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Ivy
The acceptance email was still open on my phone. I had read it so many times over the past fourteen days that I could recite every word from memory, but today, standing just outside the massive stone archway of Northbridge University on the first day of the new semester, I needed to see it again. The word “congratulations” looked ridiculously small for something that had just changed my life. My hands shook as I stared at the screen. Not from fear exactly, but from the wild, electric disbelief that this was actually happening. Two years of applications, rejection letters, and quiet nights wondering if someone like me was even allowed to dream this big. And somehow, against every odd, I had won a fully funded scholarship to Northbridge University. Everyone knew how impossible that was. Northbridge was wildly popular in California, with one of the most competitive admission rates in the country. They only offered a single fully funded scholarship each year out of thousands of applications. Everyone else fought for partial scholarships at best. Getting the full ride—tuition, housing, books, everything felt like winning the lottery. I should have felt victorious. Instead, my stomach flipped with the terrifying possibility that one wrong move could make it all disappear. Students streamed past me, dragging suitcases and calling out to friends, their laughter bright against the late summer air. Mom should have been here—taking too many photos, and crying happy tears, instead, she was back at the care home, recovering from another round of treatment. I slipped the phone into my pocket, squared my shoulders, and headed toward the Athletic Department. As a photography major, my volunteer assignment had been automatically selected for me. The university hockey team. I was expected to photograph practices, games, promotional events, and social media content throughout the semester. It wasn't exactly my dream assignment. I knew nothing about hockey beyond the fact that players enjoyed throwing themselves into walls at alarming speeds. Still, a scholarship student didn't get to complain. I checked the room number written on my orientation sheet and followed the hallway until I reached a large black door marked Northbridge Hockey Club (NHC). Laughter and male voices spilled from inside, followed by a loud crash. I took a slow breath, then pushed the door open. The smell of sweat, ice, and stale energy drinks hit me first. Nearly twenty players filled the room. Some lounged on benches, others argued over a table littered with bottles. When the door shut behind me, only a few heads turned before they went right back to their conversations. My jaw tightened. “Excuse me—” I started, clearing my throat but no one paid attention. I tried again, louder. “Hi, I’m the new photographer assigned to the team—” Still nothing. A couple of guys laughed at something on a phone. Another slammed a locker door. Heat crawled up my neck. Back in high school, shrinking into the background had only made things worse for me. And I wasn’t about to start my first day at Northbridge as the invisible scholarship girl again. I spotted a metal folding chair near the door, grabbed it, and slammed it down hard on the tile floor. The loud clang cut through the room like a gunshot. Heads snapped toward me. The guys sprawled on the benches sat up fast, cursing under their breath. A few smirked, clearly entertained by the audacity. “Now that I have your attention,” I said, forcing my voice steady and pasting on a wide smile, “I’m Ivy Hart, the new photographer assigned to the team this semes—” The word died in my throat as my eyes collided with his. He sat up slowly from the far bench, a towel sliding down his shoulders. Even half-dressed and relaxed, he commanded the entire room. His gaze landed on me, and a slow, entertained smirk curved his lips—like my little power move was the highlight of his day. Fear slammed into me so hard my knees nearly buckled. Because sitting across the room was the one person I hated the most. Asher Hayes. The same paralyzing dread I’d carried through every day of high school crashed over me like no time had passed. After clawing my way here, after sacrificing everything, the universe had delivered the cruelest possible punchline. Asher’s eyes narrowed in recognition as his smirk deepened. Silence swallowed the room. His teammates glanced between us, sensing the sudden shift but not understanding it. A small, humiliating hiccup escaped my throat. Asher rose from the bench. Every eye followed him as he crossed the room and stopped directly in front of me—close enough that I caught the faint scent of his soap and the sharp edge of amusement in his expression. His gaze swept over me once, slow and deliberate, before returning to my face. Then he spoke, voice low and cutting. “Looks like the charity case finally made it to college.”IvyThe evening practice had settled into a steady rhythm. The team was running drills, sticks clashing, skates carving sharp lines into the ice. I stayed on the sidelines, camera raised, trying to focus on my job instead of the way Asher kept glancing in my direction every few minutes.Things were stable and almost normal.Until Coach Harlan blew his whistle and waved me over.“Hart, come here for a second.”My stomach tightened. I lowered my camera and walked over to the bench where he stood. He wiped sweat from his brow with the back of his hand, looking unusually serious.“How are you doing today? I heard about the five points deducted from your scholarship,” he said without preamble. “That’s rough.”I nodded, swallowing hard. “Yes, Coach.”He sighed. “You know how these things work. Those points can follow you all the way to graduation, affect your overall standing, future recommendations, everything. As a scholarship student, there’s not much wiggle room.”I stayed quiet, grippi
