MasukSummer
Monday morning brought a mandatory summons to the HypeTV production trailer, a massive, silver vehicle parked behind the campus library that looked like a command center for a small military operation. "Sit, please," Sarah Sterling said, not looking up from a massive flatscreen monitor that displayed a grid of social media analytics. Jaxson and I sat down on the leather banquet seat, deliberately leaving a careful two inches of space between our thighs. "The numbers from Friday night are astronomical," Sarah said, finally turning to face us with a terrifyingly bright smile. “The courtyard kiss has three million views. The clip of Jaxson refusing to fight Chad after that taunt is trending on T*****r under #ReformedJax. The university board is thrilled. The NHL scouts are actively calling his agent again." I let out a small breath of relief, looking at Jaxson. His profile was stoic, but I could see the slight relaxation in his shoulders. It was working. The lie was saving him. "However," Sarah continued, her smile instantly dropping into something cold and analytical. “The data shows a plateau. The 'reformed bad boy' angle is great, but audiences get bored of stability quickly. They want jeopardy. They want to wonder if the relationship is going to survive." A bad feeling started to bloom in the pit of my stomach. “What do you mean, jeopardy?" Sarah tapped her tablet, and the flatscreen monitor shifted to display a profile picture of a young woman. She was stunning—tall, with long blonde hair, flawless skin, and a verified I*******m badge with over five hundred thousand followers. "This is Vanessa Vance," Sarah announced. "Derek Vance's older sister, and... Jaxson’s ex-girlfriend from sophomore year." Jaxson’s entire body went rigid. “No," he said, his voice flat and hard as iron. "Absolutely not. Vanessa has nothing to do with this." "She does now," Sarah said smoothly. “We’ve just signed her to a three-episode guest contract. She’s transferring back to Eastern this week for her winter term, and she’s going to be joining the show as a 'friend of the couple.' Her narrative purpose is to stir the pot. She’s going to drop hints that you two are still in contact, and that Summer is just a temporary distraction." "Sarah, that’s a blatant lie," I said, my voice rising in panic. "Jaxson and I are—" "It’s television, Summer," Sarah interrupted sharply. "The audience needs to doubt your security. Tomorrow night is the Athletic Department Charity Gala. Vanessa will be there. She will be seated at your table. Jaxson, you will dance with her once for the cameras. Summer, you will look appropriately devastated from the sidelines." I looked at Jaxson. His jaw was clenched so hard a small muscle was twitching violently in his cheek. His fists were white-knuckled in his lap. "Vanessa left the school because her family forced her to," Jaxson muttered, his voice dropping into a dark, strained register. "She doesn't want this drama any more than I do." "Her agent says otherwise," Sarah said, closing her folder with a definitive snap. “The contract you both signed gives us full control over narrative prompts and guest casting. You show up tomorrow night, you wear the clothes our stylists picked out, and you play the scene. If either of you breaks character, or if you refuse to shoot the segment, it’s a breach of contract. And you both know what happens to the funding if that happens." The threat hung in the air, heavy and absolute. Ten minutes later, we walked out of the trailer into the crisp morning air. Neither of us spoke until we reached the quiet, shaded path behind the library. "Jaxson," I said, stopping him by his sleeve. "Who is she? Really?" Jaxson stopped, looking out over the campus lawn. The look in his eyes wasn't anger anymore—it was a deep, haunting exhaustion. "She’s the girl from the diner, Summer," he said quietly, his voice barely audible over the wind. I froze. "What?" "The guy outside the diner... the donor’s son. He was her current boyfriend," Jaxson whispered, finally turning to look at me, his eyes full of raw truth. “He was hurting her. She called me because she didn't know who else to call. I showed up, I pulled him off her, and he called the cops on me. The university covered it up because they didn't want the donor to pull his money, and they forced Vanessa to leave campus so she wouldn't talk to the police." The truth hit me like a physical blow. The scandal wasn't a reckless bar fight. It wasn't a jock losing his temper. It was an act of pure, dangerous chivalry to save a girl from an abusive partner—a girl he used to love. And now, the network was bringing her back to use her as a puppet for ratings. "Jaxson," I breathed, stepping closer to him, my hand moving from his sleeve to grip his forearm. "We can't let them do this. We can't let them twist this story." "We don't have a choice, Summer," he said, looking down at my hand on his arm, a tired, sad smile touching his lips. “They own us. Until the twelve weeks are up, we’re just characters in their script." He turned and walked away, his broad shoulders hunched against the cold, leaving me standing alone on the path, realizing that the reality show wasn't just a trap for our futures—it was a weapon that was about to destroy the very real, fragile thing growing between us.JaxsonThe academic building always smelled like old paper, damp concrete, and over-brewed coffee, but today, the air inside Room 304 felt entirely devoid of oxygen. It was the final, mandatory senior seminar for Political Science and International Relations—a grueling, three-hour block that usually required a steady stream of caffeine just to survive. Today, I didn’t need caffeine. The sheer, unadulterated venom racing through my veins was more than enough to keep me awake."Find your seats, everyone," Professor Harrison announced, his voice dry as he adjusted a stack of grading rubrics at the podium. “As a reminder, your final senior presentations account for forty percent of your course grade. There will be no extensions. The NHL draft declarations, athletic banquets, and media internships do not exempt anyone from the intellectual requirements of this department."I didn't move from my spot against the back wall, my leather duffel bag resting heavily against my combat boots.
