LOGINAndrew’s POV
I didn’t sleep. Not even for a minute. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw the classroom door rattling violently under the janitor’s hand. I heard the metallic shake of the knob. Felt Mark’s breath against my neck in the suffocating darkness behind the storage cabinet. One more second. That was all it would’ve taken. One more second and everything would’ve been destroyed. My scholarship. My future. Mark’s career. Blackwood would’ve swallowed us whole. I stared at the ceiling of my dorm room as weak morning light bled through the blinds. My phone sat on the pillow beside me like a loaded weapon. The anonymous text was still there. > I know what you did with Professor Vale. The words burned into my skull. I’d reread the message at least fifty times during the night, hoping I’d suddenly realize it was some dumb prank. But it wasn’t. Whoever sent it knew. And worse… they had proof. My stomach twisted violently. I sat up slowly, dragging trembling hands over my face. My chest felt hollow, scraped clean from the inside. I couldn’t do this anymore. Not with Mark. Not now. Maybe not ever. The thought alone nearly crushed me. Because despite everything—the danger, the fear, the impossibility—I wanted him. God, I wanted him so badly it hurt to breathe. But wanting him was exactly what would destroy us. I grabbed my phone again. No new messages. Still, my pulse hammered. I opened Mark’s contact instinctively. My thumb hovered over his name. For one pathetic second, I imagined texting him. We need to talk. Or maybe: I’m scared. Because I was. Terrified. Instead, I locked the screen and shoved the phone into my pocket hard enough to hurt. Distance. That was the only way out now. I had to make this believable. No lingering stares. No secret conversations. No accidental touches. Nothing. If the blackmailer was watching, then I needed to give them exactly what they wanted. I needed to erase us. Even if it killed me. --- The advanced literature seminar was already half full when I arrived. Usually, I sat in the middle row. Not too close. Not too far. The perfect distance to quietly watch Mark teach without looking suspicious. Today, I walked straight past my normal seat. Past the students talking loudly. Past the warm sunlight pouring through the tall windows. Straight to the back corner. I pulled my hood over my head and sat down without looking at anyone. A few students glanced at me curiously. I ignored them. My fingers clenched tightly around my pen as anxiety clawed through my chest. You can do this. You have to. The classroom door opened. And instantly, every nerve in my body came alive. Mark walked in carrying a stack of papers beneath one arm. Dark coat. Silver watch. Sharp jawline tense beneath the fluorescent lights. He looked exhausted. For one dangerous second, my stupid heart softened. Then his eyes began scanning the room. Looking for me. I knew exactly when he found me. I felt it. That invisible pull between us snapped tight across the lecture hall. Slowly, I lifted my gaze. Our eyes met. God. The hurt on his face hit me like a physical blow. Confusion flickered across his expression first. Then concern. Then something colder. I looked away immediately. Straight down at my desk. My throat tightened painfully. Don’t look at him. Don’t react. Don’t ruin this. The room fell silent as Mark set his papers down at the podium. “Good morning,” he said evenly. His voice sounded calm. Professional. But I knew him well enough now to hear the strain underneath. The lecture began. Normally, listening to Mark teach was effortless. He spoke with this quiet intensity that made every word feel alive. Even boring theories sounded meaningful when he explained them. Today, I absorbed none of it. I could feel his attention drifting toward me repeatedly. Every time it happened, I kept my eyes lowered. Every muscle in my body screamed to look back. I didn’t. Forty minutes into the seminar, Mark suddenly closed his book. The sharp sound echoed through the room. “Since participation has been disappointingly weak lately,” he said coolly, “we’ll be having a surprise quiz.” Groans filled the classroom. My stomach dropped. Students immediately started panicking, flipping through notes. But I barely heard them. Because I knew exactly why he was doing this. Mark thought I regretted what happened between us. He thought I was avoiding him because I was ashamed. And now he was building walls too. Professional walls. Safe walls. The realization hurt far more than I expected. Papers were passed down each row until one landed on my desk. I stared at the questions. Easy. Painfully easy. I knew every answer within seconds. Under normal circumstances, I would’ve aced this without trying. But normal circumstances no longer existed. If I kept excelling in his class, Mark would keep noticing me. Watching me. Caring. And if the blackmailer saw that… I swallowed hard. My grip tightened around the pen. Then slowly— I chose the wrong answer. Question after question. Deliberately sloppy. Deliberately