her eyebrows. “I have a weakness for smart guys. I can’t wait for science.”
I giggled, but couldn’t help but agree.
~♥~
I
t was after lunch before I got to actually meet the new science teacher. After the dean’s hour-long blah-blah-academic-excellence-should-be-your-main-focus-but-you’re-expected-to-be-a-good-Rosewood-citizen-blah-blah-blah speech, we filed out into the hall and parted ways.
Chelly and Emmie left for History class and Kaylee, Celia and I headed out to English Lit, which, based on the syllabus, was going to be a joke after everything I’d studied in London and had absorbed from Mom over the years. But with Kaylee and Celia in the class and a young, cool teacher, Ms. Ito, it was going to be fun and a no-brainer. My favorite kind of class!
Second was French, which was going to be another easy A, though I didn’t know anyone there yet. And then Science, with the now infamous Mr. Stratton.
Kaylee and I sat together as lab partners, which I appreciated; I was starting to think, of all the girls I’d met so far, Kaylee and I might have the most in common, at least personality-wise. When it came to our backgrounds and families, she was the daughter of Hollywood producers, so she was really familiar with the celebrity life, where I was pretty much the opposite. But she was low-key and very focused on getting great marks so she could get into a pre-med program (she wanted no part of the famous life).
Not that the other girls didn’t care about grades, but Kaylee was kind of a bookworm like me and we’d laughed when we compared notes and realized we’d both read all the required reading for the English Lit class well before the start of school.
And now we had another thing in common: our sudden interest in science.
“I don’t know how I’m going to get any work done,” Kaylee admitted as we watched Mr. Stratton come into the room, a soft-sided briefcase in one hand and a to-go cup in the other. He was wearing Dockers and a starched white button-down shirt kitted up with a tie under his blazer. His eyes were focused on his desk, like we didn’t exist, although he must have heard all the excited whispering; it was almost deafening.
“Do you think he knows how attractive he is?” I asked Kaylee, my breath hitching as he took the blazer off and hung it over the back of his chair.
She smirked at me. “Only if he owns a mirror. Look at those shoulders.”
I stifled a laugh and looked at him again. Now he had his briefcase on the desk and was taking out some papers, still ignoring the twenty girls in front of him who watched him like he was the main attraction at a zoo exhibit.
He took a sip of whatever he was drinking and put it down slowly, carefully on the corner of his desk.
The suspense was killing me.
Finally, he picked up a piece of paper, took a deep breath and looked up, his eyes sweeping across us, taking us in. His Adam’s apple moved up and then down in his neck.
Kaylee whispered, “What do you want to bet this is his first teaching gig ever?”
Based on how young and nervous he looked, I wasn’t about to take that bet.
“Good morning, ladies,” he said after clearing his throat. “In case you weren’t at dinner last night, I’m Mr. Stratton and I’m a new teacher here at Rosewood. I’m excited to be here and I’m sure we’ll all learn a little something from each other over this term. Welcome.”
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Kaylee giggle at the ‘Welcome’; we’d never be able to hear that word again without cracking up.
Luckily Mr. Stratton didn’t notice and kept on with his little speech.
“...and to answer the question that I’m sure is at the forefront of all your minds, yes, this is my first teaching position and although they tell us in teachers’ college never to admit that kind of vulnerability to students, I’m hoping here at Rosewood, you are mature and will use that information to go easy on me.”
He pushed his thick-rimmed glasses up his nose and flashed us all one of those devastating smiles.
The class gave out a collected sigh.
Poor Mr. Stratton didn’t stand a chance.
M
y academic day finished out with P.E., which I’d looked forward to, since I’d thought it would mean a ride, but I was disappointed to find out that we didn’t get an equestrian unit for a couple of weeks. Until then, we had our choice of football...er...
soccer
or archery.
Like every other girl I knew, I’d gone through a Katniss Everdeen stage so I’d already done some archery, and I felt like I needed something a bit more active to burn off some steam. I spent most of the period doing soccer drills with my classmates until I basically fell into a sweaty, exhausted heap; mission accomplished.
What I neglected to remember, though, was that at boarding school, your day isn’t over after your last class; I still had dinner and the evening assembly to get through.
Dinner was fine (and after all that running around, I was starving) but then after that was the assembly about being a good Rosewood citizen. The dean was back at it again, telling us that part of Rosewood’s mandate was to ensure we all became contributing members of our society.
“That’s crap,” Celia said under her breath as she leaned in close to me. “It’s how they get free labor around here.”
