Title: Sweethearts
Author: Gemma Gilmore
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: January 29, 2018
Heat Level: 2 - Fade to Black Sex
Pairing: Female/Female
Length: 62600
Genre: Contemporary, LGBT, YA, high school, friends to lovers, alcohol use, visual arts, coming out, teen pregnancy, coming of age, slow burn
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Synopsis
When seventeen-year-old Ingrid Harper
realizes she may not have the talent to pursue a scholarship for the most
prestigious art school in Australia, she turns to pink hair dye as a
distraction.
Her new hair captures the attention of a
fellow art student, Kat, who introduces Ingrid to the LGBT clubbing scene, and
although Ingrid enjoys partying with her new friend, she becomes caught up in
confusion about her sexuality. Her fear is overwhelming—she can’t think about
anything else.
Until her best friend, Summer, reveals
that she is pregnant.
As her best friend faces the realities
of being pregnant at seventeen, Ingrid is shown the true definition of courage.
It motivates her to come out about her sexuality—she likes girls. Only girls.
Now she just has to work out what that means for the other areas of her life.
Excerpt
Sweethearts
Gemma Gilmore © 2018
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
I am desperately trying not to attract
attention.
My arms are folded across my chest. My
chin is tucked into my neck. I am leaning against the brick wall as I watch her
sing. It takes every ounce of strength I have to keep my face still, hiding any
expression that bubbles to the surface. Any reaction I have to her lilting
voice is shoved down, adding to the pit in my stomach.
The younger students are sitting
respectfully in their seats. They are still too naive to question the teachers
when they are told they must be present. I know better than to think that this
school performance is anything special to Amber Freeman. She’s been singing
since before she could walk, and although I am always the first viewer, her
YouTube videos are gaining more and more popularity with every upload. This is
just practice to her. A warm-up.
The spotlights are trained on her, and
she throws her hands up whilst the climax of the song cascades from her
talented lips. I let my eyes flicker shut and Amber’s voice surrounds me,
caressing my ears as she sings deeply. Her voice is crashing through me,
tingling across the skin on my arms and seeping through my body, calming me.
My head has fallen back against the
wall, and I remain frozen there as I listen to her sing. In this moment,
nothing else matters. With my eyes closed, she’s right next to me. Singing
softly, untying the knot that’s sunken deep into that pit in the bottom of my
stomach.
“Ingrid? What the hell are you doing?” The
voice that hisses right next to my ear jerks me out of my daydream.
I jump with shock and wrench my eyes
open, tearing myself away from the peaceful moment. In front of me, my best
friend Summer stands, her arms folded across her chest and her eyes wide in
that you are busted expression.
“Jesus,” I mutter. “I thought you had
better things to do than sneak up on people. Way to give me a heart attack.”
“I thought you had better things to do
than stand here creepily at the back of the gym listening to Amber sing,”
Summer challenges me, an amused smile dancing across her full lips.
“You snuck up on me and you’re calling
me the creep?” I snort. “Come on, let’s get out of here.”
The quicker I can get Summer outside of
this gym, the quicker I can shove away the fact that she caught me watching
Amber’s performance. We duck behind the last row of seating and out of the door
in the corner of the room, swiftly ignoring the Emergency Exit Only sign. We’ve
done this so many times now that it’s like second nature.
Outside, the rain lashes against the
building. The wind howls so loudly that I’m surprised no one noticed our little
escape from the gymnasium—then again, they never do. For Summer, there’s more
to life than just sitting in a desk at school. Any chance my best friend has to
escape the mundane restrictions of life is an opportunity she must take. She’s
never been the kind of girl to follow the traditional paths.
Then again, neither have I.
My thoughts still spin as we duck
through the car park and head out to the tin shed at the back of the school.
Summer knew exactly where to find me during Amber’s performance. She knows that
I watch Amber. While everyone else in our grade snuck off to make out in
abandoned classrooms or smoke cigarettes behind the main building, I followed
the crowd into the gymnasium with one intention.
Why did I need to watch her?
“I had a headache and the gym was dark.”
I shrug off Summer’s curious stare as we take shelter under the tin roof. The
rain really lashes down now, bouncing off the pavement and whipping through the
trees. “It was better than watching you make out with Jackson for an hour
straight.”
My snide comment is low but, right now,
I’ll do anything to take the attention away from me.
“You had a headache, so you decided to
listen to Amber sing?” Summer rolls her eyes at me. “Makes sense.”
She fidgets with her oversized tartan
scarf, staring out into the rain. Maybe I’m not the only one who is trying to
avoid things today.
“You were in there too,” I argue
half-heartedly. “What’s your obsession with her?”
This time, Summer does turn to me. “I’m
obsessed?” She snorts. “Ingrid, honey, if I’m obsessed, then you’re deranged.”
