LOGINELENA’S POV
The lecture hall smelled like damp notebooks and desperation, a scent that was currently doing nothing to inspire my "fresh start." I slid into a seat halfway up the tiered rows, the wood creaking under my weight as students filtered in around me. Behind me, a guy was arguing with his friend about word count requirements for the first essay, his voice pitched in that frantic, early-semester whine. In front, two girls were whispering about a breakup that sounded like a soap opera drama. I wrapped my fingers around my lukewarm coffee, letting the heat seep into my palms as I stared at the blank document on my laptop screen. My notes from that rainy night were gone completely wrecked by the rain that had soaked through my bag. I shut my laptop halfway, exhaling softly. This was why I’d come back to Ridgewood. Not to relive old mistakes or to get dragged into the gravitational pull of Noah Hale, and certainly not to drown in unresolved history. “Alright, settle down.” Dr. Reyes walked in like she owned the air we breathed. Her heels clicked against the linoleum, a stack of papers tucked under one arm and coffee in the other. Her sharp, predatory gaze swept across the hall, and fifty students straightened their spines simultaneously. “If you’re here for an easy A,” she began, setting her coffee down with a thud, “you’re in the wrong class. If you’re here because you think journalism is just writing what people want to hear, you’re also in the wrong class.” A few nervous laughs scattered through the room, but Reyes didn't smile. “Journalism,” she went on, pacing the front of the room, “is not about comfort. It’s not about approval. It’s about truth and the problem with truth—” she paused, glancing up at us with a knowing glint in her eyes, “—is that people rarely agree on what it is.” She turned to the board, scrawling the word OBJECTIVITY in caps. “Your job is to find the version that holds up under pressure. The one that survives questions, scrutiny, and contradiction. Which means you don’t get to rely on assumptions. You verify. You cross-check and dig deeper, even when it’s inconvenient. Especially when it’s inconvenient.” I leaned in, my pen flying across the page. This was the gospel I needed. For the next hour, the world was reduced to interview techniques. By the time the lecture ended, my head felt clearer or at least quieter. As everyone spilled out into the hallway, chatting about lunch and weekend plans, I took my time, carefully slipping my laptop back into my bag. “Miss Voss?” I looked up. Dr. Reyes was standing a few rows down. “Walk with me.” I slung my bag over my shoulder and made my way down, falling into step beside her as we moved into the crowded hallway. “You missed a few key points in the seminar discussion yesterday,” she said, not looking at me. “I know,” I admitted, the heat of embarrassment rising in my neck. “My notes got ruined in the storm.” She hummed softly, a sound that wasn't entirely sympathetic. “You’re here on a fresh start, Elena. I expect you to act like it, no excuses for the weather.” “I am, Dr. Reyes. I’m fully committed.” “Good.” She stopped outside the Journalism building, turning to face me with piercing eyes. “Because I don’t assign students to real coverage unless I think they can handle the heat.” My stomach tightened. “What kind of coverage?” Her lips curved into a tiny, almost imperceptible smirk. “You’ll find out at the staff meeting. Don't be late.” The student media office was pure chaos. Phones were ringing and someone in the back was having a full-blown meltdown over a headline font. I dropped into my seat, pulling out a fresh notebook and trying to steady my breathing. “Alright, listen up!” Charles Langley, the senior editor, clapped his hands, drawing the room’s focus to the front. He looked like he hadn't slept since the late nineties. “We’ve got new assignments. If you’ve been coasting, this is where that ends. Campus features are still open, lifestyle pieces are due by Friday, and—” he glanced down at a clipboard, “sports coverage is getting a full refresh this semester.” My heart did a slow painful somersault. “Dr. Reyes wants more consistent reporting on the Ravens,” Charles continued. “Practices, games, personal player profiles, the whole shebang. We need someone dedicated. Someone who can handle the access, meet the deadlines, and not get intimidated by a bunch of overgrown athletes with god complexes.” A few people laughed. I stared down at my notebook, my pen hovering over the page as I pretended to be fascinated by a doodle of a spiral. “Any volunteers?” The silence was absolute. Nobody wanted the Ravens. They were notoriously difficult and guarded by a coach who hated the press plus a captain who hated everyone. “Alright,” Charles sighed. “Then we’ll assign it. Let's see...” Please not me. Please not me. “Elena Voss.” The room blurred and the oxygen seemed to leave the office in one giant gasp. “Voss?” Charles repeated, looking up. I forced my hand to lift an inch off the desk. “Here.” “Congrats,” he said. “You’re covering the basketball team this semester.” A few people murmured behind me. Someone whispered, “Good luck with that suicide mission,” loud enough for me to hear. I swallowed hard, forcing a professional nod. “Thanks.” “First practice is this afternoon at four,” Charles added, moving on to the next name. “Be there, Introduce yourself and start building rapport.” Rapport. The word felt like a joke. Building rapport with Noah Hale was like trying to build a bridge out of gasoline and lit matches. Lora’s voice cut in suddenly as she dropped into the chair beside. “Why is everyone looking at you like you just got sentenced to life without parole?” “They assigned me to the basketball team, Lora.” She double-blinked. “You’re kidding. Tell me you're kidding.” “I wish I was. It was a direct directive from Dr Reyes.” “Wait,” her eyes flashed with a mix of horror and excitement. “The Ravens?” “Yes, Lora. The only Ravens on campus.” Lora let out a low, shaky breath. “Oh, that’s messy.” “That’s not even the word I’d use. I have to be at practice in two hours.” “Well,” Lora said, trying to find a silver lining. “You’re going to be around all those hot jocks all the time. That’s a perk, right?” I gave her a pointed, dead-eyed stare. “Hot? Really? One of them is my brother, which is gross, and the other is a man who thinks I’m a