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Riley’s Pov
If there were to be an Olympic sport for pretending you’re fine, I would have qualified years ago.
The campus festival lights flickered above me like I was walking through a beautifully edited dream sequence. Music thumped from the main stage. Glitter cannons exploded somewhere to my left. Half the theatre department was already tipsy on something that definitely wasn’t water in those plastic bottles.
Backstage was worse.
Costumes dragged across the floor. Props lay abandoned mid-crisis. Makeup artists hunted for faces to paint. Our director’s voice carried through two walls, sharp and already fraying at the edges.
I took a slow breath. The air felt thin. Metallic.
Four years on stage, and my body still reacted like this; pulse hammering, throat tight, palms cold.
Tonight wasn’t just a performance. To everyone else, it was the festival’s closing act. Applause. Confetti. Photos for social media. For me? It was the first round of the biggest audition of my life.
Three weeks of rehearsing until my reflection stopped looking like a robot. Three weeks of forcing emotion into my voice until it sounded real instead of rehearsed.
If I didn’t get this role, none of it would matter. I checked my phone. No new messages. Where was Matty when I actually needed him?
Lately he’d been screening my calls. Ignoring texts. Showing up late. Canceling last minute with excuses that were starting to sound rehearsed. Still, like every other day, I shoved the doubt down and texted June.
Dressing room. Now.
After circling through chaos and bodies and no free space, I reached the last door. A crooked sign read: KEEP OUT. Right. As if theatre kids respected boundaries. I pushed it open. And immediately wished I hadn’t.
Matty was rather very busy, only it wasn’t the kind of busy he made excuses with.
His mouth was on Alexa’s. For a second, my brain stalled. Like it needed buffering time. He’d sent me a voice note an hour ago. Can’t make it yet, babe. Swamped.
Apparently.
“Riles, you find a spot yet?” June called from somewhere behind me. They broke apart. Too late.
“My God, Riles, I can explain—” Matty rushed out, shoving Alexa away.
“Of course you can,” I said. My voice sounded calm. Detached. Not mine.
“She kissed me first. I was going to tell you.”
“Clearly.”
Alexa didn’t look sorry. Not even a little. If anything, she looked amused.
Of course, it was Alexa. The girl who treated casting lists like personal attacks. The girl who smiled too wide every time I got a role she didn’t. The girl who’d go to lengths to ruin me, if it meant she could take my spot.
“How could you be dumb enough to fall for it?” I muttered.
He flinched.
I stepped back into the hallway. Students milled around. A free show, apparently.
“Riles, please,” he followed. “Riles—”
“Don’t call me that.”
Tears burned, but I swallowed them. I wouldn’t cry. I had told Matty about my parents divorce because my dad cheated and how it broke, Matty held me while I sobbed and swore, he’d never put me through that kind of pain.
I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction now. I laughed instead. Sharp. Wrong.
“I’d say she won,” I said lightly, “but is it really winning if the prize is trash?”
His eyes dropped to the floor. Good.
“Riley, why are you not in costume?” our director barked, storming into the corridor.
My brain lagged.
“Huh?”
“You’re on soon. You look nothing like ready.”
“Right.” I straightened. “Focus.”
Less than thirty minutes. I turned to leave. Matty grabbed me from behind.
“Riles, it was a mistake.”
I peeled his hands off me. “What, you tripped? Accidentally landed on her mouth?”
“It won’t happen again. I swear.”
“It won’t,” I agreed calmly. “Because we’re done.”
His face crumpled. “You can’t just throw away a year like it’s nothing.”
“You should’ve thought of that before you did.”
“I’ll do better. Please.”
“Sorry doesn’t fix everything,” I said. “Not when it leaves scars. It’s really over between us.”
“Riley, I know you’re upset but please, stop trying to hurt me.”
The hallway had gone quiet. Watching. Always watching. Now his voice blurred into background noise, apologies dressed up as regret. And that’s when I understood. He expected tears. A breakdown. Forgiveness.
I felt it rising; the tremor in my ribs, the sting in my throat. No. If he wanted a scene, I’d give him one I controlled. I straightened my shoulders.
“Hurt you?” I said softly. “Let me show you what that looks like.”
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“Watch me.”
I scanned the room deliberately. Not frantic. Careful. Choosing.
And then I saw him.
Tall. Unfamiliar. Standing slightly apart from the chaos like he’d taken a wrong turn into theatre kid hysteria. Perfect. This was insane. I knew that. But I also knew exactly what it would do.
I walked over. Stopped in front of him. Held his gaze for one measured second. There was something sharp in his eyes. Observant. Confused. That flicker almost made me hesitate.
Almost.
Then I kissed him. Slow. Intentional. Reckless.
The hallway fell silent. Even the director went still. His lips didn’t respond at first. He was too surprised. Then, almost against his own hesitation, he did. And that nearly undid me.
“Holy—” the director muttered. “Did not see that coming.”
And only then did I pull away from him. My heart was racing, but not from heartbreak. From impact. “I’m sorry.” I whispered, then walked away before anyone could stop me.
At the time, I thought that was the end of it. I had no idea that one reckless kiss was about to turn my entire life upside down.
