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One

The impressive stone façade of Burberry Prep hides a host of wicked souls with pretty faces. I don’t know that yet, standing at the bottom of the wide, worn steps with my heart thundering in my throat. My school schedule is clutched in my right hand, wrinkled and well- loved; I’ve been staring at it since the fourth of July.

Deep breath, Marnye. My red, pleated skirt is freshly-pressed and fluttering around my thighs as I move across the old brick walkway towards the front entrance. According to the orientation email, I should be meeting my guide just inside the inner courtyard. I wonder if I look poor? I swallow hard against my own paranoia, but it’s not easy. The dean assured me that my scholarship status would not be advertised; that doesn’t mean nobody knows about it.

I hear the trickle of a fountain before I see it, a soft tinkling sound, like wind chimes. As I come up the last step, the sound’s matched to a bronze statue of a stag, water spouting from the rocky base he’s standing on. There’s a boy sitting on the edge of the fountain, wearing a uniform that matches mine. So he’s a first year, too, I think, reminding myself that most of the students here have been attending the academy since preschool. Different buildings, same campus. So a first year guide isn’t totally out of the question. In fact, only two percent of new students enroll during their first year of high school.

Good for me, I muse as the boy stands up and I catch a glimpse of how incredibly handsome he is: silky chestnut hair with blond highlights, bright blue eyes, full pink lips. Always working outside

the box. Now if I can only keep the rest of the students here from finding out just how outside the box I really am, like wrong side of the tracks sort of out.

“Tristan?” I ask hopefully as my new loafers clack across the intricate brick patio. I’m already holding out my hand in invitation, a bright smile tracing its way across my lips. I’ve decided that if anyone asks me about my family, I won’t lie. No, I’m not shamed of where I come from. Actually, I’m proud of myself. Not only am I going to be the first person in my family to finish high school, but I’m going to do it at a prestigious academy usually reserved for the filthy rich.

“Actually, no,” the boy says as he takes my hand with a smooth, dry palm. He smells like coconuts and sunshine, if that’s even possible, to smell like sunshine. “I’m Andrew Payson. Tristan should be …” Andrew trails off for a moment, and I catch the briefest flick of his eyes in the direction of a janitor’s closet. “Around here somewhere.” Andrew’s gaze switches back over to me and for a split-second, I see a flare of interest before he blinks, and it’s gone. Or maybe I just imagined it? I wonder, realizing for the first time that my dating life here … is probably gonna be pretty slim.

Guys might show interest at first, but no loaded teen wants to date someone without two nickels to rub together.

“I’m guessing he’s your student guide?” Andrew adds, dropping my hand. He gestures for me to take a seat on the fountain beside him, and I oblige, hissing a little at the cold of the bronze against my thighs. Wearing a skirt like this is going to take some serious getting used to. But I asked about wearing pants and was given a very firm no. Like in many elitist endeavors, there’s a very prevalent sense of gender roles regarding uniforms.

“Yep,” I reply with another smile, flipping up the tag around my neck. My name’s on one side; the name Tristan on the other. “I’ll be shadowing him all day.” Andrew smiles back at me, but there’s a slight grimace to his expression. Uh-oh. I have a feeling Mr. Payson doesn’t much like this Tristan guy. “Why? Is there something I should be worrying about?”

“You’ll see,” Andrew says, leaning back on his palms as he studies me. In the rafters above, a flock of birds lands, scattering feathers. The wind catches them and sends them dancing around my face along with the brunette waves of my hair. “He’s an interesting

sort of guy.” Andrew cocks his head slightly, chucking under his breath. “He’s damn lucky to be paired with you though.”

“Sure thing,” I say with a laugh, holding the handle of my new leather book bag in my left hand, being careful to keep it from falling into the water. This thing not only holds my new laptop and tablet, but it also cost the scholarship foundation a small fortune. Frankly, it’s worth more than my dad’s car. I nod my chin in Andrew’s direction. “What’s your girl’s name?”

“Girl? Nah.” Andrew shrugs. “I’m not quite that lucky.” He reaches up and flips his badge over, revealing the name Rob. Ah. I grin as sunlight streams between the four bell towers that surround the courtyard, turning Andrew’s hair a generous gold. “And I’m definitely not that gay—unfortunately. Between you and me, most of the girls here are already engaged.” I raise an eyebrow, but Andrew just smiles. “Old money, you know.”

