LOGINAvery's POV
The first thing I noticed when I opened my eyes was the dim light. It was creeping in through the gap in the curtain, pale and grey, the kind of light that meant it was not quite morning yet but getting close. The kind that meant I had stayed way too long. The second thing I noticed was Liam's arm across my waist. I lay still for a moment and looked at him. He was on his side facing me, eyes closed, breathing slow and easy. In sleep he looked younger somehow. Less guarded. His dark hair was a complete mess and his jaw was soft and I had absolutely no business noticing any of it. I slid carefully out from under his arm. He shifted slightly but didn't wake. I held my breath until he settled, then gathered my things from the floor as quietly as I could. The wig was still on. The mask was still in place. I was still Scarlett, technically, and Scarlett did not stand around in motel rooms watching strangers sleep. I found a small notepad on the nightstand and a pen beside it. I wrote: ‘Thanks for last night. — S.’ Then I let myself out. The street outside was empty and cold and the sky was the deep blue of almost-dawn. I stood on the pavement for a second with my bag over my shoulder and the night air on my face, and then I pulled out my phone and called a cab. While I waited I sat on the curb by the motel entrance and started the transformation in reverse. The mask came off first and went into the bottom of my bag. Then the wig, folded and tucked away. I shook my real hair loose and ran my fingers through it. I pulled my hoodie and jeans out from the bottom of my bag, changed right there on the curb without caring who saw. Good thing nobody was passing by. I stuffed the costume in, and by the time the cab pulled up I was just Avery Nash again. Tired. Achy. Oddly at peace. I climbed in and pulled out a makeup wipe. "Where to?" the driver said, not looking up from his phone. I gave him my address. My phone buzzed in my hand as I cleaned off the stage makeup. I looked at the screen and felt the peace evaporate immediately. I had twelve missed calls and a good number of voicemails. Four from Jade. Eight from Colton. I stared at Colton's name for a long second. Then I pressed play on his first voicemail. "Avery, where are you? I've been calling for hours. I know what you saw looked bad but if you would just let me explain—" I stopped it. Looked bad? I pressed play on the next one. "I know you're upset. I get it. But you can't just disappear. It's your birthday and I had reservations. They were very expensive. Please just call me back." I stared out the window at the dark empty streets sliding past. He had reservations. He had been in bed with Brianna Holloway three hours before my birthday dinner and he was more upset that I missed the reservations. I deleted every single one of his messages without listening to the rest. Then I pressed play on Jade's first voicemail. "Hey, it's me. I know you're probably having the most amazing dinner right now and I feel terrible for calling, so ignore this if you're busy. I just…something happened today and I didn't want to dump it on you on your birthday but I also really need to talk to you, so call me when you get home. Doesn't matter what time. I mean it. Love you." I listened to it twice, then I pressed play on her second one. "Okay it's midnight and you haven't called and I'm not going to pretend I'm not a little worried. Call me. Please. Happy birthday again by the way, I hope the dinner was perfect. Call me." I typed her a message. ‘I'm fine. I'm sorry for not calling since last night. I'll come to you this morning. Don't go anywhere.’ I put the phone away and looked out the window and thought about Liam sleeping with his arm across the empty space where I had been, and I pressed my lips together and didn't think about it again. I pushed open the front door as quietly as I could. The kitchen light was on. My mum was at the table. She was still in yesterday's clothes, which meant she hadn't slept, which meant she had been thinking. A mug of coffee sat in front of her that she clearly hadn't touched. "Mum." I dropped my bag by the door. "You didn't sleep." "I was waiting for you." She looked up and her eyes moved over my face, checking. She had been doing that for years, checking, like she could see through whatever version of me walked through the door. "How was work? The bar kept you late again."Avery's POVI was alone in the coffee shop on the south side of campus with nothing in front of me because I had not ordered anything and was not sure I was going to.The barista from the week before was not on shift. There was a different one today, younger, who had taken one look at me, asked if I needed a minute before ordering, and I had said yes. That had been twenty minutes ago. At some point I was going to have to either order or leave and I was not ready to do either.My phone was in my bag.I had put it in there before leaving the house because the alternative was spending the afternoon watching the share count on footage of my own face. I had done enough of that this week to know what it cost me.I looked at the wall."Do you mind if I sit here?"I looked up.A man from one of my lectures. He had been in the same room as me for one class all semester and we had been in a seminar group together briefly in July. I knew his name because the lecturer used it. He asked good ques
