Okay, so 'Beautiful Disaster', sadly, is coming to an end. I know, I know, it's sad but, hey, think of the Brightside: I'm gonna be writing a new story soon! I want to give a HUUUUUUGGGGGGGGGGGGGEEEEEEEEEEEEEE thanks to HSMandChelseaFCfan who helped me along the way. A fabulous writer and a great friend who somehow coped with my moaning and impatience. I have a few, well, a lot of story ideas but I don't know which one to do. You know me by now, I'll probably start one and then give up on it and turn to another. If you've liked me co-writing with HSMandChelseaFCfan, maybe you could help me convince her to co-write another story? I'll do one by myself and one (if she's willing) with her, okay? Here are my ideas (bear in mind I suck at summaries):
My Miracle: When single father, Troy Bolton, becomes increasingly worried by his son and daughter's lack of speech, he takes them to visit the hospital to see if they can find anything wrong. The doctor, Gabriella Montez, breaks some heart breaking news, causing him to have to visit her at least once a month with his son and daughter. She volunteers to help him teach them how to talk but finds he finds more than just help with his children. But, something he thought he'd never find again.
My saviour: Gabriella Montez is the new girl at East High, happy with just getting on with her studies. Troy Bolton is autistic an only has Taylor McKessie as a friend. When he and Gabriella meet, he finds it surprisingly easy to befriend her. But, her mother wants her to concentrate on her studies and prevents her from seeing him. Not forgetting the school's reaction. Gabriella, Troy and Taylor must find a way to prove that Troy isn't that weird.
Troy and Gabriella: West High and East High. Two rival schools with students who never interact with students from the other school. When Gabriella, a beautiful and intelligent West High knight, nearly drowns in the local lake, she is rescued by Troy Bolton, the East High Wildcats' basketball captain. They soon find it impossible to stay away from each other but know that their fathers – both of whom coach one of the basketball teams – would forbid them from doing so. With the people around them not allowing their possible relationship and college approaching soon, they must stand up and face the music, hoping that their bond would be strong enough to withhold anything. (A/N: If you were wondering, the title is kind of like how 'Romeo and Juliet' used the characters' names. Get it?)
Promises you weren't around to keep: Gabriella Montez and Troy Bolton were inseparable. Where one was, the other was just a few feet away. It had been that way since they were paired together for a drama assignment in the sixth grade – just after Gabriella had moved to Albuquerque. She was quiet, shy and kept herself to herself…unless she was with Troy. She was happy in a simple pair of jeans and tee and her glasses and braces never bothered her once. But, at the end of their freshman year in high school, Gabriella accepts the opportunity to take a two year pre-college course at Cambridge in England. She promises Troy that nothing will change and he says the same in return. He misses her departure. She returns transformed on the outside – but is clearly the same Gabriella. Her heartbreaks at the clear broken promise of her best friend. With one year until she returns to Cambridge to train as a doctor, can Troy win her back?
Raise your voice: Gabriella Montez has been a mute since she was born, living through various medical tests but all of them came out with the same result: she should be able to talk. She finds it hard to escape the constant comments and pointing from the people she shares her small village with. She has grown up with two best friends: her sister, Kelsi, and her sister's fiancée, Jason. Whilst taking a break from cooking in her family's café she meets Troy Bolton, the new gym, music and English teacher at her old high school. She soon finds him as a regular customer and begins to realise that he never comments on her lack of vocals. The more she listens to what he has to say, the more she learns that the inability to speak really isn't that bad compared with other people's lives.
I'll teach you what you need: Gabriella Montez, an aspiring writer, adopted her six year old brother, Eddie, after their mother after became too engrossed in her work. She never regretted her decision she made when she was eighteen but sometimes wishes she could've been able to travel Europe like her sister and brother-in-law. When she is called into Eddie's school about his decreasing writing ability, she meets his teacher, Troy Bolton. When he offers to help Eddie outside of school and show her ways to help him herself, she finds herself spiralling deeper and deeper into something she never thought she'd find.
I will try, I promise I will, to write more for 'stand by me' but 'love takes hard work' is just going nowhere. I'm sorry
Please tell me which one sounds the best and which one I should (if she'll let me) co-write with HSMandChelseaFCfan
