LOGINThe week had only just begun, but I already felt exhausted in a way that had nothing to do with my classes.
I arrived at my locker on Tuesday morning and froze. A single red rose leaned against the metal door, its petals perfect and vibrant. A small white card was attached. My heart gave a traitorous little jump before I forced it back down.
I glanced around quickly. A few students were watching, whispering. Of course they were.
I pulled the card off and opened it.
“For the girl who keeps surprising me. — A.V.”
I stared at the elegant handwriting for a long moment, then slipped the note into my bag and left the rose exactly where it was. I wasn’t going to carry it around like some trophy.
Sophie appeared beside me a minute later, eyes wide. “Is that…?”
“Yes,” I said, closing my locker firmly. “And I’m not touching it.”
“Girl.” She looped her arm through mine as we walked to first period. “He’s not giving up. Marcus tried yesterday, now Aiden is sending roses? This feels coordinated.”
“I know,” I muttered. “But I’m not playing whatever game this is.”
All morning, I felt his eyes on me. In the hallway. During roll call in Literature. Even in the cafeteria at lunch, where he sat with his usual crew but kept glancing in my direction. Each time our eyes accidentally met, that same stupid flutter returned to my chest. I hated it.
By the end of last period, I was drained. I headed toward the side exit, hoping to avoid the main crowd and catch my bus early.
“Emily.”
His voice stopped me near the parking lot area. Deep, smooth, and far too close.
I turned slowly. Aiden Voss stood a few feet away, hands in his pockets, wearing that signature reckless half-smirk. But there was something different in his eyes today — something almost genuine beneath the confidence.
“What do you want, Aiden?” I asked, keeping my voice steady.
He stepped closer but stopped when he saw me tense. “You left the rose.”
“I did.”
“Why?”
I adjusted my backpack strap, trying to ignore how tall he was and how intently he was watching me. “Because I don’t accept gifts from guys who knock my books down for attention. Or from guys who only notice me because I said no.”
Aiden’s smirk faded slightly. He ran a hand through his messy dark hair. “You’re really going to make this difficult, aren’t you?”
“I’m not making anything,” I replied. “I’m just trying to survive at this school. I have a scholarship to protect. Grades to maintain. A family that sacrificed a lot to get me here. I don’t have time for whatever game you and your friends are playing.”
He took another small step forward. Not threatening, but close enough that I could smell his cologne, something expensive and woodsy that made my stomach tighten.
“It’s not a game,” he said quietly.
I let out a soft, disbelieving laugh. “Really? Then what is it? You don’t even know me.”
“I know you’re different.” His gray eyes held mine, intense and searching. “Most girls here look at me and see money. Cars. Status. You look at me like you see right through all of it. And that… intrigues me.”
For a moment, I almost softened. There was something raw in his voice, a loneliness that echoed the emptiness I sometimes felt when I thought about my own family’s struggles. But I caught myself.
“That’s exactly why I’m staying away,” I whispered. “Boys like you don’t get intrigued. You get bored. And when you get bored, you leave broken hearts behind. I can’t afford to be one of them.”
Aiden’s jaw tightened. He looked like he wanted to argue, but instead he just watched me for a long, heavy second.
“You’re scared,” he said finally.
“Yes,” I admitted honestly. “I’m scared of losing everything I’ve worked for. And I’m scared of boys who think they can have whatever they want just because they’re rich and handsome.”
The word “handsome” slipped out before I could stop it. Heat rushed to my cheeks.
Aiden noticed. A small, real smile tugged at the corner of his lips, not the cocky one, but something softer. “You think I’m handsome?”
I rolled my eyes, stepping back. “That’s not the point. The point is, stay away from me, Aiden. Please. I’m asking nicely.”
He didn’t move. For several heartbeats, we just stood there in the fading afternoon light, the distant sounds of students leaving school floating around us.
“What if I’m not playing?” he asked, voice lower. “What if I actually want to know you?”
My heart betrayed me again, beating faster. I wanted to believe him. Some foolish part of me did believe him. But I had seen too many girls at my old school destroyed by boys who made promises with pretty words.
“Then prove it,” I said softly. “By respecting what I’m asking. Leave me alone.”
I turned and walked away before he could respond, my legs shaky and my chest tight. I didn’t look back, even though every part of me wanted to.
Sophie was waiting near the bus stop, bouncing on her toes. “Well? What happened?”
“He tried again,” I said, climbing onto the bus and sliding into a seat. “Roses. Words. That intense stare. The whole package.”
Sophie groaned. “And?”
“I told him to stay away.” I leaned my head against the cool window. “But Soph… I think he’s going to keep trying.”
She studied my face carefully. “And part of you wants him to?”
I didn’t answer right away. The bus started moving, carrying us away from Westbridge and back toward reality.
“I can’t want him,” I whispered finally. “My parents are counting on me. We’re barely making rent as it is. This scholarship is our only way out. If I get distracted by a rich boy who will eventually get bored and move on… I’ll never forgive myself.”
Sophie squeezed my hand. “Then don’t fall. No matter how good he looks or how lonely his eyes seem. Promise me.”
I nodded. “I promise.”
But as the bus drove farther from the school, I touched the spot on my hand where Aiden’s fingers had brushed mine days ago. The memory of his voice, quiet, almost vulnerable kept replaying in my head.
