Sense of Rumor (Mount Faith Series: Book 6)

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Sense of Rumor (Mount Faith Series: Book 6) Page 1

by Barrett, Brenda




  Sense of Rumor

  A Jamaica Treasures Book

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to an actual person or persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved

  Copyright © 2013 by Brenda Barrett

  Book Cover Design: Yorkali Walters, www.theimajination.com

  *****

  Discover other titles in the Mount Faith Series:

  Saving Face (Mount Faith Series)

  Tattered Tiara (Mount Faith Series)

  Private Dancer (Mount Faith Series)

  Goodbye Lonely (Mount Faith Series)

  Practice Run (Mount Faith Series)

  Amazon Author Profile and Full Book List:

  http://bit.ly/AMzBrenda

  Visit Brenda's Official Blog:

  brenda-barrett.com

  Twitter.com/AuthorWriterBB

  Facebook.com/AuthorBrendaBarrett

  Dear Reader

  In Jamaica, way off the beaten path in the cool hills of Malvern, there is a fictional town called Mount Faith. It boasts one of the premier universities in the island. This series is based on the lives of the Bancroft family who all live, work, go to school, or have some contact with the Mount Faith environment. The series consists of eight books. Each book is listed in order below:

  The Mount Faith Series:

  Saving Face (Book 1)

  Tattered Tiara (Book 2)

  Private Dancer (Book 3)

  Goodbye Lonely (Book 4)

  Practice Run (Book 5)

  Sense of Rumor (Book 6)

  A Younger Man (Book 7)- Dec 2013

  Just to See Her (Book 8)- Jan 2014

  Thank you for reading.

  Yours Sincerely,

  Brenda Barrett

  Chapter One

  "What's up, Arnella? You good?" Cory waved to her from the other side of the pool where she was lounging, and winked.

  Arnella ignored him. He had been pestering her to date him since high school days. Now that he was attending Mount Faith and entering second year of the Medical Technology program, he thought that he was a good catch. He could be, she supposed. He was cute in a nerdy kind of way. If only he didn't try so hard to get her to like him—that was a big turn off for her.

  She adjusted her dark glasses and lay back in the floating donut. She was bored; it was the kind of boredom that was bone deep and fuelled from a lack of meaningful activity. Most of her friends, if she could call them that, had moved on from high school and were either in their second year of university or had found jobs which they constantly complained about.

  She was doing nothing. Even Tracy, her only true friend in the world, whose birthday party she was attending, seemed as if she was moving on without her. Tracy had different friends and was talking more maturely. She didn't find Arnella as entertaining anymore. In the past, she was the one that Tracy looked to for advice. Now, Tracy rarely asked her for anything or about anything. She was in her second year at university now, and Arnella had been relegated to just her wild high school pal who she hung out with to spite her conservative parents.

  She glanced around the poolside and could count, on one hand, the people here that were from Tracy's high school, there were Cory, David, and Jeff. They were the only three persons she knew from high school, and all three of them were now at Mount Faith. The other persons were Tracy's university friends.

  Tracy's spacious backyard was full with them—Mount Faith people. Some were in the pool, and one or two of them had initiated conversations with Arnella, but she was self-conscious about being among strangers.

  She glanced at her root beer bottle. She had lined them up at the poolside. She had had five beers, and now she was feeling tipsy. She thought Tracy had said that they were non-alcoholic. She didn't touch alcohol: not with her history.

  "Hey, Nella," Tracy gestured to her from poolside. "He's here," she whispered fiercely. "Alric is here! What should I do?"

  Arnella lazily lifted her glasses and stuck it in her hair, "Say hi, and stop acting like you like him."

  Tracy had a panicked look on her face, as if she were going to expire. "I don't know how to do that thing you do."

  "What thing?" Arnella squinted at her in the sunlight.

  "The bored thing, the nothing can touch me thing."

  Arnella laughed dryly, "My attitude comes from years of hard living and growing up with an alcoholic mother."

