MasukCHAPTER FOUR
“We have a problem.” The way Adrian said it gave me chills; he had never sounded so irritated about anything, except anything concerning me, for reasons still unknown to me.
“Then explain.”
He didn’t. He just walked past me like I wasn’t even there.
“Oh no, you don't hill jockey,” I muttered, already moving after him, “we’re not doing that today.”
I grabbed his arm.
“You don’t get to drop something like that and walk off like I’m a background character.”
He stopped instantly and slowly turned around, looking down at my hand like it offended him, then lifted his gaze to mine.
“You’re involved,” he said flatly. “And that’s the freaking problem.”
“Excuse me, Mr hotshot, but I didn't ask to be entangled in your magical life… but since I am… start explaining the freaking text,” I shot back. “Start talking.”
His jaw clenched, irritation flashing.
“Whoever did this,” he said, lifting his phone slightly, “didn’t just marry us for fun.”
“Wow,” I deadpanned. “Really, I thought it was a romantic surprise.”
“They want something.”
“From you,” I said immediately.
He didn’t deny it, that silence said enough.
I scoffed.
“Right, because everything is always about you… my only question is why I had to be dragged into your mess.”
His eyes snapped to mine; sharp and warning.
“Careful.”
“No,” I said, stepping closer. “You be careful. Don’t stand there acting like this is every girl’s dream… news flash, this is my freaking nightmare. I didn’t ask to be married to you.”
“And let’s be clear,” I added, voice rising now, “this doesn’t just affect you. I have a life—a real one—and a wonderful scholarship. Do you understand that? One mistake, one rumor, and I lose everything.”
He didn’t interrupt, but his expression hardened.
“I don’t have backups,” I continued. “I don’t have rich parents or connections or whatever safety net you live in. I worked for this.”
His eyes stayed on me, unreadable.
“I’m not getting dragged into your mess,” I said firmly. “Your drama, your reputation, your girlfriends, your nonsense… I don’t want any part of it.”
“You’re already part of it, freshman,” he replied. “That’s the point.”
“No,” I snapped. “That’s your reality. Not mine.”
The words came out sharper now.
“And why are you acting like it’s the end of the world? At least you have a father. You can just talk to him about it.”
The second it left my mouth, I knew I hit something.
He scoffed, not amused, but irritated and cold.
“Think whatever you want,” he said, stepping closer, voice dropping. “But men like my father… they don't fix problems.”
His hand moved fast, grabbing my wrist firmly. He lifted it between us, pointing at the ring, then at me.
“He erases them.”
My stomach twisted, but I didn’t pull back.
“That’s supposed to scare me?” I asked, forcing my voice steady.
“Oh sweetheart, it should,” he replied. His thumb brushed the band once.
“Because this,” he tapped it lightly, “and you…” his gaze flicked over me “…is a whole lot of problem.”
I yanked my hand back.
“Then what now?” I snapped. “What do we do?”
“We do nothing.”
I blinked.
“Excuse me?”
“I’ve done my part,” he said casually. “I got you out of my room. Now I need you out of my life.”
My chest tightened slightly at how easy that sounded.
“You don’t just get to say that and walk away,” I said, stepping in front of him now. “We’re married.”
The word felt ridiculous even saying it.
“That alone can destroy me if it gets out.”
He didn’t react.
“Not for long,” he replied. “We don’t know each other. No one knows about this. So we keep it that way.”
I stared at him.
“So what? We just pretend none of this happened?”
“Exactly.”
“And it just disappears?”
“If you don’t make it messy, yes.”
“And if it doesn’t?” I pressed.
He didn’t answer immediately. That alone annoyed me more.
“Then you deal with it,” he said finally. “But not with me.”
I let out a short, bitter laugh.
“Unbelievable.”
Then stepped closer, not backing down this time.
“What happened during Spring Falls,” I said, voice lower now, sharper, “dies in Spring Falls.”
His eyes held mine, without any interruption.
“Let this be the last time we are ever standing this close to one another.”
There was a minute of silence, then, “I agree,” he said, just like that.
“Good,” I muttered, stepping aside.
“Goodbye, freshman,” he said, walking away from me like the conversation was done, like I didn’t exist.
I stood there for a second, then followed.
The bus doors were open, students climbing in, voices loud, normal, like nothing had changed… like everything hadn’t just changed.
I stepped in a few seconds after him, and immediately saw Stacey, already leaning into him like she belonged there.
“You took forever,” she said, brushing his arm. “I thought you ditched us.”
He didn’t answer, just gave her a look.
I didn’t stop, just moved my gaze somewhere else, moved past them, down the aisle, ignoring the whispers and stares, until I reached the far end, where I sighted Daniel waving at me and dropped into a seat beside him.
“Where did you disappear to? I have been searching everywhere for you” he asked, but there was no proper explanation I could give to him that would sound believable.
My fingers tightened slightly around the fabric of the hoodie still on me.
His hoodie was still warm. It still smelled like him.
I stared out the window, jaw tight, trying to reset, trying to go back to who I was before this morning happened.
He wanted me out of his life.
Good.
I wanted the same thing.
…right?
