(Usual Disclaimer Time: Even though this story almost entirely takes place in a high school setting, all the characters in this story are 18 years old or older, and since we're living in the wide wonderful world of porno-land here, where clichΓ©s roam free and things might get a little unrealistic from time to time, please remember it's all in good fun. This story is highly serialized, and though it's not 100% necessary to have read the whole story up until this point to enjoy the content of the chapter, it's definitely advisable to understand the many ongoing plots.)
Author's Note: First off, as ever, I want to thank you all for the kind words and support! This chapter took a little longer than I expected it to as I wanted to get the character beats right, but I think the ultimate result is fun, and I hope you enjoy it as well! And, of course, I want to give special thanks to all of those who took the time to vote on who'd win the role of Audrey in the spring musical!
Previously, on Senior Year Memories:
With the bullying and threats of drama club asshole, Micah Burke, eating away at 18-year-old Ryan Collins' senior year, he took up a mysterious offer of help in dealing with him. Meeting at a local boxing gym with beautiful, black drama club girl, 18-year-old Cecilia Dunwich, Ryan considered her offer and advice, while unable to stop admiring her easy confidence and amazing good looks. Though figuring that boxing was not his best approach to the Micah threat, he did enjoy Cecilia's company, and was certainly enticed by an offer to leave the gym with Cecilia and her two best friends, 18-year-old Scarlett Bishop and 18-year-old Lexa Reynard. Surrounded by three beautiful black girls and a whole lot of sexual tension, Ryan enjoyed some hot tub truth or dare, and a whole lot of sex with the trio of girls before deciding that he needed to find a way of dealing with Micah once and for all...
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I stood on the silent, dark stage of our school's main auditorium, feeling completely and utterly alone in the blackness. If my feet weren't anchored to the ground, I could have been floating in space for how isolated I felt... but I was here in Regan Hills High School, and I wouldn't be alone here much longer.
Nervous as I was, I knew I had no one to blame but myself for my being here. This was my idea, I had set the terms and the location and even goaded him into coming, but perhaps I should have also been a little more dramatic and set some of the lights as well. Standing here like I was, I couldn't help but feel like the world was pulling away from me by inches with every passing moment... but balling my fists, I forced myself to have patience and let this scene play out.
As with everything else that had happened this year, nothing was quite so simple as my primal fears might have wanted to believe, but the fact that I had always done as much as possible to avoid confrontation and was now actively courting it wasn't lost on me. Even as I was prepared for whatever fight must come next, I stood there on the stage with my hands shaking, every so often checking my phone to make sure my messages to my tormentor had gone through.
As was always the case when I questioned my sanity over whether I'd sent a text, I had, and he had certainly seen them, but with no response from him I was left here on my own to play the waiting game while he... well, I was sure he was enjoying being fashionably late and keeping me twisting in the wind.
After all, he was an actor, and he certainly had a flair for the dramatic.
Stage lights snapped on above me, bright and overpowering and bringing the entire empty stage to life. It didn't seem so big and empty now that I could see all of it, but that didn't stop me from feeling vulnerable and alone.
But I wasn't alone... not here, not on this stage. I looked around, still blinking and squinting as my eyes got used to the light, holding a hand to shade my eyes so I could better see what was going on and see what direction the attack might come from.
Unsurprisingly, he walked out of the darkness with a slow clap, smiling that stupid, superior smirk of his that I so desperately wanted to smack off his face as he appeared before me.
"I got your messages... and I'm glad you finally decided to man up and face me directly," he said, still slow-clapping. "Of course, if it were up to me, given this venue for battle, I'd have dropped a chandelier on your head and been done with it... but alas, there are no chandeliers to be found, and even if there were, my hands are meant for much better things than untying knots. Lucky for you."
As my eyes finally adjusted, Micah Burke came into proper focus before me. As ever, the handsome, blonde 18-year-old kept this meticulous look about him, one that was meant to look effortlessly casual and somehow managed to look perfectly calculated. His shoulder-length, wavy blonde hair was swept behind his ears and shimmering with a number of products, and as ever his clothes were slightly too high-end, but never *too* too high-end, for our school, giving him that look of an amicable beach bum who might have been preppy once upon a time, at least until you got a good look at his face. While he had the kind of face you could have easily seen belonging to a leading man on a movie poster, there was an undeniable emptiness to his eyes and that smile he always kept plastered to his face that kept him from looking as charming as he thought he was.
He wasn't smiling today, though, looking unusually focused as he approached me. Considering everything that had happened between us since I was assigned to write an article on the upcoming spring musical, that made sense, as we had built up a decent animosity over the past month between us. As was often the case this year, I'd spent my time within the drama club getting into any number of naughty misadventures with the beautiful girls I'd met within. Micah, possessive of these drama club girls as if they were his property, had made it clear that he didn't appreciate the time I'd spent with them, first threatening me and then ultimately trying to get me in trouble with Principal Carpenter.
There had been some close calls, but I'd always had friends and allies help me out of those problems. Knowing this confrontation to be inevitable, I'd set this meeting up between us, and now stood alone on the stage, watching Micah cautiously as he approached.
"Lucky me," I replied, pushing my glasses up my nose as I took in a breath. "I wanted to sort this out before it got out of hand."
"It's already out of hand..." he said threateningly. "It got out of hand the moment you didn't give me what I wanted and tried to take what was mine."
Careful to keep my eyes on him, I backed away and remembered my lines. "I don't want to fight you... I just want to end this. We don't have to resort to violence."
Grinning, Micah methodically unbuttoned, then rolled up each of his sleeves to the elbow to expose his lean, well-muscled arms. "This will end soon, once and for all, but if you thought you were going to get out of this without violence, well... then you're an even bigger fool than you look."
Quickly, he flexed each of his arms, punching out to each side like he was reloading his fists, before holding them up in a mock boxing position. Whatever false bravado came with the gesture, I could tell by the way that he carried himself that he *did* know at least a little of what he was doing here, which, whether I liked it or not, made him dangerous.
"Alright, let's do this," he said, trying on his best intimidating voice.
To be fair to him, it was decently intimidating... but I'd been intimidated by scarier bullies than Micah in the past. If I didn't lose my head here, I could easily come out on top of this situation.