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There was a time I thought I had my life perfectly mapped out, a straight line drawn between ambition and discipline, lit by the flashes of studio lights and the shallow applause of people who would forget my name by morning.
Modeling was never about passion for me. It was survival. A game I learned to play early. Smile, pose, repeat. Every lens demanded perfection, and I gave it, even when it stripped pieces of me away. They told me I had the kind of face that sells dreams, but no one ever asked if I still had one of my own.
Behind every photoshoot, every flattering edit, was a girl too tired to recognize herself. I lived from one booking to another, feeding on compliments that never filled the void. I pretended to enjoy the attention, the parties, the long nights of rehearsing my angles. But every time the makeup was washed off, all I could see was exhaustion staring back.
Manila was loud, alive, and merciless. Opportunities came wrapped with conditions, and I took them all. Because what else was there to do? I had left everything behind... my small town, my parents, the version of me that still believed simplicity could be enough.
When CAMPUS MODEL PH opened its doors, it felt like another chance to breathe. A newly built agency, fresh faces, fresh promises. Maybe this time I could start over. Maybe this time I could find a place where I wasn’t just another body molded into beauty.
But what I didn’t know... what I couldn’t know was that stepping into that agency would lead me straight into her world.
The world of a woman whose touch would rewrite every rule I lived by.
And before I could understand what she was doing to me, before I could even resist, it was already too late.
Because the moment she looked at me, I realized something terrifying... I wasn’t the one in control anymore. And worst, I wasn't the person I used to think I am.
"Ena, why don't you just enter the showbiz? With that face, you'll definitely get so much projects!"
I smiled and shrugged at Martha, my manager's sentiment. I just started my career in modeling, I don't want to get ahead of me that fast. Besides, I still need to figure things out for myself.
"Why do you look so bothered? You seem to be worrying about something, what is it?" she asked.
"Nothing," I answered straightly and gathered my things to leave. I still have a lot of things to do and that includes avoiding this kind of conversation.
"So defensive huh! Don't forget your photoshoot on Saturday?" she said before I could close the door of her office.
I drove my car back home and decided to just stay there instead of going to my derma appointment. I don't wanna see that doctor yet.
"Fuck, why am I even bothered? It was just a kiss!" I hissed, irritated at myself for being bothered by what happened.
When I reached home, I busied myself in researching. I wanted to fix myself, if that's even possible. I bit my lower lip as I scrolled down my ipad.
Signs to know if you're a lesbian.
Does liking a kiss from a girl makes you a lesbian?
How to unlike a kiss from a girl?
The hell I am searching? Fuck. I can't believe at the age of 26 I'd be confused of my gender identity! This isn't part of the career I chose after entering this industry!
I tried to sleep it off, but every time I closed my eyes, I could still feel the ghost of her lips on mine. It wasn’t supposed to happen. She wasn’t supposed to do that, and I wasn’t supposed to react.
But I did. I fucking did.
It’s ridiculous. She’s my dermatologist, for god’s sake. It was supposed to be professional... clean, detached, clinical. Not whatever the hell that was.
The sound of rain hitting the window pulled me back to the present. Manila nights always had that certain loneliness attached to them, the kind that sinks under your skin no matter how loud the city gets. I sat by the window, staring at the faint glow of headlights slicing through the wet streets below.
I shouldn’t have skipped my appointment. But a part of me knew that if I saw her again, I wouldn’t know how to act. Or worse—she’d see right through me.
Because that’s what she does or maybe I'm just overthinking.
Dr. Aria Williams looks at people the way surgeons look at incisions... precise, unblinking, unafraid to go deeper. And when her gaze landed on me, I felt… exposed. Like she already knew which parts of me were fragile, which ones were pretending.
My phone buzzed, pulling me out of my thoughts. A message from Martha.
Martha: Don’t be late for tomorrow’s fitting. And please, what's happening to your derma session? You look tired earlier. Go ahead and add more session before Saturday, 'kay?
I sighed. Tired. That word again. It followed me everywhere like a curse, shit, this is overreacting.
I tossed my phone onto the couch and leaned my head back, staring at the ceiling. Maybe I should just get it over with. It’s not like I could avoid her forever.
The room fell silent, except for the faint hum of rain outside. I hated silence. It made my thoughts louder.
I stood and walked to the mirror across the room, catching my reflection under the dim light. My hair was a mess, my lipstick smudged. Maybe Martha was right. I did look tired. This overthinking stresses me out!
I brushed my fingers against my lips, almost unconsciously. I shouldn’t have done that. The memory of her kiss sent a chill down my spine, sharp and soft all at once.
This needs to stop, I told myself. I needed to get back to who I was before this confusion started. Before she started.
But when I turned off the lights and crawled into bed, the darkness didn’t help. It only made her voice louder in my head— low, calm, commanding.
And maybe that’s when I realized it wasn’t just confusion anymore.
It was curiosity. Dangerous, uninvited curiosity.