SummerThe neon-lit chaos of the post-game wrap-up felt like a physical assault on my senses. While the rest of the campus erupted into a drunken, euphoric celebration of the National Championship, the HypeTV production trailer was a quiet, clinical vacuum of moving paper and ticking clocks."Sign here, Summer. And here. Initial the bottom of page four," Sarah Sterling said, her voice completely devoid of its usual performative warmth. She didn't look up from her tablet, her manicured finger tapping rhythmically on the edge of her glass desk.My hand shook so violently I could barely keep the pen steady. I dragged the blue ink across the lines, signing away the rights to the last six months of my life. The Heartbreak Finale. That was what the producers were calling it in the edit bays. They had their narrative: the tragic hero who won the trophy but lost his heart to a calculating, deceitful student journalist. It was neat. It was viral. It was exactly what the ratings demand
JaxsonThe ice beneath my blades didn't feel like ice anymore. It felt like concrete.The roar of ten thousand people inside the Eastern Arena was a deafening, vibrating wall of sound that rattled the plexiglass and made the floorboards shudder, but it didn't reach me. I was trapped in a vacuum of pure, freezing silence. Every breath I took tasted like copper, stale sweat, and old blood. My chest felt hollowed out, as if someone had reached inside my ribcage during the morning skate, wrapped their fingers around my heart, and ripped out everything that made me human.A business transaction. Nothing more.The words repeated in my head with every stride, every crossover, every sharp turn during the final warmup skate. I could see the flashing smartphones in the stands, students holding up signs, the HypeTV steadicams tracking my every move along the boards. They wanted the tragic hero. They wanted the betrayed captain. The network producers were probably salivating behind their
SummerThe rain wasn't just falling; it was a physical weight slamming against the asphalt, drumming a frantic, chaotic rhythm into my skull. My canvas sneakers were completely soaked through, the freezing water numbing my toes, but I couldn't feel it. I couldn't feel anything over the deafening roar of my own pulse. Every breath I took felt sharp, thin, and entirely inadequate to fill the hollow ache expanding in my chest."Summer, hurry!" Chloe’s voice gasped ahead of me, her hand cutting through the downpour as she pulled me by the wrist. She slammed her shoulder against the heavy steel door of the main broadcast control truck, her master key card flashing a brief, mechanical green against the scanner before the lock clicked open. "I’ve got the primary feed bypassed. The director is tracking the pre-game warmups on monitor four, but if I patch your laptop into the main switcher right now, we can override the stadium projector before the first puck drops."I stumbled into the n
SummerThe rain was pouring down in sheets on Saturday night, matching the bleak, suffocating blackness that had taken over my life. I was sick to my stomach. The Eastern University arena was glowing like a massive, silver spaceship in the dark, the parking lot packed with thousands of cars for the National Championship game against State. The noise from inside was a muffled, rhythmic thrum—the sound of ten thousand fans waiting for the final showdown.I sat on the concrete stairs of the communication building across the quad, my knees pulled tightly to my chest, my denim jacket soaked through with freezing water.My tuition was paid. My New York contract was confirmed. My future was perfectly secured on paper. I had everything I had spent four years starving for. And I had never felt more completely dead inside.A lot was going through my mind. I didn’t realize when Chloe walked up to me. "Summer?"I looked up through the curtain of wet hair to see Chloe standing there, holdi
JaxsonThe locker room on Friday morning didn't have any music playing.Usually, the walls would be vibrating with heavy bass, guys shouting over the noise, equipment slamming, and the raw energy of a team forty-eight hours away from a national title. But when I walked in at seven-thirty, my gear bag over my shoulder, the atmosphere was like a morgue.Nobody looked at me. The usual morning chatter died instantly. The guys were all huddled around Miller’s locker in the corner, their faces grim, staring down at a single smartphone screen."What's going on?" I asked, dropping my heavy bag onto the wooden bench. The metallic clink of my skates felt too loud. “Did the line changes drop? Is someone scratched?"Miller looked up, his face pale, his eyes full of a sudden, deep pity that made my stomach instantly drop into a cold, dark pit. He looked like he was about to tell me someone had died. “Jax... man, I'm sorry. You need to see this. It dropped on the HypeTV app ten minutes ago."