careless. Every incorrect sentence felt like carving pieces out of myself. By the third page, my vision blurred. Because this wasn’t just a failed quiz. This was me cutting the cord between us with my own hands. I hated it. I hated every second. The room remained eerily quiet except for scribbling pens and the ticking wall clock. When time was up, Mark stepped down from the podium and began collecting papers row by row. Closer. Closer. Closer. My pulse thundered violently as he approached the back. Students handed him their quizzes without looking up. Then he stopped beside my desk. Silence swallowed everything. I forced myself to lift my eyes. Big mistake. Mark was already staring at me. Not angry. Not exactly. Wounded. That was worse. Way worse. There were a thousand things trapped behind his eyes. Questions. Frustration. Pain. And underneath all of it… disappointment. My chest tightened so hard it almost hurt to breathe. I wanted to explain everything. I wanted to grab his sleeve and tell him none of this was real. That I was trying to protect him. That I would rather break my own heart than watch Blackwood destroy him. But I couldn’t. So instead, I handed him the paper silently. His fingers brushed mine for less than a second. The tiny contact nearly shattered my composure. Mark glanced down at my answers briefly. I saw the exact moment he realized I’d failed. His jaw tightened. Then, without a word, he took the paper and moved on. Just like that. No hesitation. No lingering glance. Nothing. The distance between us had finally become real. And somehow that hurt more than the fear ever did. --- Class ended ten minutes later. Students flooded out noisily, already complaining about the quiz. I stayed seated until nearly everyone left. Mark remained near the podium organizing papers. I could feel his presence like static electricity against my skin. But neither of us spoke. Not a single word. Eventually, I stood. My backpack felt unbearably heavy as I slung it over one shoulder. Then I walked toward the exit. Every step felt wrong. Like I was abandoning something precious behind me. Right before I reached the door, I made the mistake of glancing back. Mark was watching me. Completely still. The expression on his face nearly destroyed me. Because he looked like he’d finally given up trying to understand me. I turned away immediately and stepped into the hallway. The door clicked shut behind me. And my phone buzzed. My entire body froze. Slowly, I pulled it from my pocket. Unknown Number. A new message appeared onscreen. > Good boy. Keep ignoring him, and maybe I won't press send to the Dean today. Cold fear slithered down my spine. But the next line was even worse. > Tonight, I need a favor. My pulse began hammering violently as I kept reading. > Come to the private student lounge at 6:00 PM sharp. Don't be late, Calebs. Calebs. Not Caleb. Not Andrew. That stupid nickname only one person at Blackwood used. Only one. My blood turned to ice. Because suddenly— I wasn’t scared of a faceless blackmailer anymore. I was scared that I might actually know them.Rain hit the cabin windows hard.The sound was everywhere in the living room it was like the storm wanted to get inside.I had trouble breathing.Then I saw the black SUVs driving up the driveway and something inside me just broke.My father found me again.No matter how far I ran or how well I hid he always found me.The headlights outside shone through the darkness and men in suits got out of the cars.They looked professional, cold and in control.I knew some of them not by name. I remembered their faces.I remembered seeing them at my childhood home escorting politicians and looking through people like they were nothing.Now they were here for me.My heart was beating hard it hurt."They found us " I whispered, my voice sounded weak and broken.I hated it.There was another knock at the door deep and demanding.Every muscle in my body tensed up. For a second I was seventeen again trapped in my fathers mansion trying to survive by being small and quiet.Another knock, this time clo
Andrews POV Rain follows us all the way out of Blackwood.Not soft rain.Violent rain.The kind that turns the entire world blurry beyond the windshield and makes you feel like something terrible is chasing you through the dark.Maybe something is.I still can’t stop staring at my father’s text message.I saw you leave with the Shawn boy.Every time I read it, my chest tightens harder.He knows.Not everything.But enough.Enough to be dangerous.Mark doesn’t say much while driving. His hands stay steady on the wheel as the city lights disappear farther behind us, swallowed by mountains and thick forests.I should ask where we’re going.Instead, I sit curled into myself in the passenger seat trying not to shake apart completely.The silence between us feels different now.Not hostile.Not wounded.Just heavy with everything we still haven’t said.The windshield wipers move rhythmically.Back and forth.Back and forth.My brain keeps replaying the gala.Daniel’s voice.My father’s eye
