LOGINKamara’s POV
The drive was a quiet one as I watched the only place I’d ever known pass by. Every corner we turned reminded me of Mom, and saying goodbye was even harder because I wasn’t given the chance. It felt like she’d been ripped out of my world and replaced with silence, and silence was louder than any goodbye could’ve been. When the car pulled up, I stepped out, staring at the five-floor building in front of me. It looked completely ordinary, a quiet neighborhood, and average neighbors. Nothing like home. “Well, this should be fun,” I muttered. “Sophomore year across the country, away from everything I know… and in a shitty apartment.” Jace grabbed my backpack from the trunk and walked up the stairs without saying a word. We stopped on the third floor. He handed me the keys. I snatched them from his hand. “The new school’s just a few blocks away,” he said as I unlocked the door. Inside was a small but decent setup, a living room, a mini kitchen, and one door that probably led to the bedroom. Everything already set up. Small. But… cozy. Not that I’d admit that out loud. A lemon-scented candle was already lit on the counter, which surprised me. I figured one of my dad’s people had been here to prepare the space. That, or Jace had done it himself, which made the idea even weirder. It didn’t fit him. The man was all steel and silence, not warm smells and clean countertops. Jace dropped my bags inside. “Call me if you need anything.” He stepped out. But not two seconds later, I heard another set of keys jingling. I poked my head into the hallway and froze. Jace was unlocking the apartment right across from mine. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” I asked. “Your father assigned me to this district. I am moving in.” My jaw nearly dropped as he pulled open the door. “No way!” I nearly choked on my own breath. “No way. You are not moving in here. As if bringing me here wasn’t enough, now he’s assigned you to bodyguard me?” He dropped a duffel on the floor. “Your father gave an order. I follow orders.” I stared at him, stunned. “Do you even think for yourself?” I already knew the answer. He never did—not where my father was concerned. He owed him everything… or so the story went. That’s what made him dangerous. And exactly why my father trusted him with me. All through the time I’d known him, he spoke very little. “Could you be any more inhumane?” I snapped. “Everything is already messed up, and the last thing I need is my father’s watchdog breathing down my neck.” “I’m only here to keep you safe and protect you, Miss Mann.” “I don’t need your protection!” “You don’t get to decide, Miss Mann.” He said again, ever-so casually it almost taunted me. Damn, he was so formal it made me look crazy. I’d never seen anyone so entitled and determined to protect someone who didn’t want him around. He started toward his door. “I’ll drop you off at the university tomorrow.” He disappeared into the apartment. — As promised, Jace dropped me off despite my protest souring my already shitty morning. I didn’t know what to expect. How was I supposed to act like everything was alright, when it indeed wasn’t? A new town, new people, and no more of my mom. I’d cried myself to sleep the previous night, praying that all of it would be a dream, but instead, I stood in front of NCU. Wearing an average t-shirt and skirt. My hair tied in its usual bun. I didn’t even care to renew it. I was too tired to even care about how I looked. Valerie had transferred as well but wouldn’t be around for another day. That fact alone added a bitchy attitude to my already long morning. I didn’t realize how much I’d leaned on her presence, even when we weren’t on the best of terms. A gust of wind lifted my curls right into my lip gloss. I rolled my eyes, tugging them away as I stared at the campus gates. Then in a blink of an eye— I wasn’t paying attention. Not to where I was going or at the stupid iced coffee in his hand. Nor the fact that he was definitely taller than me and definitely not watching where he was going either. We collided. Cold liquid soaked into my white tank top like karma had been waiting all morning for the perfect moment to strike. “Shit—sorry,” he said quickly. I stepped back, staring down at the brown stain dripping down my chest. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” I muttered. I looked up, ready to cuss, but stopped mid-sentence as I got a better look. Shit. Of course he’d be hot. Perfect jawline, blonde, a single earring in one ear, eyes that were hazel, and a jaw that tightened like he was holding back a smirk. “Let me get you a napkin,” he offered, already pulling one from his back pocket. The entire crowd around already had their eyes on us. Correction: on him. I snatched it from him. “I’m good.” He blinked at my tone, then his lips twitched. “You’re new here?” “Wow. What gave it away? The coffee on my shirt or the fact that I’m not eying you like everyone else?” He chuckled. Then I watched his eyes slowly move from my head to toe. “I’m also new. Well, two weeks in, if that’s still considered new.” He looked up, then extended his hand to me for a handshake. “I’m Brian.” I didn’t take it. “Kamara.” He let his hand fall to his side, unfazed by my lack of a handshake. “Nice to meet you anyway, Kamara. Sorry again about the coffee.” I gave a tight nod and dabbed at the mess on my shirt. Brian laughed again. “There’s a café across the quad, decent coffee, less tragic outcomes. If you want a fresh one.” “You want to get me a coffee?” I raised a brow. Again his eyes roamed my body head to toe, and I couldn’t help feeling a little uncomfortable. “Yeah. Seems like a good way to apologize for this mess.” Was this flirting? I wasn’t sure. It was casual enough to pass for kindness, but the look in his eyes and the way he looked at me lingered just a little longer than necessary said otherwise. “I’m good,” I said again, more calmly this time. “Thanks.” He nodded, flashing a too cheerful smile, one I didn't return. “See you around, Kamy.” Kamy?KAMARASurprisingly, the morning sun was already high in the sky when my eyes finally fluttered open. I blinked at the digital clock on my nightstand. Almost 10:00 AM. I had completely slept in a luxury I hadn't allowed myself in what felt like centuries.Yawning, I pulled on a comfortable sweater and stepped out into the hallway, only to find Kaela walking out of her room at the exact same time, rubbing her eyes with a sleepy groan."What did you put in that food last night, Kaela?" I teased, leaning against the banister as we made our way toward the grand staircase. "I feel like I’ve been asleep for a decade."Before Kaela could even manage a groggy response, we reached the top of the stairs and stopped dead in our tracks.The entire living room below had been transformed. Streamers in deep gold and soft silver draped gracefully from the high ceilings, and a massive banner reading HAPPY 22ND BIRTHDAY KAMARA & KAELA! stretched across the main wall. Before we could even process the si
