Mag-log inPOV: Elena
The strange thing about Jace's reaction to Aiden was that he never mentioned it again.
Not during the drive home after lunch. Not during dinner. Not even later that evening when we accidentally crossed paths in the kitchen while looking for something to eat. He acted as though the conversation outside the library had never happened, which should have been a relief.
Instead, it irritated me.
The entire situation was ridiculous. Jace had no right to care who I spent time with. Our engagement wasn't real, our relationship wasn't real, and the ring on my finger existed because he had blackmailed me into wearing it. Yet somehow, his reaction kept replaying in my head. Every time I remembered the way his jaw had tightened when I mentioned Aiden, I found myself smiling.
I hated that.
The next morning, I arrived on campus determined to focus on normal things. I had classes to attend, assignments to finish, and a project presentation approaching faster than I would have liked. For once, I wanted an entire day that didn't revolve around Jace Calloway and the chaos he constantly dragged into my life.
Unfortunately, life seemed determined to ignore my wishes.
I had barely settled into one of the library's private study rooms when someone knocked softly against the open door. Looking up, I found Aiden standing there with a stack of books balanced against one hip and a coffee cup in each hand.
A smile appeared on his face the moment he saw me. "Good. You're here." I raised an eyebrow. "Should I be worried that you sound surprised?" "Not surprised," he corrected as he stepped inside. "Hopeful." I laughed despite myself.
Aiden placed one of the coffee cups in front of me before taking a seat across the table.
"What's this?" I asked. "A peace offering." "For what?" "For making you spend three hours discussing economic theory tomorrow." The reminder immediately made me groan. Our group project. I had almost managed to forget about it. Aiden grinned. "I figured caffeine might soften the blow. " I glanced down at the cup before looking back at him. "You're suspiciously nice." His expression turned thoughtful. "I get that a lot."
The conversation felt effortless after that. We spent the next hour reviewing notes, discussing project ideas, and occasionally drifting into completely unrelated topics. Unlike most people who had approached me since the engagement announcement, Aiden never seemed interested in gossip. He didn't ask questions about Jace. He didn't pry into my personal life. He simply treated me like a normal person.
It was surprisingly refreshing.
By the time my phone vibrated against the table, I had almost forgotten about everything else. Almost. I glanced at the screen and immediately frowned.
Jace: Where are you?
A second message appeared before I could respond.
Richard wants us home early tonight.
Then a third.
Why aren't you answering?
Aiden noticed the change in my expression. "Everything okay?" I quickly locked my phone. "Fine." His eyes narrowed slightly. "That didn't look fine." "It's nothing."
The lie sounded weak even to my ears, but thankfully Aiden didn't push. Instead, he steered the conversation back towards our project, and within a few minutes we were arguing over presentation slides and research sources. The distraction helped, but unfortunately, it didn't last.
When I finally left the library later that afternoon, a familiar black SUV was parked near the curb outside the building. My stomach immediately sank as recognition hit.
The driver's door opened, and Jace climbed out. He looked irritated. The sight made me stop walking. "What are you doing here?" Jace shoved his hands into his jacket pockets. "What does it look like?" "It looks like you're stalking me." "I came to pick you up.” I frowned. "You've never picked me up before." "Richard wants us home."
That answer might have sounded reasonable if I hadn't noticed the way his gaze immediately shifted towards the library entrance behind me.
His expression hardened slightly.
"Who were you with?" There was that strange edge in his voice again. It was the same voice I had heard outside the library the day before. I folded my arms.
"Aiden."
Something flashed across his face. It disappeared quickly, but not quickly enough.
"Why?" I stared at him. "Because we have a project together." His jaw tightened. "You seem to spend a lot of time with him." The comment caught me completely off guard. For a second, I simply blinked at him. Then a realisation slowly settled over me.
Oh.
A smile tugged at the corner of my mouth. Jace immediately noticed. His eyes narrowed. "What?” The smile widened.
The more I thought about it, the more obvious it seemed. He had shown up outside my class. He was asking questions. He looked annoyed every time Aiden's name came up. The conclusion practically drew itself.
"Oh my God." "What?" I couldn't stop myself. I started laughing. Jace looked deeply unimpressed. "Elena."
"You're jealous."
The words slipped out before I could reconsider them. For a brief moment, complete silence settled between us. Then Jace let out a short, disbelieving laugh.
"Of him?"
"You tracked me down after class." "I came to pick you up." "You asked who I was with before you even said hello." "Because we're supposed to be presenting a united front. I gave him a sceptical look. "Sure." "I'm serious." "Of course you are."
The annoyance growing in his expression only made my smile widen.
For years, Jace had been the one making other people uncomfortable. Seeing him on the receiving end for once was oddly satisfying.
He stared at me for several seconds before shaking his head. "Get in the car." The command lacked its usual confidence. That only made me feel more victorious.
I followed him towards the SUV, trying—and failing—to suppress my amusement. The drive home should have been awkward. Instead, it was entertaining. Every time I glanced in his direction, I found his hands gripping the steering wheel a little tighter than necessary. Jace never admitted I was right. He never even acknowledged the possibility.
But as the silence stretched between us and the muscles in his jaw continued to tense every time Aiden's name crossed my mind, I became increasingly convinced that I had accidentally discovered something important.
And for the first time since this fake engagement began, I wasn't the only one struggling to stay in control.