Andrews POV The terrace feels too small for the amount of panic inside my body.Cold wind cuts across my face while Daniel stands in front of me holding my entire life in one hand.His phone screen glows between us.Five minutes.That’s all it would take.Five minutes for my father to see the video.Five minutes for Mark’s career to explode.Five minutes for every ugly thing I buried years ago to crawl back out into the light.I can barely breathe.Daniel watches me carefully.Not angry anymore.Calm.That’s worse.Because calm Daniel is the version that already decided how this ends.“You’re shaking,” he says quietly.I hate that he notices.I hate that my body betrays me around him.I wrap my arms tighter around myself, trying to stop the trembling, but it’s useless.Everything hurts.My chest.My head.My throat from trying not to break down in front of him.Inside the ballroom, muffled music still plays beyond the terrace doors.People are dancing.Laughing.Drinking champagne wh
I knew the moment the car stopped outside the Reyes estate that I was walking into hell.The mansion glowed like something ripped out of a billionaire fantasy.Golden lights spilled across marble stairs. Luxury cars lined the circular driveway endlessly while cameras flashed at every arriving guest. Men in tailored tuxedos laughed too loudly beside women dripping in diamonds worth more than my entire existence.Everything looked beautiful.That was the worst part.People always think monsters live in ugly places.They don’t.Sometimes monsters live beneath crystal chandeliers and smile politely while offering champagne.Daniel steps out of the car first.Then he turns and offers me his hand like we’re actually here willingly.Like I’m not suffocating inside this expensive black suit he picked for me himself.“You clean up well, Calebs,” he says softly.I ignore the hand and climb out alone.The cold night air barely helps.My chest already feels tight.Too tight.The massive estate to
I haven’t slept properly in three days.Not real sleep anyway.Just fragments.Ten minutes here.Twenty there.Then I wake up choking on panic with my heart trying to claw its way out of my chest.Every single time, I hear Daniel’s voice again.Your father is flying in for this event.And suddenly I’m seventeen again.Locked in a marble mansion that never felt like home.Flinching every time footsteps came near my bedroom door.Waiting for anger to explode.Waiting for disappointment.Waiting for pain.Wednesday morning arrives like a punishment.Blackwood University is loud around me—students laughing, doors slamming, coffee machines hissing—but it all sounds distant, muffled underwater noise inside my skull.I can barely feel my hands.I stand in front of my dorm mirror for almost five full minutes trying to button my shirt because my fingers won’t stop trembling.Pathetic.I look pathetic.Dark circles stain the skin beneath my eyes. My blonde hair is messy from running my hands th
Tuesday morning felt unbearable.Andrew sat near the back of the advanced literature seminar with his hood pulled low and his fingers clenched tightly around his pen. Rain tapped softly against the tall classroom windows, turning the gray skies outside into a blur.Nobody spoke much.The rumors after the Board hearing had poisoned the atmosphere of the class.Every whisper felt loaded.Every glance felt suspicious.And at the front of the room stood Mark.Cold.Perfect.Untouchable.Professor Shawn looked devastatingly composed in a charcoal button-up with his sleeves rolled neatly to his forearms. His expression gave nothing away as he arranged papers across the podium.But Andrew noticed the small things.The exhaustion beneath his eyes.The tension in his jaw.The way he avoided looking directly at Andrew for too long.It hurt.God, it still hurt.Andrew looked down quickly before his face betrayed him.“Before we begin today’s lecture,” Mark said calmly, “there will be a change to
Andrews POV By the third day at Blackwood High, I had mastered the art of disappearing. Hood up. Earphones in. Eyes down. I took longer routes between classes just to avoid passing Mark's classroom, which was stupid considering he was literally my teacher. But every time I saw him, my chest r
Andrews POV The janitor stood outside the classroom door for another few seconds. I could hear the faint clatter of keys and the irritated muttering under his breath. “Stupid lock…” Neither Mark nor I moved. The air between us still felt charged from seconds earlier, like the room itself
Andrews POV Rain tapped softly against the windows when I woke up. For a second, I forgot where I was. The mattress beneath me was too soft. The air smelled expensive—cedarwood, cologne, and something darker underneath it. A city glow filtered through half-open blinds, casting pale gray light
Andrews POV Thick fog had swallowed Blackwood by final period. It pressed against the school windows like something alive, turning the world outside into shapeless gray. By the time the last bell rang, the halls were already half-empty — students disappearing into the murk quickly, their voices