  Tracy stood up and looked at her petite friend. "I can't believe that I have a handicap because I'm from a regular, happy nuclear family."

  Arnella nodded, "It is a handicap. Regular families are so yesterday."

  She laughed as Tracy shook her head in exasperation, then twisted around in her tube and spotted Tracy's crush.

  He was standing near the makeshift bar with his hands covering his ears from the extremely loud party music. Arnella had warned Tracy that he was too straitlaced and stuck up for this crowd, but Tracy asked him to attend anyway: Alric Peterson, son of Pastor Peterson, the university’s church pastor.

  Tracy had dragged her to the university church one night to check him out, even though she had told her that she already knew Alric. He was the goofy kid who lived in the big house on her street in Fair Ridges, a suburban community on the outskirts of Santa Cruz.

  According to Tracy, he had grown into his looks. She was right. Arnella could not reconcile his grown-up look with the image in her head of an awkward big-eared kid from her childhood days who used to ride past her house slowly and watch her with a smirk on his face.

  She had lived at the top of the street in an old turn of the period house with an unkempt yard. It was the sore thumb on the block. Arnella could still remember the first time Alric said hi to her. She had just arrived in Jamaica and his parents had welcomed her mother to the neighborhood. His mother had baked a cake and handed them a tract to attend some crusade or the other.

  Her mother hadn't been interested and the Peterson's didn't reach out to them anymore. Alric and Arnella were like night and day in every way, including their social standing, so they had not managed to rub shoulders, even as children.

  She looked him over, standing there now: tall, lean, and handsome. Somebody must have told him that a completely baldhead, coupled with that goatee, gave him a certain look. He was killing it. No wonder Tracy was jittery over him: he was very handsome. He was so not her type though—he was attending a pool party in dress pants and long sleeved shirt, though the light green shirt flattered his smooth nutmeg color nicely.

  "Hey, Alric," Arnella shouted, wanting to see him squirm when he recognized who was calling to him. He looked around when he heard his name.

  Arnella waved to him, and his eyes widened when he saw her. At first, she wasn't sure why he looked so shell-shocked then she realized that he was probably shocked at her half-naked state.

  Her bikini was a caramel shade, just like her skin. The poor guy probably thought she was naked. She looked down at her chest and realized that her nipple ring was showing through her bikini top.

  She shrugged. If he has never seen a nipple ring before, too bad. She decided to shock him even more and stick out her tongue. She had gotten it pierced just last month. It no longer felt sore, but she was yearning to stop wearing it. Like all her piercings, she had been making a statement. Her body was hers to do with as she pleased, and to hell with anybody else. She was planning to get tattoos next but was too scared of anybody putting inferior artwork on her body, given the high cost of getting tattoos removed.

&nb
sp; Alric didn't move. Arnella Bancroft was calling to him in a friendly manner. He wasn't sure how to respond.

  He had spent most of his life thinking of Arnella as Satan incarnate. The entire Fair Ridges neighborhood, where they lived, thought so too. Her mother had had a hard time reigning her in from she was little, and there were rumors and counter-rumors about Arnella that could fill a tome of books; most of those rumors were bad and portrayed her has being indecent. For instance, there was one rumor that she ran away, at age fourteen, and lived with a priest as his concubine, and another rumor that she had chain-smoked marijuana since she was eight. He wondered how she could still be alive.

  Arnella got out of the pool and stretched, arching her back and showing off her belly ring with a skull on it. Her g-string bikini left little to the imagination. She was perfectly shaped, like a centerfold in one of those men's magazines, and was casual about her state of undress.

  Her hair was loosely pinned up on top of her head; wet tendrils snaked down her back and clung to her skin like a kiss. From where he stood, he could see a birthmark on her shoulder.

  Alric's eyes swiveled to Tracy, who was dressed in a more modest one-piece bathing suit. She was a more wholesome picture to look at in her full black ensemble. She didn't inspire thoughts of impurity in a man.

