LOGINPOV: Elena
I hated him. The realization followed me all the way back to my room. Not the childish kind of hate I used to carry after he pulled my pigtails in middle school or laughed when other kids mocked me. Not the bitter resentment of a girl whose first crush turned into her first bully.
This was something deeper, something much uglier. The kind of hatred that settled in your chest and made breathing hurt.
His threats ran through my head; it felt like my heart was sinking into my stomach.
“Fine!”
The word left my mouth before I could stop it. The room went completely still.
Jace blinked. "What?" I hated the tiny flicker of surprise on his face.
As if he'd expected more resistance.
As if he hadn't already cornered me from every possible angle. "You win." My voice sounded dead. "I'll do it." The notebook slowly lowered.
For the first time all night, Jace looked uncertain. Not guilty, not sorry. Just uncertain. " Elena—"
"Don't."
I held up a shaking hand. "Don't pretend this wasn't exactly what you wanted." His mouth closed.
Good.
Because I couldn't stand hearing another lie. A strange emptiness settled over me. The kind that comes after panic. After tears. After anger. When there's simply nothing left.
"Can I go now?" Jace stared at me. For a moment something unreadable crossed his face. Then he stepped aside. The deadbolt clicked open. I reached for the handle.
My bedroom door clicked shut behind me, but it did nothing to stop the trembling that had taken over my body. I leaned against the wood and squeezed my eyes closed, trying to steady my breathing. It didn't work.
Every word from the study replayed inside my head. The scholarship. Blackmail. The threats against my mother. The notebook.
God.
The notebook.
A wave of humiliation crashed over me so hard that I physically winced. What kind of person kept a thirteen-year-old girl's diary for years? What kind of person saved it specifically so he could use it against her later?
Apparently Jace Calloway. The same beautiful monster, Jace Calloway, had spent most of my childhood making me miserable.
I pushed away from the door and crossed the room before collapsing onto my bed. My eyes immediately burned with tears. I hated myself for crying. I hated him for making me cry. Most of all, I hated the fact that he had won. He had won, and there was absolutely nothing I could do about it now.
The terrifying thing was that he knew exactly where to strike. If the threats had only been about me, I would have told him to go to hell. Let the university read my embarrassing fantasies. Let them laugh and judge me for all I care.
I could survive humiliation.
What I couldn't survive was watching my mother lose everything again.
For years it had been just the two of us. I remembered overdue bills stacked on the kitchen counter, nights when she skipped dinner and pretended she wasn't hungry, and mornings when she left before sunrise to work extra shifts. I remembered watching her smile through exhaustion because she thought I didn't notice.
Now she finally had stability. She finally had security. A beautiful house. Financial freedom. A husband who seemed determined to give her the life she deserved. All she had ever wanted and dreamed of. The thought of destroying that life made my stomach twist.
I grabbed my pillow and buried my face in it. A frustrated scream escaped before I could stop it. The sound was muffled by the fabric, but the anger behind it was real.
"Asshole," I muttered.
The word felt completely inadequate. A knock sounded on my door. I froze.
For a brief, horrifying moment, I thought it might be Jace. Then my mother's voice floated through the wood. "Elena? Honey, are you awake?" Relief mixed with panic. I quickly wiped my eyes and sat upright. "Yeah." The lie sounded terrible.
The door opened a few inches, and Margot stepped inside. She was still wearing the elegant navy dress she'd worn for the retreat, though her heels were gone and her blonde hair had started falling from its expensive updo.
Her expression softened immediately. "You were crying." Of course she noticed. My mother noticed everything. I looked away, trying to wipe out the tear that dropped from my eyes.
"I'm fine."
“You're back so soon?” “How was the trip to Aspen?” She gave me the exact look mothers reserve for lies they have no intention of believing. "Elena." "I'm serious." Another lie.
Margot walked further into the room and sat beside me on the bed. "The party ended badly downstairs." My heart immediately started pounding. "Did it?" She sighed.
"Richard and Jace had another argument. "That wasn't surprising. The two of them fought almost as often as they breathed. "What happened?"
