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CHAPTER 7: THE VISIBLE INVISIBLE

Author: Diva.dazzel
last update publish date: 2026-07-08 02:34:06

The mirror in the guest house bathroom didn't lie, but it certainly felt like it was telling a story I wasn't used to hearing.

​For the first day of senior year, I decided to actually put effort into the girl staring back at me. Usually, my thick ginger hair was shoved into a messy, impatient claw clip, reeking of stable hay and leather oil. Today, I had spent an hour taming the wild, soft waves, letting them cascade down my shoulders in a vibrant, copper mane that made my hazel eyes pop. I skipped my oversized thrifted hoodies for a ribbed, cream-colored knit top that hugged my 5'9" frame perfectly, paired with dark-wash denim that actually fit. I looked striking, sharp, and undeniable.

​But as I stepped out of the cottage and walked across the damp lawn toward the main Weller mansion, I had to remind myself that clothes didn't change a social hierarchy. My mother had already left for the out-of-state breeding assignment, taking my younger sister along to continue school there. I was completely on my own in the guest house, left behind in this golden cage because transferring during my senior year would ruin my academic transcripts.

​The main dining room of the Weller house was a monument to old-money aesthetic—all white marble, floor-to-ceiling windows, and the faint scent of expensive French roast coffee.

​"Ah, Eloise. Come in, dear. Sit down," a voice chimed, smooth as silk and dripping with a strange, innocent sort of condescension.

​Evelyn Weller sat at the head of the long mahogany table, looking impeccably manicured in a silk blouse at seven in the morning. Beside her, skimming a financial tablet, was Charles Weller, a man who looked exactly like an older, more calculated version of Mike.

​"Good morning," I said, taking a seat near the edge of the sprawling table.

​"We were just saying how wonderful it is that your mother could take that estate management assignment," Evelyn smiled warmly, pouring me a cup of tea. "She is simply a magician with the horses. It's a pity she had to take your little sister with her to that dreadful countryside school, but of course, we couldn't dream of letting you transfer for your senior year. Living out in our cottage alone is a much more civilized solution, don't you think? You can just focus on your little studies."

​It was a classic Oakridge compliment—sweet on the surface, but wrapped in a subtle, rude reminder that my mother was just an employee, and my life was being managed out of pity.

​Before I could respond, the kitchen doors swung open. Mike strode in, looking devastatingly handsome in his varsity jacket, his golden blonde hair slightly damp, his blue eyes scanning the room until they landed on me. He paused for a fraction of a second, his gaze sweeping over my new look, his jaw tightening slightly. But true to the cool, detached distance he had maintained since the warehouse fight, he quickly masked it with his usual arrogant expression, acting completely like that intimate moment had never happened.

​"Morning," Mike muttered, grabbing an apple from the center bowl.

​Right behind him came the storm. Jake Bill and Chad Miller practically burst into the room. Since Mike was an only child, his massive house was usually a quiet, echoing fortress—making the chaotic, constant presence of his two best friends essential to the vibe. Jake already had his varsity jacket half-on, green eyes bright with mischief as he slid into the chair next to me. Chad followed, scowling at his thick black compression shoulder sling but immediately loading his plate with croissants.

​"Whoa, Gilbert," Jake whistled low, a massive grin spreading across his face. "Who are you trying to impress today? Did the stable ghost finally cross over into the human world? You look incredible."

​Chad glanced up, giving me a brief, approving nod through his usual gruff exterior. "Nice shirt, Gilbert."

​Mike didn't say a word. He just bit into his apple, leaning against the counter, his blue eyes tracking me intently while his parents looked on with polite amusement.

​"Now, boys, don't tease the girl," Charles Weller finally spoke, not looking up from his tablet. "Eloise is here to focus on her studies, not to be distracted by your varsity nonsense. Michael, ensure you drive her to school on time. It would look terribly untidy if our guest hand was late on the first day."

​Guest hand. The word stung, but I just hardened my jaw and smiled politely. I chose to act completely cool since Mike was playing it distant, burying my thoughts deep down.

​The drive to Oakridge High was loud, courtesy of Jake arguing with Chad over a pre-season basketball playlist, while Mike drove in absolute silence. When the sleek sports car finally pulled into the senior parking lot, the atmosphere shifted instantly. The lot was a sea of luxury SUVs, designer backpacks, and cliques already reforming on the concrete.

