LOGINPOV: Elena
By eleven o'clock the next night, my bedroom felt less like a sanctuary and more like a vibrating cage.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
The heavy, aggressive bass from the sound system downstairs rattled the vintage glass panes of my private balcony. It had been going on for hours. What had started as a few muffled voices at eight o'clock had mutated into a full-blown rager, completely overtaking the Calloway mansion. Halden University’s elite; the athletes, the sorority girls, the campus royalty who ran the social food chain, had completely invaded.
I sat cross-legged in the middle of my king-sized bed, a pair of noise-canceling headphones pressed tightly over my ears, desperately trying to focus on a fifty-page reading assignment for my seminar class. But it was useless. Even through the foam padding, I could hear the muffled shrieks of drunk girls down the hall, the heavy stomping of boots on the hardwood, and the unmistakable sound of red plastic cups clinking together right outside my door.
Mom and Richard had left early that morning for a weekend country club retreat in Aspen. They had barely turned the corner of the driveway before Jace took over the house.
Around midnight, a sudden, sharp smell of smoke and cheap beer began to seep directly under my bedroom door. The heat in my room was becoming unbearable, and my throat felt dry, scratched, and thick from the fumes. Worse, I realized I had left my laptop charger and my primary reference textbook down in the first-floor library study before the madness started.
Talk about bad luck, right?
I couldn't just sit here starving and trapped until morning.
I pulled off my headphones, tossing them onto the mattress. I glanced down at myself. I was wearing an old, faded grey t-shirt that hung loosely over a pair of simple black shorts, definitely not dressed for a Halden VIP party. My hair was pulled back into a quick, messy bun. 'Just run down, grab the charger, and come right back up,' I told myself, my palm sweating against the doorknob. 'Nobody is going to notice you.'
I unlocked the door and stepped out into the corridor.
The hallway was a disaster zone. Two basketball players I recognized from the university sports banners were leaning against the antique crown molding, laughing loudly as a girl in a tight skirt tried to balance a beer bottle on her head. I kept my head down, shoulders hunched, slipping past them like a shadow as I headed toward the staircase.
The moment I hit the landing, the sheer scale of the chaos became visible. The massive marble foyer was packed wall-to-wall.
I took three steps down the stairs, intending to just blend into the perimeter, when a loud, obnoxious whistle cut through the music from the bottom of the staircase.
"Whoa, whoa, hold on," a guy with a thick neck and a varsity jacket yelled, pointing straight up at me. He nudged the guy next to him, a massive grin spreading across his face. "I don't recognise her. Yo' Calloway! Didn't know you had this stashed up here, man!"
The immediate circle around the staircase went dead silent, several heads snapping upward to look at me. My cheeks instantly flamed an agonizing crimson. I froze on the step, my hand tightening around the cold iron railing as the crowd began to smirk and murmur.
"Who is she?" a girl near the couch whispered loudly, scanning my oversized t-shirt with pure judgment. "Is that the new stepsister? The charity case?"
"Damn, Jace, you keeping the pretty ones hidden?" another teammate shouted, parading his red cup toward me in a mock toast.
I wanted the marble floor to open up and swallow me alive. I felt exposed, small, and completely defenseless beneath the glaring party lights. I turned my eyes desperately toward the center of the living room, trying to find a way through the crowd to the library.
And that’s when I saw him.
Jace was leaning against the grand piano, a red cup held loosely in his large, calloused hand. He was surrounded by the top-tier athletes and campus queens, looking completely in his element; untouchable, arrogant, and flawless.
But he wasn't laughing.
The exact second my feet had hit the stairs, his gray eyes had locked onto me. His posture had gone completely stiff, his broad shoulders squaring as his jaw tightened into a hard, dangerous line. As his teammates continued to hoot and call out comments about me, Jace didn't join in.
Instead, his dark, piercing gaze tracked my every single movement through the crowded room, his eyes burning into mine with an intense, unreadable, and utterly territorial heat that made it feel like we were the only two people in the house.
What the hell was up with him?
The drive back from the greenhouse was so quiet that the sound of the tires rolling over the pavement seemed unnaturally loud.Jace didn't attempt to start a conversation, and I wasn't sure I could have answered him if he had. My mind was still trapped inside that abandoned greenhouse, replaying the note over and over.YOU'RE LATE.Whoever had written it had expected us.Not hoped. Expected. I wrapped my arms around myself and stared out the passenger window as the familiar gates of the Calloway estate came into view. For the first time since moving into the house, the iron fences and security cameras didn't make me feel protected. They only reminded me that someone had managed to get close despite all of them.Jace parked in front of the house and switched off the engine, but neither of us moved. "You shouldn't have gone," he said quietly. I kept my eyes on the windshield. "You followed me." "Because you left without telling anyone." "I knew you would've tried to stop me." "I would'v
POV: ElenaThe anonymous phone call haunted me for the rest of the night."If Miss Hart wants to know who's been taking the photographs... she should come to the old greenhouse behind the athletic centre tomorrow night."The words repeated in my head until I wasn't sure whether I had actually heard them or imagined them. Someone had been watching us. Someone knew my name. Someone wanted me. Not Jace.Me.By morning, the Calloway house had returned to its usual routine, but the tension lingered beneath every polite conversation. Extra security guards patrolled the grounds. Two unfamiliar SUVs sat outside the gates. Even the staff moved more quietly than usual.Richard acted as though everything was under control. It only made me more uneasy. "No one is going to that greenhouse," he announced over breakfast, setting down his coffee with practised calm. "I've already instructed security to investigate." "And if they find nothing?" I asked. "They'll keep looking.""That's not an answer."
