Sofia Pov
I must’ve fallen asleep—I jolt awake to the sound of aggressive pounding on my bedroom door. Who the hell wants to break the door down this early? It’s definitely not Grandma Tessa. She doesn’t have that kind of energy. I glance at the alarm clock. 1:47 p.m. Crap. I’ve been out for over two hours. I was supposed to be in class. Worse—I was supposed to come up with a plan to get my phone back from Professor Lucien and convince him not to report me to the Disciplinary Committee. I groan as the office scene threatens to replay in my head, but I shut it out. Not now. I can’t afford a breakdown. Groggy, I swing my legs over the edge of the bed, rubbing my eyes. I hadn’t even changed before sleep took over. The banging only grows more frantic. “I’m coming!” I grumble, dragging myself to the door and yanking it open. And there she is. My mother. Wearing her signature scowl and judgmental gaze like a second skin. “Mom?” “Sophia,” she snaps, already in full attack mode, “you’re at home sleeping during lecture hours? Are you even okay?” Her eyes narrow. “And what on earth happened to your hair? You can’t even do your hair right.” God. This is exactly who I don’t want to deal with right now. “Hello, Sophia,” she says mockingly, flicking her fingers in front of my face. “I’m talking to you. A little acknowledgment would be nice.” “What are you doing here, Mom?” I ask flatly, stepping out of the room and closing the door behind me. She scoffs, flashing her perfectly manicured nails like they’re part of the conversation. “Look, Sop—” “It’s Sophia, Mom.” I wince, the sound of my name dragging memories of Professor Lucien to the surface. “You know how much I hate the shortened version.” “And I don’t give a damn, Sop.” “Mom. Sophia.” “I’m not here to argue with you, young lady,” she says, yanking at her well-pressed suit jacket. “I’m here because you’re skipping school, and I want to know why.” “Waist pain. I had waist pain,” I lie, hoping she’ll just let it go. She crosses her arms, clearly not buying it. “You can feed that nonsense to your grandma, but I’m not stupid enough to fall for your little games.” “I’m not lying.” She glares, her voice rising. “Come off it, Sophia. Last semester’s results clearly show what a disaster you are at school.” “Mom—” ““I’m not dealing with you like you’re some clueless kid.” “Mom—!” “I just don’t get it,” she goes on, barely pausing to breathe. “How hard is it to concentrate on your studies? When I was your age, I was at the top of my class, already winning academic awards, but you—” “I’m not you,” I snap, cutting through her nostalgic rambling.She doesn’t care how I feel. It’s always about grades, appearances, and her goddamn reputation. She pauses, her lips twitching. Her styled hair makes her look like she just walked off a movie set. She looks younger than most moms—but colder too. “Wow,” she says finally, voice flat. “You finally talked back at me. Pack your things. You’re coming with me.” “Mom—” “Don’t you ‘Mom’ me. I warned you. Fail another subject, and you're coming home. “But it’s just one and I haven't failed yet—” “No excuses, Sofia. I’m tired of your carelessness.” "Mom..." “You’re going to pack your things this minute,” Mom snaps, her voice cutting through like blade. “Say goodbye to your grandma. She’s too soft on you.” She doesn’t ask if I’m okay. She never does. I’m not even sure she notices the way my fingers are curling into my palms, how hard I’m trying not to break in front of her. Because if I do, she’ll just call it drama. She’ll say I’m weak. Spoiled. Ungrateful. But I’m not. I’m just tired. Tired of trying to measure up to a woman who only sees flaws when she looks at me. Tired of pretending like her words don’t turn my insides to stone. Grandma's house is the only place that doesn’t feel like a battlefield. And now, even that is being taken from me. I lift my chin and meet her cold stare, but inside, I’m crumbling. "I cannot live with you, Mom. Or your new husband. I don't fit in there," I plead, my voice trembling with rage. And it’s true. I don’t fit in. My mother is a lawyer, and her new husband is an attorney. A perfectionist, just like her. Two egotistical people—no, rephrase that—three. He has a daughter from a fling before settling down. Miss flawless GPA and perfect ballet form. I’m supposed to smile and ‘fit in’?'