Chapter 30

Eleven years ago

As winter morphed into spring Gray hardly noticed the changing of seasons. Being with Shelby out in the open brought new feelings:

pride and a kind of indescribable joy he’d never before experienced. Having her at his side in the cafeteria and holding hands

in the hall had turned heads. Tongues wagged, sure. Everyone wondered what Shelby Thatcher was doing with the likes of him.

While his academic stature hardly overcame the damage to his reputation, his new role as Shelby’s boyfriend seemed to make

their peers wonder if they’d missed something. Her close friends at least gave him a chance. They even attended prom together

with their dates and had a great time.

Brendan and his posse, however, glared daggers at Gray when they passed in the halls. He made a point of avoiding restrooms

and locker rooms. No doubt they’d love to get him alone again—they had yet another reason to hate him now.

But the teachers loved Brendan—he sucked up to the men and charmed the women. He was as fake with the faculty as he’d been

with Shelby, and they all bought into his pathetic act.

Gray took Shelby out once a week and savored their time alone.

Each time he picked her up, her dad was cordial and so was her brother when he was home from college.

Gray was finally making headway with her family.

Maybe they had a chance after all. He hoped so, because he was falling deeper by the day.

In early May for Shelby’s birthday, he spent some of his hard-earned money on a ring. Not an engagement ring, of course. They

were only eighteen and had years of school ahead of them. But it was a promise. He already knew he wanted to spend the rest of his life with her, and she’d admitted the same in April as they’d

talked on the phone late into the night. He wanted to give her a token of that sentiment. Something that would sustain them

through college. And let’s face it, he’d be so proud to see her wearing that symbol of his love on her finger.

On the evening of her birthday, after he’d treated her to dinner at the Waterfront Bistro, she opened the gift. They were

at the park where they’d often met back in the fall. Her lips went slack at the sight of the ring glittering from its navy-blue

nest. A tiny diamond nestled inside the gold infinity knot.

“Don’t freak out.” He spoke into the gap of silence, suddenly nervous. “It’s not an engagement ring or anything. It’s just

a—”

“Promise ring?” She gazed up at him, tears shimmering in her hope-filled eyes.

A relieved breath tumbled from his lungs. “Will you wear it?”

She took the ring from its case. “Of course I’ll wear it. Oh, Gray. I love it. I couldn’t love anything more. I can’t believe

you spent so much money. You need to save up for books and such.” But those qualms didn’t stop her from slipping that ring

onto her left hand or smiling like he’d just made her year.

He took her hand and pressed a kiss to her knuckles. “Worth every penny.”

The smile in her eyes and the long, delicious kiss afterward carried him for days. But his relationship with her proved to be a distraction. Mid-month he went into an AP chemistry class unprepared for a pop quiz and his grade slipped to a high B.

A few days later, with just two weeks of school left, he discovered that he and Brendan were in a dead heat for valedictorian

and the Warner Scholarship. The finals would determine whether or not Gray would go to college. The realization knocked the

wind out of him. He couldn’t believe he’d let his guard down for a couple of weeks and now everything was on the line.

Since he had two AP classes this semester and Brendan only had one, Gray would win if he got straight A’s. He had to nail

that chemistry final to raise his grade. He studied every spare minute, forgoing two date nights with Shelby—a huge sacrifice.

She’d offered to help him study, but she was too darn distracting.

When finals week arrived he was prepared. He’d aced his first three. Chemistry was Thursday and on Friday, the last day of

high school, all he had to do was turn in an English paper.

On Thursday when he finished his chemistry final, he felt invincible. He’d done well. He might have even gotten an A+. That

scholarship was in the bag and there was nothing Brendan could do about it. In a celebratory mood, he took Shelby out for

ice cream after work and they toasted cones to his bright future.

“Mr. Briggs, can you come with me, please?”

The easy smile slid from Gray’s mouth at the sight of the vice principal in the doorway. Why were they calling him from English

class? Had something happened?

His teacher, Mrs. Caldwell, glanced at the clock and offered Gray a smile. “It’s almost time for the bell. Go ahead and turn

in your paper and take your things with you.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Mr. Fletcher’s grim expression tightened the knot in Gray’s stomach as they walked the quiet hall. “Did something happen? Is my grandma okay?”

“She’s fine. This is another matter entirely.”

“What’s wrong then?”

The man didn’t answer. Gray was about to ask again when he caught sight of the school principal, Mr. Donovan, standing by

Gray’s locker, watching them approach. A black plume of dread spread through him.

Mr. Donovan frowned. “Gray, I need you to open your locker, please.”

“What’s going on?”

“Open it, please.”

Fine. He had nothing to hide. Gray put in the combination and opened the door. He’d already cleaned out his locker, so it

was empty save his book bag.

“Open your bag, please.”

What in the world did they hope to find? Drugs? A gun? It ticked him off to be singled out this way. But it also scared him

to death because the future seemed so promising right now. And if he’d learned anything in life, it was that things never

worked out his way.

He unzipped the two compartments and set the bag in Mr. Fletcher’s outstretched arms. While he held it Mr. Donovan rifled

through it. Gray kept a neat bag and knew exactly what was in it. His chemistry textbook, his English journal, a water bottle,

his phone and charger, a ChapStick, a gel pen, and two yellow highlighters.

The principal pulled out the textbook and fluttered through the pages. A paper fell out and wafted onto the floor.

Mr. Fletcher picked it up, unfolded it, and aimed a frown Gray’s way. “You’ll need to come with us.”

The paper, Gray found out in the office minutes later, was the advanced test for AP chemistry. A rumor had apparently been circulating that he had the test in his possession, and his teacher confirmed he’d scored an A+ on the final, his highest test grade in the class all semester.

It didn’t matter that Gray had never seen that test before or that he’d studied his butt off for weeks for that A+. The school’s

zero tolerance for cheating meant Gray would get a zero on the final, tanking his grade, costing him the Warner Scholarship—and

any chance he’d ever had at a college degree.

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