Mag-log inPOV: Elena
The 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 finally reached the heavy oak doors of the library study. I practically threw myself inside, pulling the door shut until the thudding bass of the living room was completely blocked.
The air in the library was cooler, smelling of old paper and leather. I found my laptop charger and textbook right where I had left them on the desk. Grabbing them tightly against my chest like a shield, I took a deep breath.
Why was my heart beating so fast in the first place? It's not like I cared, I'll just walk back out. Go straight up the stairs and absolutely, under no circumstances look at him.
I wrapped my fingers around the handle and pulled the door open, stepping back into the lions' den.
The party had escalated even further. The air was thicker now, hazy with smoke and the sour sting of spilled liquor. I tried to hug the walls, using the large marble pillars to block myself from view, but the crowd near the center of the living room had shifted, bottlenecking right in front of the main staircase.
Jace hadn't moved from his spot by the grand piano, but someone had arrived next to him.
Camille Hayes. I knew because she was a popular young model here in LA, it was also said she went to Halden.
Even in the middle of a chaotic college rager, Camille looked like she belonged on a runway. She was wearing a beautiful designer black dress that practically screamed old money, her blonde hair falling in perfect, glossy waves around her shoulders. From what I could hear from the crowd's whispers, she had been dating Jace for over a year, a relationship that the campus bloggers treated like a royal marriage.
But right now, her flawless face was twisted into a mask of pure, unadulterated fury.
I tried to slide past them, my boots pressing quietly against the hardwood, but the sudden drop in the room's volume stopped me.
"Are you seriously going to play dumb right now, Jace?" Camille’s sharp voice cut through the noise, vibrating with a venomous intensity.
Jace stood his ground, his large frame towering over her. He swirled the liquid in his red cup, his expression a mask of bored, lazy arrogance, though the tight muscle ticking in his jaw betrayed him. "Camille, don't do this here. You're making a scene."
"Oh, I'm making a scene?" She laughed, a high, bitter sound that had several more heads turning. She pulled out her phone, aggressively thrusting the bright screen directly in front of his face. "Then explain this. Explain why three different girls from the Alpha Phi house have texts from your private burner number. Explain why the athletic board is suddenly getting anonymous tips about property damage at the downtown hotel last weekend!"
My breath hitched. The room seemed to grow even tighter. At Halden University, the athletic scholarships weren't just about talent; they came with a ruthless, ironclad morality clause. If a player was caught in a toxic cheating scandal, or worse, linked to reckless behavior and destroyed property, the athletic department would drop them before the media could even catch wind of it.
Jace’s lazy posture vanished in an instant. His gray eyes darkened, turning dangerous as he snatched the phone from her hand, his knuckles turning stark white under the glaring party lights. "I told you, that wasn't me. Someone is fabricating this shit to tank my season."
"Save it," Camille spat, her voice dripping with absolute disgust. She stepped closer, her perfectly manicured finger digging sharply into his chest. "I am not going to sit around and let your reckless, unstable baggage ruin my family's reputation. My father is one of the biggest donors to this university, Jace. If I tell him you're a liability, you're done."
Jace didn't back down. He leaned in, his alpha jock pride flaring as his chest rose and fell with ragged breathing. "You think you own my career, Camille? Try me."
"I don't need to try you. I'm finishing you," she whispered loudly enough for the entire inner circle to hear. She looked around the room, her eyes sweeping over his quiet, frozen teammates before landing squarely on him one last time. "We're done, Jace. And by Monday morning, the athletic board is going to see every single screenshot I have. Enjoy the captain's title while you still have it."
She turned on her heel, her designer dress sweeping as she marched toward the front doors, shoving past two freshmen who didn't move out of her way fast enough. The heavy front doors slammed shut behind her, the sound echoing like a gunshot through the silent foyer.
The music kept playing, but a heavy, awkward suffocating tension settled over the room. Jace stood completely frozen by the piano, his face darkened with terrifying rage. His pride had just been utterly shattered in his own home, in front of the very people who worshiped him.
Nobody dared to speak to him, neither did anyone dare to even look at him.
Except for me.
I was still trying to sneak to the staircase, my laptop charger gripped so tightly against my chest that the plastic prongs were practically digging into my skin.
As if sensing my presence through the dead silence of his anger, Jace's head snapped up. His gray eyes, wild and burning with a dangerous, unchecked fury, locked directly onto mine.
His gaze pinned me to the spot, making every instinct in my body instantly scream at me to run.
POV: Elena Three days passed without another note.No mysterious packages appeared at the Calloway estate. No anonymous calls interrupted dinner. The greenhouse remained sealed off while Richard's security team combed through every inch of it, insisting they would eventually find something useful.They didn't.Life, somehow, continued. Classes resumed, basketball practices filled Jace's afternoons, and the campus gradually found a new scandal to obsess over.People still stared whenever we walked together, but the curiosity had lost some of its intensity. Our engagement was no longer breaking news. It had simply become another part of university life.I should have been relieved. Instead, the silence unsettled me more than the threats had. Whoever had been watching us hadn't disappeared. They had simply stopped reminding us they were there.The library was unusually crowded that afternoon. Final projects had turned every table into a battlefield of laptops, textbooks, and half-empty
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.
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: ElenaBy 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
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







