LOGINBryson’s POV
The rest of the morning dragged by like torture.
I sat through Civics trying to focus on Mr. Gardener's lecture about the electoral college, but all I could think about was the way Avery had looked right through me in the hallway.
Like I was nothing. Like we were nothing.
By lunch, I was wound so tight I could barely sit still.
"Dude, what's your deal today?" Cooper asked as I stabbed my pizza with probably more violence than necessary. "You've been weird since this morning."
"He's probably just thinking about the game coming up," Brooke said, sliding into the seat next to me and pressing a kiss to my cheek. Her strawberry lip gloss left a sticky residue that I had to resist wiping off immediately. "You know how he gets."
She was wearing her cheerleading uniform, all crisp pleats and school colors, her brunette hair pulled back in a perfect ponytail.
Everything about Brooke was perfect, put together, exactly what everyone expected the quarterback's girlfriend to look like.
And I felt absolutely nothing.
"Yeah," I mumbled, forcing myself to put my arm around her shoulders. "Just thinking about the game."
"Well, don't think too hard," Carter said with his mouth full of sandwich. "Might hurt yourself."
"Fuck off, Carter."
"Ooh, someone's touchy today." He grinned like he'd discovered something interesting. "This wouldn't have anything to do with your little reunion this morning, would it?"
Mason shot him a warning look, but Carter ignored it. He always ignored it.
"What reunion?" Brooke asked, looking between us with those perfectly lined blue eyes.
"Nothing," I said quickly. "Carter's just being an asshole."
"When am I not?" Carter laughed. "I'm just saying, it's funny how our boy Bryce gets all moody the same day little Avery Whitmore decides to grace us with her presence again."
Brooke's grip on my arm tightened slightly. "Avery Whitmore? You mean the girl who…”she trailed off. “I thought she moved away."
"She did," Mason said quietly. "Sophomore year."
"Well, she's back now," Carter continued, clearly enjoying himself. "And looking a hell of a lot better than she used to, if you ask me. Right, Bryce?"
I wanted to punch him. Instead, I took a long drink of my Coke and tried to keep my voice level. "I wouldn't know. I barely noticed her."
It was a lie, and from the way Carter's grin widened, he knew it.
"Right," he drawled. "You barely noticed her. That's why you look like someone kicked your dog."
"Carter," Coop warned.
"What? I'm just making an observation. It's interesting, that's all."
Brooke was studying my face now, those perfect eyebrows slightly furrowed. "Bryce? You okay, baby?"
"I'm fine," I said, probably too sharply. "Can we just drop it?"
But I wasn't fine. I was the furthest thing from fine. And when the bell rang and everyone started gathering their trash, all I could think about was my next period.
Chemistry.
Where Avery would be.
Where I might actually get a chance to talk to her.
I was glad I had decided to take that class after all.
The walk to the science wing felt endless and way too short at the same time. I kept playing out different scenarios in my head like what I'd say, how she'd react, whether she'd even acknowledge me.
Maybe I could ask to borrow a pencil. Maybe I could make some comment about the assignment. Maybe I could just sit close enough to her that she'd have to notice me.
But when I walked into Mr. Kevinson's classroom, all my half-formed plans evaporated.
She was already there, sitting in the third row, right side of the room.
Her dark hair fell in a curtain around her face as she read what looked like the chemistry textbook, and I mean actually read it, not just flipped through it like the rest of us usually did.
She'd always been like that, genuinely interested in learning things just for the sake of knowing them.
She was beautiful.
Not in the typical way that Brooke was beautiful, with perfect makeup and perfect outfits.
Avery was beautiful in a quieter way that snuck up on you.
The way she tucked her hair behind her ear when she was concentrating. The small crease between her eyebrows when she was thinking hard about something. The way she moved.
I'd been noticing these things about her ever since I could remember, and apparently two years of separation hadn't changed that at all.
