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Diary of a Teenage Alpha

Big-hearted and witty, Samantha Kingsley is the Alpha's daughter who grew up learning to meet everyone's expectations. But Samantha isn't a pup anymore, she's in high school now, and is just about to discover that her life is written by her choices. Not by dreams, or prophecies, or even the moon goddess. This girl is going to protect the happiness of her pack and everyone she loves. Read her diary here. Updated every night. Mon-Sat Volume Synopsis VOL 1 It's the first week of school. Despite my failed attempt to make a friend, I somehow ended up surrounded by a handful of wolf classmates, got accepted by the human "cool" girls, and became a vampire's guard dog? VOL 2 I think I'm just starting to get the hang of school. From navigating school halls, new friends, vampires, and school clubs... Back home it should have been the usual drill, but things started shifting. And I urm...might have been messing around where I shouldn't. VOL 3 I had to miss a couple of school days this week due to my ah, long term bout of "anemia". It's been pretty intense at home. My alpha position was challenged, rogues burnt down our home, I rescued my first fight dog, discovered the Lorent's secret oracle, almost rescued my mate...and accidentally stumbled into my Alpha Dad's secret. VOL 4 My worlds collide as some members from my pack come to my school to sell concert tickets. And when Grandpa Alpha shocked us all by dying, my dad's family comes together to pay their last respects at the Night Forest Pack. VOL 5 It's February and the Vampire Queen is celebrating her birthday. Would Rebel's plan to escape work out? Meanwhile, I'm stuck in school dealing with high school drama, an evolving wolf, and a new human sister. In the Red Packlands, war nearly breaks out. (This might have been a very little bit my fault.) VOL 6 It's the week of Valentine's Day, but I've got a highschool play, Lorent drama, Vampire slaying training, and an underground army to deal with first. And then warlock weather threw an extended snowstorm at us. The whole of Green Packlands goes into lockdown - but what about Valentine's Day? VOL 7 Exams are a week away, and it feels like my time at Winderhill is really coming to a close. I'm trying to be a good student, but there are paparazzi camped outside my school, I ran with rogues (I'm shocked too), Maria just had to enter her dark cycle in school...My life is too exciting to study for exams. VOL 8 It's exam week, but I've got far greater problems brewing at home. The prophecies are merging. River's stone had unlocked warlock trouble, the rogue king has moved in, and then there's Uncle Louis' economical problems... one at a time. Just let me survive Code Black and figure out what's going on at Heller's first, and I'm sure everything else will work out somehow. VOL 9 Its the last week of school and the exams are over. Its like for better or worse, all the big bad things are over now. At home, My pack works to clean up the aftermath of the rogue war, the warlock's defeat, and Jude's betrayal. In school, everyone treats me more or less the same... like a freak. Meanwhile, our school play is in dire straights, and as the Last Hurrah's debut draws near, I get ready to say good bye to Winderhill for good. VOL 10 We follow Dad to the past to stop the traitor (AKA Jude), from ever stepping into our Packlands. It would've been a good plan too - if it didn't change EVERYTHING. Now, I can't help but feel my life is ruined. Nobody understands me. Is it selfish of me to wish none of this ever happened? Why does my world have to be so magical?

katisnow · Fantasie
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1207 Chs

BY DEFINITION OF BEAUTY

If you heard Mrs Martinez at Home Ec, you'd think she was teaching an entire class of beautiful women.

It's not that we were Miss Universe material, it's just that Mac and Cheese was a deceptively easy looking dish.

I mean Mac and Cheese was just Mac stirred into melted cheese right?

Yes...and no. Let's just say the theory was much simpler than the reality.

Mrs Martinez told us to follow her detailed instructions to the letter.

First we had to fill the pot two-thirds with water, add a tablespoon on salt, and then put it on the stove.

I couldn't get the stove to light. The safety catch kept switching it off.

"Oh goodness, Samantha! Don't break my stove!" Mrs Martinez "Aren't girls supposed to be gentle?"

I nearly karate-kicked the damn thing, but I didn't because I was gentle.

"You need to press it down longer." Zara told me, "Here, let me do it."

It lit at Zara's first try.

I took a deep breath, it's okay. Chill. It's just a stupid stove.

"And your hair..." Mrs Martinez tutted, "It's just a fire hazzard in the kitchen!"

I had already worn it in a braid or it would have been flaring everywhere.

"I better not see any blue hair in the food." Mrs Martinez said, "That would be just disgusting."

Like as opposed to seeing any other coloured hair in the food?

Usually, I'd expect this type of behaviour from certain highschool girls (let's not name names), but from the highschool teacher? I supressed the sigh that nearly escaped and adverted my gaze.

Luckily someone screamed "Hot!" at the steam and spilled the uncooked Mac across her entire work area. This required Mrs Martinez full attention. I mean, the girls weren't going to berate themselves, you know.

Zara and I were left in peace to grate the cheese while waiting for the water to boil. Mostly I grated cheese. We had three chunks in different sizes, and only one grater.

"Be careful not to scrape your fingers." Zara warned.

But this part was fine. Contrary to popular belief, I had helped in the kitchen before. I could cut and dice and slice, and grate. I was a regular food processor.

Satisfied that I wasn't going to top up the ingredients with blood, Zara went to check on our water. She yelled and dropped the lid.

"It's hot!" She told me.

"Samantha!" Mrs Martinez's shrill voice called across the Home Ec room. My poor wolf ears.

And I'm sure I don't need to point out that the fallen pot lid was of no fault of my own.