POV: ElenaBy Saturday evening, I was standing in front of my bedroom mirror wondering whether it was possible to fake my death and escape a charity fundraiser.Unfortunately, the answer was probably no.A garment bag lay open across my bed, revealing the pale blue dress Richard had insisted was "perfect for the occasion." He claimed that university donors, local business owners, athletic sponsors, and several influential families connected to the school would attend tonight's event.According to me, it sounded like hell.I smoothed my hands over the fabric and sighed. The worst part wasn't even the event itself. It was the fact that I had to attend it with Jace.A knock sounded against my bedroom door before it opened. My mother stepped inside. For a moment, her expression softened when she saw me. "You look beautiful," I said, smiling faintly. "You have to say that.” “You're my mother." "I'm also right."She crossed the room and adjusted a loose strand of hair near my shoulder. The
POV: ElenaThe strange thing about Jace's reaction to Aiden was that he never mentioned it again.Not during the drive home after lunch. Not during dinner. Not even later that evening when we accidentally crossed paths in the kitchen while looking for something to eat. He acted as though the conversation outside the library had never happened, which should have been a relief.Instead, it irritated me.The entire situation was ridiculous. Jace had no right to care who I spent time with. Our engagement wasn't real, our relationship wasn't real, and the ring on my finger existed because he had blackmailed me into wearing it. Yet somehow, his reaction kept replaying in my head. Every time I remembered the way his jaw had tightened when I mentioned Aiden, I found myself smiling.I hated that.The next morning, I arrived on campus determined to focus on normal things. I had classes to attend, assignments to finish, and a project presentation approaching faster than I would have liked. For o
POV: ElenaBy Thursday morning, I had become campus property.That was the only explanation for the number of people who suddenly seemed invested in my life. Everywhere I went, someone was staring. Some students looked curious, others judgemental, and a few openly jealous. The worst ones were the people who smiled politely when I was nearby and immediately started whispering the moment they thought I was out of earshot.The attention followed me from one class to another. By the time I reached my literature lecture, my phone had already accumulated several messages from people I barely knew asking if the engagement was real. Apparently, becoming Jace Calloway's fiancée had transformed me into a public discussion topic overnight.I ignored every message.Unfortunately, the internet wasn't interested in being ignored. A notification from one of the campus gossip pages appeared at the top of my screen while I waited for class to begin.HALDEN'S GOLDEN BOY FINALLY OFF THE MARKET?I immedi
POV: ElenaBy Wednesday afternoon, I had successfully avoided Jace for almost two days.It wasn't simple. Living under the same roof made avoidance nearly impossible, but I had managed it by leaving for class early, staying on campus late, and taking advantage of the fact that basketball seemed to consume most of his spare time. The arrangement wasn't perfect, but it gave me enough distance to avoid thinking about the ring on my finger and the mess my life had become.Unfortunately, the moment I stepped through the front door that evening, I knew my luck had run out.Richard was sitting in the living room with a tablet balanced on his knee and the same expression he always wore when he was about to interfere in somebody else's business. My mother sat beside him with a cup of tea in her hands, looking far too innocent for someone clearly involved in whatever conversation was waiting for me."Perfect timing," Richard said.I immediately became suspicious. Dropping my backpack onto a nea
POV: ElenaCamille's warning stayed with me the entire drive home.Neither Jace nor I mentioned her. The silence inside the SUV felt heavier than usual, broken only by the sound of traffic outside. I spent most of the journey staring out the window and replaying the encounter in my head, trying to figure out whether Camille had been bluffing. The more I thought about it, the more uneasy I became.Camille hadn't looked surprised by the engagement. Angry, yes. Furious, even. But not surprised. It was as though she had already suspected something was happening and had simply been waiting for confirmation. The thought followed me all the way to the Calloway estate.By the time we pulled into the driveway, the sun was beginning to set behind the property. The mansion glowed beneath the golden light, looking every bit as impressive as it had on the day I first arrived. Unfortunately, the novelty had worn off weeks ago. These days, all I saw was a beautiful prison.I climbed out of the SUV a
POV: ElenaBy the end of the day, I understood something crucial about being Jace Calloway's fiancée.Everyone had an opinion about it.I couldn't walk across campus without hearing whispers. Some students stared openly while others pretended not to, only to pull out their phones the second they thought I wasn't looking. More than once, I caught people comparing the photos from Jace's announcement to my actual face as though they were trying to understand what exactly he saw in me.Unfortunately, I was asking myself the same question. The attention followed me everywhere. It followed me into lectures, where classmates suddenly wanted to sit besides me. It followed me through the library, where someone had apparently posted a picture of me studying with the caption 'Future Mrs Calloway'. It even followed me into the women's restroom, where two girls abruptly stopped talking when I walked through the door.By the time my final class ended, I was exhausted. I had spent most of my life bl
POV: ElenaBy the time we left the jewelry store, I felt sick. The diamond ring sitting on my finger was beautiful, expensive, and completely believable. That was the problem. Nobody looking at it would think it belonged to a fake fiancée being blackmailed into saving a basketball star's reputation
POV: ElenaI spent most of the night staring at my ceiling and wondering how my life had managed to collapse so completely in less than twenty-four hours.Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Jace standing in his study with my old notebook in his hand. Each time I drifted off, I woke up to the image
POV: ElenaI hated him. The realization followed me all the way back to my room. Not the childish kind of hate I used to carry after he pulled my pigtails in middle school or laughed when other kids mocked me. Not the bitter resentment of a girl whose first crush turned into her first bully.This wa
POV: ElenaAlmost instantly, the heavy, dark atmosphere Jace radiated began driving his guests toward the exits. Nobody wanted to be in the firing line of Halden University’s golden boy when he looked like he was about to rip a door off its hinges. Whispering crowds flooded, scrambling to grab thei







