ВойтиPOV: Avery BlakeFive years later.The house smelled of old wood and coffee that had been sitting too long. Small, cramped, the kind of place graduate students rotate through, leaving behind half-forgotten mugs, crooked picture frames, and that faint, permanent scent of ambition mixed with instant ramen. I stood in the kitchen, spooning sugar into a cup I didn’t intend to drink. The ritual made my hands busy, my mind quiet—until I remembered the car that should have been here fifteen minutes ago.Grayson was in Seattle. Two years. Two years of distance that felt like a living, breathing thing. Stretch it too far, and it might snap. But it hadn’t snapped. Not yet. Not when the love between us had always been as much persistence as passion, as much patience as desire. We wrote, not often. But when we did, it mattered. The 2 a.m. confessions, the tiny victories over our own fear, the debates about everything and nothing, all held in words that needed no witness. The love that survived ac
POV: Grayson HayesThe coffee shop was new. Not Marie's, not The Grind, not any of the places they'd been before. Neutral territory, Grayson had thought, when he saw her text: Can we talk? Not at the lake. Not at school. Somewhere boring.He arrived early. Ordered black coffee, the efficiency that was also habit, also inheritance, also the control he'd learned to question. Sat at the corner table, back to the wall, the position of observation that was also becoming.She arrived at 3:15, seven minutes late, the jacket he'd seen before, the hair different—shorter, hers, the becoming visible even in this."Hey," she said, sitting across from him, maintaining distance that was also intimacy, also uncertainty, also the space between who they'd been and who they were becoming."Hey."The coffee shop noise surrounded them, other people's ordinary problems, the safety of public space that was also exposure."I got into Northwestern," she said. Not greeting. Information. The future becoming pr
POV: Avery BlakeThe letter arrived on a Tuesday. Plain envelope, no return address, the handwriting familiar—Dante's, but different. Slower, uncertain, the architect learning to build without blueprint.Avery opened it at her aunt's kitchen table. The coffee cold, the morning gray, the season turning without her permission.Plain language, it began. No code. That's the promise. The trying that might fail, but is still trying.I burned the notebook. The archive. The documentation of your becoming that was also mine. Not because I don't love you. Because I do. The not-romantic, messed-up, still-trying kind. The kind that destroys and apologizes and destroys again, but is learning—slowly, failing, learning—to want your freedom without dying from it.The burning was for me. Not for you. The need to stop observing, stop documenting, stop making your life into proof of my existence. The need to— He stopped, the page turning, the handwriting becoming messier, more honest. To just be. Withou
POV: Avery BlakeMaya Chen became real. Not by accident. The debate team, the arguments, the controlled violence that was also voice. She found Avery in the library, the corner table, the position of observation that was also becoming."You're good," Maya said. Not compliment. Assessment. "The argument. The structure. The way you see what people want and—" She stopped, found the word. "And either give it to them or take it away. That's power. That's dangerous.""That's inheritance," Avery said. The honesty that was also risk, also trust, also the beginning of friendship without blueprint. "From him. Dante. The one who taught me to watch, to wait, to build rapport like it was—" She stopped, the vocabulary surfacing. "Like it was survival. Because it was. For me. For him. For the mess we made together."Maya sat down. Not asking, just taking the space, the intimacy of strangers who might become something else. "Tell me."So Avery told her. Not everything. Not the code, the porch nights,
POV: Dante RomanoTherapy was mandatory. School policy, post-incident, the leak and the fallout and the intervention that hadn't worked. Dante sat in the chair, plastic, uncomfortable, and said nothing for the first three sessions.The therapist, Dr. Okonkwo, didn't push. Just waited, took notes, let the silence be silence. The fourth session, she asked: "What do you want to talk about?""Nothing." He said it flat, the honesty that was also defense. "I don't want to talk. I want to draw. That's how I—" He stopped, found the word. "That's how I know things. By seeing them. By making them visible. Not by saying them.""Then draw," she said. "Here. Now."He stared at her. The permission unexpected, the space offered without demand. He pulled out his sketchbook, the one that had been blank for weeks, the pencil that had failed him.Drew the room. The chair, the window, the therapist observing without observation. The lines came slow, uncertain, the translation of feeling into image that h
POV: Grayson HayesThe party was Nico's idea. End of season, the win that didn't feel like winning, the celebration that felt like obligation. Grayson went because not going would be noticed, would be commented on, would be another data point in the narrative of Grayson Hayes losing control, becoming his father, falling apart.He was falling apart. Just quietly. Privately. The way he'd learned to do everything that mattered.The party was loud, crowded, the kind of space that demanded performance. Grayson performed. The ease, the charm, the quarterback who had everything and wanted nothing. He drank enough to make it convincing, not enough to lose control. The balance he'd learned, the inheritance managed, the temper locked down.Nico found him at midnight. Behind the house, vomiting into the bushes. The body betraying what the face had hidden."She's not worth this," Nico said. The easy diagnosis, the friend who saw symptoms and missed disease.Grayson wiped his mouth. Straightened.
POV: Avery BlakeThe new school was smaller, older, the kind of place that didn't expect much from transfer students in March. Avery sat in the office, waiting for her schedule, listening to the secretary explain rules she didn't plan to follow.Debate team. That was the recommendation. The counsel
POV: Avery BlakeSecurity separated them. In the office, the questions, the adults trying to make sense of what didn't make sense. Avery sat in a plastic chair, hands shaking, and protected Dante.Old habit. Old instinct. The witness she'd needed, still needing him even as she was leaving him.She
POV: Dante RomanoHe heard about the locker. Chelsea, of course, the alliance he'd ended and she continued without him. Hayes lost it. Blood. Public. The inheritance you documented, finally visible.Dante sat in the garage apartment, the notebook closed, the pages he'd scattered and gathered, the d
POV: Grayson HayesThe cafeteria was full. Grayson walked in with Avery beside him, her hand in his, the contact that was also protection, also claim, also the only thing he knew to do.The whispers started immediately. The phones, raised, recording. The viral moment from the hallway, now uploaded,







