LOGINHe walks toward me like he already belongs in my life.
I tell myself not to look at him again.
I look anyway.He stops a few steps away. Close enough that I feel aware of him. Too aware. His presence presses in, calm and steady, like he isn’t worried about being noticed. Like he knows he will be.
“Are you feeling better?” he asks.
His voice is even. Polite. Almost distant. But his eyes are not polite. They study me. Quiet. Careful. Like he’s reading something written under my skin.
“I didn’t say I wasn’t feeling fine,” I replied.
“You didn’t have to.”
That annoys me.
“I’m not interested in small talk,” I say.
A corner of his mouth lifts. “Good. Neither am I.”
Maddie shifts beside me. I feel her watching us. Measuring. Curious.
“I should go,” I add, though I don’t move.
“You can,” he says. “Or you can stay.”
“Why would I stay?”
“Because you’re not done being angry yet.”
That lands too close.
“I don’t let strangers tell me how I feel.”
“I’m not telling,” he says calmly. “I’m noticing.”
I cross my arms. “You notice too much.”
“Occupational habit.”
“Let me guess,” I say. “You’re used to people wanting your attention.”
He doesn’t deny it. That silence tells me more than words.
“And you?” he asks. “You look like someone who gives too much of it.”
I laughed once. Short. Sharp.
“You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know you’re trying not to cry.”
The words hit hard.
Maddie clears her throat. “I’m going to get a drink,” she says, very deliberately. “I’ll be right back.”
She leaves us alone.
I straighten my shoulders. “If this is your way of flirting, it’s not working.”
His gaze softens. Just slightly. “I’m not flirting.”
“Good.”
“But,” he continues, “if I were, I’d say you have a strong face. Like someone who learned how to survive disappointment.”
My chest tightens.
“That’s not a compliment,” I say.
“It is if it’s true.”
I don’t respond. I don’t trust my voice.
He breaks the silence first. “You don’t have to talk to me.”
“And yet you keep standing here.”
“Because you didn’t ask me to leave.”
I look at him then. Really look. The confidence is real. Not loud. Not forced. It’s the kind that comes from knowing exactly who you are.
“I just got dumped,” I say suddenly.
His brow lifts. “I gathered.”
“He did it over text.”
A pause. A real one.
“That’s unforgivable,” he says.
“Ten years,” I add. “And he couldn’t even say it to my face.”
“He didn’t deserve those ten years.”
My phone vibrates in my hand.
I already know who it is.
I don’t want to look. I do anyway.
Another message from Ryan.
Stop embarrassing yourself.
My jaw tightens.
“Everything okay?” he asks.
“Perfect,” I lied.
He watches me read the screen. I feel exposed. Raw.
“You don’t have to protect him,” he says quietly.
“I’m not.”
“You are,” he insists. “You’re angry at yourself instead.”
I bristle. “You’re crossing a line.”
“Then draw it,” he says. “I’ll respect it.”
I hesitate.
“Fine,” I say. “Line drawn.”
He nods. “Understood.”
For a moment, neither of us speaks.
Then my phone buzzes again.
Everyone’s watching you.
I inhale sharply.
“You look like you want to throw that phone,” he says.
“I want to throw the person attached to it.”
“That can be arranged,” he says lightly.
I snort despite myself. “You’re ridiculous.”
“Sometimes.”
I glance at him. “Why are you really here?”
His eyes darken. Just a little.
“Because I needed a distraction,” he says honestly.
“From what?”
“From people who only see the headline version of me.”
I stiffen. “So I’m a distraction?”
He studies my face. “You’re not something anyone could use without consequences.”
That sends a strange shiver through me.
Before I can reply, my phone vibrates again.
This time, the message is different.
Aren’t you supposed to be home crying?
My hands shake.
“That’s enough,” I whisper.
“What?” he asks.
I turn the screen toward him. “Read it.”
He does. His expression changes. The calm fractures. Something colder replaces it.
“He’s enjoying this,” he says.
“He always does,” I reply bitterly.
“He thinks he owns you.”
“He doesn’t,” I snapped.
“Then prove it,” he says.
I look up sharply. “What?”
He steps closer. Not touching. Not invading. Just close enough that his voice drops.
“Let him see you’re not alone.”
I laugh again. “I’m not going to use you to make my ex jealous.”
“I’m not offering to be used,” he says. “I’m offering to stand next to you.”
“That’s the same thing.”
“It’s not,” he says quietly. “Using is empty. Standing is intentional.”
My heart pounds.
“This is a bad idea,” I murmur.
“Most honest things are.”
Before I can answer, my phone buzzes again.
This time, it’s a picture.
Ryan.
With her. Her hand on his chest. His smile was wide.My chest aches.
“He moved on fast,” Alex says flatly.
“I guess it didn't matter,” I whisper.
He shakes his head. “That’s not how that works.”
“Isn’t it?”
“No,” he says firmly. “People like that don’t leave because they stop caring. They leave because they’re afraid of being seen.”
I swallow.
“Stop defending him,” I say.
“I’m not,” he replies. “I’m defending you.”
That breaks something inside me.
“I don’t need defending,” I say, though my voice trembles.
“Then let me be honest,” he says. “You’re standing here like someone who forgot her worth.”
Anger flares. “You don’t get to say that.”
“I do,” he says calmly. “Because I can see it. And because I won’t pretend I don’t.”
My phone vibrates again.
This time the message makes my blood run cold.
If you keep this up, I’ll tell them everything.
My stomach drops.
“What does he mean?” Alex asks quietly.
“Nothing,” I lied too fast.
He doesn’t push. But his gaze sharpens.
Maddie returns then, her smile forced. “Everything okay?”
“Fine,” I say.
Alex straightens. “I should go.”
I nod. Relief and disappointment crash together.