. A perfect breakfast to me is a little nourishing drink and a few slices of Grandma’s cake. But in her new house, it means three perfectionists sitting together, barely touching their meal while discussing a possible criminal case. Right. And I’m the odd one out—because I want to be a journalist, not some top-tier lawyer. “You would fit in just fine. And you’ll start by getting to know Brianna. She likes you a lot,” Mom says. I scoff. More like she rubs her intelligence in my face at every chance she gets. "I don't want to fit in, Mom. I just—" "Stop being so dramatic," she snaps. "Even my stepdaughter doesn’t stress me this way." I flinch. Not from her tone... but from the comparison. "I'm not Brianna. Just leave me alone." Mom rolls her eyes. "If you were even 25% as composed and well-behaved as Brianna, I wouldn’t have to babysit you every second." I try to convince myself she didn’t just say that—but she did. "Stop stressing me and go in there. Pack your bags. Get into the car." The door adjacent to mine opens. Grandma Tessa steps out. "What’s with all the noise, Becky?" she asks, glancing at me. "Why can’t you just talk to your daughter peacefully?" I avoid her gaze. If she looks at me with pity, I’ll break. "Mom, you’re too soft on her," Mom fires back. "Just look at her nails. The polish is chipped. She’d rather party than fix herself. And her hair—seriously thinning. Probably too much alcohol. Bad diet." "Becky, she’s your daughter. Not a lab rat." My lungs tighten. I try to drown out their voices. "Mom, you’re to blame for coddling her." "You shouldn’t raise her like your father raised you." "Mom..." she scoffs. "That’s different. I’m trying to make her better." "The way you’re going about it is wrong." "She’s coming with me. That’s final." "Becky, let her be. Let her find her own breakthrough. Just like I did with you." The images blur. Their voices start to fade. "Good advice, Mom. But newsflash—Sofia might never find her breakthrough." My knees wobble. I stumble forward, clutching my head. "Sofia—" "Sofia—" My name echoes, but I can’t tell who’s calling me anymore. And then everything goes black as my body hits the floor.“He’s my uncle,” I blurt. Too fast. Too loud.Why do I always blurt out the dumbest things?Why does my brain short-circuit around him?Margaret’s face softens. Like she was holding her breath and I just gave her permission to exhale."Mr. Lucien, wow, I never knew you had a niece."Her voice turns sugar-sweet. Too sweet.The heat climbs up my chest again—the same heat I felt when she first scanned him like a luxury item behind glass.That’s why I said it. That stupid, stupid uncle line.My fingers strangle my bag strap.Then the words slip again—worse than before.“I never said I was his niece.”Margaret gasps. Loud.Her eyes flick between us like she walked in on a scandal.My stomach knots.Did I seriously say that out loud?I don’t need to look to know he’s watching.There’s a sound—low, amused.Laughter. Maybe.No idea. I can’t check. I’m too busy trying not to combust.God, did I just ruin everything?What is wrong with me?“Oh. So you’re not his niece…”“I mean…” I start, hands
“Your test has been rescheduled for Friday. Class dismissed.”I stack my notes, ignoring the predictable wave of groans.It’s been off the schedule since last week. They just need something to whine about.I glance up.Sofia.Caked makeup. Tired eyes. The kind of tired sleep doesn’t fix.After Saturday, I’m not surprised.“Goodbye, Professor,” Ivy says, walking past with a smirk and her usual entourage.I nod once.Then her eyes lift—right into mine.Steady. Unapologetic.It shoots through me. Quick. Hot. Wrong.She rolls her eyes a second later, like that look never happened. Like I imagined it.I didn’t.She rolls her eyes and turns to her friends, pretending to listen. Pretending she didn’t just wreck my composure with a single look.“Goodbye, Professor,” another group chimes as they pass.“Till tomorrow,” a girl giggles.I don’t answer. Just slow my movements enough to scan the room.That’s when I catch Sofia’s lips move.“Let’s go,” she mouths to her friends.They grab their bags
