Shunned: a reverse harem bully romance (Kings of Miskatonic Prep Book 1)

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Shunned: a reverse harem bully romance (Kings of Miskatonic Prep Book 1) Page 1

by Steffanie Holmes




  Shunned

  A reverse harem bully romance

  Steffanie Holmes

  Copyright © 2019 by Steffanie Holmes

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  ISBN:

  Cover design: Amanda Rose

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  Shunned

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  From the Author

  Want more reverse harem from Steffanie Holmes

  Agatha Christie meet Black Books

  Excerpt: A Dead and Stormy Night

  About the Author

  Shunned

  I should have kept my mouth shut.

  I should have let them win.

  Now the Kings of the school are out for my blood,

  …and they’re not the only ones.

  The fire took everything.

  My parents. My best friend. My life.

  Now I have a second chance.

  I only have to endure one year at this prestigious academy for rich snobs.

  One year of being the charity case no one wanted.

  One year of taunts and insults and bullying. Then I’m free.

  But I didn’t count on Trey, Ayaz, and Quinn.

  Arrogant, privileged, dangerous.

  Drop-dead fucking gorgeous.

  They want me gone.

  They want me to suffer.

  They’re determined to make my nightmares real.

  Tough luck, bully boys – I won’t hide away.

  I’m not afraid.

  But maybe… I should be.

  HP Lovecraft meets Cruel Intentions in this dark paranormal reverse harem bully romance. Warning: Not for the faint of heart – this story of three broken bad boys and the girl who stood her ground contains dark themes, crazed cultists, books bound in human skin, high-school drama, swoon-worthy sex, and potential triggers.

  To James,

  Who didn’t just stand up for me,

  but taught me how to stand up for myself

  “The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far.“

  – HP Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu (1926)

  Chapter One

  Who the hell builds a school on top of an inaccessible cliff?

  Whoever built Derleth Academy, my new school. I answered my own question as the car’s wheel skidded over the rough gravel on the way up the steep peninsula. A scream escaped my lips as the car lurched toward the edge of the cliff, one wheel spinning completely free.

  Muttering under his breath, the driver for the school slammed the car into reverse and backed us onto the road before slamming on the gas again. We continued our wary climb along the narrow gravel path.

  Surely the Academy can’t be completely cut-off. The school had to bring up food and supplies. Parents must visit on the weekends. My driver was certainly giving it his all, tearing around the corners like he was on a Formula 1 racetrack and not a goat path hugging the side of a mountain. I gritted my teeth and gripped the back of the seat as rocks rolled from beneath the wheels and clattered over the sheer drop into the raging waters below. One wrong move, and we’d tumble down a two-hundred-foot cliff and be dashed against the cliffs so hard and fast that boats would mistake our remains for rock paintings.

  Not the way I ever imagined I’d go.

  We passed into thick vegetation, the cliff and ocean on one side giving way to looming trees that blocked out the grey sky. I let out the breath I’d been holding. Branches scraped the sides of the car, and my phone beeped with protest as we moved out of cell range. No contact with the outside world, the school brochure read. At Derleth Academy, we foster a competitive academic program requiring the full attention of our students. Distracting technology or personal items will not be tolerated.

  In other words, I couldn’t call for help. It was the opening sequence to every horror film, ever.

  Not that I had anyone to call. Not anymore.

  “Almost there,” the driver said, swinging the car around a hairpin corner and launching my stomach into my throat. It was the most words he’d spoken to me the entire trip. “You can see the school through the trees.”

  I squinted into the forest, trying to make out some kind of building that might pass as a school. But I couldn’t see a thing. We rounded another corner and—

  Well, that’s terrifying.

  We rolled between two towering stone pillars obscured by creeping vines, past an ornate sign that read DERLETH ACADEMY. A wide, pristine concrete drive flanked by an avenue of towering trees and wide, manicured lawns led up to an imposing stone building, stretching in all directions with narrow arched windows, spiky towers, and a row of leering gargoyles along the roof.

  What is this place? It looked more like Dracula’s castle than a prestigious preparatory school.

  I couldn’t believe the wealthiest people in the country sent their children up that winding road to get educated. Who’s the headmistress, Morticia Addams? But according to the brochure, that was exactly what they did. In droves. Derleth Academy had a waiting list a mile long, and you couldn’t even pay to get in. You had to be invited.

  Somehow, I, Hazel Waite – an overachieving orphan from the wrong side of Philly – ended up on their radar.