  He had no idea why he had agreed to stop by Tracy's birthday party. His only excuse was that her house was on the way to Mount Faith and that he had work today. He knew Tracy liked him, but she had Arnella Bancroft as a friend; and that was a big turn off. It was Tracy's big fault, but his brain reminded him that Arnella was also Tracy's draw. He had always been interested in Arnella. She was like a fascinating train wreck. He wondered how Tracy tolerated her as a friend. How could anyone tolerate such a stubborn headstrong girl for long without being burned in the heat of her rebellion?

  He almost resented the fact that her hard living was not showing on her face or her body. He glanced at her again. She had been a pretty little girl with a propensity to cuss like a fisherman, but now she was a beautiful woman with a killer body, who obviously was not afraid to show it off. Several persons, including women, had stopped to watch as she stretched. Some stares were filled with jealousy, others with pure lust.

  He felt like grabbing a towel from somewhere to cover her up. She would have laughed at that. He remembered that she had an evil sounding cackle that irked him. Sometimes, when he was walking home from school, he would hear her laughing in her yard. It wasn't a laugh that indicated that she found something funny; it was just one of those evil sounds.

  Though Tracy walked over to him and pulled him into a quiet area in a gazebo where the music wasn't pulsating in his chest, he found himself looking around for Arnella. Where did she go?

  Then he spotted her with three men. She was talking to them and laughing at something one of them said. One with a buzz cut handed her a drink, and the next thing he knew, she was leaning into him and rubbing on him like a cat.

  He felt unaccountably angry. "Why are you friends with Arnella?" he asked Tracy a bit too harshly when he saw what was taking place right there in Tracy's backyard.

  She looked at him; her mouth opened slightly, a bit taken aback by his harsh demand. "I don't know; she is a nice person when you get to know her."

  He watched as Arnella was hugged tightly by one of the other guys. The thin one with the buzz cut had let her go but was openly cupping one of Arnella's butt cheeks with one of his hands, caressing it and laughing at something that one of the other guys said.

  "Can't you see what she is doing, in broad daylight, at your party?" he asked Tracy with incredulity.

  Tracy frowned and took her time to look around. "What? I don't see her."

  "Because she has gone off with those men," Alric shook his head, "maybe to a private room. She has no boundaries and no sense of decency, that girl. It's your house Tracy; you can't encourage that kind of thing."

  Tracy was looking at him, a hint of displeasure crossing her features. "Those are our friends from high school. Arnella is not interested in young guys, and she is an adult. She can go wherever she wants to go and do whomever she wants to do."

  "That may be true," Alric growled, "but I am a Christian. I don't just go to church. This type of lifestyle is not for me: free sex, booze, and do what you want because you can. Sorry!" He spun around, "I have to go. I'll see you around school next semester, okay."

  "But, Alric," Tracy spread her arms, beseeching him to stay, "Arnella is not around anymore. See: she is not by the poolside. Why are you so upset?"

  "Find out what she is doing in your house and stop it," Alric said, seething. Images of Arnella at this moment, having indiscriminate sex were enough to raise his blood pressure to heights he feared was not at all healthy.

  He felt an irrational anger when Tracy shook her head.

  "Seriously, Alric! She is an adult! I can't go around searching for her like I am some sort of mother hen."

  "It's your house," Alric said. "Where are your parents?"

  "Work," Tracy frowned. "Alric, please stay. The music is not that bad. I can't play Rock of Ages or Amazing Grace at my party, and it's not real alcohol. It's fake champagne and root beer."

  Alric shook his head, "I have to go to work. See you around."

  He cast his eye across the back of the building. There was a sliding glass door, which was heavily tinted and probably led to a changing room. That was probably where Arnella went with those guys. He was itching to go in there, and he almost did, but he thought about how ridiculous he would look; instead, he stormed off from the pool area and walked around to the side of the house, angrily brushing aside the overhanging hibiscus as he made his way to his car.

  He still felt angry toward Arnella even when he was driving along the avenue and into the town of Santa Cruz.

