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(Lena's POV)
I have a theory about the universe…it hates me, there is absolutely nothing anyone wants to tell me that would make me think otherwise because there’s no other explanation for what happened tonight.
It started like any other Friday. Myself, a backpack full of takeout, a vague hope that my brain wouldn’t combust from teenage math homework, and a simple goal: just deliver food, collect the money given, and survive the weekend.
So simple and Doable.
Totally boring.
Then, of course, the universe intervened…I mean, as usual...urf!
The address? “Lakeside Court, Number 14.” I pictured a normal house. Maybe a fancy kitchen. Maybe someone who knew how to tip. What I did not expect was a miniature palace…you know, a small palace where you feel at home. Not kidding. The place looked like it had been copied and pasted straight out of an Integra influencer’s feed and then sprinkled with extra money. White stone walls, huge glass doors, the kind of pool that screams, yes, we swim here but only in money and touch of pride.
I parked my beat-up scooter…aka my mom’s old one that squeaks like a dying raccoon…and took a deep breath. “Deliver food. Don’t die. Don’t embarrass yourself,” I muttered under my breath. Good plan. Foolproof. Except, obviously, it wasn’t.
I opened the gate, and immediately, the sounds of laughter, clinking glasses, and a booming bass line hit me. Music. Loud music. Too loud music. My entire body wanted to run back to my car and pretend I’d never seen the address, but professionalism…or maybe sheer terror…kept me moving forward.
I carried the bag up to the sliding glass door. And that’s when I saw them.
A group of boys, maybe six of them or… I really suck at counting with my eyes. I do that with my finger but I dare not do that here. They are all impossibly tall, all wearing those “I was born to be a quarterback” smiles, clustered around a snooker table by the pool. The water reflected the dim string lights overhead, giving everything an otherworldly glow. And in the middle of it all …because of course there had to be a centerpiece…stood Derek Hayes.
Yes, you heard right. Derek Hayes. The one whose name made teenage girls across the city swoon. The one who could probably bench press my entire life savings without breaking a sweat. The one whose reputation as a bad boy and heartbreaker was legendary. And he was looking at me.
Not the “oh, I see her, she’s here” kind of looking. The studying-me-like-I’m-a-problem-you-don’t-understand kind of looking. My stomach did a full somersault.
I tried to look nonchalant. I failed.
“Uh… delivery?” I said, holding up the bag like a peace offering. My voice squeaked. I think I may have imagined it…but I didn't. Sometimes I sound like a lost baby goat when I am nervous.
The boys paused mid-snooker shots, as if the sound of my voice had shattered the delicate illusion of their perfect evening.
Hmmm…
Derek didn’t move. He just tilted his head, the corner of his mouth twitching like he was holding back a laugh or maybe he was calculating how to humiliate me.
I didn’t stick around to find out. I set the bag on the table, trying to ignore the curious eyes, and hoped gravity would swallow me whole.
Of course, nothing happens gracefully when Derek Hayes is involved. One of the other guys, he is tall, blonde, overly enthusiastic, decided this was the perfect moment to lean on the pool table. The cue slipped, the ball bounced, and…yes…you guessed it, almost hit me square in the shin.
“Careful!” I shouted, trying to maintain dignity while hopping backward on one foot. Cue ball bounced harmlessly into the corner pocket. Smooth. Very professional. The boys laughed, some more at me than the mishap. Derek didn’t laugh, though. He just watched. Quiet. Intent.
I realized, with a sinking feeling, that he wasn’t amused or judgmental. He was…enjoying the view. And that was infinitely worse.
I wanted to disappear. I wanted the ground to open up and swallow me. I wanted literally anything except to be stared at by the most infuriatingly attractive human on earth while trying to deliver food.
And then, just when I thought the universe might cut me some slack, another disaster occurred. My shoelace…yes, the one I had tied after getting down from my scooter, trust me I did tie it. But it has decided tonight was the night it would betray me. It caught on the edge of the pool deck. I tripped. I managed to stay upright for two glorious seconds before the bag tipped forward. Fried chicken, fries, and a suspiciously suspicious-looking side of coleslaw tumbled onto the pristine marble floor.