  I flashed back to the day two weeks ago, when a banging on the door of my dingy apartment dragged me from a deep slumber. A woman with coiffed hair and a designer suit that cost more than a car staggered backward in surprise when I glared at her through the chain wearing only my pajamas and what must have been a terrifying scowl. Well, she wasn’t the one being dragged from a pleasant Jason Momoa sex dream during the four-hour reprieve between night shift at the diner and cleaning rooms at a retirement home.

  “Are you Hazel Waite?” she asked, her brown eyes wide and curious.

  “No. Piss off.” I glowered, slamming the door in her face. She was probably from CPS, trying to force me into foster care. Fuck that. I only had seven more months to survive before I turned eighteen. No way was I going to spend it in the hell that had killed Dante.

  The woman didn’t go away. She sat out on the road in her sports car and waited me out. I had to leave for work or I’d lose my job, and it wasn’t easy to find work when you were underage and using an obviously fake ID. As soon as I left the house, she ambushed me.

  “I’m not here to hand you over to the authorities,” she said hurrie
dly, shoving a thick envelope into your hands. “I’m a scholarship administrator from Derleth Academy in Arkham, Massachusetts. Your current school put you forward for one of our four senior scholarship positions – a fully funded year at a first-class prep school, where our students go on to attend the top colleges in the world. I know the first quarter has already started, but it’s taken me this long to track you down. You’ve only missed a week so far.”

  I stared at the envelope in my hands, at the red, black and gold school crest – a crooked five-pointed star inside a shield with some kind of Latin phrase beneath it. This has got to be a joke.

  “I know what you’re thinking,” the woman said. “It’s not a joke or a trick. I promise you that it’s not. If you come to Derleth, we will assume guardianship duties until you turn eighteen. You’ll be housed, clothed, and have all your schoolbooks and other needs met, as well as receiving a first-class education. You’re a promising student, Hazel, and I know you’ve been dealt a cruel lot in life. This could be where you turn everything around. Don’t answer me now. Read over the paperwork, and I’ll return tomorrow for your decision.”

  And now, just ten days after I signed my soul over to this school in exchange for paid tuition, room, and board, I stared up at the imposing facade and wondered if I’d made a terrible mistake.

  Sure, my life was miserable. I was drowning in grief, and even working two jobs I could barely pull in enough money to survive. College was out of the question, because I couldn’t finish high school without going into foster care. But at least all that was familiar territory. That was the world I’d grown up in – the world of pain and struggle and loss. Derleth Academy was the exact opposite. Every element of this building screamed wealth and privilege and you don’t belong here.

  The driver pulled to a stop on the wide circular drive beside a towering stone fountain. A black woman in a drab grey smock darted out of the shadows of the porch and approached the car. I held my hand out to her. “Hello, I’m Hazel Waite—”

  The woman ducked her head, avoiding me. She popped open the trunk, hauled out my heavy suitcase and bookbag, and hurried off to the house with them before I could offer to help.

  Weird much? I swiped a dreadlock off my face. My friend Dante’s foster sister had done them for me last year, back when things were perfect and the most I had to worry about was whether my mom would ground me for getting dreadlocks.

  An awful feeling twisted in my gut. I wished Mom was here, hating my dreads, right now. But she was gone, gone, gone, and so was Dante, and it was just me and this terrifying school and no other options.

  Three figures descended the grand stone steps toward me: A woman with translucent skin and a flowing black dress, flanked on either side by two students wearing the Derleth uniform. Fallen leaves skittered away from the woman’s hem, and she moved with such poise that she appeared to float over the steps. With her severe features and a gauzy black ribbon pinned in her hair, she looked more like she was attending a funeral. Behind her, the two students – a guy and a girl – glared at me, distrust emanating from their every pore.

  The woman stopped on the second-to-last step, peering down her nose at me as if I were a bug that wasn’t even worth squashing. “You’ll have to do something about that hair. We enforce a strict dress code in my school, Ms. Waite. I’ll not have you flouting it on your very first day.”

  This must be the principal, Hermia West. My Morticia Addams guess wasn’t far off. This woman looked like she drank the blood of students to sustain her beauty. The way her grey eyes stabbed right through me sent a cold shiver through my body.

  There was nothing in the student handbook about dreadlocks. Although, of course, I’d only skim-read the thing on the bus from Philly. The handbook was boring. And long. “I’m sorry, Ms. West. I didn’t know—”

  “Ignorance is no excuse. That’s 3 demerit points for you. And you’re to refer to me as Headmistress.”

  Beside her, the boy sniggered. I turned my gaze to look at him, and my heart nearly stopped. Wow, he’s beautiful. I had no idea boys that hot existed outside of magazines and Hollywood movies. He stood practically the same height as Ms. West, his broad shoulders accentuated by the tailored cut of his red-trimmed blazer. Prefect and merit badges decorated both lapels. Dark brown curls caught the grey light filtering through the clouds, throwing back beautiful shades of russet and silver. His clean-shaven face and high, majestic cheekbones appeared angelic, but his ice-blue eyes were cold and cruel.

