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Sweetest Revenge
Sweetest Revenge
작가: Papilora

Chapter 1 - New Name, Same Pain

작가: Papilora
last update 최신 업데이트: 2025-10-11 19:24:10

The first thing they hand me at Blackridge Academy is a shiny new ID card. It has my fake name printed neatly across the bottom: Eva Sinclair.

I stare at the laminated rectangle longer than I should, pretending I’m checking for typos. The truth is, the sight of that name—this name I’ve rehearsed and memorized and practiced answering to—makes my stomach twist.

Eva Sinclair.

It sounds so clean, so polished. The kind of name that belongs in the marble hallways of this school, where the lockers gleam like polished silver and the uniforms look like they were tailored straight from a runway. A name no one will question, no one will dig into.

But beneath the neat lettering, I’m still Ava Carter. The girl who lost everything. The girl who doesn’t belong here.

I slip the ID into my blazer pocket and force my face into something calm. Collected. A girl with nothing to hide.

The secretary beams at me like she’s handing me a future wrapped with a bow. “Welcome to Blackridge, Miss Sinclair. You’re going to love it here.”

I give her a smile that’s practiced enough to almost look real. “I’m sure I will.”

That’s the thing about lies. If you polish them enough, they shine brighter than the truth.

The secretary gestures down the hall, pointing out classrooms and the library as if I’m actually listening. I nod at all the right places. My mind is elsewhere, mapping the steps of the plan I’ve been building for months.

Step one: Get in.

Step two: Get close.

Step three: Burn them all down.

The Langstons think they’ve buried the past. They think no one remembers the boy who disappeared, the scandal swept under their thick rugs of money and power. They think they’re untouchable.

They don’t know about me.

By the time I step into the hallway, the sound of shoes clicking against polished floors echoes around me. Students pass in clusters, their laughter light and careless, their ties hanging loose in ways that scream privilege.

I keep my stride steady, my chin lifted. It’s all in the performance. If you walk like you belong, people assume you do.

But my pulse is racing.

Because behind every smile and every perfect laugh, I see the ghosts of what happened here. I see Noah.

I blink, and it’s almost like I can hear his voice, teasing me the way he always did when I tried on his debate trophies like crowns. “You’re too stubborn for your own good, Ava. One day, that’s going to get you into trouble.”

He wasn’t wrong.

He also didn’t get the chance to be right.

The world says he killed himself. The Langstons made sure of it. The news articles were neat little obituaries full of lies. The whispers at school called him reckless, unstable. My parents tried to survive the aftermath, but the stares and the harassment were too much. Eventually, we had to leave.

But I never believed any of it. Not for one second.

And now, I’m back.

The bell rings, scattering the students like pigeons. I follow the crowd into my first class, sliding into a seat near the back. The teacher doesn’t ask too many questions when she introduces me. Just my name, which rolls off my tongue smoother every time I say it.

Eva Sinclair.

I can’t afford to trip over it. One wrong slip, and everything unravels.

The lesson blurs together, numbers and dates that I already know because I spent half the summer memorizing Blackridge’s curriculum. Preparation is survival. If I blend in perfectly, no one looks closer.

But all through the hour, my attention keeps flicking toward the door. Because I know he’s here. Somewhere in this building. The reason I’m sitting in this room instead of miles away under my real name.

Jace Langston.

The boy with the perfect smile and the perfect life. The boy who made my brother disappear.

When the bell finally frees us, I gather my books and follow the tide of students into the hallway. I don’t even realize I’m holding my breath until it happens.

He walks in.

And the air shifts.

I’d braced myself for him. For the version of Jace Langston I remembered from years ago, when he was just another golden boy strutting through Blackridge’s halls, soaking in attention like sunlight. Back then, he was untouchable—expensive watch, easy grin, the kind of charm that made people forget his father’s badge and his family’s corruption.

But the boy I see now is not the one I remembered.

He’s taller, broader, his jawline sharper. His blazer is half-buttoned like he couldn’t care less about dress codes. His knuckles are bruised, like he’s been fighting shadows no one else can see.

And his smile—the one that used to win everyone over so easily—is nowhere in sight.

Instead, his face is carved into something colder, something harder. His eyes sweep the hallway, calculating, dangerous, as if every person in his line of sight is a potential enemy.

Including me.

For a second, his gaze brushes past mine. Just a flicker, a spark that feels like it burns straight through the name tag on my chest.

I force myself not to flinch.

To him, I’m Eva Sinclair. Just another pretty transfer student trying to find her place. Nothing special. Nothing suspicious.

But the way he looks at me, sharp and suspicious, makes my chest tighten.

Does he know?

Impossible. I buried Ava Carter months ago.

Still, the part of me that’s been rehearsing this moment for years—the part that has dreamed of tearing down his perfect world piece by piece—feels rattled. Because I expected arrogance. Carelessness. A spoiled prince who never saw the knife coming.

What I didn’t expect was this.

A boy who looks like he’s already bleeding.

I swallow hard and remind myself of the plan. Step one, step two, step three. It doesn’t matter what he looks like now, or how my pulse races when his eyes linger too long. He’s still Jace Langston.

The boy who ruined everything.

I clutch my books tighter, the edges digging into my palms, grounding me. I can’t afford to forget.

Because this time, it’s not just about walking into Blackridge Academy under a new name.

It’s about walking straight into the lion’s den.

