I woke up still wearing his hoodie.
The sleeves were too long and smelled like old cologne and dryer sheets, and when I rolled over, the cuff brushed my cheek. I closed my eyes again, pretending it was his hand. Pretending he was still here, holding me like he had the night before — even if he never really did. Just his mouth, his fingers in my hair, his breath tangled in mine. That was enough to haunt my dreams. My lips felt different. Tender, maybe even a little sore. I smiled to myself, remembering the way his tongue had moved with mine — like he’d been waiting for that moment longer than even I had. Then my phone buzzed. I fumbled under the blanket for it, heart kicking up. Anthony: Morning, angel. I’ve been thinking about you since I opened my eyes. Your lips. Your breath. That sound you made when I kissed you. I want it again. All of it. But mostly, I just want you. Angel. The word hit me harder than I expected. Like a secret key turning in my chest. Nobody had ever called me that before. Not like it meant something. Not like I meant something. With him, even the smallest words felt like they carried weight. I lay there a moment, staring at the screen, letting the words sink into my skin. Then I typed back. Lila: You make me feel like one. Morning, trouble. Can’t stop thinking about you either. My lips still remember you. The second I sent it, I felt warm all over again. As if even admitting that much was too much — and not enough. Anthony: Mine do too. They’re jealous of your pillow. I laughed, covering my mouth with the sleeve of his hoodie. I was smiling so hard it hurt. I curled up tighter into my blanket, hugging my knees to my chest. My stomach fluttered and flipped and refused to calm down. I wanted to see him again already. I wanted to feel his hands in my hair again. I wanted more — and that want was still so new, so unfamiliar, it almost scared me. The rest of the morning passed in slow motion. I didn’t rush to get ready, didn’t change out of the oversized shirt I slept in. I poured cereal, forgot to eat it. Just kept rereading the message. Morning, angel. I scrolled back up and reread the first one. Then again. It wasn’t just the kiss that had left a mark on me. It was him. The way he looked at me. The way his voice got soft when he was being serious. The way he didn’t just want to kiss me — he wanted to know me. See me. Say my name and mean it. I padded back to my room, shut the door, and sat cross-legged on the bed. My fingers itched for something familiar — something grounding. So I pulled my diary out from under my mattress. It was old and soft, the corners dog-eared and pages ink-smudged from all the times I’d poured my heart into it. The binding creaked as I opened to a fresh page. And I began to write. [Diary Entry — November 9, 2014] He called me angel this morning. Not “baby” or “cutie” or “hot.” Not something random or cliché. He said angel. Like it was something he’d decided about me long before I gave him a reason. And the craziest part? It didn’t feel wrong. It felt like maybe I always was one. And I just forgot. I don’t know what’s happening to me. My lips still feel swollen from the way he kissed me. Not just gentle. Not just sweet. But hungry. Like he was starving and I was the thing he’d waited for. I’ve never been wanted like that. Not even close. And when he touched me — just my hair, just my waist — it felt like heat. Like a match had been struck inside me and I didn’t know how to blow it out. I didn’t want to. I wanted it to burn. And it’s still burning now. Every time I blink, I see the look in his eyes before he leaned in. The pause. The wait. That silent question: “Can I?” And my answer — not in words, but in the way I tilted forward, heart first. Yes. Always yes. He didn’t just kiss me. He changed me. Something has opened up inside me and I don’t know how to close it again. A door, maybe. Or a window. Or a floodgate. I feel… everything. All at once. Desire. Fear. Excitement. Longing. That ache in my stomach that won’t go away — the kind that isn’t hunger but is. A need I don’t fully understand yet, only that it lives in me now. He made me feel like I was the only girl in the world. The only mouth he wanted. The only skin he wanted to touch. The only person he saw. And this morning, when he called me angel, I think that was his way of saying, You’re not like anyone else. God, I don’t want this to go away. I don’t want this to fade into another “first” that disappears into memory. I want to hold onto it. To him. Even if it ends one day. Even if he breaks my heart. I want this. All of it. Him. And I want to be the kind of girl who’s brave enough to say that out loud. Maybe not to him yet. But at least… to myself. I’m falling. Not slowly. Not gently. But all at once. And for now, he’s the one catching me. And calling me angel. And making me believe I really might be. When I closed the diary, my fingers trembled just a little. Not from fear. From feeling. And somewhere deep inside my chest, I could still hear his voice. “Morning, angel.”The decision had been brewing in Lila’s mind for days, a knot of anxiety twisting tighter each time her phone buzzed. At first, she thought she could ignore it—block the number, delete the messages, pretend none of it was happening. But pretending didn’t stop the way her hands shook when her screen lit up, or how her stomach dropped at the sight of another photo she hadn’t consented to be taken. It didn’t stop the fear that whoever was behind it was watching her even now, cataloguing her life like a series of stolen moments.So on a cool Thursday morning, when the rest of the world felt caught in the slow hum of early spring, Lila marched herself into her phone carrier’s store.She sat in the plastic chair across from a clerk who looked hardly older than her, fingers flying across a keyboard as he pulled up her account. “So you’re wanting to change your number completely?” he asked, voice flat with the practiced tone of someone who’d asked the question a hundred ti
