LOGINCyrus Blackwood
I stretched my arms as a yawn escaped my mouth. I noticed a couple students look my way, either to ogle me or out of annoyance, either way I didn't care. They knew better than to approach me like a fool. Normally, people respected me. It’s not something I demanded, it simply happened. People leaned toward certainty, and I learned early that confidence passed for truth when it was delivered without hesitation.
I noticed the way people watched me, looking up to me as if I were a saint. It annoyed me to an extent but I would have to just smile and move on; they can’t do anything beyond following me blindly. Most of them only worried about getting on my good side because of my family’s influence over this college but I wanted to keep the dynamic clear. If they wanted to praise me, fear me or hate me; they would have to do it for me.
I passed a casual smile to my spectators and looked around the class. None of the students were familiar, mostly because I don't pay attention to them but a certain short-haired girl stood out to me. Her back was facing me. She was sitting upright and her frame was short and very skinny. Though from her oversized clothes, it seemed to swallow her whole.
Then it hit me.
She was the very same girl that bumped into me this morning.
Her audacity amused me more than it should have. Most people avoided me entirely, yet she had shoved me aside without a second thought. There hadn’t been hesitation in her eyes either, just dislike. Interesting. I’ll be the judge of how long that audacity lasts.
All kinds of thoughts swirled in my mind as a smirk formed on my face. I nudged Lucas to my right, but he was busy typing away on his phone. His smile creeped me out as I turned to Ethan on my left.
“Another one?” I asked. Ethan was sitting with his headphones on, clearly not listening to anything.
He shrugged. “You know him. A new week, a new girl.”
I let out a huge sigh before slumping on the table. I was itching for a smoke but I just had one before I entered the class.
Today was going to be one boring and long day.
My attention wandered back to the girl. I assumed she was new mostly because either she was a nobody until our encounter or she had just transferred. Most of the mid-semester students that transferred were usually scholarship-based students. I noticed how most scholarship students tried too hard. This one didn’t try at all. She sat there like the room didn’t intimidate her in the slightest.
The lecture dragged on for almost an hour now. I had tuned it out a long time ago. It was always fun to mess with the professor so I decided to add my input. Maybe that ought to give the professor a signal that we’re done for the day. I had to assert dominance every once in a while. More so with an esteemed, audacious guest amongst us.
“I believe people always try to reach self-actualization first rather than anything else.”
My voice was firm. I felt pretty confident about my opinion. Murmurs of agreement and acknowledgement rippled through the room. The professor nodded and deemed it right because of course he would.
But the acknowledgement was short lived as a firm voice cut through the class.
“Respectfully, the theory doesn’t work like that.”
My eyes twitched as I turned my head toward the speaker.
Of course.
The scholarship student.
She spoke with such confidence, it made me seem like the dumbest person to exist in this world. Even as she corrected me, she was looking at the professor in a measured way as if she had rehearsed it all and didn't care how it ended. She didn’t even look at me like I wasn’t even worth acknowledging.
Silence followed. Everyone seemed to hold their breath, as nobody had ever dared to speak over me or correct me.
I tapped on the table, patiently waiting for the professor to shut her down. The professor also knew where to draw the line. Hence, he knew this transfer was overstepping. However he only hesitated and coughed once before announcing it correctly.
Something shifted.
I didn’t feel embarrassed or angry. Just aware. Heads slowly turned in my direction, waiting for my reaction as they always did. Then she turned too. Her expression didn’t waver.
I smiled, but it wasn't an inviting smile. I accepted her challenge.
“She sure got guts,” Lucas murmured beside me.
I leaned back in my chair and held her stare until she turned around.
“Interesting.”
After the class was over, I shot a look at the professor, who hastily packed his belongings before leaving the class, not wanting to meet my eyes. The room buzzed back to life and the tension was evident but my attention was fixed. I had to counter that somehow. Few others started gathering around our row, all chatting but glancing my way.
I immediately thought about showing intimidation. I was the one everyone angled toward, not the other way around.
As soon as she got up, I grabbed a notebook nearest to me and tossed it toward her. Not intending to hit her. Just to startle her.
“Whoops! I dropped it,” I said with a sly smile. The crowd around me chuckled lightly. “Mind getting that for me?”
She bent to pick it up but I didn’t miss the way her eyes sharpened before she crouched. She grabbed the notebook. Instead of handing it back, she started flipping through it.
Unexpected but very amusing for me.
She tossed the book back toward me. “You should be careful with your notes,” she said with a small smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes. “Wouldn’t want them messier than they already are.”
The room stilled. I heard Ethan cough as if stifling his laugh. My smile faded before I could stop it. That was new. Not once but twice she had decided to challenge me.
As she walked out of the room without looking back, one thought settled in my mind. She had just made it impossible to ignore her.
I’ll make sure to burn my existence into her mind forever.
