ALL PREVIOUS POSTERS ARE GOD-DAMN MORONS. These people are seriously elitest and brainwashed by Hayward Field and Magnolia Road.
Yes, you can EASILY get D1 scholarship money with a sub 10 2 mile. Sub-10 for 2 miles means you should be running in college...especially since you have so much room to grow.
No, you will not get scholarship to a school that qualifies to xc nationals or places really well at regionals. You would not get money at Michigan, Colorado, Villanova, California, Oregon, etc. You would be able to walk-on many top programs though. Few would turn away a free runner of your caliber. There are tons and tons of D1 schools that will pay you to represent them.
Have you looked at running in the Southeast? It's far less competitive and you'd be on scholarship at many D1 programs. Your chances of scholarship at D1 in the West are far less.
I ran a 10:07 2 mile and 4:38 mile (senior year) in high school. I thought I was pretty good. I scored 1070 on the old SAT. I had a 2.5 GPA. I was offered scholarships from 1000-5000 a year for cross country and track at MANY schools in the southeast. I graduated 3 years ago with a 3.6 GPA, 14:37 5k / 3:54 1500 / all-conference xc, and now attend a top pharm. program in grad school. Sure I'm no Oregon All-American, but if I would have listened to these letsrun losers I would have retired without tapping my athletic potential, went to junior college, and lived in a trialer.
Here are my suggestions:
1) Contact coaches and programs that interest you. Let them know you exist and that you want to run in college.
2) Look at 1-AA schools. Hell, I can name 10 schools off the top of my head that would give you scholarship in my region (I went to school in VA)...Coastal Carolina, High Point, Appalachian State, Winthrop, College of Charleston, Furman, East Tennessee State University, Memphis, University, Georgia Southern. If you live in the Midwest try Creighton, Colorado State, University of Northern Colorado, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, University of New Mexico (if you're in state), Drake.
3) Don't demand scholarship, just look at the offers you receive and decide accordingly. I would mention you are looking for scholarship in your interest email though.
4) Don't go to school on scholarship and start partying. Do your studying, make all-academic conference at the very least for the program, and run hard!