Good Grades & Mystery Games: Chapter 3
Good Grades & Mystery Games (North University Series Book 2)
Having a break between second and third period doesnât mean taking a well-deserved break like the rest of the class, it means running across campus to meet in the middle where Kennedyâs art classroom is.
I have ten minutes to catch up with the girls like we do every time between our double periods but this time we were summoned by Ken for an emergency meeting. The rink that Wren practices at is at the other side of the campus so the art studio is the middle-ground from my business class.
I run through a dark corridor past the schoolâs dark room, towards the art classroom and I make my way through stressed out students until I find my stressed out student, basically ripping out her low pigtails.
Kennedy is sitting in the corner with a sketchbook in front of her, her blue denim dungarees covered in paint splatters, tugging at the band of her pigtails letting both bands break in half as her curly hair springs free.
I inch closer to her, not sure which Ken Iâm about to interact with right now. As I take a step closer, I feel a hand on my shoulder, pulling me back into the corridor which I just exited. I recognise the hand immediately because we just got matching manicures a few days ago.
âSheâs freaking out,â Wren says when weâre face to face in the corridor, both of her hands on my shoulders, shaking me like an insane person.
âYeah, I can tell. Why are you freaking out? Youâre scaring me,â I say, removing her lethal grip from my shoulders. She brushes her blonde hair over her shoulder and exhales deeply, her green eyes searching mine. God, I swear I have the most dramatic friends to ever exist.
âSheâs got a deadline for a project and that empty canvas in there is all sheâs done. Iâve tried to help, but I think Iâm making it worse,â she replies.
âThat doesnât sound like her. Sheâs usually on top of these things,â I say, trying to figure out how this could have happened.
When we were all freaking out about our exams at the end of last year, she was ahead of us all and helped Wren with her creative writing course. As chaotic as she is, her work always comes first for her and itâs a trait of hers Iâve always admired.
âYeah, I know,â Wren says. She blinks at me for a minute, not saying anything. Kennedy is the literal glue to our group â if sheâs freaking out, weâre all freaking out. âCan you try and talk to her? Darcy will have my head if Iâm not back in two minutes.â
I nod and take a deep breath before entering the room again. Her hair has become a wild mess of curls and coils as she runs her hands through it nervously, tapping her pencil on the empty sketchbook. She looks up at me. A faint smile paints across her face before returning down to her book.
âHey,â she says quietly, not tearing her eyes from the blank page. I check the time quickly, realising I only have a few minutes before I need to make my way back to class.
âHey.â
âAre you here to give me a pep talk? I really donât think I can deal with that right now. Wrenâs one was really shitty,â she mumbles, finally drawing faint lines with her pencil. I pull out a chair across from her and laugh.
âIâm not here to give you a pep talk, Ken. I am, however, here to tell you that you can, and you will finish the project before the deadline.â
âThis is starting to sound like a pep talk,â she murmurs. I shoot her a stern look. âThe deadline is in three days.â
âThree days? Shit. I thought it was like a month or something,â I say, and she groans loudly, pushing the sketchbook away from her as she drops her head onto the table. âOkay, okay. Listen, you are one of the strongest, coolest, funniest, and most talented people I know. Iâm not just saying that cause weâve known each other forever. Iâm being dead serious. Your work is insane and so much better than half of the stuff Iâve seen around the department.â
She lifts her head up, resting on her forearms as she mumbles into her skin, âThanks, but that isnât going to help.â
âIt better help, Ken. You canât give up on this. This is your dream. Youâre not working your ass off at Florentinoâs for nothing. And we all know coffee gives you a stomachache, so donât act like you can justify it.â
âYouâre right.â
âOf course, Iâm right,â I say, and she smiles. I push out my seat to stand up. âI have to go back to class though. Weâll talk later, okay?â
She nods and I have three minutes to get back to my class. The only thing I forgot was that this break clashes with the freshman lunchtime, meaning that everybody and their mothers are out in the corridors. Fucking hell. This school needs to invest in bigger hallways because there is no way Iâm getting back to my class in time.