The days quickly found a rhythm of their own. By the end of my first week at Zurich International, I realized there was no such thing as an ordinary day. Every morning began before sunrise. At five-thirty, my alarm would pull me from sleep. By six, I was already inside the private fitness studio located on the twenty-fourth floor of the headquarters, stretching alongside other talents under the supervision of Zurich's performance coaches. The sessions were never about becoming thinner. They focused on endurance, posture, flexibility, and injury prevention. Every movement had a purpose. "Runway work demands balance more than strength," Coach Emilia reminded us almost every morning. "The audience only sees elegance. They never see the discipline behind it." After training came breakfast, usually prepared by the nutrition team. Meals were carefully planned according to each model's physical assessment. Fresh fruits, eggs, whole grains, lean protein, and enough carbohydrates to
The first morning in Switzerland didn't feel real. I stood by the floor-to-ceiling window of my apartment, a mug of untouched coffee warming my hands as I looked out at the city below. Zürich was already awake. Trams glided through clean streets with effortless precision, cyclists moved along designated lanes, and people walked with a quiet confidence that somehow matched the calm atmosphere surrounding them. Everything here felt... organized, peaceful, and different. I glanced at the digital clock on the kitchen counter. 7:12 A.M. My orientation started at eight. I took one last look outside before setting my coffee down. The reflection staring back at me from the glass looked familiar yet distant. I was really here. Thousands of miles away from home. Thousands of miles away from everything I once called mine. For a brief second, my thoughts wandered. Was Xavier having coffee already? Had he gone to work? ...And Aria? I wondered if she had finally opened h
Entering my parents house makes me feel a mixture of longing and thrill. It's been a while. I have long turned my backs on them. Back in our province, I decided to leave everything behind. Including them. For my modeling career. Now, I am here. In front of them, in the city where they decided to leave after I left. Waiting for me to thank them for bringing back the offer I once throw for love. My mom smirked, showing that "I told you" look. Proud. While my dad looked at me with longing. Maybe missing me too, just how I missed seeing him this close. It has been 7 years since I distanced my self to them. "I'm glad you changed your mind, Ena. This is for your own good," my mother started. I sighed and nodded. "I realized, it's better for me to chase for that dream first." She waved her hand elegantly as if she's shoo-ing the idea of "chase for that dream first". "You chase that dream of yours and never repeat your mistake. Enjoy your life there and look for a
I closed my eyes and felt everything slowly shattering on me. This love... I thought would thrive no matter how hard things can get but seeing Aria being kissed by someone else, I don't know. I just know that I can't look at her anymore. Her explanation isn't needed anymore. And I regret choosing to stay with her. My tears continued to flaw as memories of us flash back in my mind. I wonder if any of that was true? If she ever loved me? Or if all this time, she was just proving something to me? Maybe she doesn't really love me. Maybe she just wanted to show me that she can control me. Foolish me. I believed every lie she uttered. - "Ena... please, you need to rest." I shook my head and wiped the tears on my face. "I can't rest until I leave. I want to leave, Xavier." My voice sounded too firm than it should. My brother looked at me confused. I closed my eyes firmly and took a deep breath before looking at him again, calmer. "Can you still find a way to contact
The door slammed behind me, but I didn’t hear it. Or maybe I did—and my mind just refused to register it. Everything felt… muted. Like the world had been wrapped in something thick and suffocating, dulling every sound except the one thing that wouldn’t stop echoing inside my head. That image. Him. Her. I walked blindly. I didn’t even remember grabbing my keys. I didn’t remember stepping outside. The only thing I was aware of was the way my chest felt like it was being torn open, breath by breath. I couldn’t think. I couldn’t process. I couldn’t even cry properly. It was like my body didn’t know how to react to that kind of pain. My phone buzzed in my hand. Xavier. I stared at the screen for a second before answering. “Hello?” My voice came out uneven, barely there. “Ena? Where are you?” His tone shifted immediately. “You don’t sound okay.” I laughed weakly, but it broke halfway through. “I’m… driving.” There was a pause. “Driving where?” “I don’t know,” I admitted.
I cried myself to sleep. And when I woke up the next day, everything seems gloomy. I get up and hurried to where Aria has been sleeping for the past months, the guest room. I opened the door aggressively but she wasn't there. It was just her lauggae piling up near her bed. She really is going. The realization didn’t hit all at once. It crept in slowly, settling deep in my chest until it became something I couldn’t ignore. I stepped inside the room. The bed was neatly made. Too neat. No sign that she slept there last night, even though I knew she did. The air still carried her scent, faint but familiar, and it made my chest ache even more. Her luggage sat by the corner, zipped, ready. Prepared like she had been planning this longer than I thought. I walked toward it slowly, my fingers brushing against the handle. Cold. Still. Final. “So this is it,” I whispered to myself. No answer. Of course, there wouldn’t be. I stood there for a while, staring at the room t
The first email arrived at six in the morning. I saw it before I even sat up in bed, the glow of my phone cutting through the quiet. Aria was still asleep beside me, her breathing even, her arm draped loosely across my waist like it had been there all night without thinking. I didn’t move at firs
Distance didn’t arrive all at once. It came quietly, disguised as responsibility. In the days that followed, my calendar filled up faster than I could process. Calls from brand representatives across different time zones. Emails marked urgent. Contracts that demanded answers without explicitly as
I didn’t realize how much that dinner with my mother affected me until the quiet finally settled. Not the peaceful kind of quiet—the heavy one. The kind that lingers in your chest long after the conversation ends, replaying words you wish didn’t still have power over you. I woke up earlier than u
Stability, I learned, did not mean immunity. It only meant that when challenges arrived, they didn’t immediately tear everything apart. The first sign came quietly—too quietly for comfort. I was in the middle of reviewing a proposal when Aria’s phone buzzed on the counter. She was in the shower,