Wren CarterSomething was wrong with Cyrus.At first, I told myself I was imagining it.Maybe he was busy. Maybe his father had buried him under another mountain of responsibilities. Maybe he was simply giving me the space I'd once begged him for.But no matter how many excuses I came up with, none of them felt right.Because this wasn't the Cyrus I'd slowly begun to know.The Cyrus who would send me a sarcastic text after class.The Cyrus who would somehow appear outside the hospital at exactly the same time as my visits.The Cyrus who had started smiling more than smirking.This Cyrus...Looked haunted.It had been three days since we'd visited my mother together.Three days since we'd laughed over burnt pancakes he had proudly insisted were "perfectly edible."Three days since we'd sat under the stars talking about absolutely nothing.And in those three days, something inside him had changed.He still walked me home.He still made sure I reached my apartment safely.He still called
Cyrus Blackwood There were days when I wished ignorance had stayed bliss. Today wasn't one of them. I was halfway through dismantling the punching bag hanging in my private gym when my phone buzzed across the bench beside my towel. Sweat dripped from my forehead as I ignored it, driving another punch into the leather until the chain rattled violently above me. The ache in my knuckles was welcome. Physical pain was easier to deal with than the constant war going on inside my head. Wren. She had occupied every waking thought of mine for weeks now. Was she sleeping enough? Was she eating? Had her mother gotten better? Were those bastards still watching her? The questions never stopped. My phone buzzed again. This time, I glanced at the screen. Marcus. The investigator I had connections with. Immediately, my posture stiffened. Marcus never called unless he had something important. I grabbed the phone before the third ring. "What?" "I found something." Those three words we
Cyrus BlackwoodI wasn't sure what terrified me more. Business meetings with my father.Or asking Wren Carter to have dinner with me.At least in business meetings I knew exactly how I'd fail.With Wren...I never knew.Mrs. Carter had eventually fallen asleep after exhausting herself talking more than the doctors probably approved of, leaving Wren and me quietly walking side by side through the hospital corridor. Neither of us felt the need to fill the silence. It wasn't uncomfortable anymore. Somewhere along the way, silence with her had become... peaceful.She was adjusting the strap of her bag when I finally worked up the courage."Wren?""Hm?"She looked over.My rehearsed speech disappeared instantly."I..." I scratched the back of my neck. "I wanted to ask you something."She stopped walking. I almost wished she hadn't. Now she was actually waiting. Patiently."What is it?"I took a slow breath. "Would you..."No.Too direct."I was thinking maybe..."Still terrible.She tilted
Wren CarterThe elevator ride to my mother's floor felt strangely... peaceful.For once, my mind wasn't occupied by threatening messages or Adrian's confession or wondering whether someone was watching me.Instead, I found myself painfully aware of the man standing beside me.Cyrus leaned casually against the wall of the elevator, one hand tucked into the pocket of his jeans while the other held a small paper bag from the bakery downstairs.I glanced at it."You bought something?"He looked down as though he'd forgotten he was holding it."Oh."A sheepish smile tugged at his lips."Your mom likes those strawberry cream pastries."I blinked."You remembered?"He looked genuinely confused."Of course."Then, after a brief pause, he added quietly,"She mentioned it the second time I visited."The second time.He remembered something so insignificant that even I had forgotten she'd mentioned it.Before I could stop myself, I smiled.A real one.He caught it immediately."What?""Nothing."
Cyrus BlackwoodIf someone had told me a month ago that my Saturday morning would begin with Wren Carter calling me first...I would've laughed in their face.Yet here I was.Standing in my room with a folder full of reports spread across my desk, trying to make sense of names, numbers, and dead ends that all somehow led back to the men hunting Wren.Nothing fit together.Every lead I chased either disappeared or circled back to another fake identity.The photograph of her mother.The threatening messages.Adrian.The loan sharks.It all felt connected, but there was still a missing piece.One piece.And until I found it...Wren wasn't safe.I rubbed a tired hand over my face before throwing another file onto the desk with a frustrated sigh."Damn it."For the first time in years, I felt useless.No amount of money.No family influence.No connections.Nothing seemed enough.Whoever these people were...They knew how to disappear.I leaned both hands against the desk, staring blankly
Cyrus BlackwoodBy the time I pulled into the driveway, it was well past midnight.The entire estate was lit up as if someone important had arrived.That usually meant one thing.My father was home.I shut off the engine and sat there for a few seconds, rubbing my face with both hands. After everything Ryan had uncovered tonight, the last thing I wanted was another lecture from him.Unfortunately...Life rarely cared what I wanted.The moment I stepped through the front doors, one of the house staff approached me cautiously."Mr. Blackwood is waiting for you in his study, sir."Of course he was.I nodded once before making my way down the familiar hallway.The door was already open.My father stood beside the floor-to-ceiling windows with a glass of whiskey in one hand, his back facing me. He didn't bother turning around when I entered."I hear you've been busy."I closed the door behind me."If this is about Christy—""It isn't."His calm tone somehow felt more dangerous than if he h
Cyrus BlackwoodI felt my muscles burn as I ran the last lap and got us another goal. Loud roars of celebration ran through the team as I took off my helmet. My hair was plastered on my forehead as I wiped my face. The coach patted me on the shoulder as he whistled to another player. The coach was
Cyrus BlackwoodThe sun was hidden behind the clouds, which made the environment dim. It was drizzling lightly, making the already damp environment more foggy and chilly. Everyone’s spirits were low as well considering it was the final day and the most important presentation as well. The tensions w
Wren CarterThe sharp scent of antiseptic brought me back to my senses the second I stepped in the clinic. I hated the environment but I hated being sick more. It was a small cabin but they had the perfect set up for a makeshift clinic. Small narrow beds lined one side of the cabin while a row of c
Cyrus BlackwoodMy foot tapped restlessly on the ground as I leaned on the tree trunk. I had woken up early and gone for a run before I stood at the agreed position for the sample collection. She was late and it was agitating me. I got that she was sick but that was yesterday. I thought about that







