LOGINLena's POV
You know… there are moments in life when things go terribly wrong. Like when I trip while delivering food to football players. Or when I bump into the same really handsome quarterback the next morning. Or when my chair makes a loud noise in class and everyone laughs.
Those moments are the worst. Unfortunately, all three happened within twenty-four hours.
I walked through the hallway like a criminal. People were talking. “…the chair girl…” “…she blamed the furniture…” “…I swear it sounded real…” Great. Just what I needed to confirm. I adjusted my bag strap and kept walking, pretending to study the floor.
If anyone asked, I would say I was studying architecture, or probably counting the cracks on the floor… or just planning my escape. Exile had never sounded so peaceful.
I reached the cafeteria and grabbed the cheapest sandwich on the menu because my account balance and I are not on speaking terms.
Then I looked around for a table and immediately regretted it. Derek Hayes just walked in. Of course he did. The whole cafeteria seemed to change when he entered. Girls straightened their hair, some giggled, and a few whispered like he was a celebrity. Derek just looked calm…tall, broad-shouldered, and with a really great countenance.
His dark hair was messy, like he had run his hands through it many times, and that confident look said he knew he had an effect on people. Which made him really annoying.
I quickly turned my head and marched toward a corner. Out of sight, out of mind… sorry, I mean out of danger. Out of quarterback radius. I dropped into a chair and started eating my sandwich.
“Are you the girl who farted in math class?”
I nearly choked. A girl with dark hair stood beside the table, looking amused…and she was so beautiful.
“I did not fart,” I said. “It was the chair.”
She nodded seriously. “Of course. Chairs are liars.”
I sighed. “Please tell me you didn’t come here just to ruin my lunch.”
She slid into the seat across from me. “Maya,” she said, pointing at herself. “I came because you looked like you needed a friend.”
I stared at her, then laughed. “Well, congratulations. You’ve found the person.”
Maya leaned forward. “You’re new, right?”
“Yeah… got here and laid low for months now.”
She nodded toward Derek and his teammates. “Then let me give you your important lesson about Ridgewood High.”
I followed her gaze…straight toward Derek.
“That,” she said, “is Derek Hayes.”
“I noticed.”
“Star quarterback. School legend. Walking heartbreaker.”
“Also professional embarrassment distributor.”
Maya grinned. “Oh, so you have met him.”
I covered my face. “You have no idea.”
“Actually,” she said, leaning back, “I heard the story from a friend of mine…the delivery girl, tripping… bla bla…”
I peeked at her. “Are you done?”
“Not even close.”
I dropped my hands. “Please don’t tell me you’re enjoying this.”
“Very much.”
I shook my head and went back to my sandwich.
“Anyway,” Maya continued, “Derek’s ex is Vanessa Blake.”
“Oh?”
“Yeah. Cheer captain. Beautiful. Slightly terrifying.”
“Sounds lovely.”
“They broke up months ago,” she said. “She’s been trying to get back together with him.”
I nodded slowly.
Maya froze. “Oh no.”
“What?”
She leaned closer and whispered, “Don’t look now.” Of course that automatically meant I looked. Derek and his teammates were walking toward us. My stomach dropped. God! Just let me have a peaceful lunch.
“Why are they coming here?” I whispered.
Maya groaned. “Because I waved at Tyler.”
Within seconds they were standing beside our table. Tyler greeted Maya like they knew each other. That explained a lot…he was the friend who had told her about the delivery incident.
Derek stood there, looking directly at me. But I stayed focused on my sandwich.
“Chair behaving today?” he asked casually.
Maya burst out laughing. I muttered, “Wonderful.”
“It’s the chair,” I added.
He tilted his head. “Of course.” His voice sounded amused. I looked up. Big mistake. He was watching me.
“Well,” Maya said, “this is awkward.”
Tyler laughed. Derek didn’t. He just kept looking at me. Then he picked up his tray. “Try not to trip on anything today,” he said, walking away.
I stared after him. Maya leaned across the table. “You know most girls would kill for that kind of attention.”
I dropped my head onto the table. “I officially hate him.”
Deep down, a tiny voice whispered something worse. For a moment nobody said anything. Then his eyes dropped to my tray…a sandwich, fries, and a cheap cafeteria milkshake.
He raised an eyebrow. “You might want to slow down on the calories,” he said lazily. “You wouldn’t want another… incident.”
The table behind him burst out laughing. A couple of people watched.
I kept chewing. Because honestly? Kids had been making comments about my size since school. You learn something after a while. If you react, they win; if you cry, they enjoy it more. So I just took another bite.
Across from me, Maya stood up. “Wow,” she said sharply. “You’re really proud of that, huh?”
The laughter faded. Derek looked at her. “Proud of what?”
“Being a jerk,” Maya snapped. “Congratulations, quarterback. Very impressive.”
Tyler rubbed the back of his neck awkwardly. A few students watched.
“Relax,” Derek said calmly.
“No,” Maya shot back. “You relax… maybe take your ego somewhere else.” She pointed toward the cafeteria. “Because you’re not welcome at this table.”
Silence settled between them.
I slowly finished chewing my sandwich. Derek’s gaze shifted from Maya… to me. Like he was waiting for something, a reaction, insult, or anger. Ooops. You are not getting that from me, mister. I just wiped my hands with a napkin.
He looked at my face for a moment, then shrugged. “Suit yourself.” He turned around and walked away with his friends.
The noise in the cafeteria slowly returned. Maya sat down again, still angry. “I don’t believe him.”
I took a sip of my milkshake. “He’s Derek,” I said.
“That doesn’t give him the right to act like that.”
“Maybe not.”
She looked at me. “You’re not even mad?”
I shrugged. “You get used to guys like him.”
For a moment Maya was quiet, then she leaned forward and pointed at me. “Well, I’m not used to it,” she said. “And when he talks like that again, I’m throwing my lunch at him.”
I laughed. Derek Hayes looked back once. Just once. Like he didn’t get why the girl he had just insulted… wasn’t hurt.
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 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.
Derek's POVThe place Tyler picked for the night looked like a palace that someone decided to turn into a hangout spot for rich people. It had open ceilings, stone floors that probably cost more than a semester of school, and a pool glowing blue under the lights. Right in the middle of it all was a
LenaToday is a masterpiece of awkwardness. And I am the main exhibit. I mean the exhibit that looks so weird on the wall but in a way you keep staring at it trying to figure out what the hell is this?I wake up feeling like a spoiled burger someone left in the fridge a little too long. My hair…oh,