Right.

“How about you?” I ask, and even though I don’t mean to, I end up flirting with the guy. Great. My mother’s daughter, I guess. “Are you engaged?”

“I,” Andrew begins, his eyes twinkling, “am perfectly single.”

We both pause as a boy in the red pants, black jacket, and white shirt of a first year comes up the steps and pauses awkwardly, raising his hand in a hello. After he introduces himself as Rob Whitney, I step back and lean against the cool stone walls of one of the bell towers, excited that classes are actually still held in these narrow buildings. I’m trying to give the boys a little space, so I tug one of the books from my bag, crack it open, and wait for my guide to show up. Normally, I’d be all over my phone, but the academy is super strict about electronics: school-issued laptops and tablets only.

Before Andrew and Rob even get a chance to start their own tour, the door to the janitor’s closet flies open and a girl in a fourth year uniform—black skirt, black shirt, black jacket—comes out, one shoulder of her top falling down, her lipstick smeared.

A boy comes out behind her, a boy with silver eyes and an awful, awful smirk. The moment I see him changes everything. Hell, it changes my whole life, rearranges my past, dictates my future. When I first lay eyes on Tristan Vanderbilt, I become a different person.

Heat rushes through my body, and it feels suddenly hot, like I should take off my jacket and loosen my tie. Tristan’s fixing the buttons on his white first year shirt as he makes his way over to me with long, confident strides, his hair glossy and raven-black, his mouth too dangerous to be tempting. My fingers curl tight around the side of my book bag and my heart races, sweat beading at my temples.

What a reaction.

What the hell is wrong with me?! I wonder with increasing panic as Tristan marches right up to me, towering a good half a foot over me. He takes the jacket that’s lying over his arm and shrugs into it, fixes the two center buttons, and then leans forward, putting his forearm on the wall above my head. I can smell him, too, like peppermint and cinnamon. It’s damn-near intoxicating.

“You’re the charity case, huh?” he asks me, his smile growing even wider. There’s nothing at all nice about it. Tristan looks downright vicious. I open my mouth to respond, wishing I’d never made the decision not to lie. It’d feel good right now, to deny this boy’s accusation. But it’s true, isn’t it? I am the charity case. But how the fuck does he know?

“My name is Marnye Reed, and yes, I’m the scholarship recipient.” Jesus, I sound like a school teacher or something. So much for acting cool. Not that it would matter to this guy: he’s already made up his mind about me. It’s written all over his face, a dash of disdain drowning in haughty arrogance.

Tristan scoffs and shakes his head, immediately refocusing his gaze on mine. I’m not sure how long I can maintain that stare without losing part of my soul. It’s absolutely terrifying … and thrilling, all at once. I’ve only ever met one guy like this before, and that didn’t turn out so well.

“Scholarship. Trash talk for free money handout.” His smile turns into a nightmarish grin. “My family actually built this school, and yet, we still pay to be here. What makes you so special that you should get to come here for free?”

I’m so not ready or expecting this attack that it blindsides me, and I’m left gaping as he reaches out and teases a strand of my loose hair around his finger. He gives a little tug on my brunette waves and leans even closer, brushing my ear with his mouth.

“Pretty enough though, for white trash.” Without thinking, I reach up with both palms and shove this stranger back with everything

I’ve got. One bonus of growing up on the wrong side of the tracks, you learn to stand up for yourself. Tristan barely moves, his expression never changing. It’s like shoving at a mountain of bricks. Completely and utterly immovable. “How long do you think you’ll last?” he continues, cocking his head slightly to one side. I reach up to push his hand away from my hair, but he’s already leaning back, dropping his arm—and his smile—with a sudden change in expression. His lids go half-lidded as he studies me. “Not long, I don’t think.” That beautiful mouth of his purses. “Shame. I was looking forward to a challenge.”

Tristan turns away from me, like I’m the one who’s done something wrong when he was late to meet me and he was … well, doing something with an older girl in the closet. What, exactly, he was doing, I don’t want to know. And yet some dark, messed-up part of me really does. Damn it.

Even though I don’t want to, I take off down the open air hallway with the blooming jasmine, and catch up to my ‘guide’ for the day. Fantastic. I’ve clearly been paired with the rudest—and probably richest—boy at this school. And probably the best looking, too. My heart flutters in my chest, but I push the feeling away. I try to be nice to everyone, but I’m not going to simper at some guy just because he’s hot.

