Cherreads

Between Chains and Wings

Esther_Kitcher
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
221
Views
Synopsis
Can love truly bridge the gap between faith and rebellion? Amelia Reynolds is a sensitive, earnest teen from a strict Christian family, sent to Triple H College after rejection from her dream school. Far from home, she faces new academic pressures, unfamiliar social circles, and the temptations of independence. Her greatest worry: disappointing her parents. Then there’s Kamen, her aloof new classmate—mysterious, guarded, and untouched by the typical high school excitement. As their slow-burn connection grows amidst peer pressure and family expectations, Amelia and Kamen must each decide if they have the courage to be truly seen.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - The Rejection

Amelia's POV

The letter sat on my desk like a quiet verdict.

One thin sheet of paper, twelve words that tore through months of hope.

We regret to inform you…

That was how my dream ended—not with a cry, but with silence.

I lay on my bed, the ceiling a blank witness to my failure. The words blurred as tears pressed behind my eyes. I reached for my Bible, tracing verses with trembling fingers, whispering prayers for courage I wasn't sure I possessed.

At fifteen, I thought faith would make disappointment easier. It didn't. The rejection stung sharper because I'd believed so deeply.

My parents had always said, "God's plans are perfect." I wanted to believe that, but right then, it just felt like a lesson I hadn't agreed to learn.

Dad's voice echoed from earlier that day—calm, firm, immovable.

"We do what's right, and what we can afford."

That was his answer when I begged to try again, to apply elsewhere. His tone wasn't harsh, but final—like a door closing gently, yet completely.

Now, the reality settled in: Triple H College would be my next chapter. A big, mixed school. Not my dream, but what we could manage. My cousin and a few friends from junior high would be there, which offered a sliver of comfort. Still, I couldn't shake the thought that I'd somehow failed both God and my family.

Outside, rain whispered against the window, soft but relentless. I watched droplets race down the glass, wondering if life—or I—would ever make sense again.

Tomorrow, I'd start packing. A new school, a new state, a new chance. But lying there in the dim glow of my bedside lamp, it didn't feel like a beginning.

It felt like a punishment dressed as purpose.