I closed my eyes and whispered to myself again:
Don’t fall, Emily.
Yet deep down, I was terrified the fall had already started, slow and terrifying, like the first drop on a rollercoaster you can’t get off.
The rain had stopped, but the air still carried that fresh, clean scent as we left the greenhouse. Emily’s hand was warm in mine, fingers loosely intertwined like she was still deciding how much she wanted to hold on. After our first real kiss, everything felt different, lighter, but also more fragile.“I should get you home,” I said quietly, not wanting the night to end. “It’s getting late.”She nodded, but didn’t let go of my hand. “My bus should be coming soon.”I hesitated, then squeezed her fingers gently. “Let me drive you. No big deal. I just… I don’t want you waiting alone in the dark.”Emily looked up at me, searching my face. For a moment I thought she’d say no, her usual careful instinct kicking in. But something in her eyes softened.“Okay,” she whispered. “But just to the corner near my building. My parents…”“I know,” I said quickly. “I won’t make it complicated.”The drive was quiet but comfortable. Emily gave me directions, her voice soft as the city lights passed by.
The greenhouse had become our place again.Not every day, but when the weight of the world felt too heavy, when my parents’ packing boxes appeared in the living room or when the fear of leaving became too loud, we found our way back here. Tonight was one of those nights.Rain pattered softly against the cracked glass roof. The air smelled of wet earth and wild jasmine. Dim moonlight filtered through the vines, casting silver patterns across the old wooden bench where we sat.Aiden was quieter than usual. He sat close tonight, closer than he had in weeks, our shoulders brushing. The careful distance we had maintained was slowly dissolving, moment by moment.“I told my parents I want to stay until the end of the year,” I said softly, staring at my hands. “They didn’t say yes… but they didn’t say no either.”Aiden turned toward me. “That’s something.”“It feels like everything is slipping away,” I whispered. “The scholarship. My plans. This… whatever this is between us.”He was silent fo
I was losing the battle against myself.It had been three days since our quiet afternoon at the park, and Aiden’s words kept replaying in my mind like a song I couldn’t turn off.“You make me want to be better… You’re the first person who’s ever made this empty house feel less like a tomb.”I sat cross-legged on my bed, textbooks spread around me, but I hadn’t read a single page in over an hour. The small lamp on my nightstand cast a warm glow over the room, but it did nothing to calm the storm inside my chest.I missed him.Not just the conversations or the way he looked at me. I missed the feeling of being around him, that strange mix of safety and danger, comfort and butterflies. Even when we were sitting in silence in the library, the air felt charged. Alive.Sophie’s warning echoed in my head again: “Be careful. Guys like him don’t change.”But he was changing. I had seen it with my own eyes. The way he defended Leo in the hallway. The way he respected my request for space even t
I couldn’t keep lying to myself anymore.The bet had started as a stupid, drunken challenge by the pool. A way to fight boredom. A way to prove I could still get whatever I wanted. But now, weeks later, it felt like a chain around my neck, tighter every time Emily smiled at me, every time she trusted me with another piece of herself.I had to end it.That night, Marcus and Tyler came over uninvited, as usual. They let themselves in like they owned the place, carrying takeout bags and loud energy that clashed with the heavy silence of the mansion.“King’s castle!” Marcus announced, dropping onto the sectional. “We brought burgers. Figured you might be starving after all that ‘studying’ with your scholarship project.”Tyler grinned, already raiding the fridge for drinks. “How’s the bet going, man? You’ve been weirdly quiet. She fallen yet? We’re getting close to the deadline.”I stood by the window, staring out at the city lights, my back to them. My hands were clenched at my sides. The
I told myself it was just one time.One innocent hangout. Nothing romantic. Nothing that would make my parents’ warnings echo louder in my head. Just two people who needed to talk somewhere other than the library, where the walls felt like they were closing in with every stolen glance.That’s what I kept repeating as I waited on the corner two blocks from Westbridge, wearing jeans and a simple sweater instead of my uniform. My heart hammered against my ribs when I saw Aiden’s black car pull up, nothing flashy, just a sleek, dark SUV that still screamed money.He stepped out, looking nervous in a way I’d rarely seen. Dark jeans, gray hoodie, hair slightly messy like he’d run his hands through it too many times.“You came,” he said, voice warm but cautious.“I said I would.” I offered a small smile. “But somewhere quiet, okay? No big gestures.”Aiden nodded immediately. “I know a place. No one goes there much. Just… normal.”We drove in comfortable silence for fifteen minutes, leaving t
The library felt colder when she wasn’t sitting directly across from me.I’d kept my promise. For five days now, I sat three tables away close enough to see her, far enough to give her the space she’d asked for. I buried myself in textbooks I didn’t care about, stealing glances when I thought she wasn’t looking. Every time our eyes accidentally met, the almost-kiss in the greenhouse flashed between us like lightning. Then she’d look away, and the ache in my chest would deepen.Today, though, something was different.Emily arrived later than usual. Her eyes were tired, shoulders slightly hunched like she was carrying the weight of the world. She sat at our old table, the one we used to share and stared at the empty chair across from her for a long moment before opening her books.I lasted twelve minutes before I couldn’t take it anymore.I gathered my things and walked over, stopping a respectful distance from the table.“Can I sit here today?” I asked quietly. “Just for a little whil







