The final bell rang and I all but bolted from my seat, stuffing my books into my backpack with the grace of a sleep-deprived raccoon. School drained me enough without the added headache of navigating the social landmines that came with Beatrice and her ever-watchful gaze.
She’d been acting strange lately. Not her usual cold and calculated self—but tense. Uneasy. Almost as if something was unraveling, and I couldn’t help but notice that Liam was always somewhere in the background of that fray. He’d been… different. Looking at me longer. Smirking more often. And earlier that day in the hallway, when he caught me by the waist after I nearly slipped on a spilled coffee, it felt like the whole world paused for a second too long. I hated that. I hated him. The air outside was crisp, sunlight spilling across the parking lot as I made my way toward the sidewalk. My headphones were in, volume turned up to ignore the usual crowd of students piling into cars and buses. And then I saw him. Liam. Leaning against a sleek black Audi like it was part of his uniform—white T-shirt tight enough to suggest he cared how he looked, sunglasses too obnoxious for a boy still in high school. He looked like trouble. And unfortunately, he was looking at me. I slowed, one foot instinctively shifting back like I could disappear into thin air. “Hey, new girl,” he called out. His voice was casual, but there was something smug in it. The kind of smug that made you want to punch him just to wipe the grin off his face. I tugged one earbud out. “What?” “We’ve got that history project to finish, remember?” he said, already pushing off the car and walking toward me like he owned the sidewalk. “You’re coming with me.” I blinked, confused. “Excuse me?” “We’re doing it at my place. Thought I’d save us both the pain of sending emails back and forth.” I crossed my arms. “That was the plan, Liam. That was the agreement.” He shrugged like it didn’t matter. “Yeah, well, plans change. Come on.” He walked over to the passenger side and opened the door, like he was holding it for some princess in a rom-com. Only I wasn’t that girl, and this wasn’t a love story. I didn’t move. “I’m not going anywhere with you.” Liam tilted his head. “Why not? Scared of me?” “No,” I snapped. “I just don’t like you. I don’t trust you. And I think you’re an arrogant jerk who’s only nice when it benefits him.” “Ouch.” He clutched his chest in mock pain. “You wound me.” “Good.” He sighed then, the smirk briefly falling away. “Look, Zara. I’m not trying to hit on you. I just want to get this project over with. It’s due in two days, and I’m not about to fail because you’re being stubborn.” His tone was different. Less flirty, more… tired. I eyed him carefully. Was this genuine? Still, I stayed planted. “And why your house? Why not the library?” “Because my house has snacks and peace and quiet, and I won’t have to listen to Matteo practice his pick-up lines across the table. You want to work or not?” I hesitated. I hated him. But I hated failing even more. With a groan, I stomped toward the car and tossed my bag into the footwell of the passenger seat. “Fine. But if you try anything, I swear to God—” “I know, I know,” he cut in, sliding into the driver’s seat with a grin. “Pepper spray. You’ve said that before. You really carry it?” I gave him a pointed look and reached into my backpack, pulling out a small pink bottle. Liam laughed as he started the engine. “Feisty.” “Focused,” I corrected, buckling my seatbelt. “And very aware of who I’m sitting next to.” ⸻ The ride to his house was quieter than I expected. Liam didn’t turn on the radio. He didn’t talk. He just drove, one hand on the wheel, the other resting lazily by the gearshift. I kept stealing glances at him, trying to figure him out. What was this? A trap? A joke? Another Beatrice-orchestrated plan to humiliate me? Whatever it was, I was tense the entire drive. Until we pulled up to his house. And my jaw dropped. It wasn’t a house—it was a statement. A modern architectural masterpiece made of black steel, glass, and clean white stone. Floor-to-ceiling windows revealed flashes of pristine interiors: a sweeping staircase with a glass railing, designer furniture in bold monochrome, and what looked like a massive indoor koi pond beneath the walkway. The lawn was perfectly trimmed, framed by white roses and symmetrical hedges. Even the pavement looked like it had been freshly waxed. He lived here? “You own a museum?” I blurted as he pulled into the circular driveway, parking next to a matte-gray Range Rover and what I swore was a vintage Aston Martin. Liam looked over at me, amused. “Nah. Just home.” I stared at him, then at the house, then back at him. “This isn’t a home, Liam. This is where tech billionaires hide from the government.” He laughed, casually grabbing his bag. “You coming, or are you just going to gawk from the passenger seat all day?” Still stunned, I followed him up the sleek concrete steps to the front door. It slid open before