Sometimes if Mr Anderson is in a particularly shitty mood, he locks us out, making us catch up with notes in our own time. Still, this is my third year here at NU and I still donât get how heâs legally allowed to do so.
I make the brave decision to cut across the football field instead, finding this route to be more effective to get back to class. The first semester of this year only started a few weeks ago so the football team isnât exactly paying much attention to me cutting across their field, except for the one boy who does a double take when he realises that my red-bottoms are sinking into the muddy pitch.
Iâm clearly not paying attention either because thatâs why I collide with the body standing at the top of the stairs, in front of the doors to the business building.
âJesus. Can you watch where youâre going?â the boy grumbles, pushing me away from him. I take two steps back, almost falling down the steps, but he latches onto my elbow, steadying me.
âMy bad. I was just-â I say, the words falling out of my mouth automatically before I look up and of course itâs him.
Evan fucking Branson; the literal bane of my existence.
He enjoys getting under my skin just as much as I enjoy getting under his. Heâs spent his last two years at NU torturing me, turning every class game into a competition and not to mention, heâs rich as hell, as his familyâs clothing brand is one of the top in the States, rivalling mine. Also, I think itâs very important to mention that heâs blonde, which speaks for itself.
I yank my arm out of his grip as he stubs out his cigarette on the railing. I brush past him, pushing through the doors and into the corridor. And obviously, weâre walking to the same class, so I can hear his footsteps a few paces behind me.
âGod, if youâre going to smoke, at least do it off campus,â I mutter, pulling my bag up higher on my shoulder. He steps in beside me, walking with me. For once, heâs not that dressed up and has ditched his usual tailored suit for baggy light washed jeans and a white tee. It makes him seem more human. Interesting.
âThanks for the advice, Angel,â he replies. I take a quick glance at him, glaring at his insistent use of that stupid nickname. âYouâre awfully late for someone who cares so much about this class.â
âAnd so are you,â I retort, trying to pick up the pace so I donât have to look at him.
âWhy?â he asks.
âWhy, what?â
âWhy are you late?â
I always try my best to keep conversation with him to a minimum because the more we speak, the closer I get to ripping his head off. He stops outside the door to the lecture theatre, arms across his chest, waiting for me to say something.
âDo you always ask this many questions or are you choosing to be extra irritating today?â I ask curiously.
âDo you always have something to say or are you incapable of shutting up?â
I match his stance, pinning my arms across my chest, narrowing my eyes at him. He has the tendency of making every single thing that comes out of his mouth sound like an insult, itâs almost like heâs begging me to strangle him. I canât last a day at school without his stupid comments on everything that I do, disguising it as âconstructive criticism.â He stares back at me, and I still canât tell if his eyes are blue or green.
I lean back on the class door, slightly pushing it open behind me as I whisper to him, âFor the record, Iâm not being quiet because you told me to. I simply donât want to waste anymore of my breath on you.â
Then, because Iâm petty and seeing his face pisses me off, I slip through the door, shutting it on him before walking up to my seat in the half full room.
I make it halfway up the stairs before Evan finally appears through the door and I smirk.
âMiss Voss and Mr Branson, Iâm glad you didnât get lost on your way back to class,â Mr Anderson says when I get my laptop and notebook out of my bag, pushing it onto my desk. Heâs one of the greatest teachers in our department, even if most of our lessons end with a forty minute rant about his ex-wife.
I watch as Evan takes a seat at the front of the class because like me, he doesnât exactly have anyone waiting for him in here.
As embarrassing as it is to admit, I donât have many friends in this class. Well, I donât have many friends in general. Itâs always just been me, Wren, and Kennedy since we were kids and I like it that way. Iâve always been fine with solitude. Iâve had to be, growing up with all brothers and feeling like the odd one out.
People either donât care about my existence or hate me because they think Iâve got everything handed to me, which couldnât be further from the truth. I worked hard for my spot at North University, and Iâve never once taken that for granted. Iâve accepted the way Iâm going to be perceived and Iâm fine with it. But it stings that I have to sit here and play the âI hate you so much that it makes me sickâ game with Branson while everyone else can laugh and talk with their friends.