And as Jace Langston’s gaze locks with mine for a second too long, one thing becomes painfully clear.

The lion already sees me.

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  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 33: The Unseen Player

    Here ream slices through the maze like a knife, freezing my blood in an instant.“Ava!”My name—my real one—echoes across the campus.Jace and I stare at each other for half a second. That’s all it takes.Then we run.Branches whip against my arms as we tear through the hedge maze, slipping out the other side and sprinting across the quad. Students stop and stare, murmuring, confused and alarmed, but I don’t slow down. I don’t breathe. I don’t think.My legs move on instinct—toward danger, not away.“Ava, slow down—” Jace grabs my wrist.“No!” I yank free. “Someone called my name. They know me. They know who I am.”“Ava, we don’t know what we’re walking into—”“That’s exactly why I’m not stopping.”He curses, but runs beside me anyway.The closer we get to the administration building, the louder the noise becomes—not another scream, but frantic voices, footsteps, the sharp sound of someone crying. A crowd has already gathered at the steps.And then I see her.Mira. The friendly outsid

  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 32: Truce, Not Trust

    Darkness swallows everything.For one terrifying heartbeat, I think I’ve gone blind. The locker room is pitch-black, the fluorescent buzz overhead gone silent, like someone ripped the power cord out of the world.My breath catches.Noah’s last words echo in my skull: If you get this… run.I can’t run.I can’t even see.“Ava,” Jace’s voice cuts through the dark, low and rough. His hand finds my arm, steady and warm. “Stay with me.”“I’m right here,” I whisper, though my voice shakes.Something creaks behind us—metal? A locker door? Footsteps?Jace pulls me closer, positioning himself in front of me. My shoulder hits the wall, cold and unyielding, grounding me just enough to breathe.“We need to move,” he murmurs, breath brushing my ear. “If someone cut the lights, they want us trapped.”“Or separated,” I whisper back.He curses under his breath. “Not happening.”The emergency lights flicker on at that exact moment—dim red bulbs casting long shadows across the tiled floor. The room look

  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 31: Broken Alliances

    Sleep is a stranger by the time dawn finally smears gray across the sky. I sit on the edge of my bed, elbows on my knees, staring at the last note like it’s some kind of radioactive object.You’re running out of time.My fingers run over the letters again and again until they blur. Every sound outside my door makes me flinch. Every thought circles back to the same, terrifying truth:Someone isn’t just watching me.Someone wants me gone.Someone wants me like Noah.My breath shudders out. I press my palms to my face and inhale slowly, forcing myself to keep it together. If I fall apart now, I lose. If I panic, I lose. If I trust the wrong person—I don’t even want to think about that outcome.The building hums awake: running water, footsteps, slamming doors. Normal sounds. Safe sounds. Almost enough to make me believe last night was nothing but paranoia.Almost.I shove the notes deep into my bag and tie my hair back, my hands trembling only a little. Fake it until you make it. Noah us

  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 30: The First Real Threat

    The note sat in my pocket all night, burning through the fabric like fire. I didn’t sleep. I couldn’t. Every creak of the dorm pipes, every shuffle of feet in the hallway made me jolt upright, certain someone was coming for me.By morning, my head was heavy, my eyes gritty, but the fear hadn’t dulled. If anything, it had sharpened, slicing at me with every thought. Someone knew about me. About Jace. About everything.I’d survived weeks at Blackridge by convincing myself I was the one in control. That I was always one step ahead. But standing in front of my mirror, hair pulled back tight, uniform buttoned to the throat, I didn’t feel like Ava Carter or Eva Sinclair. I felt like prey.I told myself I wouldn’t involve Jace unless I had to. But the universe seemed determined to laugh in my face, because the second I stepped into the quad, he was already there. Leaning against the statue like he owned it, jacket slung

  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 29: Enemies United

    The problem with secrets is they never stay buried. Not the ones that matter, anyway. And no matter how many lies I pile on top of mine, I can still feel them, scratching from underneath, begging to be let out.That’s why meeting Jace tonight feels like walking into my own grave.We agreed to work together — or at least pretend to. But I can tell from the way he’s waiting under the bleachers, hands shoved in his pockets, shoulders tense, that strategy isn’t the first thing on his mind. His gaze lifts as I approach, shadowed and unreadable.“You’re late,” he says.“You’re impatient,” I shoot back, forcing my voice flat.He huffs a laugh, but there’s no humor in it. “Typical Carter.”I ignore the way my stomach twists when he uses my real name. I should correct him, remind him that as far as the rest of Blackridge is concerned, I’m Eva Sinclair. B

  • Sweetest Revenge   Chapter 28: Blackmail

    The first note should have been enough to scare me off. A warning, clear and simple. But Blackridge doesn’t operate in warnings—it operates in weapons. And tonight, I’m the one with a knife at my throat.The second note comes folded and tucked neatly into my history textbook. I find it when I open the book to take notes, the paper sliding out and landing on my desk. My pulse spikes before I even unfold it, because I already know what it’ll say.Hand it over. Or everyone learns who you really are.The tape. The flash drive sitting hidden inside my desk drawer under a false bottom I built myself. Proof of Noah, proof of Jace, proof of everything. Whoever’s pulling the strings knows I have it.My throat tightens. Around me, class drones on. The teacher’s chalk squeaks across the board. Students yawn, scribble, pass notes of their own. No one sees me freeze, no one notices the world narrowing to a single sente

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