I gave her a look, hoping she’d explain, but she just waved toward the stage, like it would be obvious soon enough.
And it was, when the dean went on to explain that we would each find our assignments e-mailed to us at our special Rosewood e-mail addresses that had been issued to us and were on our schedules. Not having noticed it before, I pulled the folded up and dog-eared schedule out of my pocket and sure enough, at the top was my special Rosewood e-mail address.
She assured us that each of our assignments was hand-picked to fit in with our schedules and interests (Emmie, sitting on my other side, snorted here) and was non-negotiable except in very extreme circumstances.
“Death or...death,” Celia said.
“If they really wanted us to contribute to society, they’d give us real volunteer opportunities,” Emmie whispered. “They’d send us out in the community to do worthwhile things.”
“So why don’t they?” I asked.
Emmie shrugged. “Like Celia said, it’s free labor. And also, they can’t have us all scattered around outside the compound; too much of a security issue.”
“Security?” I mean, I knew
I
might be a security issue, but what about the other kids?
Emmie leaned in closer. “Look around; there’s a lot of money represented by all these kids. If some billionaire’s kid gets kidnapped for a ransom, this school is screwed.”
I wondered if Emmie was a ‘billionaire’s kid’ as she continued. “Our parents pay for us to be safe here—that’s a huge draw, right? I’m sure you saw the security booth at the front gate—and they can’t exactly let us off campus to go be candy stripers or work on a big Habitat project with Joe Public.”
She shook her head. “It makes sense, but it’s still a waste of our talent and abilities. I could do a lot from here, organizing projects and fundraising online, but instead, they’re going to make me work in the kitchen or something and call it ‘community work’ that’s going to make me a better citizen. Right.”
“As long as I don’t get stuck shoveling crap in the stables again,” Chelly said. “It’s like they knew I hate horses and gave me the worst job in the world.”
“I’d love to work in the stables,” I said, suddenly eager to get back to our room so I could check my e-mail, figuring the new girl surely had to draw the short straw and get stuck mucking stalls.
Celia snorted. “If you
want
to work in the stables, you’ll end up cleaning the giant oatmeal-encrusted pots at, like, five in the morning. That’s just how it works here. And they never let anyone change—because then everyone would, right?”
Awesome. I couldn’t wait.
~♥~
E
mmie and I returned to our room after assembly to log into the Rosewood webmail and get our assignments. She sat on her bed, her laptop across her thighs while I sat at my desk, working on my tablet.
“How did
that
happen?” she exclaimed, incredulous, but as I glanced over at her, I couldn’t tell if it was
good
incredulous or
bad
incredulous.
“What is it?” I asked, still trying to get logged in.
She looked up at me. “They put me in student services. School liaison.”
“What does that mean?” I asked. I still couldn’t tell if she was happy or not, but it sounded better than cleaning pots in the kitchen. At least she probably wouldn’t have to get her hands dirty, although I had a feeling Emmie wouldn’t mind physically digging into a project, as long as she was really helping people.
“It means I’ll be working with my counterpart at Westwood to coordinate events: dances, outings, talent shows.”
The slow smile that spread across her face told me this was a good thing. A very good thing.
She looked back down at her computer. “I told them no special treatment, but you know what? Screw it. I’m okay with this, if it’s thanks to nepotism.”
I wondered if juniors at public schools even know what
nepotism
means, but for girls at Rosewood, it was a way of life; kids get special treatment just because of who they’re related to. Although to be special and stand out at Rosewood, you had to be the upper crust of the upper crust—like have a building donated by your parents.
“What did you get?” she asked, putting her laptop on her bedspread and scooting to the end of her bed to look over my shoulder.
I finally got into my e-mail and sifted through the several automated e-mails from the registrar’s office about drop and pick, school policies, etc, etc, to find the one with the subject line, ‘CSA: community service assignment’.
Holding my breath, I opened it and scanned for the word ‘stables’ or maybe ‘equestrian center’ but no. I read it from the beginning:
Dear
Ms. Prescott
, we are pleased to have you be a part of our award-winning community service program where you will give back to your community through volunteership that will help build skills that will last you a lifetime.
Your assignment is located at:
The Rosewood Academy’s state-of-the-art laundry facilities.
Please report to your community service mentor:
Mr. Ammaturo
At:
The Housekeeping office, Main building, Sub-basement B. Tomorrow at 7:00 p.m.
After which, your scheduled hours of service will be:
Monday through Friday, 6:00 -7:30 a.m.