Rogue (Prep #2) Read Online Elle Kennedy

Categories Genre: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance, Young Adult Tags Authors: Series: Prep Series by Elle Kennedy
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Total pages in book: 126
Estimated words: 122030 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 610(@200wpm)___ 488(@250wpm)___ 407(@300wpm)
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After an initial warm-up, Coach Gibson blows his whistle and has us line up behind the starting platforms.

“Mason, Clark, RJ, Silas. On the blocks.”

RJ intentionally puts himself in the lane next to mine. He proceeds to do that annoying compulsive habit where he slaps his thighs like he thinks he’s Michael Fucking Phelps.

“Hey, remind me,” he says over his shoulder, getting into a starting position. “What’s Silas’s record in the 400 free?”

“Uh…” Lawson eyes me cautiously. “Like a minute thirty-three?”

“Hey, Coach,” RJ calls. He slides his goggles down over his eyes. “Get out your stopwatch.”

“This isn’t a race, Shaw,” Coach barks back. “I want to see form. I want to see follow-through. Clean lines, smart breathing.”

“You’re dreaming,” I tell RJ, staring straight ahead at the flat water and seeing only the lane ahead of me. “That record’s getting me into Stanford.”

“Then you better hope they’re desperate for alternates.”

When Coach’s whistle blows, we’re both off the blocks like our feet are on fire. I hit the water in a straight line. Every muscle is pulled into focus on a clean entrance and getting as much distance as possible powering through my dolphin kicks.

RJ is right beside me. Almost stroke for stroke when we breach the surface. We hit the wall for the first turn dead even and well ahead of the outside lanes.

The problem, though, with swimming a dead heat with the lane beside you is all the chop they churn up. White water is the enemy of speed. Ideally, you want to be the lone leader with nothing but clean water ahead of you. RJ apparently doesn’t know this and thinks he can draft an advantage by hugging our lane line. I try squeezing every ounce of speed I can out of my kicks, grabbing the water with both hands and propelling my body as far as I can. Still, I can’t seem to find an inch of distance between us.

After the second turn, I come up to a face full of water. I know he’s intentionally splashing into my lane. Timing my breaths. Dirty fuck. But if he wants to cheat, he’ll have to try a hell of a lot harder than that.

Turnabout is fair play, so I start hugging the lane line as well. I make a point of smacking it with my hand or kicking it with a foot to force a wobble that veers into his lane and obstructs his strokes. In a competition, this would obviously be illegal. Here, all’s fair in love and war, right?

But I must get under his skin, because on the third turn he takes an extra dolphin kick past the resurface marker. A blatantly desperate move that proves he can’t beat me in a fair fight. So I show him there’s no honor among thieves. When I see him approaching the surface, I throw a leg out that connects square against his jaw. The result gives me almost a full hand of distance advantage. Then it’s a dead sprint to the finish.

I can already feel the wall against my fingertips as I push with everything I have left. I don’t even take breaths. I just keep my face in the water and kick as hard as I can.

Until I feel a sudden shove against my shoulder.

It’s enough to throw me off my stroke, and I watch RJ’s hands slam into the wall before mine.

“That was bullshit.” Ripping my goggles and cap off, I jump over the lane line.

He gets right in my face, cheeks flushed and eyes blazing. “Don’t start shit you can’t finish.”

Coach’s whistle screams through the building. “Everyone out of the water. Now!”

We all haul ourselves out and stand behind the blocks. I notice Lawson watching me with a frown and resist the urge to give him the finger. Since when does Lawson disapprove of shit like this? He lives and breathes chaos.

“You two,” Coach booms, pointing at RJ and me. “Push-ups. Go.”

“Are you serious?” I charge over to Coach, incredulous. How is it not obvious RJ is the problem? “He was messing with me the whole time. I was defending myself.”

“Yeah, I suppose I managed to kick myself in the face, right?” RJ throws himself in front of me like he’s ready for another round.

“Learn to stay in your own lane.”

Coach’s whistle again screeches us to silence.

“Both of you shut the hell up,” he barks. “I’m sick of your bickering.”

“Coach, come on.” I can’t believe he’s letting RJ off the hook on this.

“I don’t know what’s gotten into you two lately but keep it out of my pool.” Then he shakes his head at me. “I expected better from you, Silas. Push-ups. Get on it.”

“This is bullshit,” I snap.

Fuck push-ups, and fuck RJ. I’m not taking the heat for a fight he started.

Coach shouts after me, but I ignore him as I head into the locker room.


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