POV: ElenaThe message lingered on Jace's phone long after he lowered it.Answer your front door. I left you a little gift.A cold feeling settled in my stomach. The text wasn't dramatic or threatening, which somehow made it even worse. Whoever had sent it was confident enough to know we'd open the door. They wanted us to find whatever had been left outside, and they wanted us to know it was intentional.Jace slipped his phone into his pocket and headed for the staircase."Stay upstairs." "I'm coming with you." His shoulders stiffened. "Elena, this could be dangerous." "So I could stand here wondering what's in that box." He opened his mouth to argue, but before either of us could say another word, Richard stepped out of his study. One look at Jace's face told him something was wrong."What happened?"Jace handed him the phone without a word.Richard read the message carefully, his expression revealing almost nothing. He looked toward the front entrance before pressing a button on the
POV: ElenaFor a moment, I simply stared at the bedroom door.Richard's voice was calm, almost casual, but it immediately put me on edge. Jace had told me to lock the door and wait for him. Instead, his father was standing outside my room asking me to come downstairs.I hesitated before unlocking the door.Richard stood in the hallway with both hands tucked into the pockets of his tailored trousers. Even at this late hour, he looked perfectly composed, as though expensive suits were simply another layer of skin. His expression revealed nothing."I hope I didn't startle you," he said. "You did." A faint smile crossed his face. "I suppose that's fair." He turned without another word, clearly expecting me to follow. Curiosity got the better of me.When we reached the study, he closed the door behind us and walked towards his desk. The room smelled faintly of leather and old books, the shelves lined with awards, framed photographs, and business trophies collected over decades.Richard pic
POV: ElenaFor a long moment, neither of us spoke.The photograph rested between Jace's fingers, but it no longer looked like ordinary paper. It looked like a threat.The image had been taken from outside the Calloway house. I recognized the sitting room immediately—the grand piano near the window, the marble fireplace, and the navy curtains Richard insisted had been imported from Italy. Jace and I were standing in the background, arguing about something I couldn't even remember anymore.Whoever had taken the picture hadn't been standing close. They had been watching us from a distance."They followed us," I whispered. Jace's jaw tightened. "No. I looked at him. "They were already there."Before I could ask what he meant, Sandra glanced between us with growing concern. "Is something wrong?" Jace folded the photograph so quickly that she couldn't see it. "No." His voice was calm. Too calm. "We'll be there in a minute." Sandra hesitated before nodding and disappearing down the hallway.
By the next morning, the paper bag Jace had given me sat empty on my desk, but the knot in my stomach hadn't gone anywhere.I had slept badly, waking every couple of hours only to remember the photos, the comments, and the way people had looked at me on campus. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw strangers laughing at a younger version of myself—a lonely little girl who had once believed the boy she admired might someday notice her.Now the entire university knew she had.My phone buzzed just as I finished tying my hair into a low ponytail.Jace: Be downstairs in fifteen minutes.I frowned and typed back.Why?His reply came almost instantly.Media Day. Richard already told the athletic department you're coming.I stared at the screen in disbelief.Without asking me.Again.A second message appeared.Wear something elegant. Cameras will be there.I tossed my phone onto the bed with more force than necessary."Unbelievable."Breakfast was unusually quiet. Richard sat at the head of the d
POV: ElenaBy Thursday morning, I had become campus property.That was the only explanation for the number of people who suddenly seemed invested in my life. Everywhere I went, someone was staring. Some students looked curious, others judgemental, and a few openly jealous. The worst ones were the p
POV: ElenaThe suffocating weight of Jace’s gaze followed me all the way across the crowded floor. I kept my chin down, pushing past sweaty bodies and ignoring the stray glances from people who were too drunk to care but sober enough to whisper. My heart was a frantic drumbeat against my ribs as I
POV: ElenaThe sharp, echoing crack seemed to vibrate through the entire house, but neither of us moved.Water seeped into the pristine white tiles, carrying tiny, jagged shards right to the edge of his bare toes. Jace didn't even flinch. He just lowered the juice carton from his lips, his eyes tra
POV: ElenaThe blast of thick, humid air hit me the second I stepped off the jet bridge, but it wasn't nearly as suffocating as the voice vibrating against my eardrum."Elena? Are you off yet? Tell me you’re off the plane," my mother’s voice rushed through the line, accompanied by the distinct, cli