IvyAsher looked up at the reporters, his expression shifting instantly from irritated to fiercely protective.“Look, guys, you want a statement? Here it is.” Asher’s voice carried down the corridor, deep and authoritative. He tilted his head down and pressed a slow, lingering kiss to the top of my head. The unexpected softness of his lips against my hair made my breath hitch. “Ivy and I are together. What happened last night was just a fight. Couples argue, and unfortunately, things got loud, emotions ran high, and it looked worse on video. But we’re fine. We’re good. Now turn the cameras off and give us some space.”The reporters erupted with a barrage of new questions — When did you start dating? What about Jennie? Is this serious? — but Asher ignored them all. Keeping his arm locked securely around my shoulders, he steered me down the hall, forcing me to walk in perfect lockstep with him.Every eye in the athletic complex was glued to us. His body heat radiated against my side, hi
Ivy Girlfriend? I stared at Asher like he’d lost his damn mind. My brain was still short-circuiting from the kiss — the way his hands had cupped my face, the heat of his mouth, the way my stupid body had leaned into it for those few treacherous seconds. The moment we stepped inside the empty hockey lounge, I yanked my hand out of his and exploded. “Are you out of your mind?” I yelled, voice echoing off the walls. “There is no way in hell I’m dating you!” Asher scrubbed a hand over his face, looking as exhausted as I felt. “Tell that to Coach Harlan. He’s the one who suggested this. If the public thinks we’re in a relationship, the whole thing gets spun as a lovers’ quarrel instead of athlete misconduct. I get to stay on the team. You get to keep your scholarship.” I held up a hand. “Hold on. None of this is making any sense.” He kept talking like I hadn’t spoken, pacing in front of the lockers. “We have to think radical here, Ivy. The school doesn’t punish messy love lives. The
IvyI walked across campus clutching my bag like a lifeline, my steps slow and heavy. The meeting with the student adviser kept replaying in my head on an endless loop.The woman had been polite but firm, her expression unreadable as she reviewed the notes on her laptop.“The board is already reviewing your scholarship in light of the recent… incident,” she had said. “We’ll try to contain the situation, but only if the attention dies down quickly. Otherwise, you may have to forfeit the scholarship entirely.”She had paused, then added, “I’ll be in touch soon, Miss Hart.”Just like that. No “one more chance.” No warnings. Just the cold reality that everything I had fought for could be taken away.I thought back to the two years of endless applications, rejection letters, late nights filling out forms while Mom was in treatment, and the constant fear that someone like me didn’t deserve a shot at Northbridge. I had sacrificed so much to get here. And now, barely a week into the semester,
IvyI barely slept.After the chaos at the party, after the slap, after watching Asher walk away into the night, I had tossed and turned for hours. The alcohol had left me with a dull headache and a heavy sense of dread. I finally drifted off sometime close to dawn.“Ivy! Ivy, wake up!”Lena’s voice yanked me violently back to consciousness. She burst into the room, still in her pajamas, waving her phone like it was on fire.“Ivy, oh my God, wake up right now!”I sat up groggily, rubbing my eyes. My head pounded. “What… what time is it?”“You need to see this.” She shoved the phone into my hands, already playing a video.The clip was shaky, clearly filmed by someone in the crowd at the party. It started with Asher grabbing my wrist and pulling me away, then Marcus intervening. The fight exploded on screen — punches, shoving, drinks flying. Then the camera zoomed in on the moment I slapped Asher hard across the face. The audio caught the sharp crack perfectly.The caption above the vid
Ivy The dorm room was a mess of clothes and excitement when I got back from the library. Lena stood in front of the mirror, trying on different tops and humming to herself. “Where are you heading?” I asked, dropping my bag on my bed. “Sophomore party tonight at the old fraternity house off campus,” she said brightly. “It’s supposed to be fun — music, decent drinks, no freshmen rules. You should come with me.” I hesitated. The photos. Asher’s stupid deadline. The six hundred shots still waiting on my laptop. But the thought of sitting alone in this room, obsessing over his pictures and replaying every humiliating moment, felt worse. “Can I come?” I asked. Lena’s face lit up. “Yes! But what about the pictures you’re supposed to send Asher?” I shrugged. “They can wait till tomorrow. I need a break.” She didn’t argue. Twenty minutes later we were walking across campus toward the pulsing bass of the party. Inside, the house was crowded and warm, lights low, music loud. Lena stuck
I couldn’t sleep.I tossed and turned on my narrow dorm bed, the sheets twisting around my legs like restraints. Every time I closed my eyes, Asher’s face appeared — that split-second hesitation in the VIP room, followed by the cruel smirk as he shoved me out. Would he keep my secret? Or was he alr
The silence after the slap was deafening.For one heartbeat, the entire student lounge seemed to freeze. Then chaos erupted.Gasps turned into murmurs. Phones stayed raised, lenses pointed straight at us like weapons. Someone whispered, “Did she just slap the captain?” Another voice laughed nervous
The silence that followed Asher’s words was worse than laughter.I stood frozen at the entrance of the hockey club while twenty pairs of eyes bounced between us. Nobody spoke. Nobody moved. Everyone seemed to be waiting for an explanation.For a moment, I foolishly hoped he had changed. Two years h







