LOGINADRIAN
Silence. It was a luxury I was beginning to appreciate over the past few days. The moment I stepped into my apartment and closed the door behind me, the silence settled around me like a warm, familiar blanket. It was kind of funny how things changed so quickly. Just two weeks ago, this house had been filled with noise and laughter and the kind of easy presence that only two people that had been together for years could manage. And now… nothing. It was just me now. Just like it has been for most of my life. It was fine, though. Because this was exactly how I preferred it. Or at least… That was what I kept telling myself. I placed my briefcase on the table before loosening my tie. Everything looked exactly the way I’d left them this morning— neat, organized, spotless. Not a single dirty plate in the sink. Not a single cushion out of place. Some people found comfort in chaos, I found comfort in order. Because that was the only thing that was constant and predictable. The only thing that could be completely controlled. I walked into the kitchen and poured myself a glass of water. Halfway through drinking it, my phone vibrated against the countertop. My stomach churned as I stared at the call screen. Dylan. The name alone was enough to make my mood plummet. Even further than that arrogant idiot, Lucas Carter, had already achieved. For a second, I considered ignoring the call. Nothing good could come out of speaking to Dylan again. It wasn’t like the past few times have exactly been fruitful. But against my better judgement, I answered. “What?” My voice sounded surly even to my own ears. A sigh came through the speaker. “Is that how you’re greeting me now?” My fingers gripped the phone tighter. The sound of his voice filling my ears made familiar emotions rush to the surface. No matter how hard I tried to bury them, it didn’t work. Five years. Five years of trying to make things work. Five years of thinking I’d found the perfect partner. All gone down the drain. “You lost the right to expect anything better,” I replied coldly. The audacity of him. After everything he did, he was lucky I even spoke to him at all. I’d cut people off for less. “I just wanted to talk.” “We have nothing left to talk about.” “I still have some things at the apartment.” I glanced toward the hallway closet. I’d gathered some of his things in a box. Some clothes, an old guitar, a collection of books he’d insisted he would come back for. The box had been sitting there untouched for days. I cleared my throat. “I’ll have them delivered.” “I can come get them. You don’t have to—” “I do.” Silence. Then another sigh came down the line. “You’re still angry.” I let out a laugh. It didn’t sound amused. “You slept with someone else, Dylan,” I hissed. “Someone you reassured me was just a sister to you.” “It’s not as easy as you’re making it sound. I—” “Enough. I don’t want to discuss this any further.” “Adrian—” “I said enough.” Another silence. Then he spoke again. “I didn’t call to fight.” “Then why did you?” “... I wanted to make sure you were okay.” I pinched the bridge of my nose as my chest twisted. Once upon a time, I’d have believed him. There was a time when those words would have made me melt. That time was long gone. “Not that it’s any of your business, but I’m fine.” “You don’t sound fine.” “I’m hanging up, Dylan.” “Adrian.” I closed my eyes briefly. “What?” “You don’t have to send my things. I’ll come get them. And also…” There was a long pause. “I’m sorry.” Sorry. It was a word I’d said numerous times in my life. A word I’d since come to hate. It was useless because it didn’t change anything. What was done was done and it couldn’t be taken back. And with Dylan saying it now, it couldn’t have sounded anymore redundant. It was too late. He was thirteen days too late. So, I replied to Dylan with the words someone once told me: “It doesn’t matter.” Click. The apartment became silent again as I hung up the call. I stared at the dark screen in my hand for several long moments before placing the phone face down on the counter. I rubbed both hands over my face. I should have felt better. Instead, I just felt tired. An hour later, I forced myself to deal with the rest of Dylan’s things, arranging them into another box. Halfway through it, I discovered a framed photograph of us. It was taken during our second anniversary. We both looked young. Dylan had his arm around my shoulders and we were both smiling. We looked really happy. Who knew then that it wasn’t going to last? I couldn’t remember the last time I’d smiled like that. I turned the frame over before I could look any longer. Straight into the box it went. It took me a long time to gather all of Dylan’s things but I eventually managed it. I let out a huge sigh when I was done. It was deeply stressful but necessary. It felt like a chapter was closed in my life. Forever. I took a shower and I poured myself tea, settling myself on the couch in the living room. I stared at the city lights blinking beyond my apartment window as I sipped from the mug. Usually, evenings like this were peaceful. Tonight, they weren’t. Those words kept drifting back to me. “I’m starting to think that’s what you’ve grown comfortable doing. Pushing people away.” I gritted my teeth. That pain-in-the-ass Lucas Carter. I hated how easily he’d uttered those words. He said them as though he’d known me for years instead of a single night. As though he had any right. He didn’t. He knew nothing. Nothing about the wedding invitations still sitting in the bottom drawer of my desk because I still couldn’t bring myself to throw them away. Nothing about waking up one morning and discovering the future you spent years planning no longer existed. He knew absolutely nothing. My phone buzzed again. This time it was an