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The bully

Author: Abi Gail O
last update publish date: 2026-05-07 08:09:21

The school hallway was already loud by the time Elara arrived.

Lockers slamming, voices bouncing off the walls, wolves moving in groups the way they always did — rank sticking to rank like magnets. The alphas and betas clustered near the main corridor, taking up space the way powerful people always did, unbothered by anyone around them. The gammas filled in the gaps. And the omegas stayed to the edges, close to the walls, heads low, invisible by necessity rather than choice.

Elara slipped through the front doors and merged with the flow of students, keeping her eyes forward and her pace steady. She had a system and she never deviated from it. Get to her locker, get her books, get to class before the hallway thinned out. The thinner the hallway the more visible she became and the more likely it was that today would turn into one of those days she had to work hard to forget by evening.

She was almost at her locker when she heard it.

The laughter came first. Sharp and carrying that particular edge that had nothing to do with anything being genuinely funny. Then came the silence — the kind that swept through a crowded hallway like a cold wind, the kind that meant everyone had clocked something and was collectively deciding to watch rather than intervene.

Cara Thorne was leaning against her locker.

She was stunning in the effortless way that girls who had never struggled tended to be — dark hair falling perfectly over her shoulders, her uniform sitting on her like it had been tailored specifically for her. Two of her friends flanked her on either side wearing identical expressions of lazy amusement. Cara's eyes found Elara the moment she slowed down. They always did. It did not matter how carefully Elara tried to blend into the background. Cara always found her.

"Look who finally showed up," Cara said. Her voice was light and pleasant the way a knife could look harmless before someone decided to pick it up. "I was starting to think the little omega had done us all a favor and stopped coming to school."

Laughter rippled through the small crowd already gathering. A few people looked away, suddenly interested in the floor. Nobody stepped forward. Nobody ever did.

Elara kept walking. She fixed her eyes on her locker and told herself that if she didn't engage, Cara would lose interest and move on. It was a strategy that worked maybe one time out of five but she kept trying it because the alternative always made things worse.

She was two steps from her locker when Cara pushed off the wall and stepped directly into her path.

"I am talking to you," Cara said, still smiling. "It is rude not to respond when someone speaks to you. But I suppose we cannot expect much from an omega."

More laughter. Elara felt her jaw tighten but kept her face completely still. She met Cara's gaze without flinching, which she knew from experience irritated Cara more than anything else she could do. Cara wanted tears. She wanted visible distress. Elara's stillness was her only weapon,d and she held onto it firmly.

"I need to get to my locker," Elara said. Her voice came out calm and even.

Cara tilted her head. "Your locker." She glanced back at her friends. "She needs to get to her locker." She turned back to Elara with sharp bright eyes. "Tell me Elara, what exactly do you keep in there? Little omega dreams of becoming something you were never meant to be?"

The hallway had gone almost completely quiet. Elara could feel every pair of eyes pressing in on her and she hated it — the exposure of it, the helplessness of standing at the center of all that attention with no clean way out and nobody willing to step in.

She held Cara's gaze. "Are you done?"

Something flickered behind Cara's eyes. Irritation is breaking through the performance. She did not like to be calm. She never had.

Cara reached out and knocked the bag clean off Elara's shoulder.

It hit the floor hard and everything scattered — books sliding across the tile, pens rolling away, and a small folded photograph spinning out and stopping directly at Cara's feet.

The hallway went very still.

Cara looked down. She picked up the photograph before Elara could move and turned it over in her fingers. A man and a woman smiling wide at the camera, both radiating warmth that only existed in pictures of people who were no longer around to give it in person.

Elara's parents.

She had carried that photograph every single day since they died. It was the only one where both of them were looking at the camera at the same time, smiling as if nothing in the world could touch them. The creases had gone soft from how many times she had folded and unfolded it.

Something crossed Cara's face briefly — something almost human. It did not stay long enough to matter.

"Still holding onto dead weight," Cara said and dropped the photograph back onto the floor.

Nobody laughed this time. Even Cara's friends stayed quiet. There were lines that even spectators recognized and Cara had just crossed one.

Elara crouched down. She picked up the photograph first, smoothing it carefully with her thumb before folding it into her pocket. Then she gathered her books and pens from the floor one by one, unhurried, refusing to scramble. She took what she needed from her locker, closed it quietly, and walked away without a single word or backward glance.

She pushed into her classroom, sat at her usual seat in the back corner, and closed her eyes for just one second.

Then she reached into her pocket and took the photograph out. Set it on the desk in front of her. Looked at her parents — her mother's wide smile, her father's arm around her mother's shoulders, both of them looking at the camera like they had everything they would ever need.

*You are not what they say you are.* Lily's voice found her quietly from that morning.

Elara folded the photograph and tucked it away.

The teacher walked in. She opened her book and fixed her eyes on the page.

She breathed. She focused. She kept going.

Because that was what you did when the world gave you no other option.

One hour at a time.

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