LOGINI feel used. Completely used. That’s been the way I’ve felt since the first time River came into my room. He didn’t even acknowledge it before he just took what he wanted.
There was one thing I thought would change. I thought if I let him have my body, my virginity, he would like me back, but I guess not. I had tried to be what he wanted. Tried to watch p**n in order to perform well for him but still the same result. We have fucked 14 times in the last three months of starting this forbidden thing, and each time, he always leaves immediately after sex. At least on Saturday he said good job, and I received a kiss on my forehead. I guess I satisfied him this time. But he hasn’t reached out. I’ve checked my phone for the hundredth time—still no messages, no calls. My eyes land on my last message to him after I cried. Did you get home safe? Delivered. Three days ago. My stomach twists every time I see it sitting there unanswered. My fingers hover over the keyboard. Maybe I should text again. Are you busy? I stare at the words for a moment before quickly deleting them. God. That sounds desperate. I type again. Did I do something wrong? My thumb hovers over the send button. No. Delete. I toss the phone onto the bed and press my hands to my face. Why am I acting like this? He already told me what this was. No labels. No drama. Still… my hand reaches for the phone again. Just one more message. Are we still meeting again? The words sit there for a long moment before my chest tightens. Delete. The message box is empty again. Just like the rest of our conversation. With a sigh, I lock my phone and push my glasses up, straightening my uniform before turning away from the mirror. Then I leave my room. “Good morning, Mom.” I rush toward the door. Breakfast is already set, but I can’t eat. Cortney is waiting a little ways down the street to drive me to school since I missed the bus. “No breakfast?” Mom calls after me. I pause, meeting her gaze. Her face… it’s full of hope and care. I know she was happy to cook, especially since I skipped dinner last night too. “Cortney’s waiting. I’m sorry,” I say softly. “Is everything alright? You can talk to your sister if you don’t want to talk to me.” My phone buzzes. I look down at it. Cortney texts, asking where I am. I look back at Mom. “I’m fine. I’ll see you later.” Before she can reply, I slip out the door. I sprint through the neighborhood, even taking a shortcut. I only stop when I see Cortney’s car. I catch my breath then she lifts her shades and unlock the door. Cortney doesn’t mind picking me up right at the door, but I don’t want Mom or the neighbors hovering—she’s Alice and Drake Dawson’s daughter, after all. She looks at me when I climb in. “Are you okay?” she asks. I glance at her, surprised. “Why do you ask? I’m perfectly fine.” I shrug. She points to my glasses. “Your eyes… they look swollen. Did you cry?” I force my gaze to the road. “No. I just didn’t sleep enough.” She laughs. “We had the whole Sunday to do nothing, and you didn’t sleep? Were you up texting a boy or something?” “Of course not!” I snap, then see the look on her face and soften. “I mean… no boy. I didn’t sleep because my sister and her kids were around, so…” Guilt twists in my chest. If only she knows I am like this because of River. My heart aches, sitting here and lying to my best friend’s face. Cortney changes the subject. “Let’s grab breakfast first, then head to school.” She pulls into the road. During the drive, I check my phone more than five times. Still nothing from River. ~~~ “We’re back in time for first period,” Cortney says as she pulls into the school parking lot. We ate at one of the restaurants her mom reserved for her. It was supposed to be a family breakfast, but they called to say they couldn’t make it because of an emergency. They always seem to have those. I can tell Cort is upset, even though she hides it well. River didn’t show up either. So we both ate the food, and I even took pictures for my private I*******m account. As we approach our lockers—right beside each other—we hear Cortney’s name being yelled from down the hallway. We both stop and look at each other. I’m shocked. Cortney hates attention, hates drama. So why does this feel like trouble is coming straight for her? We wait until the girl finally comes into view. My stomach drops. It’s the girl River was kissing in the locker room Saturday night. Hazel. I could never forget her face. I even cursed her before I went to bed after I cried. My fists clench, but I force myself to keep the anger inside. She’s walking toward us quickly, fury written all over her face. Two girls follow behind her. Then she stops. Her eyes meet mine for a second. She looks away just as quickly and focuses on Cortney instead. “How dare you?” she yells. I stand there, stunned. Curious. Cortney folds her arms. “What do you want? You know I don’t like attention on me.” Hazel suddenly shoves her against the locker, pressing her elbow against Cortney’s chest. “Then you shouldn’t have done what you did.” Cortney’s face shows the same confusion I feel. Why would Hazel think Cortney caused