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Rebecca Rogers

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  1. HEARTLESS Chapter 1 (Opening, first 1000 words to include sample dialogue) Harbrook University students commit to protecting their own safety and the safety of all romantic entanglements by agreeing to the following: I agree to not take any unnatural action to expedite or encourage the expulsion of mine or another’s heart. I agree to return my heart to my chest immediately following a cardiac event. I agree to report any observed heart malfeasance to the school medics, including but not limited to the following: improper heart removal, reckless heart endangerment, stealing or harboring hearts, and organ dissection, experimentation, or dismemberment. As Mac stared at the policy in her shaking hands, she knew one thing for certain: she was making a huge mistake. It felt far from pleasant to finally admit this to herself, impatiently bouncing her knee up and down in the waiting room of her college counselor’s office on her first day at Harbrook University. She was already on campus after all, past the point of no return. Within the next hour, she would have a course schedule in-hand and be helplessly swept into her mediocre life. The sickening feeling of disappointment was stirring in her gut, so she hastily scribbled her signature on the policy document and diverted her attention to the rest of the waiting room. She took a deep breath and was hit with the familiar scent of industrial floor cleaner and fresh ink from an overused copy machine. Plastered across the walls of the counseling center were inspirational posters— some of your standard offenders, such as “Hang in there!” with a kitten clutching a rope, but worse were the ones trying to be modern in their sense of humor. Directly above the receptionist’s head was a poster of an anatomical heart with the bold text: Aorta tell you how bloody proud I am of you! Mac did her best to refrain from rolling her eyes. Directly next to the “humorous” heart poster was a notice that read: CALL 888 TO REPORT ANY HEART MALFEASANCE TO THE HARBROOK CENTER OF HEART AFFAIRS IMMEDIATELY. She felt her breath catch in her throat. Without thinking, her hand wandered back to the top of her sternum to rub the scar barely peeking out from her oversized sweater, at this point just a faint white line stretching the few inches from her heart to her collarbone. The wound had healed months ago, but she still chose to wear her heather gray hoodie to hide any possible traces of it. Though the outfit was casual, she added a sweep of eyeliner and a dash of mascara to frame her large green eyes and draw attention away from her messy brown curls that she could never seem to fully untangle. Heart affairs were the last thing she wanted to think about today. Letting her heart make terrible decisions was what had gotten her here in the first place. Mac forced her attention back to the room, taking in the vinyl flooring spotted with yellowed stains. The out-dated afterthoughts of decor were exactly what she expected given Harbrook’s unsavory reputation as a struggling state school. Though her mom insisted they had a remarkable arts program, Mac refused to believe any college her mom attended could be taken seriously. She should have been grateful that her mom’s alumni status helped her get into Harbrook with only weeks before the semester started, but she only felt resigned as she clocked the other freshmen awaiting their first semester schedules. Nervous energy seemed to radiate from every student she saw, the dull thudding of the receptionist’s keyboard like a symphony to accompany their anxiety. Mac caught herself subconsciously settling into the rhythm of those around her, instinctively tapping her toes onto the cheap flooring. There was a small chuckle to her right, and Mac whipped her head around to see the girl sitting next to her watching her curiously. The girl leaned back comfortably in the blue plastic chair, an upbeat pop tune leaking through the bright purple headphones stretched across her perfectly straight, jet-black hair. She tapped her bright red boots to the beat of her music and locked eyes with Mac, flashing her a quick grin before nudging the headphones back to her neck. “You look nervous. First time?” Mac blinked. “For what?” The girl rolled her eyes. “It was a joke. Since we’re all freshmen?” “Oh, right.” Mac huffed a nervous laugh before quickly averting her gaze down to the orientation schedule resting on her lap. Meeting with the college counselor was the first task of orientation day, and unsurprisingly, Mac awoke before her alarm to beat the crowd of freshmen that would be arriving at any moment. She met uncertainty with preparation, and developed her own version of the freshman orientation schedule weeks before arriving on campus. Mac planned to arrive exactly seventeen minutes early to each event planned for the day to give herself ample time to navigate between buildings, and to get the best spot in every line. She loathed waiting in lines— it simply gave her more time alone with her own thoughts, which was especially unacceptable on a day like today. Because today, she was making the one cliche mistake that she, of all people, should have known better not to make. She was throwing away her future because of a boy, and she hated herself for it. “Mackenzie Webster? Ms. Rivas will see you now,” the receptionist called from the front of the room. Mac felt her chest scar twinge with pain, and forced an awkward smile to hide her grimace. She zipped her hoodie up an extra inch and hastily gathered her backpack. “Go get ‘em, heartbreaker,” the girl with the red boots called. “And watch out for the blood stains.” Mac jolted as she looked at the ground, imagining pools of blood creeping toward her pant legs. Instead, all she saw was the sad off-white flooring, covered in…brownish yellow stains. Too much dried blood for industrial cleaners to erase. “Thanks for the heads up.” Mac nodded to the girl and gingerly tip-toed across the room as fast as she could, darting into the counselor’s office where her future would be decided.
