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CHAPTER 5: The Outcasts and the Elite

Author: Diva.dazzel
last update publish date: 2026-07-06 21:34:23

​The old warehouse district smelled like rusted iron, exhaust fumes, and industrial dust. It was the complete opposite of the manicured, country-club side of Oakridge, which made it the perfect venue for a gritty, unsanctioned summer exhibition game.

​I stood just inside the cavernous entrance of the dilapidated building, instantly regretting my life choices.

​My inner drama queen had demanded I at least attempt an effort, so I had ditched the oversized sage green hoodie. Instead, I wore a slightly fitted, faded vintage band tee tucked into high-waisted black denim jeans with frayed rips at the knees, pairing them with my worn-out sneakers. My ginger hair was down for once, falling in wild, soft waves around my shoulders. I felt like myself—cynical, low-key, and entirely out of place among the sea of pastel polo shirts and designer athleisure crowding the cracked concrete bleachers.

​The popular kids from Oakridge High had shown up in droves, treating the neighborhood like a trendy safari. And the moment I stepped into their line of sight, the whispers started.

​"Is that the girl from the stables?" a blonde in a tennis skirt murmured loudly to her friend, laughing behind a manicured hand. "Ugh, she literally smells like horse manure. Did she get lost on the way to the tractor supply store?"

​I forced my hands into my pockets, my cynical Millie-style armor locking into place. I was used to the isolation, but the open hostility in the air was suffocating.

​"Are you lost? The animal shelter is down the road, sweetie."

​I paused. Standing right in front of me was Allie Grace—the reigning queen bee of our senior class and Mike’s toxic on-and-off girlfriend. She looked flawless in a white designer cropped tee and a pleated skirt, surrounded by a tight circle of her elite clique. Her eyes raked down my thrifted outfit with pure, condescending disgust. She was the definition of a high-society bully.

​Before I could drop a killer, soul-crushing sarcastic response, a heavy basketball slammed violently against the chain-link fence right next to us. BANG.

​Everyone jumped. Allie let out a small, high-pitched gasp.

​Mike Weller walked over, wiping sweat from his forehead with the back of his hand. In his dark blue jersey, his broad shoulders and athletic frame looked devastatingly imposing. Behind him, Jake Bill and their teammate Chad Miller—another guy from their varsity circle—leaned against the scorer's table, laughing together as they finished their warm-up drills.

​Allie’s face transformed instantly into a sweet, practiced smile, her hand reaching out for Mike’s arm. "Mike, babe, you won't believe who walked in—"

​Mike completely bypassed her hand. He didn't even look at her. His piercing blue eyes locked straight onto me, entirely erasing the space between us.

​"You're late, ginger," Mike said smoothly, his deep voice carrying effortlessly over the sudden silence of the crowd. "I told you five o'clock."

​The entire corridor went dead quiet. Allie’s jaw literally unhinged, her eyes darting between Mike and me in absolute horror.

​"The traffic was brutal, varsity," I deadpanned, crossing my arms over my chest, refusing to let the crowd see my heart hammering. "My dented bucket doesn't fly."

​"Excuses," Mike huffed, a familiar, arrogant smirk playing on his lips. He looked past me, his gaze sweeping over Allie and the rest of the popular crowd, his expression turning instantly cold, elite, and defensive. "She’s with me to handle our gear. Anyone has a problem with that, you can take it up with me on the court."

​He tossed his sports drink directly into my hands. "Hold that. And don't drink it all."

​The game that followed was absolute, unadulterated warfare. It wasn't basketball; it was a physical assault disguised as a sport. The rival district team—a group of massive, heavily tattooed guys who hated the Oakridge country-club crowd—were playing dirty from the first whistle.

​Mike, Jake, and Chad dominated the court, executing plays with a brutal, synchronized precision. But the tension in the warehouse was a powder keg. Every drive to the basket resulted in hard shoulders and hidden elbows.

​Late in the fourth quarter, the game exploded.

​Chad went up for a hard layup, and the rival team's center intentionally undercut him mid-air. Chad hit the concrete court with a sickening thud. Instantly, the game ceased to exist. Jake lunged in to defend Chad, a rival player threw a punch, and a massive, chaotic bench-clearing brawl broke out.

​Mike didn't hesitate. He was right in the middle of the madness, protecting his teammates, throwing a heavy shove that sent a rival player stumbling back before three refs and the coaches managed to violently tear the teams apart. In the blind chaos of the scrum, a rogue elbow had caught Mike squarely across the face. The game was called on a double-forfeit, and the gym erupted into shouting as the crowd began to scatter.

​An hour later, the warehouse courts were entirely empty. The lights had been dimmed to a low, yellow haze, leaving the corners of the building in deep shadow.

​I stayed behind. Because technically, I was still on the hook for my assistant duties, and his heavy leather gym bag was still sitting by the bleachers.

​I found Mike sitting alone on the lowest tier of the wooden bleachers near the back exit. His jersey was torn at the shoulder, his hair was a messy disaster, and he was holding a bag of melting ice against his heavily bruised, scraped knuckles. A thin line of dried blood ran down his jaw from a split lip. He looked dark, moody, and completely exhausted.

​I walked over slowly, the concrete echoing with my footsteps, and sat down a few feet away from him. I reached into my tote bag, pulling out a small first-aid kit I'd snagged from the stables.

​"You guys are primates," I said quietly, my voice losing its sarcastic edge for a brief moment as I looked at the damage. "Do you always trade brain cells for points?"

​Mike didn't look up immediately, but a dark, tired huff escaped his lips. "They played dirty. We don't let people roll over us."

​"Clearly," I muttered, leaning closer. I gently pulled the ice away from his hand, taking a piece of antiseptic gauze soaked in alcohol and pressing it against the cut on his jawline.

​Mike winced sharply, his blue eyes finally lifting to meet mine. The proximity was dizzying again. Up close, I could see the raw, unpolished intensity he usually hid behind his arrogant smirk.

​"Why do you do that?" Mike asked suddenly, his voice low and rough, staring intently into my face as I cleaned the cut.

​"Do what? First aid? I work with animals, Weller, a bruised ego is nothing—"

​"No," Mike interrupted, his hand suddenly reaching out, his large, calloused fingers gently catching my wrist, stopping my hand against his cheek. His touch sent a violent, electric jolt straight up my spine. "Why do you let people treat you like shit, Eloise? Allie... the girls at the entrance. They talk down to you, and you just stand there and take it with a smirk. Like you expect it."

​I froze, my breath catching in my throat. I looked down at his grip on my wrist, then back up into his dark blue eyes. My inner Millie-style defense mechanism wanted to deflect, but the quiet warehouse made it impossible to lie.

​"Because fighting back gives them an audience," I whispered, my voice steady but quiet. "If you're invisible, they eventually get bored and move on. Armor doesn't work if you let them see where it hurts."

​Mike stared at me for a long, agonizingly slow beat. His grip on my wrist didn't loosen; instead, his thumb brushed softly against the sensitive skin of my pulse point.

​"It's a stupid rule," Mike murmured, his eyes dropping to my mouth for a fraction of a second before rising back up to lock with mine. He reached his free hand up, his bruised knuckles gently tucking a stray wave of ginger hair behind my ear, his touch incredibly warm against my cold skin. "You're not invisible to me anymore, ginger. And I don't let people ruin my things."

​I offered him a tiny, shaky, but thoroughly cynical smirk. "I'm not your thing, varsity."

​"Keep telling yourself that," Mike whispered, a slow, arrogant, beautifully familiar smirk finally returning to his face. "Hold the ice. My hands are tired."

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