a problem? She’s the last person who looks for trouble. Hazel leans closer, her voice sharp with anger. “My daddy saw the picture you sent.” Cortney finally pushes Hazel’s hand away. “What are you talking about? I didn’t send any pictures.” She adjusts her uniform. A crowd has already started forming around us. I can hear whispers spreading through the hallway. I want to shove Hazel away from Cort, but her two minions step in front of me like they’re ready to fight if I interfere. And I can’t fight. I’m as fragile as I look. “You and your little minion were the only ones who saw River and me making out in the locker room,” Hazel whispers, careful not to let the others hear. “I did no such thing.” Cortney takes her books, slams her locker shut, and looks at me. “Let’s go to class, Chancé.” She’s about to walk away when Hazel suddenly grabs her by the hair and shoves her back into the locker. Cortney’s books scatter across the floor. “What the hell?” Cortney snaps. “You’re out to get me, aren’t you? Because of what happened between River and me?” Hazel hisses. “Get over it, Cortney! The world doesn’t revolve around you!” The way Hazel talks to her makes me curious about what really happened between them. Were they once friends? Cortney has never told me about any old friends. And of course River was the cause. I roll my eyes. Cortney bends down to pick up her books, and I crouch beside her to help. When she stands again, she looks straight at Hazel. “I’ve stayed away from your life for years now. You and Rue. Don’t you think it’s time you stayed out of mine too?” She steps forward, then adds sharply, “And stay away from my brother.” She pauses. “And I didn’t send the picture,” she says coldly. “I don’t care enough about you to get involved in your life anymore.” Then she pushes through the crowd. I hurry after her. “Cortney, wait!” She slows down and turns to me. “I know you’re confused. Hazel and I go way back.” “That explains the yelling in the locker room.” She sighs. “You don’t understand. Hazel was my best friend. She and Rue. Until I found out they’d been sleeping with my twin brother.” My heart jumps. “They hid it from me and still smiled to my face. I hate them so much.” My heart is pounding loudly in my chest as I take a big gulp. “River always takes everything from me,” she continues bitterly. “He took them too. That’s why I didn’t want you getting involved with him.” She looks at me seriously. “I wanted to believe there was at least one girl who was immune to his charm.” She smiles faintly. “And I’m glad it’s you, Chancé.” I stagger slightly, but I’m careful not to let her see. Shock rushes through my entire body, but I force myself to keep the expression on my face believable. Cortney will hate me too if she ever finds out River has access to me too. “Cortney!” My heart leaps at the voice. We both turn. It’s River Dawson. He’s walking toward us in his hockey uniform. Normally he would greet me with a casual Hey, Chan. But this time he doesn’t even glance my way. It’s like I’m not even standing there. Like I’m invisible. My chest tightens at the realization. He stops in front of Cortney. “We need to talk,” he says, his brows drawn into a frown. “Now.” My stomach twists. Did he come all the way here because of Hazel?***~~~RIVER~~~***Practice hasn’t been the same level of intense ever since Ricky and I started getting along.Which is a good thing. I think.Daniel though, I need to talk to dad about him. Get him to change his mind and set him free. He’s been in detention since Friday and as much as what he did to me was wrong, I don’t want that sitting on my conscience longer than it has to. Part of it was my fault anyway. I had provoked him. I just hope dad listens. He isn’t the easiest man to reason with.The good news is that I’m getting better. The sickness has finally cleared and my bruises are healing faster than I expected. Another week, maybe less, and these plasters should be off my face completely.Tutorial with Chan today was something else.I can’t even explain it properly. It just — it was good. She makes it easy to want to learn, which is not something I’ve ever said about studying before. And when she pulled out those cookies at the end… I almost laughed.She looked so nervous han
Sleep doesn’t come.I’ve tossed and turned and it just won’t. I heave a sigh and sit up, my head turning to the clock on my nightstand.9:32 pm.I leave my bed, slip on my shoes, and quietly pull my bedroom door shut behind me. The living room is dark and empty. I pad softly to my parents’ door and ease it open just enough to check — they’re both fast asleep. I pull it closed again and stand there in the hallway.My restlessness won’t stop.Sasha taking my role as Gwen. Mrs. Cetera gone. Cortney can protect me from the bullying — I believe that — but I don’t think even she can stop Sasha from going after what is mine. What’s next? What else is she willing to take from me? Because right now I feel like I have nothing left for her to reach for. I’ve been kicked out of the play without doing a single thing wrong. And there goes my college portfolio. There goes the full reassurance I needed for Yale.I can’t let this go.But I also can’t go to Sasha about it. That is exactly what she want