“Oh no. Oh no. Oh no!” I squeaked, flailing.
God! The sound of laughter. This time it wasn’t a small chuckle, it was a collective, echoing ha-ha, directed entirely at me. My dignity? Shattered. My confidence? Exploded. My desire to teleport back to my bedroom? Desperate.
And Derek? He walked over. Slowly. Deliberately. Like he was assessing the damage. Me, the food, the marble…and deciding which part of my life he wanted to ruin first.
“Nice reflexes,” he said. His voice was calm, smooth, with that infuriating smirk. “Almost caught it.”
I wanted to scream. I wanted to throw the coleslaw at him. I wanted to vanish. Instead, I muttered, “Thanks,” because apparently words were optional when your life was being judged by a living heartbreaker.
He glanced at the mess. Then, to my horror, he crouched slightly, picked up the food, and handed it back to me. My brain short-circuited.
“Careful next time,” he added. That smirk again, like he knew exactly how my internal panic looked and was enjoying it far too much.
I took the bag, muttered something that was hopefully a sentence, and backed away slowly, trying to act like tripping, spilling food, and almost dying in front of Derek Hayes was perfectly normal.
As I reached the gate, I realized two things:
I survived. Barely.
Derek Hayes was now a permanent problem in my life.
Because whether I liked it or not, the guy had noticed me. And in a world where I spent my life being invisible, this was…terrifying.
I got back on my scooter, and took several deep breaths. My hands were shaking. My pride? Destroyed. My future? Probably ruined. And yet…somehow…my curiosity about him had taken root.
The universe hates me. But maybe, just maybe, it also has a sense of humor…
Lena's povMy phone buzzed itself right off the nightstand. I fumbled for it in the dark, my heart already pounding from the sound. It was 6:17 a.m.It wasn’t a text. It was a storm.My screen was a flood of notifications. Instagram tags. Twitter mentions. A string of texts from numbers I didn’t know. At the top, a message from Chloe, sent three minutes ago: LENA. WAKE UP. YOU’RE INTERNET FAMOUS. IN A BAD WAY.I sat up, the cold morning air hitting my skin. I tapped the first notification.It was a photo. Posted by an account called ‘Gridiron_Gossip’. It had over five thousand likes already.The picture was from last night on the field. The stadium lights made everything look sharp and dramatic. There I was, kneeling in front of Derek, holding that stupid, bloody cloth to his eyebrow. My face was all serious concentration. His face… his face was looking down at me with this weird, soft expression. I’d been too focused on the cut to see it then. But in the photo? It looked intense. It
Derek's pov Bryan’s words hung in the air like a bad smell. Planning the wedding. He said it. He actually said it. I looked at Lena. She was just holding that stupid bloody cloth, her eyes wide. She looked like she’d seen a ghost. A ghost wearing a tuxedo. Then I looked at the team. No one was moving. Everyone had stopped packing up. Helmets were dangling in mid-air. Water bottles were forgotten. Every single one of them was staring at us. At me. Mason’s mouth was hanging open. I saw Chris elbow Jake and point. A low whistle came from somewhere behind me. The silence was worse than getting sacked. Then Lena blinked. She looked from Bryan’s stupid grinning face to the crowd of my teammates. She made a tiny squeaking noise, dropped the cloth like it was on fire, and spun around. She almost ran off the field. Her ponytail was bouncing like a flag of surrender. “Lena, wait…” I started, but it was too late. She was gone, ducking into the tunnel. That’s when I heard the laughter.