KamaraA Year LaterTime has a strange way of reshaping our lives when we aren't looking. For an entire year, I had completely buried myself in my studies, trading the dangerous chaos of my family’s world for the quiet, predictable rhythm of university lecture halls. The past year had changed everything.My phone buzzed in my hand, the screen lighting up with a name I had spent the last twelve months trying to lock away.Brian. He had reached out a dozen times over the past few months, begging for a chance to explain, to mend the wreckage he’d contributed to. And while he seemed to be doing well for himself now that his father was locked securely behind bars, forgiveness wasn't something I could just hand over. I didn't trust him. I didn't know if I ever would.With a definitive swipe, I declined the call, pushing the thought aside as the car came to a stop in front of the estate. I hadn’t been back properly in almost a year. But now I was finally here.And tomorrow…I was turning
KamaraI couldn't register the information at once.I looked at Dr. Laurence, but her face was beginning to blur into a smear of clinical white and sterile grey. “That can’t be true, right?” I looked at Elijah, desperate for him to tell me this was just another mind game, another lie to keep me off balance. “Right?”Elijah didn't look at me. He was staring at the floor, his hands shoved so deep into his pockets his knuckles were likely white. The doctor hesitated, then she slowly shook her head.“At the moment, I know it’s a lot to process. But it’s too early to say 'permanent,'" she clarified. "With intensive physical therapy and time, the nerves may recover. But for the foreseeable future, he’s going to be in a wheelchair.”May. Not would.I leaned against the wall, my heart fracturing. All I could feel was a violent, erratic thumping in my chest. He saved me, and this was the cost. "Does he know?"“I haven’t said it directly yet. But judging from his reactions…” She sighed softly,
KAMARA“I still think this whole thing is unnecessary.”A soft laugh left my lips as I adjusted the shopping bag sitting beside me in the backseat.“You’ve said that three times already,” I muttered into the phone.“And I’ll say it again,” Father replied smoothly. “We can have dinner without turning it into a royal ceremony.”“It’s not a ceremony,” I argued, smiling despite myself. “It’s literally just dinner.”“With enough food to feed an army.”“That’s because Kaela barely eats.”“And?”“And you eat…well…”A low chuckle rumbled through the speaker. It was strange.Weeks ago, speaking to my father felt impossible. Now we could somehow sit on a call arguing about dinner plans and food portions like normal people.Normal.I never thought we would get here.“You’re smiling,” he suddenly said.I blinked. “What?”“You always go quiet when you smile.”Something softened painfully in my chest.Maybe he was learning me too.I looked out the car window, watching the streets blur past. “Maybe
KamaraFor the next few days, Jace hadn’t woken up.The doctors kept saying he was recovering, though very slowly. There were too many internal injuries, too much damage his body had sustained, and every step of his treatment had to be handled carefully.It hurt hearing it every single time, but at least he was alive. That was the only thing keeping me together.Life outside the hospital had somehow continued moving, even after everything that happened.Matthias had finally been arrested.The authorities found enough evidence in the files we recovered to bury him for good, and whatever they discovered inside his house only made things worse for him. For once, justice was actually happening.And Elijah…I had seen him a few times over the past week whenever he came around to help with bills or check in on things. He looked different now. Lighter somehow. Like he was finally trying to rebuild himself after everything.I liked that for him.Honestly, I liked that for all of us. Maybe thi
Kamarawas it. My life up until this moment.They said minutes before you die, the best moments of your life flash before your eyes. But right now, all I could see was fear. The cold barrel of the pistol was a focal point of terror against my skin. I could smell the gunpowder and the sweat on Ricko’s palm as he hauled me up. My feet barely touched the floor."Mom, please..." My voice was thin and shaky."I'm scared. I don't want to die. Mom, do something!""Keep your mouth shut, girl!" Ricko snarled, his grip on my throat tightening until I felt the pressure in my eyes. He looked at my mother with an ugly grin. "You see her, Vivian? This is your handiwork. Every tear she sheds, every bruise on that boy on the floor, it’s all because of you. You ruined their lives before they even started living it."My mother was shaking so hard the gun in her hand was a blur. "No... I tried to protect them. I did it for my family… all I do is for my family.”"Look where that landed you!" He barked.
Kamara’s POVIt was well past three in the afternoon and still no sign of him.Was he deliberately avoiding me… or was I reading into things the way I always did?I shoved the thought aside, focusing instead on the cup of ice cream in my hands, the once solid, now a sad, melted swirl I kept stirrin
Kamara pov.At first it started off like a blurry haze, but the moment his hands snaked their way around my waist in that solid, unyielding grip, I knew I’d crossed a line.One I wasn’t sure I wanted to stop.The first press of his mouth against mine was firm, like he’d already made a decision and
Jace’s POV“I can’t believe this,” she said, breathless. “I really can’t.”She sat back down, lifting her glass again without thinking. She refilled it.I watched, silent.“It’s a scam,” she decided, laughing. “Being grown. Total scam.”She took another sip.Then another.At some point, she pushed
Kamara’s pov. All afternoon I tried to not think of anything but it seemed even more impossible in the empty beach house. Thirty minutes ago. I picked up my phone at the sound of a notification and instantly regretted it the moment I opened it. More comments, so much hate and most from friends re