But Zara might have been hurt, so I had no time to respond to the irate teacher. Instead I went to check on Zara. She was okay, just taken aback by the heat of the steam.

In the end we put the macaroni into the hot water with a long spatula, scoop by scoop.

"How long are you going to take just to put the Mac in?" Mrs Martinez complained during the lull of when everyone's Mac was in the pots and there was no more mishaps.

But you know what they say, there's always a calm before the storm.

A few minutes later, pots started to boil over. Mrs Martinez screeched at the first one, and then the second one. At one table, the girls refused to even go near the overboiling pot, they simply ran and hid at the other side of the counter.

"Turn off the heat!" Mrs Martinez would scream, "Remove the pot from the fire!"

This turned out to be game changing for me. I managed to take off our pot with a pair of oven gloves and put the whole pot into the sink. I helped save Krystal and Leia's pot too. The trick was the get it off the flame the moment the boiling water and Mac got rowdy in the pot.

It was hot, the steam, and you needed to be quick.

But I saw how at another workbench, one of the girls simply took off the lid and turned off the fire. That worked too, at a much calmer pace, I might add.

"I can tell that most of you had never cooked a meal in your life." Mrs Martinez declared.

Eventually, all the Mac was safely cooked and off the stove. Ours was really "al dente" in the sense that if we had taken it off any earlier, it would still be too hard in some places.

One of the pots, I think it was at Arlene's workbench had burned.

It stank.

Mrs Martinez made some of the girls open the windows.

Arlene and her partner had to reboil another batch of pasta. Mrs Martinez wasted no time in tormenting them with her constant supervision.

Mrs Martinez hated Arlene almost as much as she hated me. Poor us.

The cool air felt nice. I sighed a bit in relief. Then I looked back at my workbench. The cheese was grated. We needed to collect milk and butter from the fridge in front of the classroom and we could start on the cheese sauce.

I looked at Zara, and Zara looked at me, "You collect the milk and butter, I'll drain the pasta." I decided.

Zara nodded, "Yeah, or else Mrs Mar might pick on you again. Be careful it's hot though."

Poor Zara, she was worrying for me. I took extra care. I mean, it's just removing pasta from the pot, but I couldn't risk attracting more of Mrs Mar's unforgiving attention.

I used the same spatula and an oven glove. I know I looked ridiculous BUT I managed to remove the lid, and got most of the pasta into the colander scoop by scoop. Then I simply emptied the last of it in with the others. By then the pot was light, and cooled.

So I wasn't a Killion in the kitchen. But I was okay. I could boil water and make a sandwich. And now, I could boil a pot of pasta. LEVEL UP!

"Oh my goodness, Samantha! What in the world are you doing?" Mrs Martinez found her way back to me.

I put down the spatula and took off the oven glove, "I got all the pasta drained." I picked up the colander and showed her.

"Well, don't let it drip all over my floor!" Mrs Martinez said.

So I guess I did good.

Zara came back with a measuring cup of cold milk and a wad of butter, "I can't tell how much butter is 2 tablespoons."

I looked at the wad and then at the tablespoon she was holding. It looked roughly the right size. I nodded, "Looks right..."

So we tried it. First we (Zara) started the fire. Then we (me) put the pot back on and added the butter. A thin white film started coating our pot from the inside. It was only a little bit but didn't escape Mrs Martinez's hawk eyes, "SAMANTHA! You didn't wash the pot. The pasta water is going to burn on your pot. Go do it over with a clean pot!"

Okay. We took out a second pot. I turned the old pot over and the half melted wad of butter went plop into the new pot, splattering out a little, but we got most of it in. What next?

"Zara, we forgot to measure out the dry ingredients!" I realised when I checked the printout.

So we measured some flour and salt out, just in the nick of time. Carefully we stirred the ingredients in.

I've never cooked before, and Zara had only ever made instant foods, but I've done science experiments before, so I figured we just had to do it the same way.

I turned down the fire to the smallest setting (I was trying to imitate a Bunsen burner amount of flame), and added the right amount of each ingredient slowly, making sure it gets properly "dissolved" into the mixture.

Nevermind science experiment, it felt like I was making a witch's stew.

From the smell that our pot was making, we were doing good, which was a kind of magic all on its own. By the third cheese, Zara's eyes were bright with excitement, "I can't believe I'm making macaroni and cheese from scratch."

Nothing had exploded at our workbench. We didn't even burn anything.

From the sounds and smells around us, the rest of the workbenches had varying success. I was sure there was more than one burnt cheese sauce just from the smells around me, but I tuned it all out and soon we were stirring in the Mac.

"Wow." Zara smiled as she took her turn to stir. She had been so excited, she pretty much grabbed the spatula from me.

I found myself grinning too.

We nailed it.

I turned the fire off from under the pot.

"Quick! Let's scoop it out before it gets stuck in the pot." Zara said.

With our trusty spatula, we scooped out the pasta into our food containers. Then we went up to a side counter together to sprinkle on the toppings.

Zara choose some pepper and more parmesan cheese. I sprinkled dried chives and then a little bit of dried chilli flakes because I remembered Killion using it in pasta and it was delicious. I only used a very little though, just for the color.

"Yours look good." Zara said. She added chives to her box too, but not the chilli flakes because she hated spicy foods.

We did it! We really, really did it!

Wow, if I knew cooking was so exciting, I would have joined the cooking club.

"Goodness! If I knew you girls were so bad, I would have sent all of you to woodwork class!" Mrs Martinez concluded, "Half of you should never be allowed near a stove!"

So at least half of us were destined to become beautiful women by Marcus' mum's definition.