A/N: Hey guys! It's me again.
It's a week into summer and I've been getting new ideas for Teen Wolf fics because it's coming back this month :-)
yess i'm so pumped! But anyways, I had this AMAZING idea that came to me tonight, and I just had to get it started. I know that I had another piece "a part of our pack now" that I started awhile back before my unannounced hiatus, but I think I'm going to put that on hold for now. Sorry for anyone who was following it (I don't think many were...) but I'll come back to it, I promise.
I also have another story I've had in the works for awhile now, but I haven't started it.
I'll be trying my best to update every week this summer, because I am a busy girl.
Man. You have no idea.
Anyways, I really hope you like this story! The first four chapters will be small introductions about the four core main characters, but you'll see a little bit of minor ones. You'll know what I'm talking about. Okayyy just read now! haha
PLS REVIEW. 3333
Scott McCall was your normal, above average teenage boy. He had a girlfriend. He played a sport, lacrosse, and was more than good at it. He was friends with everyone. Not to mention his smile.
Scott was rather popular. He was captain of the lacrosse team, and everyone adored him because of it. There was not one person in the school who didn't want to please him. And even if they said they didn't care about what Scott McCall thought of them, they were lying.
His girlfriend, Kira Yukimura, controlled the world that was Beacon Hills High School, and everyone knew it. She made it clear with her arrogant and bitchy attitude that made people wonder why Scott was dating someone as terrible as her. But Scott knew that there was so much more to her that others couldn't possibly see.
You see, everyone at Beacon Hills is artificially plastic. They don't care who you actually are, they only listen to what they hear from what others are saying about you. Scott learned that in the two years that he had gone to Beacon Hills. Kira had an interesting story and past that ultimately made Scott fall for her, but he knew that the others he went to school with wouldn't be able to comprehend something as deep.
Scott often wondered the stories that the students around him had. In a sea of more than one thousand fish, there was bound to be one in Beacon Hills High School that had a story that was worth writing about.
Writing was another thing that made Scott so perfect. His writing expressed who he was, but didn't reveal too much of his flaws that would tear down his "perfect" image. He wrote love poems for Kira that made other girls jealous. He was the editor-in-chief of the school newspaper, not only because he had a gift for writing but because he made the paper popular, and made people want to read it.
Scott loved to write. He had turned to writing when his parents started fighting.
He knew that no love was perfect, but Mr. and Mrs. McCall's love was more than unperfect. It was stressful, gut-wrenching, and painful to watch. They fought all the time, many times in front of Scott. They had started when Scott had just got out of the seventh grade. He didn't know how to deal with it at the time, so he turned to his friends. Kira and his best friend since diapers, Isaac Lahey.
Isaac Lahey was Scott's rock. He was the one person who had always been there for him when he needed someone to talk to about his parents or when he was having troubles with Kira. Isaac was the man to talk to. Isaac had stuck with Scott ever since they had first met, which was when they were two. They were inseparable; from potty training together and learning the basics of lacrosse, Isaac was with Scott the entire way to high school.
Isaac was the sweet boy that every girl wanted. His eyes made girls (and boys) swoon and his smile created butterflies in people's stomachs. He was just as popular as Scott was. He was Scott's right hand man on the field. He sat with Scott and the other popular kids at lunch. He proofread Scott's articles and essays when he wrote them. Isaac Lahey didn't just watch his best friend get the perfect life in high school. Somehow, he became a part of it. And he was okay with it.
Scott McCall did get the perfect life. But that life wasn't going to stay perfect for long.
