LOGIN
Five minutes before class started, the seats were already full.
They always were.
Alessandra paused outside the lecture hall just long enough to check her reflection in the dark glass of the classroom door. Not to fix anything—nothing was out of place—but to take inventory.
Long hair, worn down. Soft waves over sharp shoulders. Black silk blouse tucked into a high-waisted charcoal skirt that skimmed her hips just enough to suggest confidence without asking permission. Gold hoops. Red lipstick—subtle, but intentional.
Power wasn’t about modesty.
Power was about control.
She pushed the door open.
The low hum of conversation died instantly.
Eighty-four upperclass political science students turned toward her in near-unison. The air shifted. It always did. Anticipation. Curiosity. Calculation.
GOV430: Political Scandal.
Her course.
Her name was on it in the registrar’s office—her design, her syllabus, her intellectual property. It was the class that secured her tenure at Bastian College six years ago. The youngest tenured professor in school history. At twenty-nine.
She was thirty-six now. Not the youngest professor anymore. But still the most watched.
And she preferred it that way.
Alessandra set her leather briefcase on the podium without breaking eye contact with the room. She didn’t rush. She let the silence stretch just a few seconds too long.
“Welcome,” she said evenly. “If you’re here, you either couldn’t get into Constitutional Theory… or you enjoy watching powerful people fall.”
A few nervous laughs. A few knowing ones.
She smiled faintly.
“Relax. I do too.”
The projector blinked to life behind her. On the screen: a montage of headlines. Nixon. Clinton. Watergate. Emails. Tapes. Footage. Apologies delivered behind podiums with flags carefully arranged in the background.
She began to pace slowly.
“In this course,” she said, “we’re not interested in morality. We’re not interested in private behavior. We are interested in exposure. Optics. Narrative control.”
Her gaze drifted across the room, lingering just long enough on certain faces. The athletes in the back row pretending not to lean forward. The overachievers in the front, already poised with color-coded tabs. The ones who didn’t know yet why they’d enrolled—but would soon.
She felt it. That electric undercurrent. Attention sharpened into something warmer.
After the divorce had finalized in December, she’d noticed the difference.
Or maybe she’d simply started allowing herself to notice it.
No more ring. No more polite faculty-dinner small talk about her husband’s consulting firm. No more shrinking herself in meetings to accommodate a man who resented her salary, her tenure, her name on publications.
The papers had been signed. The house sold. The silence in her new condo at night was deafening.
But here—inside this room—she was undeniable.
Desired.
Respected.
Studied.
She clicked to the next slide.
A grainy still image of a candidate caught mid-sentence, mouth twisted in an awkward half-expression. Frozen forever.
“In politics,” she said, voice lowering just enough to make the room lean in, “it’s never the act.”
A beat.
“It’s the footage.”
The slide changed again. A slow-motion clip rolled—an offhand comment captured by an open mic. A moment that would have passed unnoticed twenty years ago. Now immortal.
“Reputation,” she continued, “is a performance. And scandal is simply the moment the performance slips.”
She stopped walking.
“Your final project in this course will be to construct a scandal. Entirely fictional. You’ll design the act, the exposure, the fallout, and the attempted recovery.”
Now they were fully awake.
“Because the most important question isn’t why someone did something.”
Her eyes swept the room again, settling—briefly—on a dark-haired student in the third row who hadn’t looked away from her once.
“It’s who benefits from the footage.”
The silence after that wasn’t awkward.
It was charged.
She could feel it building already—the hunger for proximity, for approval, for being the one she called on unexpectedly. It was harmless. It was inevitable. Students were drawn to authority. To certainty. To charisma.
And Alessandra Moore was very, very good at giving them something to orbit.
She picked up her syllabus.
“If you’re uncomfortable with media analysis, narrative framing, or discussing public disgrace in detail,” she said coolly, “there’s still time to switch sections.”
No one moved.
Of course they didn’t.
A slow smile touched her mouth.
“Good.”
Outside the tall lecture hall windows, the late August sun glared against the quad. Freshmen wandered past in uncertain clusters. The semester was still new enough to feel like possibility.
Inside, the air had thickened.
She began the lecture in earnest now—diving into case studies, deconstructing press conferences, dissecting apologies word by word.
But somewhere beneath the analysis, beneath the academic rigor and sharp commentary, something else pulsed quietly.
Reputation.
Performance.
Exposure.
After all, she understood scandal better than anyone in this building.
And if there was one thing Alessandra Moore knew with certainty—
It was that power was safest when you controlled the camera.
She just didn’t yet realize that somewhere, someone was already recording.