email. I caught a little bit of the contents from the notification screen. My heart raced as I registered at the email ID. Lucas Carter. Subject: I think you owe me an explanation, Professor. I read the words in his voice. I didn’t dare to open the email. Fear coiled tight in my stomach like a deadly snake. For a second, I thought about quitting working at the university. But that wasn’t a good idea. Working at Westview was good for starting out my career. It was good for networking. Good for my CV. Good for the department. Still, I couldn’t focus on all those things. Instead, all I could picture was ash-blond hair. Brown eyes. That cocky smile on his face. And his voice saying, “I don’t regret any of what happened.” I powered off my phone without clicking into the email. Tomorrow. I’d answer tomorrow. Tonight… I wasn’t sure I trusted myself to make the right decision.ADRIANSilence.It was a luxury I was beginning to appreciate over the past few days.The moment I stepped into my apartment and closed the door behind me, the silence settled around me like a warm, familiar blanket.It was kind of funny how things changed so quickly.Just two weeks ago, this house had been filled with noise and laughter and the kind of easy presence that only two people that had been together for years could manage.And now… nothing. It was just me now.Just like it has been for most of my life.It was fine, though. Because this was exactly how I preferred it.Or at least… That was what I kept telling myself.I placed my briefcase on the table before loosening my tie. Everything looked exactly the way I’d left them this morning— neat, organized, spotless. Not a single dirty plate in the sink. Not a single cushion out of place.Some people found comfort in chaos, I found comfort in order. Because that was the only thing that was constant and predictable. The only thin
LUCASOne thing I’d learned about myself over the years was that I didn’t know when to quit.I called it persistence but some people chose to call it being an asshole and not recognising boundaries.One of my exes had called me “overbearing” and that I didn’t know “when to stop pushing.”Whatever that meant.The point was, once something caught my attention, letting it go wasn’t exactly my strongest skill.I didn’t know why Adrian Frost had captured my attention. It wasn’t like there was anything particularly outstanding about him and yet…The truth was it didn’t matter why or how. He was my interest and I was going to pursue him.Until I eventually lost interest as always anyway.Noah glanced at me, his eyebrows furrowed.We were seated under a tree, our usual spot to relax.“You’ve been smiling to yourself for the past five minutes,” he said.“I have not,” I countered.Rina looked up from her phone and tilted her head.“He’s right. You literally are still smiling right now.”Sure e
ADRIANI pushed against him again, but he didn’t even let up an inch. “Mr. Carter…” “Do you know what I find the most insulting about that night?” he interrupted. I exhaled sharply. “This is not the appropriate time to…” He reached into the pocket of his jacket and pulled out a small, slightly creased piece of paper. “This…” He raised the paper higher. “This was what I found the most insulting.” I frowned as I stared at the paper in his hand. I didn’t remember leaving a note. But then again, I’d chosen to shelve most of the memories from that day into the back of my mind. He shook the paper in my face. “I’ve kept this with me since the day you left it. I thought I’d never see you again but I guess the universe chose to be generous.” “Look, I don’t remember leaving any note. If you’ll just tell me what it says…” That seemed to annoy him even more. His eyes narrowed slightly. “You don’t even remember what you wrote?” “No… not exactly.” “‘Thanks for the company.’ That was w
ADRIANI’d made a lot of regrettable mistakes in my twenty-seven years of existence.At the very top of that list was agreeing to be in a five-year relationship with someone who would end up being a liar and a cheater.But I was beginning to realize that wasn’t even my worst mistake— and that was saying something.My absolute worst mistake had to be hooking up with a random stranger I met in a club.And not just any random stranger, a stranger that turned out to be my student.The one that was currently sauntering towards me now, an arrogant smirk on his face.This was all Dylan’s fault.Apparently, the universe decided that him cheating on me, after five years of being in a relationship, with his twenty-two year old ‘sister’ wasn’t punishment enough.I had to make an even worse mistake.A reckless, whiskey-fueled mistake.The lecture hall slowly emptied around me.Students chatted amongst themselves as they packed laptops into bags and filtered toward the exit.I smiled politely. Ans
LUCASI’d always viewed life as unpredictable.Things had a knack of not going exactly how you wanted them.For example, when I was walking into class this morning, I expected another boring, but simple day.I had absolutely no idea that my entire life was about to change.As I looked toward the front of the lecture hall, I still couldn’t believe what I was seeing.Dark hair. Gray eyes. Black shirt beneath a charcoal blazer. A sharp, serious gaze.He looked nothing like he’d looked a week ago at the club. Or even when he was on a bed beneath me an hour later.He was currently standing behind the podium, looking calm and collected.Like he’d never once ended up following someone to a cheap hotel room after too much whiskey.Looking at him now, I expected to be hit with regret but instead, I felt strangely… victorious.It wasn’t just that the sex had been mind-blowing— although I wasn't going to be forgetting it any time soon— but that it’d been fun breaking him apart piece by piece.I’