Lena’s POV I was halfway across the parking lot when shouting from the football field made me stop. At first I ignored it because football practice at Ridgewood sounded violent even on normal days, but then I heard Derek’s name and suddenly everyone started running toward the field like free money had fallen from the sky. My stomach tightened immediately. By the time I got closer, Coach Thompson was yelling, players were crowding around the benches, and Derek was sitting down with blood running from a cut above his eyebrow while the medic argued with him. “I said I’m fine.” “You’re bleeding through your uniform.” “I noticed.” “You probably need stitches.” “I probably need everyone to relax.” Even injured, he sounded irritated instead of concerned, which honestly felt very Derek. Bryan spotted me first and walked over quickly. “You missed the drama,” he said. “Derek punched Carter Mills.” I looked at him. “Why?” Bryan gave me a look. “Because Carter apparentl
Derek’s POVBy the end of the day, I have officially become Ridgewood High’s favorite topic against my will.Which is saying something considering last month people thought Coach Thompson was secretly having an affair with the cafeteria manager because they were seen buying oranges together at a grocery store.This school survives entirely on delusion and WiFi.The second the final bell rings, my phone starts vibrating like it has developed a personal vendetta against silence.Messages and notificationsFootball group chats exploding.Social media posts already dissecting my “public defense” of Lena like sports commentators analyzing national tragedy.Mason appears beside me while I shove my phone back into my pocket with growing irritation.“You know,” he says thoughtfully, “when people said senior year would be memorable, I do not think they imagined you defending a girl accused of theft like a divorced father in court.”“I hate you.”“No, seriously,” he continues, barely holding ba
Derek’s POVHmmmm….There are very few things more exhausting than walking into Ridgewood High at eight in the morning and immediately sensing chaos before anyone even opens their mouth.Unfortunately, Vanessa Blake has perfected that atmosphere over the years.She does not create scenes loudly anymore because she learned long ago that subtle cruelty survives longer than dramatic cruelty, and the second I spot her near the lockers surrounded by her usual audience of emotionally unemployed cheerleaders, I already know somebody’s day is about to get ruined for entertainment purposes.Then I see Lena.And suddenly the problem becomes predictable.She is standing near her locker quietly adjusting the strap of her bag, expression calm in that careful way she has when she is trying not to attract attention, and for reasons I do not entirely understand, watching her exist like that while people constantly look for ways to tear at her nerves irritates me more every day.Bryan is beside her ta
Derek’s POVHmmmm….There are very few things more exhausting than walking into Ridgewood High at eight in the morning and immediately sensing chaos before anyone even opens their mouth.Unfortunately, Vanessa Blake has perfected that atmosphere over the years.She does not create scenes loudly anymore because she learned long ago that subtle cruelty survives longer than dramatic cruelty, and the second I spot her near the lockers surrounded by her usual audience of emotionally unemployed cheerleaders, I already know somebody’s day is about to get ruined for entertainment purposes.Then I see Lena.And suddenly the problem becomes predictable.She is standing near her locker quietly adjusting the strap of her bag, expression calm in that careful way she has when she is trying not to attract attention, and for reasons I do not entirely understand, watching her exist like that while people constantly look for ways to tear at her nerves irritates me more every day.Bryan is beside her ta
Lena's POVIgnoring someone is easier when they don’t notice, when the absence of your voice blends into everything else and no one stops to question it, but Derek notices in the worst possible way, not directly, just in the small pauses that stretch a little too long when I don’t respond the way I
Lena’s POVBy the time the last class before lunch ends, the weight of the day has already started settling in my shoulders, not because anything major has happened yet, but because there’s this quiet tension that keeps building underneath everything, the kind that makes even normal moments feel li
Lena’s POV This morning already felt wrong before I even stepped out of the house. The kind of quiet wrong that sits in your chest and makes everything feel slightly off, like you’re about to face something unusual but you don’t know what it is yet. I tried to ignore it. Because ignoring thing
Chapter 5Derek's POVThe cafeteria here at Ridgewood High always made a fuss whenever I walked in. The first thing that happened was it got noisy. The second thing was it got quiet. It started with people whispering, then chairs moving, then everyone pretending they weren’t staring at me before.