My advice is always ruin the friendship better than regret it for all time.Taylor Swift said that in her song like it’s the easiest thing in the world.It’s not.I can’t do that.I won’t.I’m tempted to. God, I’m tempted to throw every professional boundary we agreed on straight out the window and just not care about the consequences for once. But I can’t. I know I can’t.He is not making it easy though.River sits across from me, completely unbothered, completely unaware of the internal war happening on my side of this table. His eyes are low and focused on the test paper I gave him earlier. One hand props up his jaw. The other moves his pen slowly across the page. I bite my bottom lip. My eyes travel against my better judgment from his rolled up sleeves, to his half-unbuttoned shirt, to his gorgeous hair falling just slightly out of place.Stop loo
After our emotional talk, Cortney decided we needed air.There was no ice cream left in the fridge, so we walked to the supermarket that is just a few minutes from the Dawson mansion, picked up a cup each, and grabbed a few more to store for later.I feel a quiet sadness knowing I didn’t get to see River. Didn’t even get a minute to slip away and check on him. But I wouldn’t bring it up. I couldn’t. Not without Cortney’s eyes narrowing in that way they do when she’s piecing something together.So I keep it where it belongs — tucked away, in my secretive mind.Cortney inhales the evening air as we step out of the supermarket, her cup of ice cream in one hand, her face tipped slightly upward. “I missed this,” she says. Then she turns to me. “And I cannot wait for midterm break.”“That’s still a few weeks away, Cort. Tests are next week. Exams are two weeks after that. Before we know it—”She links her hand through mine and throws her free arm into the air. “Midterm break!” she squeaks.
Maybe my mind made a very rash decision when I decided to speak out and object Sasha’s offer in front of everyone.Our little pretend friendship has been peaceful and good so far. But Sasha will always be Sasha — controlling, arrogant, beaming with pride. And if I hadn’t done it today, the day would have definitely ended with me joining her squad. Becoming part of her minions. Losing whatever little ground I’ve managed to stand on.I shake my head at the thought as Cleo drives us home. Imagine having to dye my hair blonde or red and doing Sasha’s bidding. Imagine that being my life.A quiet sigh pulls me out of my thoughts. I turn my head.Cleo’s eyes are still on the road. “I wish we could have stayed.” Her voice is soft. Not accusatory, just honest. “I wanted to see what games would come next. It would have been so much fun to be on Sasha’s Instagram.” She glances at me briefly before her eyes return to the road. “But I’m very proud of you for standing up to her. That takes real bal
The door to Sasha’s closet is already open from the girls before me, and I step inside and stop.It’s enormous.Racks and racks of pink — every shade imaginable. Blush. Fuchsia. Dusty rose. Hot pink. Barely-there pink that almost looks white. The shoes are arranged on shelves along the far wall, lined up like a display. Bags hang from hooks. Jewelry sits under a glass case near the vanity mirror. I think she just set this up because of girls time. I stand in the middle of it and feel completely lost.My eyes move across the racks. I pull out a structured blazer, but it’s too similar to Pristina’s. I push it back. I find a ruffled midi skirt, but it has too much volume. I find a sequined mini dress and immediately put it backI pull out a slip dress and pause.What would Cortney pick?The thought lands quietly and stays there. I look around the closet again, but this time with different eyes. Cortney doesn’t chase trends like Sasha. She doesn’t pile things on. She finds the thing tha
My eyes flip open at the sound of beeping.I've heard this before. It's like déjà vu—the same rhythm, the same sterile hum. My body hurts. Like someone took a bat to every joint and walked away smiling. My blurry gaze clears. I glance around the room. It’s empty. I close my eyes—and it all comes
The news of Daniel Marrius's arrest shocked me when I saw it on my phone. I turned my head to my sister to check if we got the same news because her phone beeped at the exact same time.She had a shocked look on her face too."This could ruin him," Cortney says.I nod, still in a daze about how this
***~~~River~~~***The sound of beeping is all I hear. It starts to get louder and louder — like a bomb has been set to blow off.A bomb!I gasp awake. At first, everything is blurry, but I'm quick to feel the pain shooting through my body. A low groan leaves my lips, and now I can see my surround
The bell finally rings, and the noise begins again. Everyone involved in the play runs down to the auditorium.The class we just finished was pottery — an elective, so River didn't show up. He's not taking it.Cortney and I find our way to the auditorium and take our seats. The hall is still very n







