I returned to campus that morning wrapped in a strange, weightless quiet and not the usual sleepy hush of early classes, but something sharper like a held breath.
Noah didn’t text. I knew he wouldn’t have known the moment I left his place but knowing didn’t soften the ache of it. He didn’t glance at me once during the lecture, not even accidentally. His voice usually warm and full of energy when he taught, moved flatly from one student to another, deliberately skipping past me like I wasn’t there. He packed up before the last slide had even finished loading. His laptop was halfway into his bag as the projector still hummed, casting blue light over rows of emptying chairs. I stayed behind, slowly rearranging papers I didn’t need to fix. The room drained of students, their laughter and shuffling feet fading into the hallway like echoes from a life I wasn’t in anymore. He didn’t come back out. Curiosity, maybe desperation, pushed me to the office hallway. I stood in front of his door, trying to make out shapes through the blurry square of glass. He sat inside, unmoving, just staring. He wasn’t staring at his computer or a paper, but at the blank wall as if it had whispered something unforgivable. When his eyes met mine through the glass, something closed behind them. Then he turned his head immediately with no words or gestures but just the back of his shoulder. It was enough, I walked home alone. A pressure pulsed low in my abdomen, not pain exactly, more like a shifting as if something small was rearranging me from the inside. The nurse said it was normal hormones. The embryo was just finding its place but I knew better. This wasn’t just biology. I was carrying his child and I’d given him something else, something he didn’t ask for, didn’t want the piece of me I’d been saving without even realizing I’d been saving it. My virginity was gone with the trust I thought might follow. Evening sank through the window like wet ink as I lay on my bed, staring at the last text we exchanged: Noah: Let’s go to the Clinic by 11. I’ll drive you. Me: Thanks, see you then. That was before I let him touch the parts of me no one else ever had and before I made a choice that doesn’t unmake itself. The screen blurred. I threw the phone onto the bed like it had bitten me. A knock jolted me upright. My heart lurched, stupid with hope. I dragged on a hoodie and cracked the door. Desmond leaned casually against the frame, a brown paper bag in one hand, that crooked grin in full effect. “Emergency rations,” he said. “You looked like you were about five seconds from fainting the last time I saw you.” I blinked, thrown off. “How did you know where I live?” He shrugged like it was obvious. “Faculty access, campus directory, and not exactly rocket science.” I hesitated. Then stepped back. He stepped inside like he’d done it before. He set the bag gently on my desk and opened it with the kind of exaggerated flourish that would’ve been annoying if it weren’t so… him. “I went with instinct,” he said. “Got what I want if I were you. Which, I know, makes zero sense.” “You didn’t have to…” “I wanted to.” His voice had dropped the usual charm. There was no wink in it, no game. I sat and pulled the bag open. A grilled sandwich still warm in its foil, a piece of fruit, and a cookie the size of my palm. My stomach groaned at the smell. I hadn’t realized how hollow I felt until the food reminded me. “You okay?” he asked. I nodded as I chewed. “Just tired.” “Morning sickness?” The words landed like stones dropped into still water. I froze mid-bite. His tone wasn’t accusing just sharp, perceptive. I looked up. His eyes were steady not unkind but knowing. “You’re glowing, Grace,” he said softly. “And not in the filtered I*******m way.” My throat went dry. I looked down, twisting the paper napkin in my fingers. “It’s not what you think,” I said, barely audible. He leaned back in the chair opposite me, folding his arms. “Then tell me what it is.” I couldn’t tell him what was going on with me. The silence stretched, thick as syrup. Then he spoke again, quieter this time. “Look… I’m not judging. Whatever’s happening between you and Professor Bennett…” “What?” My head snapped up. His expression didn’t change. It’s just a faint tilt of the head, a softness around the eyes that made it worse. “You think nobody sees it? That weird static between you two? It’s like trying to walk through humidity.” “I’m not… He’s not…” The words wouldn’t form. He let out a small laugh, not a mocking laugh but a tired one. “Relax. I’m not about to run off to Dean” I stood too quickly, the chair scraping behind me. “Thanks for the food. You should go.” But he didn’t move. Instead, he rose slowly, gaze still locked on mine. Then, with a voice so low it almost felt like a secret: “You don’t have to lie, not even to me.” I looked away, fists clenched. Then he was closer, one hand lifting to brush my cheek barely a touch like he thought I might crack. “Whoever he is…” His voice was barely more than a breath. “If he won’t even look at you after what you gave him… he doesn’t deserve your silence.” That was it. The wall broke and tears surged up from some place I hadn’t known was full. He caught me in a hug before I could think twice. His arms wrapped around me like they were built for this solid, sure, unyielding. He smelled faintly of spice and clean cotton. I let him hold me, didn’t stop him, not immediately. When he pulled back, his hands lingered at my jaw. His eyes searched mine then he kissed me. It was slow, measured, not a rushed one but gentle like he was asking a question and not making a move but it still felt wrong. I pulled back, breath catching. “I can’t.” He nodded, though his eyes had changed, something cooler settling behind them. “I’ll check in later,” he said, already stepping back. He didn’t look over his shoulder as he left. When the door clicked shut, I locked it. I leaned against the wood, my heart thundered. My face was damp and my skin still burned where his hands had rested, the quiet that followed, I finally