“Goodnight,” I say.
He takes a step back. Then stops.
“One thing,” he says.
I look up.
“You’re stronger than you think,” he says. “And he knows it.”
Before I can reply, he leans closer. His voice lowers. Intimate. Dangerous.
“You don’t know how dangerous you are to me.”
My breath catches.
And suddenly, I know.
This isn’t over.
It’s just beginning.
Why does his voice sound like a warning and why does part of me want to cross the line anyway?
Ryan’s voice was soft when he said my name, and that scared me more than if he had shouted.I should have walked away.I knew that.I felt it.But my feet stayed still.“You look tired,” Ryan said, leaning closer, his tone gentle, almost caring. “This whole thing with Alex… it’s breaking you.”I swallowed. I hated that he noticed. I hated that he was right.“I’m fine,” I said, but my voice did not agree with me.He smiled slowly. Not warm. Not kind. Calculated.“Izzy, you don’t have to pretend with me. I know you. I always have.”That word. Always.It dug into old wounds I never fully closed.“You left,” I reminded him. “You don’t get to say that.”His face shifted, regret flashing for half a second before disappearing.“I left because I was scared,” he said. “And now you’re walking into something worse.”I shook my head. “You don’t know that.”“I do,” he said quickly. “Alex lives in secrets. He thrives in lies. You’re just the next headline.”That hurt.Because part of me already fea
The picture went live before I could stop it.I knew because my phone buzzed once. Then again. Then it would not stop. My name flashed across the screen like a warning I had ignored too many times.I opened the link with shaking fingers.There I was.Too close to someone who was not Alex. Too close in a way that told a lie without words. The angle was wrong. The moment was stolen. The truth twisted.My chest felt hollow.“That’s not what it looks like,” I whispered, though no one could hear me.The comments were already pouring in.She moves fast.Guess Alex was just a phase.Knew she couldn’t keep it clean.I closed my eyes. My hands went cold.It had been nothing. A brief conversation. A polite goodbye. A hand on my arm that lasted half a second too long. But the photo froze it into something ugly.I heard Alex before I saw him.“Where did this come from?” he asked.I looked up. His face was tight. Not angry. Controlled. That scared me more.“I don’t know,” I said. “I didn’t even no
I did not answer him right away.The question stayed between us, heavy and fragile.Do you trust me yet?I wanted to say yes. I wanted to say it fast and without fear. But trust was not a switch I could flip. It was a wound that healed slowly, and only if no one pressed too hard.“I’m trying,” I said finally.Alex nodded. He did not push. He never did when it mattered most.“That’s enough for now,” he said.I exhaled. My shoulders relaxed a little.We sat in silence for a moment. Not empty. Not awkward. Just full. My mind kept circling the same thought. There was something he was not saying. I felt it the way you feel a storm before the rain.“You’re holding something back,” I said.He did not deny it.“I was hoping you wouldn’t notice yet,” he replied.I gave a weak smile. “I notice everything. It’s a curse.”He leaned forward, elbows on his knees. His hands clasped together. Tense.“There are things I can’t tell you,” he said. “Not because I don’t want to. Because it’s not only my s
I stopped pretending I was fine.That was the truth pressing against my chest as I stood across from Alex, knowing too much had already happened for things to stay simple. The silence between us was loud. Heavy. Full of things we had not said.“You’re angry,” he said.“I’m tired,” I replied. “There’s a difference.”“There is,” he agreed. “But they look the same on you.”I crossed my arms. “You don’t get to read me like that.”“I already do,” he said softly.That scared me.I looked away first. I hated that I did.“You should’ve told me about the sponsor,” I said. “You should’ve told me how much this could cost you.”“I was trying to protect you,” he said.“No,” I snapped. “You were trying to control the damage.”He flinched. Just slightly.“That’s not fair,” he said.“I know,” I said. “But neither is finding out I could ruin your life from someone else.”He stepped closer. Not touching. Never forcing.“I made a choice,” he said. “Before you ever said yes.”“And what choice was that?”
The world woke up angry.That was the first thought in my head when my phone would not stop buzzing. Messages. Alerts. Missed calls. My name is everywhere. My face is everywhere. That photo is everywhere.I stared at the screen until the words blurred.“They think they know me,” I whispered.Alex was already awake. I could tell by the way he moved. Quiet. Controlled. Like someone trained to stay calm when things explode.“Don’t read the comments,” he said.“I need to,” I replied. “If I don’t see it, it feels worse.”“You don’t owe strangers your pain,” he said.I laughed softly. “I used to think love meant explaining yourself until people understood.”His eyes softened. “And now?”“Now I know that was survival,” I said. “Not love.”He nodded once.The news spun the story fast. Some called it romance. Some called it a scandal. Some called me names I refused to repeat in my head.I put the phone down.“What’s the plan?” I asked.“We don’t hide,” Alex said. “Hiding looks like guilt.”“An
The rumors started before I could breathe.I did not need anyone to tell me. I felt it in the pauses. I heard it in the way conversations stopped when I walked in. I saw it in the looks that lingered too long and the smiles that did not reach the eyes.Something was wrong.My phone buzzed again.I ignored it.I told myself I was done reacting. Done shrinking. Done letting Ryan pull strings from a distance.Still, my chest felt tight.Maddie called first.“Tell me you’ve seen it,” she said, her voice sharp with anger.“Seen what?” I asked, though I already knew.She exhaled hard. “He’s talking. Again.”Of course he was.“What did he say this time?” I asked.“That you’re using Alex. That you always do this. That you climb men and burn them when you’re done.”My grip tightened around the phone.“That’s rich,” I said. “Coming from him.”“I know,” Maddie said. “But people are listening.”That hurt more than I wanted to admit.I ended the call and stared at my screen. Messages stacked up. S