he even touched it—smart house, of course—and we were greeted by the soft hum of ambient music and the subtle scent of vanilla and something expensive I couldn’t identify. The inside was even more ridiculous. Marble floors that looked too polished to walk on, chrome finishes, a grand piano placed strategically beside a glass wall overlooking the infinity pool. A sunken living room boasted a massive sectional couch that could fit the entire student body, and mounted on the far wall was a TV bigger than my bedroom. “Try not to break anything,” he said, kicking off his sneakers without a care as he tossed his keys onto a sculptural console table. “Most of it costs more than your tuition.” “Wow,” I muttered, taking it all in. “You really are the cliché.” “Rich, charming, devastatingly handsome?” he asked, leading me toward a secondary lounge off to the side—because apparently one wasn’t enough. “Entitled, spoiled, and deeply punchable,” I replied. He snorted. “Fair enough.” We settled into what he called the study lounge, though it looked more like a minimalist art gallery with its black leather chairs, wall-mounted bookshelves, and floor-length curtains pulled back to reveal a water feature in the backyard. He dropped his bag lazily onto the sleek black coffee table and flopped into a low-slung chair like he did this every day. Which, apparently, he did. I sat across from him stiffly, clutching my laptop like it was a lifeline. “Okay,” I said, trying to refocus. “We still need to write the introduction and conclusion. And maybe add a few more sources.” Liam leaned forward, grabbing his notebook. “Cool. I’ll do the conclusion. You handle the intro. We’ll meet in the middle like a beautiful academic sandwich.” I groaned. “You’re insufferable.” “But talented,” he replied, winking. I rolled my eyes so hard I saw stars. For the next hour, we actually worked. And annoyingly, Liam was smart. He offered insights I hadn’t considered, challenged my wording in a way that was somehow more helpful than obnoxious. We barely spoke unless it was about the project, and a small part of me—one I refused to acknowledge—was impressed. But just as I was finally settling into a rhythm, Liam stood and stretched, walking over to the shelf beside the fireplace—because of course there was a fireplace in the study lounge. “You know,” he said, trailing a finger across a glass sculpture that probably cost more than my car, “I never really thought you hated me.” I froze, fingers hovering over my keyboard. “Well, surprise.” He turned, eyes scanning my face. “You don’t hate me. You’re just scared I’m not who you think I am.” “And who are you, Liam?” I asked bitterly. “Some poor misunderstood prince who just wants to be seen?” He grinned. “Something like that.” I scoffed, closing my laptop. “Spare me.” But as I stood to grab my bag, I noticed his expression shift—just for a second. Like he wanted to say something else. Something real. Instead, he just smiled and said, “Relax, Zara. It’s just a project. I’m not here to win you over.” And for some reason, that only made my heart beat faster.The hallways were buzzing when I walked into school the next morning—voices overlapping, sneakers squeaking, the usual hum of teenage chaos. I kept my head down, slipping through the crowd like a shadow. After last night at Liam’s house, I thought I’d shaken him off. That once the project was behind us, so was he. I was wrong. Because as I turned the corner toward my locker, there he was. Liam. Leaning against the metal like it was his personal throne, one foot crossed casually over the other, his head tilted just enough to look annoyingly cool. His tie was loose, blazer unbuttoned, and the grin he wore when he saw me was just shy of smug. My stomach did that stupid flip again—the one I hated. The one that meant danger. “Good morning, sunshine,” he said, pushing off the locker like he’d been waiting there all his life. I blinked, caught completely off guard. “What are you doing?” “Waiting for you,” he replied, as if it was obvious. “I figured after the quality bonding session
I should’ve said no.When Liam asked if I wanted to get ice cream, my mouth said “sure” before my brain could catch up. Probably because it felt easier than going back to the cafeteria, where Nick’s arm would still be wrapped around Kaylee like a damn possession, and where I’d have to keep pretending I was fine.So now we were here.At Sweet Daze, the annoyingly aesthetic ice cream shop two blocks from school, with hanging plants, neon signs, and a chalkboard menu that listed flavors like “lavender honey” and “blueberry basil.”Liam was already at the counter, confidently ordering a double scoop of espresso fudge in a waffle cone like he came here every weekend. I lingered behind, arms crossed, trying not to look like this was the first time I’d ever hung out with him voluntarily.“Your turn, hurricane,” he said, stepping aside and looking at me like he expected me to be difficult.“Don’t call me that,” I muttered, scanning the board.“Come on, it suits you.”“Fine. Then I’m calling y
