LOGINAvery's POV
My mum thought I was waitressing at a bar somewhere downtown. It was a perfect alibi for my late nights and the decent tips I brought home on work nights. There was absolutely nothing to worry about. I had kept that story clean for months and I had no plans to change it. "Busy night," I said, sitting down across from her. "I made good tips though." I reached into my bag and pulled out the envelope. Thise were tips from the floor during my sets plus the private room. I put it on the table in front of her. Her eyes went wide. "Avery—" "Take it. It's for the house." She reached for it with both hands and I watched her start to uncrumple some of the bills and the exhaustion in her face slowly gave way to something like relief and my chest did that tight thing it always did. "This is so much, sweetheart. This will cover the—" "Well, well." The voice came from the hallway and both of us froze. Dean leaned in the kitchen doorway with a terribly worn shirt on and his hair going everywhere and a look on his face that I had learned over two years meant he had already been to the liquor cabinet even though it wasn't even seven in the morning. My mum's boyfriend. Emphasis on the boy. "Look at that." He pushed off the doorframe and walked to the table and picked up the envelope before my mum could do a single thing to stop him. "Somebody had a good night." "Dean." I kept my voice flat. "That's for the bills." "And I've got bills of my own." He was flicking through the notes already, counting. "You've been sitting on this kind of money and I've been eating rice for two weeks. That's not very loving, is it?" "Put it down." "Relax." He pocketed the envelope and had the nerve to smile at me. "Think of it as rent. You live here, don't you?" "She pays rent," my mum said quietly. "Dean, please—" "It's my mum's house and you are the one who needs to pay rent," I said. "I pay for the food and the electricity and the phone bill. You pay for absolutely nothing and you drink everything we have, including what's meant for the bills, so don't stand in this kitchen and talk to me about rent." His smile vanished and his eyes went cold. "Watch your mouth." "Or what?" "Avery." My mum's voice had that please-don't quality that I hated because it worked, it always worked, because I could never put her in the middle of something that went bad. I looked at her. Her hands were flat on the table. She was watching me with that careful look I had seen a hundred times. I looked back at him. "Give it back," I said. "Not today." He straightened his shirt like he had somewhere important to be. "You can make more tonight, can't you?" He gave me a look up and down that made my skin crawl. "Clearly you're good at it." I stood up so fast my chair scraped loud against the tiles. "Mum." I looked at her. "Why? After everything he does, after every single time. Why do you still put up with this?" "He's going through a hard time," she said softly. "He's always going through a hard time. Every month there's a new hard time." I pressed my hands flat on the table. "He has been going through a hard time for two years and we are the ones paying for it. When does our hard time count?" "He loves me, Avery." "That is not what love looks like." She looked away. Dean was already heading down the hallway like the conversation was over. A moment later I heard the bedroom door close. I stood there in the kitchen looking at my mum and feeling every hour of the night I had, going down the drain. "I'm going to Jade's," I said. "Avery—" "I need some air, Mum." I walked towards the door. "I'll come back later." She nodded and didn't look up from the table and I hated Dean for that. I properly hated him, for turning my mum into a ghost of herself. My bestfriend Jade lived next door. I could cross the gap between our front doors in less than thirty seconds. I had been doing it since we were eight years old. A car was parked in front of her driveway that hadn't been there when the cab dropped me off less than twenty minutes ago. I slowed down. Something about it nagged at me. I had seen a car like that recently. I just couldn't place where. I pushed the thought away and walked up to the front door and rang the bell. I heard some voices and the door swung open. And every single part of me stopped working. He was in the same plain grey shirt and his hair was still a bit messy and he was looking at me the way you look at a complete stranger. Because to him, I was. He did not see my face last night. My wig, mask and makeup that made me Scarlett made sure of that. He was looking at me right now and seeing absolutely nobody he recognised. But I recognised him. Every single inch of him.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
Liam's POVI first noticed her on Tuesday.Not the way you noticed a stranger. The way you noticed someone you already knew when they turned up somewhere unexpected. She was at one of the long tables near the window when I came in, laptop open, head down. I went to a different section, got out my work, and started.I did not think about it for the rest of the session.On Wednesday she was in the corridor outside one of my lectures. She was leaving a seminar from the room next door when I came out. We passed within about six feet of each other. She had her phone in her hand, looked up briefly when she heard people coming out, our eyes met for about two seconds, and then she looked back at her phone and kept walking.I kept walking too.On Thursday she was in the library again.This time she was in my section. Not next to me. Two tables over and three seats down. Far enough that it was not a deliberate approach. Close enough that if I looked up I could see her.I told myself the campus
Jade's POV I went next door on Saturday. Not Thursday when I first saw it. Not Friday when I spent the day wondering whether I actually knew who was living next door to me. I spent Friday ignoring her calls because I needed to face her myself and not talk about anything on the phone. So I went on Saturday. Two days after I saw the footage that changed everything I thought I knew about the person next door. I knocked on her door at eleven. She opened it immediately. Like she had been somewhere near the door, ready to open it, for two days. She looked at me. I looked at her. "Can I come in?" I asked. "Yes," she said. She stepped back and I walked past her into the hallway and she closed the door behind us. We went to the kitchen. Thirteen years of difficult conversations meant we always ended up at a kitchen table. I took a chair. She settled across from me. Neither of us said anything. Then I asked, "Is it you?"It was not really a question. The footage had already ans
LAST WEEK THURSDAYJADE'S REACTION TO THE VIDEO RELEASED OF AVERY FROM LAST WEEKJade's POVMy phone buzzed at seven forty on Thursday morning and I picked it up from the nightstand without opening my eyes properly.It was a message from a girl on my course. Three words and a link.'Have you seen?'I opened the link while still half asleep.I watched it twice before I fully understood what I was watching.Then I pushed upright in bed and watched it again.The stage. The dancer. The mask falling forward in slow motion, frame by frame, the way someone had edited it to make the fall seem deliberate rather than accidental. The face. Fully lit. Three to five seconds before the hand came up.I knew that face."What the fuck?!"I said it out loud and it did not feel like enough so I said it again. I threw back the covers and stood up and then dropped back down because my legs were not sure what the correct response was. I opened the video a fourth time. Then I put the phone face down on the
Avery's POVLiam had left and I was at home alone. He had some personal things to go and sort out. My phone buzzed on the nightstand where I left it because I had gone to my room to rest a bit.I picked it up expecting nothing in particular and read the first line of the message and sat up.It was
Jade's POVI closed the door and stood in my front room and listened to the silence.They were gone. I had watched them walk back across to Avery's door from the corner of the window and then I had let the curtain fall and stood there in the quiet of my own house with the echo of the last few words
Avery's POVWe walked back to my house without saying anything.The street was the same street it always was. Saturday morning, a few cars, a neighbour two doors down washing her car with the radio on. The ordinary world carrying on with absolutely no awareness of what had just happened thirty seco
Avery's POVJade kept looking at me.She was waiting for me to say something. To qualify it or soften it or give her a version she could work with. I could see it in the way she was holding herself, still and watchful, still giving me the chance to take it back.I did not take it back."Is that tru