“Would you come out already so we can see the dress?” Mom snaps from outside the changing room. Her voice, clipped and impatient, slices right through the curtain.I sigh, dragging a hand through my hair as I stare at the mirror. What kind of joke is this dress?I turn, trying to see the back. The fabric hugs my chest and hips like it’s trying to expose every flaw. I look… round. Not in the flattering way. The zipper strains a little when I move, and the neckline—God, the choker-style collar feels like it’s trying to strangle me into elegance. This dress isn’t me. Not even close. It’s her idea of who I should be.I shift again and exhale—barely. “She got my measurements wrong,” I mutter.“Sofia!” Mom snaps from outside. “Do I have to come in there and drag you out?”Wouldn’t put it past her.I clench my jaw and breathe—barely. My lungs are being crushed by overpriced fabric, and the collar around my neck feels more like a leash than a fashion choice.Still, I unlock the door and step
“Coming,” I groan, wincing as the pounding in my head threatens to split it open.That’s what I get for sleeping late and waking up barely past six.“Grandma?” I call out, slipping on my flip-flops and dragging myself to the door.I open the door slowly. Mom’s standing there in full makeup and heels—at 7 a.m. Like she’s headed to a photoshoot, not her daughter’s bedroom.“You’re not dressed,” she says flatly, like I’ve offended her personally.“Good morning to you too,” I mutter, leaning against the doorframe.“We have fittings. You forgot, didn’t you?”No good morning. No how did you sleep. No happy Saturday, honey.“Me and you?” I blink.“Yes. I texted you last night—Brianna’s birthday party. I need to buy you something decent that actually fits the theme.”“Mom.” I groan. “You show up at my door at 6 a.m. just to drag me on a shopping spree… for Brianna’s birthday?”“What’s wrong with that?”“I have things to do. I manage my time—something you don’t seem to understand.”She always
She dragged her eyes up to meet mine—slow, deliberate—and I stilled. Her knees were on the floor. Palms spread gently beside them, like an offering. Obedient. Composed. Too composed. Like she was waiting to be told. “Come here.” The words slipped out before I could stop them. Low. Rough. A command wrapped in need. She smiled. “Okay… Professor Lucien.” She said it slowly. Like a dare. Like she knew exactly what that name did to me. Then she crawled. One knee forward. Then the other. Her hips swayed just enough to make it unbearable. Deliberate. Controlled. Like she wasn’t obeying. Like I was. Her palms kissed the floor, fingers splayed. Graceful. Feline. Dangerous. “Closer,” I heard myself whisper. She tilted her head, lashes lowered like a curtain over something wicked. “Is this how you imagined it, Professor?” I hadn’t. I wouldn’t. But now I’d never imagine anything else. She inched closer—close enough that I could feel her breath ghosting across my skin. And that
Sofia Pov Flashback Mia's Apartment. "Shouldn’t we be getting ready for the party?" Kiera asks, watching Mia lying face-down on the bed, nose buried in a book. "We still have over an hour," Mia groans, barely glancing up. "I’m not trying to show up with the first-rounders." I walk over and climb onto the bed beside her. "What are you reading?" "Seriously, Sofia?" Kiera scoffs. "Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed her obsessing over that book all week. You think you’re going to seduce Leo with those tricks?" "Hush, Kiera." Mia throws her a disapproving glare. "Believing is key." My eyes wander to the pages. Chapter Four: Make Them Kneel Without Touching Them Something tightens in my chest. Curiosity. Quiet. Creeping. The kind that doesn’t knock before entering. Mia flips the page with a sigh, totally engrossed. “This one’s good,” she mutters. “This chapter alone is worth the price.” “Let me see.” I tilt my head, catching a line: “Guilt is a powerful leas