I forced myself to walk to my usual seat near the back, but I couldn't stop watching her. She didn't look around when other students came in. Didn't glance toward my voice when I said hey to Jake Walker. Didn't give any sign that she was aware of my existence.
It was driving me insane.
Mr. Kevinson started the class by talking about the periodic table review we were supposed to have read over the summer.
Most people looked lost or bored, but Avery was taking notes like her life depended on it. When Mr. Kevinson asked a question about electron configurations, Avery's hand shot up immediately.
"Yes, Miss...?" Mr. Kevinson paused, clearly not recognizing her.
"Whitmore," Avery said clearly. "Avery Whitmore."
"Ah yes, our transfer student. Go ahead."
Avery rattled off a perfect explanation of electron shells and orbital patterns, and I found myself smiling despite everything.
She'd always been brilliant, but she'd gotten so shy about showing it since middle school, always downplaying her intelligence or pretending not to know answers she clearly knew.
Now she didn't hesitate at all.
When the bell rang, I watched her pack up her things with careful precision.
This was it.
My chance.
I could catch her in the hallway, maybe walk her to her next class, try to break through this wall she'd built around herself.
I waited until she was heading for the door, then quickly gathered my stuff and followed her out.
"Avery."
She stopped walking, just like she had this morning. But this time, when she turned around, she actually looked at me.
Her eyes were exactly the same, that warm brown that I'd loved, but there was something different in them now. Something harder.
"Yes?" she said coolly.
"How... how are you?" I asked, already knowing how inadequate it sounded.
She tilted her head slightly, like she was studying something mildly interesting under a microscope. "I'm fine, thanks."
"Good. That's... that's good." I was fumbling this so badly. "I wasn't sure if I’d ever get to see you again. I mean I wasn’t sure if you were ever coming back, I mean."
"Well," she said with a small smile that didn't reach her eyes, "here I am."
There was a pause where I desperately tried to think of something to say that wouldn't sound completely stupid. Something that might crack through this cold mask she was wearing.
"Look, Avery, I know things ended... badly. Before. But I was wondering if maybe we could—"
"Could what?" she interrupted, her voice still perfectly pleasant. "Be friends? Pick up where we left off? Pretend the last two years didn't happen?"
"Maybe," I said quietly. "Yeah." It was stupid, I knew.
She looked at me for a long moment, and for just a second, I thought I saw something flicker in her expression. Something that looked almost sad.
"I don't think so…Bryson," she said finally.
Bryson. Not Bryce. She was using my full name like we never even existed to each other.
She turned and walked away, leaving me standing in the hallway like an idiot.
But she'd talked to me.
Actually talked to me, looked at me, said my name.
It wasn't much. But it was something.
And I wasn’t going to let that be it… even if it killed me.
Bryson’s POVA week. A full week of complete radio silence, and I was losing my mind.I'd tried everything. But every single time, she’d shut me down without even looking my way. I'd even decided to approach her at lunch yesterday.Before I’d even sat down, she'd taken one look at me, stood up, and walked away. Threw her entire lunch in the trash without a word.That's when I knew I was screwed.The respectful approach wasn't working. Hell, the disrespectful approach wasn't working either. Nothing was working, and I was running out of time before I did something really stupid.Like what I was doing right now.I stood at the edge of the Whitmores' backyard, hidden behind the old oak tree that used to be our secret meeting spot when we were kids. The pool glowed blue in the late afternoon light, and I could hear the rhythmic sound of someone swimming laps.This was insane. Completely insane. If her parents caught me, if any of the neighbors saw me, if she called the cops...But I'd bee