virus.” Lora’s brows wriggled. “I think you’re forgetting that Noah Hale is objectively the finest man to ever walk this campus. Toxic? Yes. But fine.” “You’re in danger then,” I muttered, closing my notebook with a snap. “Cause I’m a professional.” “Right,” she smirked. “And Noah is just a guy.” I headed for the door before she could say another word. I didn't need moral support. I needed an exit strategy cause I wasn't just building rapport, I was walking into a war.NOAH'S POV I wasn't looking for a book. I was looking for the reason my life was currently a heap of smoldering ash.I found her in the corner of the law section, tucked between two shelves of leather-bound records. She was sitting on the floor, her back against the mahogany, a single desk lamp casting a harsh light over her. She looked up when my boots hit the carpet, and for a second, the world just stopped turning.I walked into her space, my height cutting off the light until she was looking up at me from the dark."Noah," she breathed.I reached out, my hand slamming against the bookshelf above her head. The sound was a violent crack in the silence of the library. I leaned down, my face inches from hers, my breath hitching in a way that had nothing to do with the walk up the stairs."You think you can hide back here?" I rasped, my voice a jagged edge. "You think if you stay in the dark long enough, I’ll forget that you’re the one set to ruin me?""I'm here to ruin you, Noah," sh
ELENA'S POV They say the silence after a tragedy is the loudest thing you’ll ever hear.Tonight, the tragedy wasn't the car in the canyon, it was the hollow, echoing stillness of the locker room after Noah Hale had just set fire to his own crown. Outside, the world was a riot—sirens, screaming fans, and the flash-fry of paparazzi cameras—but in here, under the flickering fluorescent light, there was only the sound of a man breaking.Noah was slumped on the bench, his jersey hanging from his frame like a shroud. He looked less like a fallen king and more like a ghost that had finally run out of places to haunt.I didn't say anything as I approached. I couldn't. My heart was a bruised, frantic thing, hammering against my ribs with a rhythm that felt like glass shards. I stopped when my sneakers hit the puddle of melted ice by his feet."You should get out of here," I whispered. "Before the board of directors finds a way to lock the doors."He didn't look up. He didn't even move. "Let t
NOAH’S POVI was halfway through taping my left ankle when the first phone chimed then a second. Within ten seconds, the room was a symphony of digital alerts. Jax was standing by the equipment rack. He looked at his screen, his face draining of colour until he looked like he’d been carved from chalk. He didn't say a word. He just walked over and dropped his phone into my lap.I didn't have to scroll. The headline from The Ridgewood Insider was already screaming at me in bold, black-and-white malice.BLIND ITEM: The Wreckage of a Golden Boy.Which star Raven is flying on clipped wings? Word is that a certain 'Captain' didn't just earn his stripes on the court. Years ago, a midnight drive in a certain canyon ended in a wreckage that was bought. A girl took the fall, a career was saved, and the truth was buried under a six-figure 'donation.' But ghosts have a way of digging themselves up. Tic-toc, Noah. The clock is striking twelve.My vision tunneled and the air in the room turned into
ELENA'S POV "You left your scarf in the alcove." Noah said it across the breakfast table like he was reporting the weather. I looked at him. He looked at his food. Ethan, sitting between us, looked at the ceiling with the expression of someone who had made a personal commitment to staying out of it and was finding that commitment genuinely difficult to honour."Thank you," I said."It's on the bench outside the media room.""Okay.""It was still there this morning.""Noah.""Just making sure you knew.""I know. Thank you."He nodded and continued not making eye contact with the dedicated focus of someone disarming a bomb. I wrapped both hands around my coffee cup and stared into it and thought about the alcove and the concrete floor and his arm around my shoulders and the way he'd said I'm not going anywhere in the dark.Then I thought about the fact that we were currently sitting at a breakfast table pretending none of that had happened.This was fine. Everything was fine.The thin
NOAH'S POVIt started raining at nine forty-seven.I know the exact time because I was on the court running free throws when the first crack of thunder hit, and I checked my phone out of habit, and the weather app said severe storm warning until 2AM in the cheerful way weather apps delivered bad news. I kept shooting.The thing about storms at Ridgewood was that they came in from the mountain pass to the north and they arrived fast and they arrived with no warning drizzle. One minute the sky was clear and the next the whole world was water and thunder. I'd been caught in one before so I knew better than to think about that.I shot until my arm ached and then I shot some more. My phone buzzed at ten twenty-three.Ethan: Seen Elena? She left the library twenty mins ago and she's not answering her phone. Storm's getting really bad.I stood at the free throw line and read the message twice. I was out the gym door in forty seconds.I had no jacket. The cold hit immediately and completely
ELENA'S POV "You're in my seat."I looked up from my laptop. Noah was standing on the other side of the media room table with a coffee cup in each hand and the expression of someone who had decided to be difficult about something small because they couldn't be honest about something large."There are eleven other seats in this room," I said."I always sit there.""You don't even come to the media room.""I'm here now."I looked at him. He looked at me. Three days had passed since the showcase. Three days since go back to whatever hole you crawled out of had come out of his mouth in front of sixty people and landed somewhere in my chest that still hadn't fully recovered. Three days of complete silence. Nothing.And now he was here. Standing over me with two cups of coffee like the last seventy-two hours hadn't happened. Like he hadn't said what he'd said in front of my supervisors and my peers and the faculty members whose opinions had actual consequences for my career.Like I was jus