Home didn’t feel like home anymore. The walls were the same—light gray with the little scuff marks near the baseboards from when I used to drag my desk chair around. My books were still stacked in the corner, alphabetized, untouched. Even my favorite hoodie was still hanging from the bedpost, exactly where I’d left it the day I walked out. But everything felt different now. Off. Maybe it was because this wasn’t just my home anymore. It was Nick’s too. After Mom left Dad and I became this two-person universe. And the woman I called her a second mother, well she did actually try to get me to open up, in other words, she tried to replace my mother but I hate her guts. Then I couldn’t take it anymore and moved to Kaylee’s. I just wished they would leave me alone but two weeks later, dad and Nick showed up with the police. They said a bunch of things like how I wasn’t eighteen and didn’t have the right to decide for myself and blah, blah, blah. So here I was. Back in a house I
I told myself a thousand times I wasn’t going to get in the car. I’d even picked out a book to “casually” read in bed, just in case anyone asked. But when Liam’s headlights appeared outside my window right on the dot at 7:30, my stomach twisted, and my legs moved before my brain could stop them. The air was sharp, cool against my skin as I stepped outside. Liam stood leaning against his car, arms crossed, eyes already on me like he’d been waiting for hours. “Wow,” he said, grinning. “I thought I’d have to text your dad to come drag you out.” “You don’t have my dad’s number,” I muttered, trying not to smile. “You don’t know that.” I rolled my eyes, but my pulse was already racing. We drove in silence at first. Not the awkward kind—something more… expectant. The windows were slightly down, letting in just enough of the breeze to carry the scent of pine and autumn. His playlist hummed in the background—low-fi, soft, and nothing like what I imagined Liam Knight would listen to. He
LIAM I shouldn’t have hit record. I don’t even remember doing it. Just a stupid impulse—something Beatrice suggested in passing, some twisted insurance that the plan was working. “Keep a little trophy,” she’d said, half-laughing. “So we can play it back when she realizes she was just a pawn.” At the time, I didn’t think twice. I didn’t think much at all. I just tapped record on my phone and slid it into my jacket pocket that night under the stars. And now I was back in my basement, sitting on one of the worn-out couches, surrounded by the people I used to think were the only ones who mattered. My guys—Matteo,Lucas, Levi and Mason —were sprawled across bean bags and armchairs, all wearing the same smug expressions. Beatrice was perched on the arm of the couch beside me, manicured hand lazily wrapped around a wine cooler she hadn’t asked permission to open. Her two shadows—Lena and Skye—were whispering and snickering like we were in middle school again. I hated the sound of it.
I leaned against my locker waiting for Kaylee to walk out of that classroom.I don't know what keeping her because school ended five minutes ago.I left immediately the bell rang because I had to put some stuff in my locker and she told she me she would join me immediately. Suddenly, I ran out of patience and just when I was about to enter the class, Kaylee zoomed pass me almost pushing me. ''Kaylee ! " I yelled running after her. She ignores me and quicken her pace. I run after her and soon caught up with her."Thanks for making me burn calories," I rolled my eyes, when I caught up with her but she ignored me and kept going. '' I've been waiting ...." I trailed off when I saw the tears in her eyes. '' What is wrong with you?" I asked with a frown. ''Nothing....'' Kaylee sniffed, wiping her face. ''Are you telling me or you want me to go in there and find out?" I threatened and saw her shake her head. "It's .... it's Beatrice," Kaylee sniffed and that was all I needed to hear. I
I pull up in the compound and find dad's car parked at its spot. "That's weird," I frown, entering the house. The house is very quiet and my live in nanny Tania is nowhere to be seen. Double weird, she normally greets me immediately I walk in and give me a hug. I walk into her room and it's empty. Before I could react, I hear a loud thud coming from Dad's study. I run to check it out immediately. The door is slightly open and I peek in to see mom sitting on the floor. Dad had a deep frown and he looked frustrated. Were they arguing? Triple weird. First dad came home early, Tania is nowhere around and my parents are arguing? What is going on?"I saw you with my own two eyes Joseph. There's no need to deny it," mom sobbed, getting up. What did she see? What was dad denying?"I know it has been going on for a while now but I chose to stay silent for my daughter's sake..."For my sake?"Not any more, I won't stay with a cheating husband," mom yelled angrily. Dad is cheating on mom?