CHAPTER FORTY-FOURSophie's POVThe office door clicked shut behind me, but it did nothing to muffle the chaos raging inside my head. Every step down the hallway felt heavier than the last, my heart refusing to settle as Adrian's voice chased me through every corridor."I like you... far more than I ever planned to."I clenched my jaw and kept walking. No. I wasn't doing this to myself again. I wasn't going to let one confession erase everything else. Not the distance he'd put between us, not the divorce papers he had sent, not the way he'd left me questioning my own worth until I'd convinced myself I was nothing more than a responsibility he'd grown tired of carrying.
Chapter Forty-ThreeSophie's pov He stood there, chest rising and falling, eyes locked on mine like he was daring me to look away.“If I hadn’t walked into that room,” he asked, voice low but edged with possession, “what was your reply going to be?”I stared at him, stunned into silence for a second. The audacity of the question after everything we’d been through left me speechless. ‘He drags me out like I’m his, and now he wants to interrogate me?’“That doesn’t concern you,” I finally said, my tone sharp. “Nothing about my life concerns you anymore, Adrian.”“Yes, it does.” He stepped closer, frustration and fear mixing in his eyes. “Are you that blind? Or are you really that stupid?”“Don’t you dare insult me!” I snapped, anger flaring hot. “What’s your deal if I say yes to him? He is handsome, soft-spoken, wonderful… in fact, a perfect match for me. Someone who actually shows up without playing twisted games.”Adrian’s jaw clenched hard, jealousy flashing across his face. “Oh re
CHAPTER FORTY-TWOSOPHIE'S POVDaniel's question lingered in the air, wrapping itself around every pair of eyes fixed on us. The hallway had become unnaturally quiet, as though hundreds of students had collectively forgotten how to breathe while they waited for my answer. Daniel remained on one knee with the bouquet cradled carefully in his hands, his nervous smile wavering ever so slightly beneath the weight of my silence, and all I could do was stare back at him, my thoughts tangling over one another until I couldn't separate one from the next. This wasn't how today was supposed to go. None of this was supposed to happen in front of an audience, and certainly not with the entire school watching my every expression as if my answer belonged to them too.A sudden ripple swept through the crowd before I had the chance to speak. Whispers broke out from somewhere behind the students, followed by people instinctively stepping aside until a narrow path appeared through the middle of the h
CHAPTER FORTY-ONEADRIAN'S POVIf anyone asked me what today's lecture had been about, I wouldn't have been able to answer even if my life depended on it. The professor had spent the better part of an hour filling the whiteboard with formulas and explanations while the rest of the class scribbled away diligently, but every word that left his mouth seemed to dissolve before it reached me because my mind had stubbornly latched onto something far more frustrating than chemistry. The entire school knew; they knew Sophie and I had broken up, or at least that was the story making its rounds through every hallway and classroom, and as much as I tried to convince myself it shouldn't matter, the irritation refused to loosen its grip. I had always known this fake relationship would end one day. Hell, I was the one who had agreed to call off the plan after everything that happened with Daniel. So why did it feel like someone else had made that decision for me? Why did it feel like I had been
Chapter fortyAdrian's pov The moment I stepped into school, I knew something had already shifted, not because anyone said anything directly to me at first, but because the air itself felt like it had been rearranged overnight and I was only just catching up to a conversation everyone else had already finished, and that realization settled in slowly as I walked through the gates and noticed how eyes lingered a second too long, how voices dropped a fraction too quickly, and how even the usual chaos of the corridor seemed to bend slightly around me instead of through me as it normally would.Tom appeared beside me almost immediately, falling into step like he always did as co-captain, but even that felt different today because there was no easy rhythm between us, only a careful silence that suggested he was deciding how to say something he already knew I wouldn’t like, and I didn’t need to look at him to know what was coming because people never waited this long to talk about something
Chapter thirty nineSophie's povThe moment Stacey disappeared deeper into the diner with her little entourage eagerly following behind her, the suffocating tension she'd left in her wake slowly dissolved into the familiar rhythm of the afternoon crowd. Conversations resumed as though someone had unpaused the room, chairs scraped softly against the tiled floor, waitresses weaved effortlessly between tables balancing trays of food, and laughter drifted from one corner of the diner to another. Life had already moved on from the little spectacle she'd created, but I knew the students who had witnessed it hadn't. Judging by the number of glowing phone screens I'd caught before she'd even reached the exit, messages were already spreading across school, each version growing a little more dramatic than the last. By tomorrow morning there would probably be stories claiming I'd cried, slapped somebody, started another fight, or declared war on the entire female population. The thought sho
Chapter tenSophie’s pov“You decided to put the rest of my life in complete misery to save your sorry ass,” I said, and didn’t even bother to soften the words because he does not deserve soft.Adrian’s eyes flash. “Careful.”“No, you be careful,” I shoot back, my voice shaking only because there
CHAPTER SEVENSOPHIE’S POVAdrian pulls away first, wearing that wicked smirk like he has not just taken my mouth, my peace, and whatever little dignity I had left in front of the whole school. My lips still burn, and I hate that I notice it before I notice the noise around us.Daniel says my name,
CHAPTER SIXSOPHIE”S POVI am almost in Daniel's car when Saya decides to start trouble from the other side of the screen, smiling like she has already packed herself into my life for the summer. She keeps talking about coming over, but the moment she says she wants to meet my boyfriend, I almost l
Chapter fiveTHREE MONTHS LATERADRIANs POVIt's been three months of partying, spontaneous matches, practice, literally doing everything possible to bury the dreadful memories of spring falls, because it wasn't worth holding onto, whatever happened there stayed there, that was the agreement, and t