  It wasn't until he was making his way up to Mount Faith to his summer job as a lab instructor that he recognized that what he was feeling was jealousy. When he recognized it, he had to stop at the side of the road, gasping from the intensity of it. He had to squash this feeling. There was no way that he was jealous about Arnella, no way.

  Chapter Two

  Arnella woke up with a bitter taste in her mouth. She looked around the guest room where she had been sleeping and grimaced. She couldn't remember how she had gotten there. Was the party even over?

  She looked down on herself. She was wearing one of Tracy's nightgowns, a pink fluffy thing that was so Tracy-ish. Pink and girly was Tracy's middle name. She would have preferred to sleep in one of Vanley's old boxers and a ratty t-shirt.

  So, what was going on? The last thing she remembered was drinking a drink that David gave her and then feeling dizzy. Cory and Jeff had been around too and they had led her to the poolside changing room.

  She raised her head from the pillow when she heard Tracy's mother at the door. She knocked briefly and then stuck her head around it. Her perfectly coifed hair was neat as usual.

  "Ah, Arnella," Audrey Carr whispered. "Do you want to join us for breakfast?"

  Mrs. Carr had a soft motherly voice, the type she wished her own mother had. She had always envied Tracy for her mother.

  "Breakfast?" she opened her eyes again and looked in Mrs. Carr direction. She was still standing at the door, obviously dressed for work.

  "But what about the party? Is it over?"

  Mrs. Carr looked as if she nodded. Arnella couldn't be sure because her vision was blurry.

  "Tracy said you have been asleep since yesterday afternoon. I was all for calling the doctor when we came in last night and saw that you were still out; I thought it unnatural but Tracy said you were just tired."

  Tired? She was not that tired. For the past few days, she had done nothing much except twiddle her thumbs, debating with herself, whether she should call her uncle and throw herself at his mercy. Where did Tracy get her 'tired' story?

  "Where's Tracy?" Arnella asked uncomfortably. What the hell happened to me? Tracy was the
only one who would know, she thought.

  "Downstairs," Mrs. Carr said softly. "Your clothes are at the foot of the bed. Please join us; we haven't seen you in quite a while."

  Arnella glanced down to the foot of the bed. Her tie and dye, backless, summer dress was there all right. She got up gingerly and wondered why she felt sore all over, even her knees and especially her throat and vagina.

  Oh no! I wasn't raped, was I? The thought filled her with dread. At first, her mind wouldn't cooperate with trying to remember, but when she hobbled to the en suite bathroom and stepped under the hot shower, snippets of the previous afternoon came back to her. She remembered Cory behind a video camera, grinning. He was naked.

  God, no! please no! Not that nerdy, imbecile who she had rejected time and time again from high school days! But there he was in her mind's eye, naked and grinning. She pushed her mind to remember more but that was all that she saw.

  She stepped into the shower and soaped up thoroughly. Out of nowhere came the memory of David, his buzz cut hair in her line of vision as he whispered, "You'll like this, Arnella. All my girlfriends say I am good." Then she remembered him, his face sweaty above her panting, "You are tight, like a virgin," and then she heard chuckles in the background.

  Arnella leaned her face down on the tile in the shower cubicle. Was that her giggle she heard in her ears? Was she the one sinuously stretching in front of the camera? Camera! Had they videotaped her in the poolroom? She couldn't be sure if it was a video camera or one that took still images. She wasn't even sure that there had been a camera. Maybe it was the sun coming through the window.

  They must have drugged her. The thought gave her goose bumps under the heat of the water. Why would Cory and David do that to her? And Jeff! She remembered his leering face as he rammed his penis down her throat.

  A sob threatened to tear from the bowels of her belly, but she managed to swallow it back. She closed her eyes and willed herself to remember the details of what else happened to her, but she couldn't. Her brain felt foggy, and she felt really hung-over, like she had consumed several tons of alcohol, though she could not remember having a drop of alcohol at the party. What could wipe out her memory like this? What had those cretins put in her drink? She had found it strange that all three of them had come to her acting extremely friendly. David had handed her that cup with root beer and had made a quip about success and long life.

 

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