Thatâs why it sucks when I swear I hear Anderson introduce a new project for this year. I raise my hand, almost knocking over my water bottle in the process. This canât be happening.
âYes, Scarlett?â
âUh, sorry, but could you repeat that? I think I just missed the end of that,â I say nervously as slowly, one by one, people in the rows below me turn towards me, snickering. I swear itâs like high school all over again. I sit up straighter, pushing my dark brown hair over my shoulder, feigning confidence.
âIâve been talking for the last hour, but you only missed the end of it?â Anderson asks. I shrug. âYou need to start paying more attention. I want to do something a little different to incorporate productivity and fun for this year. So, Iâd like everyone to pair up with someone else in the class and I want you to create a hypothetical business. It can be anything from clothing to food, to an app; Iâm not fussed. As long as you can present to me a project by the end of the school year on how you would market your business, your target audience, and the realistic ways you would build it from the ground up. It might come more naturally to some more than others, but the whole point is for this to be some fun before weâ¦â
Thatâs about where I start to drone him out.
Iâm confident in all the ways that matter, but not with talking to people my own age, especially those that make it no secret that they donât like me. Iâve always found it hard to make friends, but the friends that I do have, I hold them dear to my heart and I appreciate them more than anything. Itâs the making of them that sucks the most and is the hardest.
The sound of Evanâs annoying voice draws me back to the class. âDo we get to choose our own partners?â Anderson nods and the strangest thing happens: Evan turns back to me, looks me dead in the eye and he smiles. Not a sweet, genuine smile, but one that holds mischief. Danger.
No. No.
He wouldnât.
Oh, but he would. Heâd do it just to torture me.
I raise my hand this time. âCan we also reject offers of partnership?â
Anderson sighs, pushing his glasses up his head. âI donât care. As long as you come to me with a project before summer break, then itâs fine.â
With that, everyone in the class rushes around, yelling and finding their partners and I sit there, hoping that someone will be left without a partner and lead me to pair up with them. I donât think I could handle the rejection right now if I tried to ask someone.
When my row has cleared, people partnering in different sides of the lecture theatre, Evan turns back around, leaning on the table behind him with a lazy smile hanging off his lips.
âThen there were two,â he drawls.
I roll my eyes. âThereâs one: you. I would rather drop out of this class than work with you for the next few months.â
âWeâre really carrying this on, huh?â Evan says, chuckling low. Iâm glad he finds this so amusing because I cannot work with him. âOur housemates are dating, the least we can do is be civil with each other.â
âThis is me being civil,â I retort. He raises his eyebrows at me, tilting his head.
âReally? âCause it looks like youâre ready to gauge my eyes out.â
âListen, Branson, this is not going to work out.â
âWhy not?â he asks, scratching his eyebrow, not taking his eyes off me as if he can see right through me. âItâs not like people are exactly lining up to work with us.â
I pin my arms across my chest, suddenly feeling defensive. I know he doesnât have many friends in this class either, but admitting it aloud, watching everyone else being paired up, makes it seem more real.
âWhatâs in it for you?â I ask.
âYouâre the smartest person in here, second to me, and I could do with some extra credits. It turns out that going on vacation during the semester isnât always the smartest idea,â he admits. Of course, he believes heâs the smartest person in every room he walks into.
I try to mull over the idea. In reality, it could work, but that would mean having to speak to him nearly every day and interact with him when I donât need to. It also means putting up with more competition than usual, purposefully letting him get under my skin.
âJust being in your presence gives me a headache,â I mutter, rubbing at my temples for extra effect. It canât be a coincidence that since Iâve seen him and his snobbish self, my head has started to hurt.
âOh, âcause youâre such a delight, arenât you, Angel?â My body automatically shivers, and he smirks when he watches the way I squirm. âBelieve me, I donât want to do this as much as you do. I need the grade and youâre my best shot at getting it. Are we clear?â
I roll my neck before nodding, adding, âFine.â