Prologue
Sen
June 2017
This time, it was going to stick. That’s what my dad told me when he dropped me off yesterday. Even though I wasn’t so sure about it, I wanted to make him proud. Wasn’t that what every thirteen-year-old boy wanted? How I felt about it didn’t really matter.
It didn’t matter that I was scared out of my mind when he told me where I was going or when we pulled up to this place. It didn’t matter that the woman who checked me in looked at me like I was fresh meat for the cauldron of camp chili. More than anything, it didn’t matter that I wanted nothing to do with this place. It was for him and for my mom. I could do this for them because they thought it would help. Apparently, that was what I needed.
When they told me about this place, I thought it was a joke. Who knew something like this still existed? It probably shouldn’t and in some states, I was pretty sure it wasn’t even allowed. This was Texas, though. They’d driven me from our home in Colorado because, “This place has the best conversion rates in the country.”
Super.
“Hey, man.”
Ripped out of my thoughts, I turned to find a guy standing on the dock beside me. I couldn’t help but look him up and down quickly, even though I was sure it could get me in trouble. He was probably a couple of years older than me, with more defined arm muscles and a broader chest. Maybe he was a jock. That was a manly thing, which was why Dad already had me lined up to start football during freshman year. It was only a couple of months away.
“Hey,” I replied before clearing my throat.
“I’m Travis. What’s your name?” He took a seat beside me and I watched his feet sink into the water.
“Sen,” I said. “Yeah, it’s short for something, but we should probably save that for our third conversation so that you can decide if you like me first.”
His laugh was musical. It made my stomach constrict and I worried I might actually throw up in the lake. That couldn’t be good for the fish.
Manly or not, sports didn’t seem to have kept this guy out of here. Maybe he was a plant put here to test us. What were the consequences of screwing up? It couldn’t be that bad. This was 2017, after all. Backwards ass Texas or not, they couldn’t abuse you in these places.
Right?
Wrong.
I never should’ve talked to Travis. I really shouldn’t have drawn attention to myself at all. Camp Dumont was a nightmare, but it did its job. So, I guess they were right. It was the best in the country.
Now, I could be normal. I could make my dad proud. I’d go into my freshman year just like every other guy. Proud. Confident. A girl on my arm at every dance and a smile on my face.
Straight.
Chapter 1
Sen
September 2024
Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.
None of these were right. I knew I should have picked my outfit last night, but my dumbass had gone out with friends. It wasn’t every day someone graduated from community college, after all. It warranted some drinks and, to put it delicately, the female touch.
It wasn’t that great of an accomplishment, in and of itself. It was a stepping stone and saved me money. My parents weren’t loaded, but they did have money put away for my future, so they made me a deal that if I finished my two-year degree at the local college, they’d set me up at a university and I’d only have to work a part-time job. It sounded great to me.
The problem now was that I didn’t have anything impressive to wear. Who did I have to impress, you may ask? I didn’t know. That was what made me nervous about the whole thing. I had a two-hour plane ride to get to Seattle, then I would Uber to the university. Once I was there, it was all about first impressions.
Dad always said that a visual brings a first impression. Good ones weren’t made by looking like an idiot. I needed to be professional but laid back. I didn’t want to look like a twenty-year-old with a stick up his ass and millions in the bank. Being authentic felt like the right move, whatever that meant.
“What’s taking so long?” Dad called from downstairs.
I groaned. “Just give me a minute.”
“Leaving in five, with or without you.”