  2. Act of Story Statement After a public and unusual heart incident, College freshman Mackenzie Webster must seduce a total stranger to take her heart back and build a future on her own terms. Antagonist Angela Arnett, a rude and privileged over-achiever, competes with Mac on every level possible. Though her popularity is from intimidation rather than likability, Angela still commands every room she enters with a posse of admiring social climbers at her tail. Their high school rivalry follows them into college, where Angela and Mac end up in the same section of History of Cardiac Reactivity and fight to claim a spot in the coveted Dean’s lab. When Angela joins the overly pink and suspicious sorority Kappa Phi Kappa, she tries to draw Mac in with the allure of secret practices to control one’s heart. A character who is cunning, manipulative, and the fakest sweet one could be, Angela finds a way to get under Mac’s skin and tempt her to the dark side. Titles Heartless The heartless girl at Harbrook University Comparables BLOOD MOON- Britney Lewis- 2025 A college student discovers vampires and werewolves are real and gets sucked into their world. YA college love story with speculative/fantasy elements. MAKE ME A MONSTER- Kaylnn Bayron- 2025 This dark romance follows a mortician’s daughter grappling with corpses coming to life after tragedy strikes. Logline In a world where heart metaphors take on literal meaning, heartbroken freshman Mackenzie Webster locks eyes with a stranger at college orientation and gives him her heart, throwing her life into chaos as she wrestles with opening herself up again and doing what it takes to get her heart back. Inner Conflict After Mac’s high school crush Mason rejects her at the end of their senior year, she diverts from her plan to follow him to the prestigious college down the road and instead settles for the under-funded arts school nearby. When she arrives, she is determined to avoid anything to do with romance– a goal she nearly immediately fails at when she sees Ben Myers at college orientation and her heart bursts into his unsuspecting hands. And of course, her high school crush happened to have transferred to the arts college, too, and witnesses the whole gory scene. Mac is torn between her head and her heart, questioning if she can trust the kind and humble Ben, or if she needs to close herself off to anything and everything she can’t rely on. She oscillates between adoring the new people in her life and pushing them away as she grapples with vulnerability, loneliness, and what deep connections are worth. Secondary Conflict Not only does Mac give her heart to a total stranger, but she experiences an incredibly rare heart incident called love at first sight syndrome, which results in her heart fusing to Ben’s hand. While she desperately wants to transfer back to the prestigious college down the road upon seeing Mason, she is forced to stay at the arts school until she can find a way to get her heart back. Mason approaches Mac trying to apologize for rejecting her, and slowly works his way back into her life. Meanwhile, she gets closer to Ben, who is nothing but reliable and kind. It’s a classic love triangle, but with dangerous, and bloody, consequences. This intensifies as the distance from her heart sets Mac on edge: the longer she goes without seeing her heart, the more distanced she feels from her emotions. Mac’s cold and unfeeling demeanor causes her friends to fall away as she makes increasingly dangerous attempts to reunite with her heart. Her growing desperation pushes her into the arms of a sorority that encourages her to distance herself from her heart and the feelings it incites, despite the body aches and tension that build with every passing day. Setting Though it was an arts school with a laughable reputation, the Harbrook University campus felt like being in another world. It was technically only fifty miles from where Mac grew up, but the city landscape alone was drastically different from the cookie cutter homes and neighborhood parks comprising her hometown. Nestled in the middle of the busy city, the old brick buildings of Harbrook University seemed to grow out of the landscape like they predated the massive oak trees lining every pathway on campus. Something about the place felt wild, untamed, a direct contrast to the polished constructed landscape of the city surrounding it. Mac loved the tangled vines covering her favorite buildings—the library and the dining hall, in that order— and the smell of honeysuckle that permeated the winding stone paths. There was a quad in the middle of campus, a sprawling intersection of pathways colliding in the center at the famous brick bell tower. A new Dean came to campus, demanding modern renovations that stuck out against the old brick buildings. A collision of opposites: old and new, city and campus, brick and steel, Harbrook University was full of secret basements for students to explore.
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