“Then I’m deranged.”
Summer rolls her eyes, signalling the
end of that particular conversation. “Whatever. Your deeply disturbing issues
are the least of my problems right now. Look, Ingrid, I think I’m going to have
to take a test.”
Red splotches gleam against Summer’s pale
cheeks, and I watch her carefully. She tugs on that scarf like it’s strangling
her.
“Like an STD test?”
“Are you stupid?” I know her voice is
harsher than intended, and I brush it off with a blunt laugh. “A pregnancy
test.”
“Oh, for god’s sake, here we go again.
You and Jackson really need to invest in some efficient birth control because
this I’m pregnant freak-out that you have every month is getting boring.”
“Trust me, I know.” Her tone is suddenly
tense, and she blinks back emotion. “But right now, I’m pretty sure I have the
devil’s spawn growing inside of me, so I’m allowed to freak out. I’m two weeks
late.”
I raise my eyebrows. She’s never been
this late before. “Jackson is not the devil’s spawn. You know he loves you. But
I highly doubt you’re pregnant. It’s all the stress from thinking you’re
pregnant every month starting to get to you.”
“Yeah, okay, whatever.” She says,
throwing her hands up in defeat. “I knew I shouldn’t have said anything. I
don’t know what you’re moping about—we got a free class and you got to watch
Amber singing. It’s a damn good day for Ingrid Harper right now.”
“Listen, I really did just have a
headache. I don’t care about Amber’s singing. And you and Jackson were quite
obviously distracted. You didn’t seem to have pregnancy on your mind during
that public make-out session. Or maybe you did. Either way, I think it’s a damn
good day for both of us, don’t you think?”
I know what Summer is doing. She is the
ultimate denier of reality. More than that, she is aware that I will follow
along with every topic change she throws at me. I get distracted easily,
apparently.
Summer laughs, but the smile doesn’t
quite reach her eyes. Distraction is inevitable right now, for both of us.
These are not issues we should be faced with at seventeen years old. Summer’s
mother is getting married soon, so that’s just one more thing to top off what
I’m coining Summer’s Distressing Summer.
We stand silently as the rain pours over
the sides of the flimsy tin roof. Muddy water pools right to the edges of the
door. It’s mid-December. While politicians are throwing around the term climate
change like it’s currency, I stare at the pools of water near this emergency
exit, wondering if our town has sufficient flood safety plans.
“Come over tonight,” she murmurs.
“Please, Ingrid.”
“You’re buying me McDonald’s.” I sigh in
return. The truth is, I have my own things to worry about, whether Summer is
pregnant or not. She’s been with Jackson for three years—that’s three years
they have successfully been together and prevented pregnancy. It’s not a
possibility. It just isn’t.
Summer is wild, just like her name. Her
light-brown hair is constantly tangled, but her dominating blue eyes seem to
distract everyone.
But today, she stares out at the grey
sky and nervously chews at her lip, clutching that damn scarf so tightly that I
know she’s already certain about this pregnancy. More so than I’ve ever seen
before. Her blue eyes don’t seem so bright today.
“I heard Jackson was thinking about
transferring to the art school. I didn’t think that boy had an artistic bone in
his body.” I smirk, desperately trying to relax Summer. I don’t know what to
say when she’s so shut off like this. My lie is smooth, slipping off my lips
easily.
“Yeah, he does comics. I don’t know, I
guess they’re funny.”
“It’s our last year of high school.
Surely he’s left it a bit late?” I frown in earnest now.
What Summer doesn’t know is that I’ve
known Jackson a lot longer than she has. I know that he’s been wanting to do
art since he started high school, but his military-driven father would never
allow it—he’s all about physical education, mathematics, and science. He used
to drill that into Jackson every time I was around; none of this fairy fluff
nonsense, he would say pointedly.
“Look, Ingrid, I don’t really want to
talk about Jackson right now,” Summer snaps, finally releasing the titan grip
on her checked scarf and running a frustrated hand through her frizzy hair.
“Do you even want me to stay tonight
then?” I throw back. “I can’t deal with you when you’re being like this. Either
let me in or let me go. I’ve got shit to do.”
To my complete surprise, Summer snorts
as she turns to face me. “Just shut up and come and sleep over at my house. I
need your brutal honesty, but I also need you to do literally everything I say
right now. You know I’d do the same for you.”
I don’t bother telling her that to be in
her position, I’d actually have to get closer than two feet to a guy, but I think
she already knows that.
“Look, I don’t like that you called
Jackson the devil before. I don’t care if he’s annoying sometimes, if you
are…pregnant…it’s definitely not the devil’s spawn that could be growing inside
of you. And that’s all I’m going to say about that,” I huff.
“Okay, I didn’t know you were Jackson’s
number-one cheerleader, but whatever.”
“Yeah, whatever.”
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