“We got a call, which sounded very important, so we had to fly back as soon as possible." "Something about Camille." I kept my face carefully neutral. My mother continued talking. "Apparently she caused a scene before she left." A scene. That was one way to describe threatening to destroy someone's future.
The guilt settled heavier in my stomach. If my mother knew what had happened upstairs after the party ended, she would lose her mind. At least I hoped she would.
A terrible thought suddenly crept into my head. Would she? Or would she tell me to help him?Would she ask me to protect the family that had given her everything?
I hated myself for even wondering. Margot reached over and brushed a strand of hair behind my ear. "You know you can tell me if something's wrong, right?"
The question almost broke me. For one dangerous second, I considered it. Telling her everything. The threats. The diary. The fake engagement. All of it. The words rose to the back of my throat.
Then I imagined Richard finding out. I imagined another argument. Another divorce. Another financial collapse. And just like that, the courage disappeared.
"I'm just tired."
The disappointment in my mother's eyes nearly made me confess anyway. Instead, she leaned down and kissed my forehead. "Get some sleep." I nodded.
She stood and headed toward the door. "Goodnight, sweetheart." "Goodnight." The room became silent again after she left. I stared at the closed door for several seconds. Then I slowly looked toward my desk. My phone sat beside my laptop.
One notification glowed across the screen.
Unknown Number. A chill ran through me.
I already knew who it was before I opened the message.
Tomorrow. 10 A.M. Dress nice. We're buying your ring.
— Jace
I stared at the text. Then at the ceiling. Then back at the phone. The reality of what I had agreed to finally settled over me. By this time tomorrow, I will be wearing a diamond ring. And everyone at Halden University would believe I belonged to Jace Calloway.
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 lunchtime, I wanted to disappear.The problem was that disappearing had become impossible.Everywhere I went, people stared. Some weren't even trying to hide it anymore. Conversations lowered when I walked past. Phones appeared in their hands. Groups of students glanced in my direction before immediately pretending they hadn't. It felt as though the entire campus had collectively decided that my humiliation was the most captivating thing happening at Halden University.The photos had spread faster than I thought possible. Apparently, the internet had decided that my entire personality could be summarised by a few awkward pictures from middle school. I should have stayed off social media, but curiosity got the better of me. When I checked again, the comments were somehow even worse.Some people thought the whole thing was romantic. Others thought it was pathetic. One account had created a side-by-side collage comparing a twelve-year-old photo of me looking in Jace's direc
POV: ElenaI should have known Camille wasn't the type of person who made threats she didn't intend to follow through on.The problem was that part of me had hoped she was all talk.After the fundraiser, life settled into something that almost resembled normal. Classes continued. Jace buried himself in basketball. Richard remained obsessed with public appearances. For three whole days, nothing exploded.Then Thursday arrived. I was walking across campus after my morning lecture when my phone started vibrating nonstop inside my bag.At first, I ignored it. By the fifth notification, I stopped walking.Something was wrong.Pulling out my phone, I found more than twenty unread messages waiting for me. Most were from classmates. A few were from people I barely knew. One was from my mother. The knot in my stomach tightened.A message from Lila sat at the top of the screen.Call me. Right now.Before I could even process what was happening, my phone rang.Lila.I answered immediately. "What
POV: ElenaBy the time we left the jewelry store, I felt sick. The diamond ring sitting on my finger was beautiful, expensive, and completely believable. That was the problem. Nobody looking at it would think it belonged to a fake fiancée being blackmailed into saving a basketball star's reputation
POV: ElenaI spent most of the night staring at my ceiling and wondering how my life had managed to collapse so completely in less than twenty-four hours.Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Jace standing in his study with my old notebook in his hand. Each time I drifted off, I woke up to the image
POV: ElenaAlmost instantly, the heavy, dark atmosphere Jace radiated began driving his guests toward the exits. Nobody wanted to be in the firing line of Halden University’s golden boy when he looked like he was about to rip a door off its hinges. Whispering crowds flooded, scrambling to grab thei
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