He doesn’t wait for me to catch up, so I have to run, panting by the time we’re shoulder to shoulder. Tristan doesn’t seem to notice or care that I’m short of breath. Nor does he seem to notice or care that he’s supposed to be showing me where the dorms—sorry, apartments—are, the classrooms, the cafeteria.

“You’re my guide for the day,” I say, cheeks flushed with heat from running, my fingers lifting the badge up for Tristan’s inspection, flashing his name on the backside. “Whether you like me or not is irrelevant, you have a job to do.”

Tristan pauses just outside a door with beautiful stained glass panels stretching from floor to ceiling. My instinct is to gape at it, and then snap a picture for my dad, but I’m going to have to get used to the idea of not having a phone. That, and my gut instincts are telling me it’d be a mistake to let this Tristan guy learn anything about me, even something as small as my fascination with historical architecture.

“A job?” he scoffs, taking a step back and looking me up and down with a slow sweep of silver eyes. They cut across me like a blade, making me bleed. Unconsciously, I cross my arms over my

chest and he chuckles. It’s not a pleasant sound, not even close. Instead, Tristan’s laughter is mocking, like he thinks I’m some cosmic joke thrust upon him by an uncaring universe. “Listen, Charity,” he starts, and I open my mouth to tell him off when his palm slams into the stained glass panel behind my head. “No, don’t talk. There’s nothing you have to say that would interest me.” Reaching out, Tristan runs his fingers down the side of my jaw, and I slap his hand away. He snatches my wrist and holds it there, like he owns me. Looking at the guy, I get the impression that he thinks he owns the whole school. “Do you know what my last name is?”

“After the way you’ve treated me,” I start, lifting my chin, nostrils flaring. “I don’t think I care to.”

At my last school, we had metal detectors, drug dogs, and an on- campus police force. If Tristan thinks he can intimidate me, he’s got another thing coming. What I don’t know in that moment is that rich boys are far more dangerous than poor ones. The poor ones might join gangs and pack heat, might rough you up for walking in the wrong neighborhood, but the rich ones have all the same instincts wrapped up in pretty faces and designer shoes, white smiles and genteel manners. The thing is, with infinite resources comes the ability to inflict infinite pain.

“If you want to survive even a single day on campus,” he continues, leaning in and putting his mouth so close to my ear that his breath stirs my hair, raising goose bumps on my arm. I can’t decide if I like or hate his proximity, his long, lean body brushing up against the front of me, one knee between my legs. My breasts just barely brush his chest, two crisp white shirts teasing one another with each breath we take. “Then you best learn it—and quick.”

Tristan releases me and steps back. The arrogance in his handsome face is staggering, his high cheekbones and full mouth a waste on such a haughty face. He’s too full of himself to be pretty. Liar, my mind whispers, but I brush that aside. The guy practically assaulted me. If he thinks I won’t report his ass, he’s got another thing coming.

“That girl in the closet …” I blurt before I can stop myself. There’s a morbid fascination brewing in me that I know I should tamp down. Play with flame and get burned. That’s a hard fact of life I learned long ago, so what the hell am I doing?

Tristan slides long fingers through his lush, raven-colored hair, looking down at me like I’m gum on the bottom of his shoe. I’m not

surprised. By the time lunch rolls around, the whole school will be calling me Charity.

“Want me to tell you how I fucked her?” he asks as heat rushes up the back of my neck and burns my cheeks. “If you last the week,” he continues, reaching up to adjust his black silk tie, “maybe I will.”

He turns then and leaves me standing alone on the walkway. On either side of the awning, rain begins to fall.

That’s not a good omen, not a good omen at all.

Without a guide, Burberry Preparatory Academy is like a labyrinth of old stone hallways and spiraling staircases. It’s haunted by a melancholy beauty that makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up, like I can sense the history crouching inside the building, eras long past watching from shadowed eyes.

“Hey.” A voice sounds from behind me, and I jump, stifling a small scream as I spin and find a girl with bright blond hair and a wide smile. If it weren’t for the genuine warmth in her blue eyes, her beauty would be intimidating, almost cold in its perfection. She bears a striking resemblance to the marble statue in the corner, carved infallibility and plaster pale skin. “Are you lost?”

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