I drove into the compound to see a moving truck with two men busily packing stuff inside. With a slight frown, I parked my trophy next to dad's car and walked in. "Mom!" I called, even though I really didn't want to speak to her. "Mom?!" I called again, taking the stairs but received no answer. I took the left turn and was heading towards my parents's bedroom when I collided into something…..someone. "You?!" We both chorused, staring at each other. Me in annoyance but the other person….in shock. "What are you doing here?" He asked with a smile. "Uhhhh….. I should be the one asking you dummy," I replied coldly, rolling my eyes. "Are you looking for someone…or something?"he raised a brow. "Wha….." "Hey mom," he cut me off, waving someone behind me. I stood there frozen for a second before I heard a familiar voice. "Nick…" Tania's responded and this time I couldn't stop myself from turning. My eyes were bulging out of their sockets when I saw Tania and the guy from the gym earli
LIAM I shouldn’t have hit record. I don’t even remember doing it. Just a stupid impulse—something Beatrice suggested in passing, some twisted insurance that the plan was working. “Keep a little trophy,” she’d said, half-laughing. “So we can play it back when she realizes she was just a pawn.” At the time, I didn’t think twice. I didn’t think much at all. I just tapped record on my phone and slid it into my jacket pocket that night under the stars. And now I was back in my basement, sitting on one of the worn-out couches, surrounded by the people I used to think were the only ones who mattered. My guys—Matteo,Lucas, Levi and Mason —were sprawled across bean bags and armchairs, all wearing the same smug expressions. Beatrice was perched on the arm of the couch beside me, manicured hand lazily wrapped around a wine cooler she hadn’t asked permission to open. Her two shadows—Lena and Skye—were whispering and snickering like we were in middle school again. I hated the sound of it.
I told myself a thousand times I wasn’t going to get in the car. I’d even picked out a book to “casually” read in bed, just in case anyone asked. But when Liam’s headlights appeared outside my window right on the dot at 7:30, my stomach twisted, and my legs moved before my brain could stop them. The air was sharp, cool against my skin as I stepped outside. Liam stood leaning against his car, arms crossed, eyes already on me like he’d been waiting for hours. “Wow,” he said, grinning. “I thought I’d have to text your dad to come drag you out.” “You don’t have my dad’s number,” I muttered, trying not to smile. “You don’t know that.” I rolled my eyes, but my pulse was already racing. We drove in silence at first. Not the awkward kind—something more… expectant. The windows were slightly down, letting in just enough of the breeze to carry the scent of pine and autumn. His playlist hummed in the background—low-fi, soft, and nothing like what I imagined Liam Knight would listen to. He
Home didn’t feel like home anymore. The walls were the same—light gray with the little scuff marks near the baseboards from when I used to drag my desk chair around. My books were still stacked in the corner, alphabetized, untouched. Even my favorite hoodie was still hanging from the bedpost, exactly where I’d left it the day I walked out. But everything felt different now. Off. Maybe it was because this wasn’t just my home anymore. It was Nick’s too. After Mom left Dad and I became this two-person universe. And the woman I called her a second mother, well she did actually try to get me to open up, in other words, she tried to replace my mother but I hate her guts. Then I couldn’t take it anymore and moved to Kaylee’s. I just wished they would leave me alone but two weeks later, dad and Nick showed up with the police. They said a bunch of things like how I wasn’t eighteen and didn’t have the right to decide for myself and blah, blah, blah. So here I was. Back in a house I
I should’ve said no.When Liam asked if I wanted to get ice cream, my mouth said “sure” before my brain could catch up. Probably because it felt easier than going back to the cafeteria, where Nick’s arm would still be wrapped around Kaylee like a damn possession, and where I’d have to keep pretending I was fine.So now we were here.At Sweet Daze, the annoyingly aesthetic ice cream shop two blocks from school, with hanging plants, neon signs, and a chalkboard menu that listed flavors like “lavender honey” and “blueberry basil.”Liam was already at the counter, confidently ordering a double scoop of espresso fudge in a waffle cone like he came here every weekend. I lingered behind, arms crossed, trying not to look like this was the first time I’d ever hung out with him voluntarily.“Your turn, hurricane,” he said, stepping aside and looking at me like he expected me to be difficult.“Don’t call me that,” I muttered, scanning the board.“Come on, it suits you.”“Fine. Then I’m calling y