  The girl moved closer to him, touching his arm and shooting me a possessive glare, like a cat in heat. She had the appearance of a cat, too – slanted green eyes accentuated with heavy makeup, pointed chin, and the lithe body and long legs of a panther. Beautiful but deadly.

  “This is Trey Bloomberg and Courtney Haynes,” Headmistress West said. “I’ve appointed them as your student guides. They will show you the dorm, library, and dining hall, go over your schedule and classrooms, and ensure you understand all our rules. You will dine with the student body in two hours’ time, and tomorrow you begin classes. I’ve had a copy of your schedule and the school handbook placed in your room. Memorize them, for failure to comply will result in further demerits. Here’s your dorm room key.”

  In my pocket, my phone gave another defiant chirp. Great. I’d practically worn down the battery looking for a signal on the death road.

  Headmistress West descended the last step to drop an ancient-looking metal key into my hand. Her pointy black boots lined up with my scuffed Docs. She loomed over me, her disapproval seeping into my bones. “You have a phone in your pocket.” It wasn’t a question.

  “Yes.”

  Behind her, the boy smirked. I felt naked, exposed. My legs itched to make a run for the woods. Headmistress West held out her hand, unfurling long fingers topped with red-painted nails, the tips pointed like talons. “Hand it over. We don’t allow outside technology on campus.”

  Instinctively, my hand flew to my pocket. “I won’t use it to call or text. It doesn’t work here, anyway, so what’s the—”

  “Ms. Waite, failure to obey a teacher’s command is an automatic loss of 10 points. You seem most anxious to find out what punishments await the students at the bottom of the class list.”

  A lump rose in my throat. My phone contained photographs – snaps of my mom smiling demurely or brushing her hair in the mirror before she went out to work at the strip club. Of Dante and I hanging out around the neighborhood, smoking on the rusted playground beside his house, tagging the concrete wall behind the boxing gym on the corner. Every other one of my possessions had been destroyed in the fire. Those photographs were practically all I had left of them.

  Trey and Courtney covered their mouths with their hands, barely disguising their laughter. Courtney leaned over and whispered something to Trey. They both cracked up. Despite myself, my cheeks flushed. Better get used to this.

  Headmistress West, of course, ignored them. She wasn’t backing down on this phone thing. My fingers closed around it, the comfortable weight of it in my hand reminding me that it was one of the last connections to my old life.

  What does it matter? They’re gone. Looking at their photos won’t bring them back. But this school could be the only chance I have at a real future.

  My hand trembling, I dropped my phone into her talons. As soon as it left my hand, I itched to get it back. Headmistress West slipped the phone into a fold of her dress, where it disappeared from sight.

  “Follow me.” The headmistress swirled on her heel and floated up the stairs. Numb, I fell in step behind her. Trey came up beside me. His arm brushed mine, and a jolt of warmth rocketed through my body. I dared a look up at his face. As we moved into the shadow of the porch, the colors in his hair changed, becoming a deep brown and blood red. A curl flopped over his eye, and I noticed flecks of silver on the edges of those arresting blue irises. My fingers itched to reach up and swipe that curl off his face, to touch his smooth skin, feel his cheek move b
eneath my fingers, to cut myself on his cheekbones. A familiar longing pooled in my stomach, an ache that I’d never been able to sate before, and now never would.

  I’d never seen a boy that perfect.

  Trey’s fingers brushed me again. My breath froze in my mouth as his hand lingered on my elbow. To anyone looking at us from a distance, it would appear as though he was helping me, steadying me up the steep steps. The touch on my skin was white-hot, lighting up parts of my body that hadn’t felt anything since Dante… since before the fire. How can this boy with such cruel eyes have this effect on me?

  When he caught me looking, Trey’s perfect lips curled back into a sneer. His fingers tightened on my arm, squeezing my skin. Tighter, tighter, until he was cutting off circulation. I yelped in protest.

  “You don’t belong here,” he murmured, his perfect lips forming hateful words. “You should leave now.”

  He said it so casually, like he was chatting about the weather, and that self-satisfied smirk never left his face. My stomach twisted, the air driving from my lungs as though he’d punched me.

  “No thanks,” I said brightly, pretending that I misunderstood him. “I’m good.”

  “We don’t want you, and we’re used to getting what we want. We’re going to eat you alive, new meat.” Trey flashed me a smile that was all teeth and violence. The venom in his eyes frightened me. This is not a guy to mess with.

 

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