LOGINThe familiar smell of flour and butter hit me the moment I stepped into the culinary lab. It was ridiculous how grounding it felt, the clean gleam of the stainless-steel counters, the hum of ovens already preheated, and knives laid out like soldiers. My chest loosened a fraction. This room had always been my sanctuary.
I slipped into my station, setting my knives down with careful reverence most people reserved for prayer. Around me, chatter buzzed, the same voices from years past, some new, some too loud for my comfort. I tugged at the hem of my apron and tried to fade into the rhythm of the room.
"Miss Nyelle," Professor Hart's voice cut through. He was tall, silver-haired, with that perpetually stained chef's coat that somehow made him more authoritative instead of less. He always spotted me, no matter how small I tried to make myself.
"Yes, Chef?" My voice came out quieter than intended, but he didn't seem to mind.
He glanced at the neat way I'd already arranged my tools. "Still, the only student who treats mise en place like a religion. Excellent."
Heat bloomed across my cheeks. Compliments always made me itch. Still, I nodded and murmured, "Thank you, Chef."
The class started, and I fell into the movements like second nature. Today was laminated doughs, croissants, and puff pastry. The part of baking that demanded patience, control, and precision. My wheelhouse.
Around me, some students groaned as their dough tore or their butter leaked. Someone cursed when flour puffed up into their face. I kept my head down, hands steady. The anxiety that gnawed at me everywhere else went silent here, drowned in the logic of ratios and the promise of a clean rise in the oven.
"Perfect lamination," Professor Hart announced when he stopped at my station, lifting the edge of my dough to examine the layers. "As always. If only the rest of you took notes from Miss Nyelle."
A few students shot me looks, some impressed, some irritated, but I pretended not to notice. I tucked a strand of hair behind my ear and whispered a small, "Thanks."
By the end of class, golden, buttery croissants cooled on my rack, their layers crisp and delicate. The sight alone eased something in me.
When the timer beeped for dismissal, I packed my tools in precise order, wiped down my station until it gleamed, and tugged my backpack onto my shoulders.
The hall outside was noisier, filled with students spilling between classes, but I moved through it like a ghost, hugging the wall. My phone buzzed with a text from Mariah.
"Break time, bitch. Meet me at the fountain."
I exhaled. At least with her, I didn't have to pretend quite as hard.
When I reached the fountain in the quad, she was already there, perched on the stone ledge, iced drink in hand and sunglasses shoved into her curls. She grinned the second she spotted me.
"There's my favorite kitchen witch," she teased, arms open wide.
I rolled my eyes but stepped into her hug anyway, the comfort of it sinking into my bones.
"How was class?" she asked as she pulled back. "Bet you showed those dough-heads who's boss."
I shrugged, biting back the smile tugging at my lips. "It went fine."
"Fine?" She narrowed her eyes. "Translation, you killed it, and Professor Hart probably proposed marriage again."
I laughed despite myself. "Shut up."
Mariah's grin widened. "Never. I live to embarrass you."
We sat together on the fountain ledge, the sun sharp overhead but softened by the breeze that finally, mercifully cut through the heat. Students streamed past, laughing, smoking, and scrolling on their phones.
Mariah launched into a story about her English professor mispronouncing her name three times in a row, her arms flailing as she mimicked his stammer. I listened, sipped from the water bottle I'd packed, and let her chatter steady me.
The rest of the morning passed in a blur of steel, steam, and voices. After baking came food science, a lecture heavy with formulas and reactions that most students groaned at. I didn't.
I liked formulas. They made sense. Gluten development, starch gelatinization, and Maillard reactions every process had a cause and an effect. Unlike people, and emotions.
I scribbled notes fast and neat, diagrams crowding the margins. The professor threw out questions no one wanted to answer, and my hand lifted before I could stop myself. His nod came like permission, and I recited the explanation automatically.
A few students turned to glance at me. I felt the heat crawl up my neck, but kept my gaze on the notebook.By noon, my head buzzed with information, but it was a good kind of buzz. A controlled kind. I stopped by the student café for lunch and ate in the quietest corner I could find. Mariah texted me memes throughout, dramatic GIFs that made me stifle laughter behind my spoon.
Afternoon classes dragged, less engaging, but I powered through them. Menu planning. Restaurant management. Numbers and margins, deadlines and flow charts. None of it thrilled me like the doughs and sauces, but I knew it mattered. Control didn't just live in recipes. It lived in spreadsheets, too.
By late afternoon, the sky softened to gold. I walked across campus with my binder pressed tight to my chest, weaving through clusters of students sprawled on the lawn or lounging by the fountain. Their laughter rose like bubbles, easy and careless. I wasn't jealous, exactly. Just...aware that I didn't fit in that way.
And maybe I didn't want to.
Mariah found me again before my last class, shoving half a bagel into her mouth while rattling off plans for the weekend. A party invite, a movie she wanted to drag me to, and a new restaurant she swore we had to try.
"You're not gonna hide in your cave all semester," she warned, pointing the bagel at me like a dagger.
"I don't hide," I said softly.
She gave me a look.
"Okay," I admitted. "I selectively retreat."
Her laughter rang out, loud enough to turn heads, and I found myself smiling despite the coil of nerves still tight in my chest.
When my final class ended, dusk had already begun to stretch shadows across campus. I packed my things, slung my bag over my shoulder, and made my way toward the bus stop.
That was the thing about school, it was exhausting, overwhelming at times, but here I had order, predictability, professors with syllabi, assignments with due dates, and projects with measurable outcomes.
Here, I knew exactly what was expected of me.