Avery’s POVThe front door closed behind me harder than I intended, and I immediately heard my parents' conversation stop dead in the kitchen.Crap.I dropped my backpack and pressed my back against the door, trying to get my breathing under control.The hallway whispers had followed me all the way home, echoing in my head like a broken record.Can't believe she came back... after what happened... wonder if she thinks people forgot..."Avery?" Mom's voice, carefully neutral. "How was school, honey?"I could hear them both holding their breath, waiting for me to either break down or lie to their faces. The same dance we'd been doing for two years."Fine," I called back, hating how my voice cracked slightly on the word.Dad appeared in the doorway, still in his work shirt but with his sleeves rolled up. His eyes did that quick scan thing checking for tears, for signs that I was falling apart again."Just fine?" he asked, and I could hear all the questions he wasn't asking.Do you want t
Bryson's POV"Gray! What the hell was that?"Coach Williams' voice boomed across the practice field, and I realized I'd just let what should have been an easy completion slip right through my fingers.Again."Sorry, Coach," I called back, jogging to retrieve the ball from where it had bounced harmlessly into the end zone."Sorry doesn't win games against North Ridge!" he barked. "Get your head in the game or get off my field!"I gritted my teeth and got back into position. Third time I'd fucked up a simple throw in the last twenty minutes.My timing was off, my focus was shot, and everyone could tell."Dude, what's going on with you today?" Mason asked as we huddled up for the next play. "You're playing like you've never seen a football before.""I'm fine," I muttered, avoiding his eyes.But I wasn't.Every time I tried to focus on the play call or read the defense, my mind wandered back to that moment in the chemistry hallway. The way Avery had looked at me, really looked at me, for
Avery’s POVI'd forgotten just how loud Westfield High hallways could be.The cacophony of slamming locker doors, overlapping conversations, and sneakers squeaking against linoleum hit me like a wave as I walked through the front doors. For a moment, I almost turned around and walked right back out.But I didn't come back here to run away again.I lifted my chin and kept walking, focusing on the steady rhythm of my breathing like Dr. Martinez had taught me. In for four counts, hold for four, out for four.It was a technique that had gotten me through panic attacks and sleepless nights and the first day at my new school second semester sophomore year when everything felt impossible.I could handle this."...is that really her?""...thought she moved away...""...looks so different..."The whispers followed me down the hallway like ghosts.I kept my expression neutral, my pace steady, my eyes forward. I'd learned how to do this. I’d learned how to walk through a crowd like their stares
Bryson’s POVThe rest of the morning dragged by like torture.I sat through Civics trying to focus on Mr. Gardener's lecture about the electoral college, but all I could think about was the way Avery had looked right through me in the hallway.Like I was nothing. Like we were nothing.By lunch, I was wound so tight I could barely sit still."Dude, what's your deal today?" Cooper asked as I stabbed my pizza with probably more violence than necessary. "You've been weird since this morning.""He's probably just thinking about the game coming up," Brooke said, sliding into the seat next to me and pressing a kiss to my cheek. Her strawberry lip gloss left a sticky residue that I had to resist wiping off immediately. "You know how he gets."She was wearing her cheerleading uniform, all crisp pleats and school colors, her brunette hair pulled back in a perfect ponytail.Everything about Brooke was perfect, put together, exactly what everyone expected the quarterback's girlfriend to look like
First Grade - SeptemberThe new boy sat by himself at the reading carpet, clutching a worn dinosaur backpack and looking like he might cry.Avery noticed him right away because she noticed everything like how she noticed that Mrs. Peterson always wore the same purple earrings on Mondays, or how Tommy Dillard picked his nose when he thought nobody was looking.But this boy looked sad, and Avery didn't like when people were sad.She abandoned her spot next to Jessica and plopped down cross-legged beside him, her rainbow socks peeking out from under her denim overalls."Hi!" she said brightly, adjusting her glasses that were always sliding down her nose. "I'm Avery.""Av-ee," he tried to repeat her name, which came out sounding like "Avy.""No silly!" Avery giggled. "It's Av-er-y.""Avy," he said again, still not quite getting it right. “Av-eeey.”Avery giggled again."You know what? I like Avy!" she decided, bouncing a little. "It sounds nice so you can call me Avy instead. But only you,