admitted the truth I’d been avoiding. Noah was pulling away. And Desmond? He was already stepping in.I didn’t sleep even after Noah left, the room cooled and my skin stopped tingling with the memory of his hands. I just lay there motionless listening to the creak of the ceiling fan and the buzz of something I couldn’t name pulsing beneath my skin.Desmond’s house didn’t feel safe anymore. It felt… heavy like the walls were watching me and they knew what I’d done.By morning, the air was so thick that it felt like I had to swallow it just to breathe. I packed slowly and quietly. I didn’t have much, just a few clothes, some toiletries, and a journal I barely wrote in anymore. I folded things carefully like I was trying not to make noise, like a child sneaking out of a room she was no longer welcome in. But I wasn’t really sneaking out, I just didn’t want a scene. I should’ve known better. I stepped out of the guest room, bag slung over my shoulder and there he was, Desmond. He stood barefoot in the hallway, leaning against the wall like he’d been there all night, watching the door. M
The doorbell rang just after midnight. A single clean chime that sliced through the quiet like it didn’t belong in a place like this.I was sitting in the guest bed, knees pulled to my chest, the blanket wrapped tight around me. The house was still, I hadn’t slept, I hadn’t breathed since the video.I didn’t move until I heard voices low at first then rising. I pushed the door open from the hallway, I saw Desmond standing at the front door. His posture was sharp, defensive.On the other side stood Noah.His hair was a mess, his shirt was wrinkled. He looked like he hadn’t eaten in days. They didn’t notice me right away. “She doesn’t want to see you,” Desmond said.Noah’s expression didn’t change. “Is that what she said? Or what do you want?”Desmond stepped forward. “She came here, that should tell you everything.”Then Noah’s voice cut through it. “Grace.”I stepped out fully into the hall, and both of them turned.Desmond’s mouth set into a flat line.Noah didn’t say anything else
I didn’t pack a thing, no bag, no toothbrush. I just walked through the night like I could somehow outrun everything, fear, shame, gravity.In less than twenty-four hours, my world cracked wide open. Every door I thought I had? Slammed shut.Noah’s been suspended, I’m being blackmailed and someone only God knows who is holding onto a video that could ruin everything. Not just him, not just me, but everything we’ve been trying to hold together. I couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe. My hands were shaking, my heart wouldn’t slow down, and it felt like the walls were closing in so I left. I didn’t even know where I was going, I just needed somewhere quiet, somewhere I wouldn’t have to pretend I was okay, somewhere I could finally take a full breath without feeling like I was about to fall apart. That place… it didn’t fix anything, but at least for a while, it felt like the world stopped spinning so fast.”Desmond’s.He opened the door like he’d been waiting, like he already knew.No questio
By morning, the video is not out but I can’t breathe easily. That video still lives rent-free in my head like a loaded gun with the safety off and whoever is holding it has a steady hand.I haven’t told Noah yet. I don’t know if I’m protecting him or myself.The university calls me in before noon. There is no appointment, no warning, just a bland email with no subject line directing me to Room 406B of the admin building.That’s not a classroom. It’s where they hold hearings, the kind they don’t list on public calendars.I show up wearing the cleanest dress I can find, no makeup, no jewelry, hair pulled back like I’m trying to apologize with my appearance.I walk in and see three people waiting, a man in a blue suit who doesn’t smile, a woman with a clipboard, and an assistant who won’t make eye contact. Noah’s not here. There is no lawyer, no advocate, just me.“Miss Carter,” the woman says, flipping a folder open. “We’ll be asking you a few questions today.”“Am I in trouble?”“No,”
Back across the parking lot, I walk away into the dorm where nothing feels safe anymore. My head won’t stop replaying what almost happened.He pecked me and for half a second, I almost didn’t stop him. I don’t know what scares me more, what he did, or what I almost wanted. I make it to my room and shut the door like I’m trying to keep out a war but it’s already inside me.I stripped off my sweater and crawled into my bed, hoodie pulled over my face, heart aching in a way I can’t blame on hormones.Then my phone buzzes. Once, twice then thirty-eight times.My hands shake as I grab it. The class group chat is lit up like a bomb went off.Image attachment from Nighthawk999.I open it without thinking and the air leaves my lungs.It’s me in Noah’s car captured through a windshield from across the lot. My hand on his chest, leaning close. His head tilted toward mine. I remember the moment right before he kissed me before everything changed.The caption:“Texas Southern’s ethics professor o
Noah didn’t speak to me for two days after the car, not even a word, not a glance.In class, he acted like I didn’t exist. I sat through lectures, my hands clenched in my lap, trying not to look at him, trying not to remember the sound he made when he came inside me. The way he whispered my name like it hurt.I told myself I didn’t care and it was just sex but when I passed him in the hall and he looked through me like I was air…I realized I’d been lying.The ache in my chest felt bigger than the baby growing inside me.Desmond found me sitting outside the Fine Arts building, a half-eaten croissant in my lap and my hoodie sleeves pulled down over my fingers. I didn’t even notice him until he dropped a paper cup in front of me.“Chai latte,” he said. “Extra cardamom. You look like you needed something warm.”I blinked up at him. “You just walk around reading girls’ minds now?”“Only yours, he replied.”He sat beside me, close but not too close. His presence was warm, easy. The kind of