​As Mike killed the engine, a hush fell over the students standing nearby. Eyes immediately locked onto the car.

​I stepped out of the front seat first, my heart doing a nervous flutter. I could hear the immediate whispers cutting through the morning air.

​"Wait, who is that with Mike and the boys?"

​"Did someone get in the front seat?"

​"Is that... wait, isn't that Allie Grace's jacket?"

​Because I had spent my entire high school career being completely invisible, the student body's brains literally couldn't process me standing next to the golden boy. By the time we walked toward the main entrance, the rumor had already mutated and spread down the hallway like wildfire: Mike Weller brought a girl to school, so he and Allie Grace must be back together and she was hiding in his car. There was a faint whisper about a girl staying at the Weller estate because her mom was out of state, but nobody connected it to me. To them, I was a phantom, completely erased by the shadow of the school's queen bee.

​My first period was AP English Literature—a high-level class that only a few seniors qualified for. I slipped into a desk near the back, pulling out my laptop and hoping to fade into the background as usual.

​A few moments later, a heavy scent of expensive vanilla perfume signaled the arrival of Allie Grace Vance.

​Allie was stunning. Platinum blonde blowout, cold blue eyes, and a smile that could either freeze you solid or melt you on the spot. She was the definition of high-society royalty. She strutted into the room, surrounded by her entourage, but stopped when she realized the only open desk left in the entire room was the one directly next to me.

​Allie sat down, her designer bag clicking against the floor. She didn't say a word to me. In fact, she didn't even look at me. To Allie, the girl with the vibrant copper hair was just part of the classroom furniture—a nameless face she didn't need to waste her social currency on. Allie simply pulled out her pristine, gold-trimmed tablet and began texting her friends, completely ignoring my existence.

​Ten minutes into the lesson, Mr. Harrison threw a complex prompt on the board regarding the psychological subtext of The Great Gatsby and the illusion of the American dream. The classroom went dead silent. The wealthy students shifted uncomfortably, used to regurgitating SparkNotes rather than actually analyzing the text.

​Allie raised her hand, offering a beautifully polished, surface-level answer. "Well, Mr. Harrison, Daisy's wardrobe represents her ultimate purity and innocence. She's trapped in a world that doesn't understand her, making her a victim of her environment." It was sweet, elegant, and completely shallow—exactly the kind of mean-sweet polish she mastered.

​"An interesting take, Miss Grace," Mr. Harrison sighed, clearly wanting more. "But can anyone dig deeper into the actual economic hostility of the text? Anyone at all?"

​His eyes scanned the silent room before landing on the back row. "Miss... Gilbert, correct? Care to enlighten us?"

​Allie didn't even turn around at first, completely unbothered.

​But then I spoke. My voice was calm, clear, and utterly brilliant.

​"Daisy's purity is a manufactured illusion. The text isn't a romance; it's about the violent preservation of old-money structures. Daisy and Tom don't just smash up things and creatures; they smash up people like Gatsby and Myrtle because they view working-class bodies as disposable fuel to maintain their own pedestals. The hostility isn't a byproduct of the dream—it's the foundation of it."

​The entire classroom went dead silent.

​Allie Grace slowly, deliberately turned around in her seat. Her cold blue eyes narrowed as she stared at me, a look of profound, intense evaluation on her face. She looked at my sharp hazel eyes, my perfectly tamed ginger waves, and the cream knit top. Allie didn't say anything mean, but her eyes locked onto me like a radar that had just detected a major threat. She was realizing, for the very first time, that this nameless girl wasn't just furniture.

​And from the doorway, leaning lazily against the frame because he had been sent to deliver a varsity roster to the teacher, Mike Weller stood watching. His blue eyes were dark, a slow, dangerous smirk spreading across his bruised jaw as he listened to the stable girl completely dismantle the elite world he was trapped in.

​He waited until Mr. Harrison turned to write on the board before he caught my eye from across the room. He didn't wave. He didn't smile. He just gave me a lazy, barely noticeable nod, his lips moving silently to form a single word that only he ever called me.

​Ginger.

​My heart did a violent, frustrated thud against my ribs. I quickly looked down at my laptop, my face burning, while Mike turned on his heel and sauntered back down the hallway, leaving me completely exposed to Allie Grace's calculating, intense stare.

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