Practice that afternoon was brutal.The sun sat heavy over the field. The air felt thick enough to chew, pressing down on shoulders already tight with expectation. Even the dirt seemed hotter than usual, baking beneath their cleats.Liam jogged up beside him during warm-ups, fully recovered and infuriatingly energetic.“So,” Liam said, bumping his shoulder, “how was your academic adventure?”“A blonde told me to tell you hi.”Liam grinned instantly. “Which blonde?”“Chloe.”“Do I know her?”“Not yet.”
The sunlight was aggressive.It sliced through the dorm blinds and landed directly across Liam’s face.Liam groaned into his pillow. “Why is it so bright.”Ethan was awake but unmoving, staring at the ceiling and letting the room exist in quiet shapes and shadows. Without his hearing aids in, the world was muted—distant, underwater. Liam’s complaints registered only as vibration and tone.He rolled onto his side and reached for the small case on his nightstand.One by one, he fitted the hearing aids into place.The world clicked into focus.Air conditioning. Footsteps in the hallway. Liam’s dramatic suffering.“Ethan,” Liam muttered, voice thick with sleep and tequila. “Tell me I didn’t do anything catastrophic.”“You define catastrophic,” Ethan said evenly.Liam squinted at him through one eye. “Oh God. That tone means I did.”Ethan sat up slowly. “You disappeared.”“That’s vague.”“With a redhead.”Liam blinked. “Redhead.”“Yes.”“Like… natural redhead or bottle redhead?”Ethan gave
Theta Rho did not do small.The house glowed like it had been dipped in gold — string lights strung from balcony to oak tree, bass vibrating through the porch boards, bodies moving in a rhythm that felt less like dancing and more like conquest.Liam thrived in it instantly.“Vale twins!” someone shouted from the lawn.The orbit formed within seconds. Girls in cropped sorority tees. Freshmen trying to look older. Upperclassmen pretending not to stare but absolutely staring.Liam gave them what they wanted — a grin sharp enough to cut glass.Ethan stayed half a step behind him. Relaxed. Observing. His hearing aids caught the music in controlled bursts, but his eyes did most of the work.They hadn’t even made it through the front door before Maddox Reyes intercepted them.He didn’t need to be loud to command attention.President of Theta Rho. Political science major. Olympic-hopeful swimmer. Campus fixture. The kind of guy donors remembered by name.“Vale twins,” Maddox said, shaking the
Her apartment was quiet in a way her classroom never was.No fluorescent lights.No whispers from the back row.No careful calibration of posture and tone and presence.Just Alessandra.She kicked off her heels by the door and shrugged out of her blazer, draping it over the back of a chair with absent precision. By the time she reached the couch, she had traded silk and structure for an oversized Bastian College sweatshirt and soft black leggings. Her hair—meticulously smoothed that morning—was now piled into a loose, imperfect knot.On the television, Love Island flickered in bright neon absurdity.“Why am I like this?” she muttered to herself as two impossibly bronzed strangers debated loyalty after knowing each other for forty-eight hours.Because sometimes she didn’t want Senate hearings or ethics committees or the slow implosion of presidential reputations.Sometimes she wanted mindless chaos.Her laptop rested open on the coffee table. Her grading program showing first-week assi
Ethan preferred the back left quadrant of lecture halls.Not the back row — that was Liam’s stage. But two rows up, slightly off-center? That was strategic. Clear view of the board. Clean acoustics. Fewer distractions.Government 101.Required. Foundational. Manageable.Beside him, Liam dropped into the chair like he’d just claimed territory.“Over/under,” Liam murmured, glancing at his phone. “Two minutes before she clocks us?”Ethan didn’t look up from his laptop. “You’re assuming she cares.”“She’ll care.”Their faces were everywhere. Campus posters. Athletics promo reels. An NCAA feature praising Bastian’s “freshman twin pitchers poised to reclaim championship glory.” Four seasons without a title had turned into a narrative. And thanks to NIL — the NCAA’s Name, Image, and Likeness policy — that narrative now came with contracts.Athletes could monetize their personal brand. Appearances. Sponsorships. Social media partnerships. It was marketed as empowerment. In practice, it meant
Liam had read the blog three times before practice.Not because he needed to.Because it was good.FRESHMAN PHENOMS: THE VALE TWINS MAY BE THE MISSING PIECE FOR BASTIAN’S TITLE RUN.Missing piece.That was new language.For the last three seasons, Bastian College had come close—painfully close. Two regional finals. One conference championship appearance that ended in a ninth-inning collapse. A super regional loss that still got replayed in preseason hype videos like a scar.Close didn’t hang banners.Close didn’t erase the drought.And now the program had decided the solution was two eighteen-year-olds.Liam lay across his dorm bed, phone above his face, scrolling through the NCAA baseball blog while Ethan sat at his desk tightening the laces on his cleats. The late afternoon sun lit the posters rolled against the wall—unused extras from the marketing department that someone had “accidentally” let the twins keep.Vale & ValeThe Future Is NowChasing What’s OursSubtlety had left the