Avery's POVVega called an emergency meeting for Wednesday at four.The message went to the full squad list. Mandatory attendance. Meeting room off the main corridor. Thirty minutes. I read it and put my phone down and thought about what thirty minutes in a room with all of them again was going to feel like.Then I stopped because it did not change what it was going to be.I got there first and took the seat at the end of the table nearest the window. Behind me I could see the athletics building and the car park and Liam's usual parking spot which was empty at this hour. I looked at the whiteboard instead. Someone had written a formation count on it in blue marker that had never been fully wiped and underneath it in lighter marks from two or three meetings ago were other diagrams that had become ghosts.I kept my eyes on the whiteboard and waited.They came in. Mia took the chair to my left. Chloe took the seat across from me, put her hands on the table, and looked at nothing. Brianna
Avery's POVI got to the gym early and stood in the middle of the floor with nobody else in it and breathed.I had about eight minutes before the first person arrived. I had the floor under my feet and the lights overhead and the quiet of a space that was waiting to be used. I needed those eight minutes. Because the practice was the one part of the week I was certain about and I wanted to stand in it before it got complicated again.They started coming in at five forty.Mia was first. She walked in, looked at me, said nothing, dropped her bag by the wall, and started stretching. I felt a bit hurt because she didn't walk up to me, but I understood. Right now she meant nothing elaborate. Just I am here, let us get to work.Chloe came in second. She said, "Morning, captain," said with the care Chloe used when she was choosing her words. Not unfriendly. Careful. I had known her long enough to know which one this was.Five more came in together talking about something that stopped when the
Jade's POV I saw him again on Thursday. Not in the coffee shop this time. In the lecture hall, which was where I had suspected I knew him from before. we had both attended that lecture for over twelve weeks without ever having an actual conversation. Public Administration was a big module. Big enough that you could sit in the same room as someone for an entire semester and not know their name. You could know just their face and the general area of the room where they usually sat and nothing else whatsoever. He came in late. Not significantly late. Four minutes, maybe five. The lecturer had started but was still on the first slide which was always the agenda slide that nobody actually needed. The agenda was on the module page and everyone had already seen it. Ethan came in and scanned the room and took a seat on the end of the row two ahead of mine. I watched him settle. He pulled out a notebook rather than a laptop. That was worth noticing because most people in that module ha
Liam's POVI was so glad our project was done and submitted before my fall out with Avery. It would have been a nightmare having to work with her after the incident.The project grade came back on Monday.I saw it in my inbox when I woke up. Grade Release: Urban Planning and Community Development Group Project. I opened it at six forty-five, before coffee, before my brain was properly functional.Distinction.I closed the email and went to make coffee.Later I was in the library at the table near the window when Zoey came in. She did not come to my table immediately. She went to the shelf along the right wall, got a book, brought it back to the table two across from mine, and started reading.I was aware she was there.She had not made her presence into something I was required to respond to, which I had noticed about her appearances in the last week and a half. Just there. Not pushing but not avoiding.There was a Zoey I had been bracing for after everything with Avery. The one who a
Jade's POVSince I was taking a break from Avery, I was feeling a bit lonely and bored. I needed to do more things on my own.So on thursday afternoon, I was at the coffee shop on the south side of campus.I had been going there since my first year because it stayed open until late and had the corner table with the outlet near the wall and the barista who remembered I took oat milk without being asked.I was at the corner table with my laptop open and my notes spread beside it, trying to finish a paragraph that would not move, when the door opened.I did not look up.The door opened and closed fifteen times an hour. I did not have the attention span to look up every time.But the laugh made me.Not some fake laugh. Not the kind someone turns up for a room to hear. The kind that was surprised out of him rather than done for anyone.He was standing near the counter with someone I did not recognise — a guy from what looked like the science block based on the lanyard. The science block gu
Avery's POVHe stopped in the kitchen doorway.Dean was not a man who did surprise well. He was not a man who did anything well, really, but surprise in particular was a genre his face had no training for. He looked at me and then at my mum and then at the purse on the table between us and then at
Avery's POVI let her cry for a minute before I said anything.That was the rule with my mother. She did not like to be talked to while she was crying. She never had. Even when I was small and I used to come and sit beside her on the kitchen floor when things were bad, she would put her hand out an
Avery's POVFor half a second I could not move.The corridor went very quiet around me, or it did inside my head at least. The assistant was standing two steps below us on the stairs holding her clipboard against her chest, looking up at me with the polite slightly anxious look of a person who had
Avery's POVI sat in the campus carpark with the engine off and tried to talk myself into going inside.It was Tuesday. Eleven in the morning. Business Management was at half past in lecture hall three. I had not been to class in two weeks. I had told myself last friday that I would go this week. I







