POV: Layla BrooksIt had been three days since I hit send. Two days since I stopped checking my email every hour. And one day since the trembling started beneath my ribs—an anxious kind of restlessness I couldn’t quite name.Still no response from The Fold.I was beginning to feel like Schrödinger’s applicant—accepted and rejected at the same time, suspended in a purgatory of potential.Lucas nudged my elbow gently. “You’ve been staring at that inbox like it owes you money.”I blinked. “It kind of does. Like, the emotional equivalent.”He chuckled and handed me a croissant. “Eat something. You’re too tense.”“I’m fine,” I said, but the truth was—I wasn’t.Zoe walked in a moment later, balancing her tablet and an iced latte like a seasoned pro. “Did you check this morning?” she asked immediately, her voice tinged with hope.“Checked. Refreshed. Stared at the screen. Nothing.”“It’s still early,” Zoe said. “And no news doesn’t mean bad news. It could mean your application made it to t
POV: Mara GreeneLayla was smiling again. But I’d learned not to trust smiles. Not the kind she wore lately—thin, practiced, flickering like a candle someone kept trying to blow out.We’d both learned to master the art of pretending after trauma. So I saw through it.And I worried.“I’m fine,” she said that Saturday as we sat in our favorite little café, the one with chipped mugs and piano jazz playing too low for anyone but us to notice.She stirred her tea like it held secrets. Like her silence could dissolve if she just kept moving the spoon long enough.“You’re not,” I replied gently.Layla looked up, her eyes betraying the fatigue beneath her polished face. “I’m just tired. Work’s intense. The Fold application. That’s all.”“You’ve been tired before,” I said. “This feels different.”She didn’t answer right away.I waited.It’s how we’d learned to talk—quietly, carefully, giving each other the space to unfold or retreat.“I feel like I’m holding everything up with strings,” she
POV: Layla BrooksEvery hour felt like a heartbeat against a deadline.The Fold wasn’t just an opportunity—it was the opportunity. If I got this right, everything I’d been building for would take flight. If I failed… I’d go back to the shadows of someone else’s pages.But I wasn’t the same girl who once hid behind silence.So I drafted. Deleted. Rewrote. Breathed. Cried. Sipped lukewarm coffee at midnight and stared out my window, searching for a line that would make someone feel something.Because that’s what I knew how to do—make words feel.The task was twofold: a written application and a five-minute video presentation that captured not just my experience, but my editorial vision. What kind of voice would you elevate if given the chance? they asked.I knew the answer instinctively.Voices that have been overlooked, muted, or flattened into someone else’s comfort. Voices like mine. Like Mara’s. Like every girl who learned to survive by folding herself small.It wasn’t a resume that
POV: Layla BrooksThe offer letter sat in my inbox like a bomb waiting to detonate.Subject: CONFIDENTIAL – Editor Consideration | The Fold MagazineI’d opened it six times, read every word, checked the sender address to make sure it wasn’t a scam. It wasn’t.The Fold was legendary. A publication that shaped global culture, led opinion, launched voices into the stratosphere. Writers waited years for a freelance feature spot. Editors? They barely ever left. And when they did, it was like a shifting star—noticeable, rare, and full of possibility for the person who stepped in.And now, they were asking me to apply for the open junior editor position.Me. Layla Brooks. Editorial assistant.I sat at my desk that morning, the office still quiet, the city barely awake, staring at the screen like it held the answer to a question I hadn’t dared ask: Was I ready for this?My hands trembled. But only slightly.By mid-morning, everyone was in. Lucas passed by my desk, flashing his usual easy grin
POV: Layla BrooksMondays had a rhythm—predictable, a little bitter, and always salvaged by caffeine.I walked into the office just past eight, cradling a cinnamon latte, the city still yawning itself awake behind me. My blouse was tucked perfectly, my mind only slightly less so. It was getting easier to show up now, to press “play” on this version of life again, even when grief still echoed in small corners of me.Lucas waved from his desk as I passed. “Morning, superstar.”I rolled my eyes. “You say that like I didn’t almost spill coffee on myself ten minutes ago.”“Confidence is 90% pretending not to be a disaster.”“Well then,” I smiled, “I’m thriving.”Zoe arrived moments later, cheeks flushed, energy bright. She’d been settling in well as our intern, and though still eager to please, she had started to show flashes of real insight during brainstorming sessions.I’d also started noticing the way her eyes flickered toward Lucas more than once.The way she always seemed to need his
POV: Layla BrooksMara arrived just after sunset.She didn’t text beforehand. No grand gesture. Just a gentle knock at the door of my apartment, followed by her familiar silhouette framed in warm hallway light.“I brought food,” she said, holding up a paper bag like a peace offering. “And a bottle of something that pretends to be wine.”I opened the door wider. “Then you can definitely come in.”She smiled, and I could tell she was studying me—quietly, carefully, the way people do when they’re trying to gauge how deep the wounds go without asking outright.The last time we’d sat together, I had barely spoken. My head was fogged by fear, my body still recovering from the trauma of being held against my will. This time was different. I was different.She set the bag down on the kitchen counter and pulled two glasses from the cabinet like she had lived here once. Maybe in some ways, she had. Not this physical space—but the emotional one. The part of me that remembered how it felt to laug