Riley’s POVCole stared at me like he couldn’t believe what had just come out of his own mouth. A subtle grimace crossed his face, the kind people made when they regretted a decision a second too late.“Urmm… well…” he stuttered.Oh my gosh. Cole Donovan was stuttering.“Actually, you’re right. I remember now,” I said quickly, rescuing him before he completely malfunctioned.He stared at me for a beat, confusion flickering across his face before he gave a small nod.“Thank you for the offer,” I told Noah, “but I’ll go with Cole.”“Of course.” Noah stepped back with an easy smile.“Well, shall we?” I turned to Cole.He nodded and grabbed his things. The walk to his car was rather quiet, and awkward, the awkward kind that made me suddenly aware of every footstep, every rustle of leaves, every passing student.I still didn’t know what work he was talking about, and he hadn’t made an effort to explain what it was. The moment we reached his car, he stopped and faced me. His usual composur
Cole's POV“Yo, Cole. I was just about to call you.” Tyler’s voice came through the phone the moment he picked up. “I saw the post on Campus Blog. It seems to be gaining a lot of traction. Is she okay?”I glanced over my shoulder. Riley sat on the bleachers with Noah, the afternoon sun filtering through the trees behind them. The tension that had practically swallowed her whole earlier seemed to have eased a little.“Red is fine.” I said then regretted it immediately because Tyler had certainly not missed it.“Red,” Tyler repeated, amusement dripping from every syllable.I pinched the bridge of my nose.“We can't make it back to the meeting though. Any way you can convince Stacy to move the meeting forward?”“Why can't you make it?”My gaze drifted back to Riley. Noah was saying something to her. The sight rubbed me the wrong way. I looked away immediately.“Take a hint, Tyl.”“Whatever.” He hung up.I stared at my phone for a second longer before slipping it into my pocket. What the
Riley's POVI stood frozen as students who knew absolutely nothing about me dissected my life like it was entertainment. They didn't know what Matty had done. They didn't know how badly it had hurt. They didn't know the mess I'd been left to clean up afterwarYet somehow, I was the villain. The worst part? A small, ugly part of me felt guilty anyway. I knew I shouldn't. But I did.A hand settled firmly on my shoulder. I startled and looked up. Cole. His grey eyes met mine. Calm, steady, softer than I'd ever seen them before."Come on," he said quietly. "We should go."His hand slid from my shoulder to my wrist before settling around my hand. The gesture was simple. But somehow, it grounded me.I let him lead me through the crowd. Noah fell into step beside us without saying a word. The further we walked, the worse it got.Whispers followed us. Phones appeared. Some students didn't even bother pretending they weren't staring.My shoulders tightened. My breathing beca
Riley's POVThe dinner went better than I expected. Considering most of the chaos had been caused by me, that was saying something.At least it wasn't a complete disaster. Cole’s mom seemed happy. Mr. Donovan hadn't scared me into a nervous breakdown. And somehow, despite everything, I was fairly certain we survived the evening.Cole didn't talk much on the drive back, but that wasn't unusual. Honestly, I didn't have the energy for conversation either. Dinner had drained me.Unfortunately, exhaustion didn't stop my brain from replaying Emelia's phone call. I couldn't stop wondering what she'd meant.‘She has nothing to do with why I came back.’I had considered telling Cole what I'd overheard. Then decided against it. It wasn't my place. Still, a small voice in the back of my head kept asking the same question. Who was "she"? And why did I have the horrible feeling Emelia had been talking about me?By the time I got home, June was nowhere to be found. So much for binge-watching her fa
Cole's POV"She's going to live, Cole. It's just a cut."Tyler's voice snapped me out of whatever thoughts had followed Riley down the hallway. I looked away from the direction she'd disappeared and found him smirking at me from across the table. Mom noticed immediately, of course she did."Look at him," she said, nudging Dad with her elbow. "He's worried."I frowned. "I am not worried.""You absolutely are."Dad sighed. "I owe your mother a thousand dollars."Tyler nearly choked on his drink. "What?""He bet me Cole wasn't over Emelia."The entire table fell silent. Then Tyler burst out laughing."So that's why you invited her?" I muttered, annoyed.Dad looked completely unapologetic. "It was a scientific experiment.""It was a bet.""Same thing."I rubbed a hand over my face. I couldn't believe these people. Mom looked entirely too pleased with herself."I told him he was wrong.""And I was wrong." Dad shrugged."Very wrong."The sound of footsteps pulled everyone's attention toward
Riley’s POVTalking to Cole's mom was easy. The hard part was Mr. Donovan. It wasn't because of my own issues with my father. At least, not entirely. And it wasn't because of his intimidating presence either, though the man could probably make seasoned politicians sweat with a single look.It was because of the way he and Cole interacted. Or rather, the way they didn't. Every conversation between them felt like two people standing on opposite sides of a battlefield, pretending not to notice the weapons. And for some reason, that scared me.Still, I did my best to be cheerful. Mr. Donovan's responses were short and measured, but I refused to let that discourage me. Cole had warned me on the drive over."My dad enjoys intimidating people." Those had been his exact words. "If you survive the first dinner, congratulations. You're officially approved."So naturally, I squared my shoulders and put on my best brave-girl smile. Apparently, Mr. Donovan found that amusing. A small smirk tugged
Cole’s POVEmelia.The one variable responsible for altering my entire system. And somehow, even after everything, I still couldn’t bring myself to hate her. I glanced at Riley, who stared back at me innocently, her lips pressed into a thin line while curiosity gleamed openly in her eyes.“You don’
Riley’s PovWho would have guessed the cold genius could actually be a good actor?Because honestly, this dinner was going far better than I’d expected. I had fully prepared myself for disaster. I mean, come on. Cole was practically a stranger who treated conversation like an optional feature in li
Cole’s POVOne lunch with two strangers, if it could erase my little scandal, shouldn’t have felt like such a big deal. However, being in a relationship with someone, even a fake one, even the most logical option available to me right now, didn’t sit right in my chest.Statistically, it was hundred
Riley’s PovI had already written an entire script in my head explaining why Cole absolutely had to meet with me. Then I wrote another one as backup, just in case he refused. Which, honestly, felt highly likely considering yesterday he had thrown “No” at me in at least twelve different variations, l