The sunlight filtering through Lila’s blinds didn’t feel warm today—it felt intrusive. Every beam seemed to spotlight the unease curling in her chest, reminding her that no matter how much she tried to pretend, the unknown sender was still out there, still watching, still whispering into her life through texts and images. She sat cross-legged on her bed, phone in hand, scrolling through the latest barrage of messages that had come overnight. Each ping made her flinch.Nicole and Mae had insisted she bring the phone over so they could examine it together. If Terra really was behind this, they needed a strategy, and Lila wasn’t going to be the only one on edge anymore.By mid-morning, Lila had texted her friends to come over. When the doorbell rang, she opened it to find Nicole with a backpack slung over one shoulder and Mae holding a laptop like it was a weapon.“Morning,” Nicole said, her tone a mixture of teasing and seriousness. “You’ve got that haunted
Lila couldn’t hear the world around her. The music from her phone, the hum of the ceiling fan, even the faint traffic outside her window—all of it faded beneath the roar in her chest. Her hands trembled as she clutched the phone, the screen lighting up with the last unanswered message she’d fired off at the anonymous number.Who are you? Why are you doing this? Why him? Why me?The reply had come in seconds, like whoever was on the other side was waiting, breathing down her neck through invisible wires.You’ll see. He’s not who you think he is. And I’ll prove it.And then, as if to twist the knife, the photo.Her and Anthony. From two nights ago, walking down the block after leaving Nicole’s house. She hadn’t even noticed anyone near them, let alone close enough to snap a picture. But there they were—her head tilted toward Anthony, his hand brushing hers, both of them caught in a moment that had felt so safe.Now it was ruined.
Lila couldn’t hear the world around her. The music from her phone, the hum of the ceiling fan, even the faint traffic outside her window—all of it faded beneath the roar in her chest. Her hands trembled as she clutched the phone, the screen lighting up with the last unanswered message she’d fired off at the anonymous number.Who are you? Why are you doing this? Why him? Why me?The reply had come in seconds, like whoever was on the other side was waiting, breathing down her neck through invisible wires.You’ll see. He’s not who you think he is. And I’ll prove it.And then, as if to twist the knife, the photo.Her and Anthony. From two nights ago, walking down the block after leaving Nicole’s house. She hadn’t even noticed anyone near them, let alone close enough to snap a picture. But there they were—her head tilted toward Anthony, his hand brushing hers, both of them caught in a moment that had felt so safe.Now it was ruined.
The night pressed in heavy, the kind that swallowed and wrapped the world in a suffocating stillness. Lila sat cross-legged on her bed, the pale glow of her phone the only light in the room. It illuminated her face like a cruel spotlight, highlighting the tension etched into her jaw, the tear-gloss sheen in her eyes.Her screen still showed the last message, waiting for her acknowledgment like a taunt.Does he tell you he loves you? Or does he just say it because you need to hear it?She hated how the words sank under her skin, how they poisoned the very place Anthony’s voice used to soothe her. She wanted to delete them, block the number, pretend this had never crawled into her world. But she couldn’t. She never could. Every time she silenced the phone, every time she told herself she was done, the messages found their way back to her like a shadow she couldn’t outrun.Tonight, though, she was done being passive. Tonight, she couldn’t shove it aside anymore. Somethi
The glow of Lila’s phone felt like fire against her palm. Another message had arrived—no name, no picture, just the same number that had haunted her for weeks.“He’ll never love you the way you think. He belongs to me.”She squeezed her eyes shut, every word carving deeper into the insecurities she thought Anthony’s presence had healed. She should have ignored it. She’d promised herself she would. But her thumb hovered over the keyboard like it had a mind of its own.Who are you? What do you want from me? she typed, heart slamming in her chest.The reply came instantly.“I want what’s mine.”Her breath caught. Fingers trembling, she typed again. You don’t even know me. Why are you sending me this?This time, instead of words, an image arrived. Her own face, taken from across the street outside her apartment. She was unlocking her car, wearing the same denim jacket she’d had on earlier that week. Her blood ran cold.The phone nearly slipped from her gr