LOGINPOV: Elena
By 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 gesture was familiar enough to ease some of the tension sitting in my chest.
"Are you nervous?" she asked. I laughed. "Is it that obvious?" "A little." That was probably the understatement of the century. The past few days have been exhausting. Everywhere I went, people stared. Every public appearance became a discussion topic online. Every interaction with Jace felt like navigating a minefield.
Tonight promised to be even worse.
Before I could say anything else, my phone vibrated. One message appeared on the screen.
Jace: Stop hiding. We're leaving in five minutes.
I rolled my eyes.
My mother noticed. "Jace?" "Unfortunately." A laugh escaped her. "Try to enjoy yourself." I stared at her. "Have we met?" Her laughter followed me all the way downstairs.
The foyer looked like something out of a magazine.
Richard stood near the entrance in a perfectly tailored tuxedo while several household staff moved around making last-minute adjustments. Jace was already waiting beside the door. For a moment, I almost didn't recognize him. I was used to seeing him in basketball jerseys, hoodies, or casual clothes. Tonight, he wore a black suit that looked expensive enough to pay someone's tuition.
His eyes lifted when I reached the bottom step.
For the first time all evening, he stopped talking. The silence lasted only a second.
Still, I noticed. Apparently, so did Richard. A satisfied smile appeared on his face.
"Excellent." The word immediately made me suspicious. Richard stepped forward and looked between us. "Remember why we're attending tonight," I sighed. "To support the university." "No." I blinked. Richard's expression remained completely serious. "To be seen supporting the university. "The correction somehow made everything worse.
Beside me, Jace groaned.
"Can we go now?" "Please do." The drive to the hotel took twenty minutes. I spent most of it staring out the window. Jace spent most of it answering calls from teammates. Neither of us spoke much. The peace ended the moment we arrived.
The fundraiser occupied the ballroom of one of the city's most expensive hotels. Crystal chandeliers hung from the ceiling while elegantly dressed guests moved through the room balancing champagne glasses and polite smiles.
I immediately wanted to leave.
"Smile." I looked up. Jace offered me his arm. My stomach sank. "Seriously?" "Seriously." The smile on his face never wavered. "People are watching." Of course they were. People were always watching.
Suppressing a sigh, I slipped my arm through his. The effect was immediate. Several conversations paused. Heads turned. Cameras appeared. I hated everything. Jace leaned slightly closer. "Relax." "I'm trying." "You look like you're attending a funeral." "Maybe because I want to be buried." His shoulders shook with laughter.
To anyone watching, we probably looked content. The thought was depressing.
For the next hour, we played our roles. We greeted donors. We smiled for photographs. We listened to boring conversations about investments, university programs, and athletic sponsorships.
Everywhere we went, people seemed fascinated by our engagement. Several women asked how we met. One man wanted to know when the wedding would be. Another congratulated Jace on "finding such a lovely young woman."
I smiled so much my face started hurting.
At some point, Jace handed me a glass of sparkling water and guided me toward one of the quieter corners of the ballroom. "You look exhausted." I accepted the drink gratefully. "I am exhausted." His mouth twitched. "You've only been pretending to like people for an hour." "Exactly." To my surprise, he laughed. The sound felt different here. Softer. More genuine.
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
The noise of the ballroom faded into the background as we stood together near one of the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. The silence wasn't uncomfortable. That realization caught me off guard. Then a familiar voice shattered it.
"Well, this is disappointing." Every muscle in my body tensed.
Camille.
She stood several feet away wearing a sleek red dress and an expression that suggested she had just discovered something unpleasant. Her gaze moved from me to Jace. Then back again.
"You're really committing to the performance." Jace's expression hardened immediately. "What do you want?" Camille smiled. The expression never reached her eyes. "I came to support the university." "Sure you did." The smile widened.
For a moment, I thought she might continue the argument. Instead, her attention settled on me. Something cold flickered behind her eyes.
"I hope you're enjoying yourself, Elena." The words sounded harmless. The tone didn't. Before I could respond, Camille leaned slightly closer.
"Just remember that some fairy tales have expiration dates." A chill ran down my spine. Jace stepped forward instantly.
"Leave."
The single word carried enough force to make several nearby guests glance in our direction. For the first time all evening, Camille's smile slipped. Not completely. Just enough to reveal the anger underneath. Then, as quickly as it appeared, the mask returned.
"See you both soon." She turned and disappeared into the crowd.
The knot in my stomach remained. Beside me, Jace's jaw clenched. "You okay?" The question surprised me. I looked up. For once, there was no sarcasm in his expression. No arrogance. Just concern. The sight unsettled me more than Camille's warning. Because concern was harder to defend against.
And as I stood beside him beneath the ballroom lights, surrounded by people who believed our relationship was real, I found myself thinking something dangerous.
Pretending was becoming easier.
Far too easy.
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: ElenaThe suffocating weight of Jace’s gaze followed me all the way across the crowded floor. I kept my chin down, pushing past sweaty bodies and ignoring the stray glances from people who were too drunk to care but sober enough to whisper. My heart was a frantic drumbeat against my ribs as I
POV: ElenaBy eleven o'clock the next night, my bedroom felt less like a sanctuary and more like a vibrating cage.Thud. Thud. Thud.The heavy, aggressive bass from the sound system downstairs rattled the vintage glass panes of my private balcony. It had been going on for hours. What had started as
POV: ElenaThe sharp, echoing crack seemed to vibrate through the entire house, but neither of us moved.Water seeped into the pristine white tiles, carrying tiny, jagged shards right to the edge of his bare toes. Jace didn't even flinch. He just lowered the juice carton from his lips, his eyes tra
POV: ElenaThe blast of thick, humid air hit me the second I stepped off the jet bridge, but it wasn't nearly as suffocating as the voice vibrating against my eardrum."Elena? Are you off yet? Tell me you’re off the plane," my mother’s voice rushed through the line, accompanied by the distinct, cli