The hallways were buzzing when I walked into school the next morning—voices overlapping, sneakers squeaking, the usual hum of teenage chaos. I kept my head down, slipping through the crowd like a shadow. After last night at Liam’s house, I thought I’d shaken him off. That once the project was behind us, so was he. I was wrong. Because as I turned the corner toward my locker, there he was. Liam. Leaning against the metal like it was his personal throne, one foot crossed casually over the other, his head tilted just enough to look annoyingly cool. His tie was loose, blazer unbuttoned, and the grin he wore when he saw me was just shy of smug. My stomach did that stupid flip again—the one I hated. The one that meant danger. “Good morning, sunshine,” he said, pushing off the locker like he’d been waiting there all his life. I blinked, caught completely off guard. “What are you doing?” “Waiting for you,” he replied, as if it was obvious. “I figured after the quality bonding session
The final bell rang and I all but bolted from my seat, stuffing my books into my backpack with the grace of a sleep-deprived raccoon. School drained me enough without the added headache of navigating the social landmines that came with Beatrice and her ever-watchful gaze.She’d been acting strange lately. Not her usual cold and calculated self—but tense. Uneasy. Almost as if something was unraveling, and I couldn’t help but notice that Liam was always somewhere in the background of that fray. He’d been… different. Looking at me longer. Smirking more often. And earlier that day in the hallway, when he caught me by the waist after I nearly slipped on a spilled coffee, it felt like the whole world paused for a second too long.I hated that. I hated him.The air outside was crisp, sunlight spilling across the parking lot as I made my way toward the sidewalk. My headphones were in, volume turned up to ignore the usual crowd of students piling into cars and buses.And then I saw him.Liam.
BEATRICE: Watching Liam hold Zara in such a manner made my heart sink. The sight of their banter turning playful and intimate ignited a fiery jealousy within me. I knew it was my idea to make Zara fall in love with Liam so that he could break her heart and ego but seeing them in such a position made me feel like he was going to fall in love with her for real. “What that all about?” I asked, anger laced in my voice. “What was what?” Liam asked, picking on French fry from Matteo’s plate and tossing it into his mouth. “What were you doing with Zara?” I pressed further. “Nothing,” Liam shrugged casually. “Liam. I saw you holding her waist. I saw the way she looked at you. I saw you…..” “Isn’t that what you wanted?” Liam’s words make me choke on mine. “Wasn’t it your idea? Did you not want me to get her to fall in love with me so that I can break her heart?” His words made my heart beat faster. The reality of my actions were now hitting me. What if Liam actually
ZARA: Nick was standing in front of the school when we arrived. I rolled my eyes in annoyance when I saw Kaylee run to him. “Hi Nick,” Kaylee greeted him cheerfully but I just rolled my eyes again and scoffed before walking past them. “Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed today,” I heard Nick tease me but I just ignored him and kept walking. I stopped by my locker and packed a few books before slamming it shut. “Won’t you take anything from your locker?” I turned to ask Kaylee but she and Nick were busy giggling over something. “What now?” I asked exasperated. “You won’t understand sis,” Nick said with a smile. “Sis? Don’t you ever call me that Nick. I am not your sister,” I said angrily, remembering dad’s betrayal all over again. Fresh tears pooled up in my eyes but I took in a deep breath and blinked them back away. “I’ll see you in class,” I told Kaylee before walking away. The bell soon rang and students flooded into the classroom in large
LIAM I drive out of the school after basketball practice with Beatrice sitting in the front seat. She must have noticed my spoilt mood so she didn’t say anything throughout the ride. “I’ll see you in school tomorrow,” I said, without sparing her a glance as I pulled up in front of her house. “My parents are in, I think you should come say hi,” she offered but I quickly declined. “Not today.” She nodded and got down from the car. I immediately drove off, ignoring her as she wave me. I drive straight home and thankfully, no one was around when I arrived. “Good evening sir,” one of the maids greeted me as I walked in. I handed over my bag and jacket to her and walked straight to my room. I needed a fresh shower so I went straight to the bathroom, my mind swirling with frustration. I turned the shower on, letting the cold water cascade down my body, but it did little to distract me from the thoughts of Zara. She had a knack for getting in my way and it infu