It was only when the bus hissed to a stop in front of my building, and I stepped down onto the sidewalk, that the knot in my stomach returned.
Because home wasn't really safe anymore.Home had Lloyd.
And whether he was behind his door, on his balcony, or laughing low through the wall, his presence was enough to make every bit of control I'd built during the day start to fray.
I couldn't look away. He was everywhere at once, moving, pivoting, launching, laughing, and yet somehow every motion was enthralling. My eyes followed the ball as if it were tied to him with invisible strings, every swish of the net making my chest tighten.He smiled after nearly every basket, that little triumphant grin that made my stomach flutter, that subtle thrust of his shoulders like he owned the moment. And that tiny happy dance he did after sinking a shot? I caught myself leaning forward, toes curling against the edge of the bleacher, unable to stop myself from watching.The squeak of his sneakers against the polished wood echoed through the gym, punctuated by the shouts and laughter of his teammates. The way he called the plays, gestured, barked playful insults at his friends, it was... intoxicating. He wasn't just good, he was alive here. And I couldn't stop staring.I felt my own pulse spike, warm heat crawling up my neck, cheeks flushing. Every time he shot, I held my br
I was running late, fumbling with my bag straps and trying not to trip over the pile of textbooks spilling out of the bottom. The sun had barely climbed high enough to warm the sidewalk, and the air carried that sharp, damp-grass bite mixed with distant coffee. My sneakers scuffed against the threshold as I stepped toward the door, mind already in full "school mode" what classes I had, what assignments I needed, how I'd explain to Mariah why I was late again.I threw open the door and nearly stepped on a box neatly wrapped in red ribbon, sitting right in front of the door. The faint scent hit me first, sweet and buttery, pulling me up short as if someone had yanked the floor out from under me. Beside the box was a folded note, perfectly creased, leaning against the box. My fingers trembled slightly as I picked it up, careful not to tear the paper.Nyelle, it began, I'm sorry. I shouldn't have...My pulse skipped, heat pooling low in my belly. I could hear his voice in each sentence,
The bathroom tiles bit cold into my bare feet as I twisted the shower knob all the way to the left.Ice-cold water exploded down, slamming against my skin. I gasped sharply, the shock stealing my breath as it pounded over my head, streamed through my hair, raced in freezing rivers down my neck, over my shoulders, tracing the curve of my spine, and slipping between the cheeks of my ass.I braced both palms against the slick wall, head bowed, letting the chill punish me.But the second I closed my eyes, he was there.The car. His thumb stroked my jaw. That heartbeat of space before he closed it.And then the kiss, fuck, the kiss.It crashed over me hotter than the water ever could. His mouth on mine, firm and patient, waiting for me to open like he already knew I would. My lips parting on instinct, tongue brushing his before my brain caught up. The slow, filthy drag of it, the way he sucked gently at my bottom lip, then grazed it with teeth hard enough to make my clit throb in answer.M
My back hit the seat with a small thud. His thumb stroked the hinge of my jaw, tilting my chin enough for him to deepen the kiss, coaxing my lips to part. A low sound...his, not mine, vibrated against my mouth when I responded.His fingers threaded into my hair. The shock detonated in my chest... heat, fear, confusion all tangled. My other fingers clamped around my backpack straps, heart exploding against my ribs as if trying to escape. His hand slid to the back of my neck, sending sparks down my spine in ways I was absolutely not prepared for.I fisted the front of his shirt. The kiss slowed, then lifted, then returned with more certainty. His mouth brushed the corner of mine, gently at first, then with a teasing pull that made my breath break against him. That tiny, broken breath snapped everything.I jerked back so hard the seatbelt cut into my collarbone. "Open. Open the car!"His head snapped back, eyes wide. "Hey... hey, okay... okay, relax...""No!" I scrambled at the door, fi
The rest of the school day unfolded in a blur so quick it felt unreal. Maybe it could sense how jittery I was, how every thought, breath, and shift in my body kept circling back to the one person I didn't want occupying space in my head.After the cafeteria incident, my nerves were shot. My next two classes passed in half-listened lectures and scribbled notes that didn't even follow the professor's pacing. Words went in one ear and spilled right out the other. Each time my phone buzzed, my heart tripped. Even when it wasn't him.By the last class, our shared German elective, Mariah dropped into the seat beside me, flipping open her notebook with a dramatic sigh."You're weirdly quiet," she whispered, leaning in."I'm always quiet.""No, honey." She gave me a look, the kind that saw through excuses. "This is a whole different flavor. This is quiet-plus-anxiety-times-ten."I forced a tiny smile. "Just Tired."Her raised eyebrow said she wasn't buying it, but she didn't push. The profes
The cafeteria smelled like hot oil, burnt bread, and the faint tang of cheap sanitizer. I slid into the booth with Mariah and her boyfriend Nate, careful not to let my tray wobble. Mariah was already halfway through her salad, laughing at something Nate said.I nibbled at a piece of sandwich, pretending not to notice the dozens of eyes that occasionally flicked our way. Cafeterias had a way of turning the mundane into theater."So," Mariah broke the silence, leaning back, "how were your classes today, kitchen witch?"I snorted, careful not to choke. "Barely scaled through."Mariah laughed, and Nate shook his head. "She's humble, isn't she?""Yeah, right," I muttered, rolling my eyes.Nate grinned. "That's Nyelle-speak for 'aced everything.'"I kicked him lightly under the table. "Shut up."I picked at my sandwich, trying not to notice the way other students seemed to drift closer to the center of the room, voices tilting upward."Mind if I join?" I froze mid-bite, fork paused halfway







