Home / YA/TEEN / The space between the wrong / Chapter 1: The Door That Only Needed a Pull

Share

The space between the wrong
The space between the wrong
Author: Mimi Leigh

Chapter 1: The Door That Only Needed a Pull

Author: Mimi Leigh
last update publish date: 2026-04-01 16:06:41

The door to Seminar Room 114 is heavier than it looks.

I find that out the hard way, pushing with my shoulder when it only needed a pull, and I have exactly one second to be embarrassed about it before I look up and see him.

Cole Whitfield.

Sitting at the round table like he belongs there, which he does, because apparently the universe has a sense of humor I never accounted for.

He sees me at the same time. I know because his whole body goes still — not the freeze of someone caught doing something wrong, but the stillness of someone who has been waiting for something they weren’t sure was coming. His hands stop moving around the cap of his water bottle. His eyes find mine across the room and they stay there.

I look away first.

I pick a seat. Not across from him — I’m not doing that to myself on the first day — but not beside him either. The table is round, so there’s no perfect answer, but I find something close to neutral and I sit down. I put my bag on the floor. I take out my notebook. I uncap my pen.

I do not look at him again.

The room fills slowly. Six other students, all of us graduate cohort, all of us carrying the specific energy of people trying to look like they belong somewhere new. Someone laughs too loud at the door. Someone else arranges their pens in a line. I write the date at the top of my page and keep my eyes there.

The thing about Cole Whitfield is that I always knew when he was looking at me. Two years ago I thought that was romantic. Some kind of proof that we were tuned to the same frequency. Now I understand it’s just spatial awareness. The same reason you always know when someone is standing too close behind you in a queue.

He is looking at me right now.

I write my name under the date. Then the course code. Then the professor’s name, which I already know from the department website because I did my research like a person who takes their graduate program seriously.

I did not research who else was enrolled. That was a mistake I will not repeat.

“Is this COGS 601?”

The voice comes from the door. New student, out of breath, backpack half-unzipped. The room tells her yes in three different ways and she collapses into the nearest seat with the energy of someone who has been running since September.

I write the course title.

The chair two seats to my left scrapes back. Someone sits down. I don’t look. I already know from the shift in the room’s atmosphere, the way the new student’s eyes track upward and stay there for a beat too long.

Cole used to have that effect on rooms. Apparently that hasn’t changed.

I underline the course title.

Dr. Vass walks in at exactly three minutes past the hour, which tells me something about her. She’s small, composed, carrying a single folder and nothing else. She sets it on the table without opening it and looks around at all of us with the patient expression of someone who has done this many times and is still interested.

“Welcome,” she says. “This is Social Cognition and Belief Formation. If you’re here for something else, now is the time.”

Nobody moves.

“Good.” She pulls out her chair and sits. “I want to start with a question before we get to syllabi and policies. Think of a time you believed something about another person that turned out to be wrong. Not a small thing. Something that mattered. Something you acted on.”

The room goes quiet in a specific way. Not uncomfortable — thoughtful. People looking at the table, at their hands, at some middle distance.

I look at my notebook.

“Now ask yourself this,” Dr. Vass continues. “When you found out you were wrong — what did that cost? You, and the person you were wrong about.”

She lets that sit for a full five seconds.

“That question is what we’ll spend this semester on. How people form beliefs. How they defend them. What it costs everyone involved when they get it wrong.” She opens the folder finally, takes out a stack of syllabi, and passes them to her left. “The research is technical. The implications are not.”

The syllabi move around the table. When the stack reaches me I take one and pass it left without looking up.

A hand takes it from mine.

I know those hands.

The syllabus leaves my fingers and I stare at my notebook and I think about the word why. How it lands differently than did you. How the whole shape of a question can tell you where someone’s mind already is before you answer.

I think about an elevator. A lobby button. A decision I made in twelve seconds that I have not once regretted, not even now, not even in this room.

Dr. Vass is still talking. I make myself listen.

“Your semester project will be a case study in belief formation and its social consequences. Real events, real stakes, real cost. I want academic rigor and I want honesty in equal measure.” She looks around the table one more time. “Those two things are not always comfortable together. That’s the point.”

I write that down.

Rigor and honesty. Not always comfortable. That’s the point.

I feel Cole look at me. I feel it the same way I felt it two years ago, the same frequency, the same pull I’m not going to do anything about.

I turn to a fresh page.

I have work to do.

And then Dr. Vass says, almost as an afterthought, “I’ll be assigning project partners next week. Come prepared to be uncomfortable.”

I finally look up.

Cole is already looking at me.

He doesn’t look away.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 41: The Third Variable

    The words hit me like a physical blow, the air leaving my lungs in a short, sharp gasp."Theo," I whisper."No," Cole says immediately, his hand coming down on my shoulder, his grip almost painful. "Theo was in the hospital bed, Nora. He was asleep. We left him with Miller.""Miller is bureau, Cole. He’s not medical," I say, the logic snapping into place with a terrifying, absolute certainty. The space between wrong and right is gone. There is only the data. "The X-14 didn't fry Theo’s pathways. He told us he was the sword. He gave Miller the coordinates because he knew we would come here. He knew we would clear the site and activate the core.""He used us," Jonah says from behind us, his flashlight beam shaking against the concrete wall. "He used his own sister to bypass the security tier."I stand up, leaving Marcus in the dark. The cold in the tunnel doesn't feel like weather anymore. It feels like the inside of my father’s mind. It feels like the reality we’ve been trying to run f

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 40: The Blind Corridor

    "Cole! Cole, talk to me!"My hands are fumbling through the dark, my palms scraping against hard concrete and sharp shards of plastic. The air is suddenly thick with the stench of burning insulation and ozone. My ears are ringing from the blast, a high-pitched whine that drowns out everything else.A heavy weight shifts beside me, followed by a low, ragged cough. "I’m here. I’m okay. Where’s Jonah?""I’m by the stairs," Jonah’s voice calls out from the dark, sounding far away and muffled. "The main breaker blew. The emergency backup isn't kicking in. We’re on a dead line."A beam of light cuts through the smoke. It’s Cole’s flashlight, its lens cracked but the bulb still flickering. He aims it toward the center of the room.The terminal is a melted ruin of plastic and copper wire. Marcus is gone. The chair is knocked over, a trail of dark, heavy drops of blood smeared across the concrete leading toward the secondary exit door at the back of the server bay."He hit the line," Cole says

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 39: The Ghost Machine

    "Step away from that console, Nora, or I swear to God I’ll end this right now."Marcus’s hand is shaking so violently the metal barrel of his gun clatters against the edge of the server rack. The red indicator lights cast a sickening, bloody glow across his sunken cheeks. He looks less like a man and more like a corpse being animated by sheer, desperate panic."The recording is automated, Marcus," I say, keeping my palms flat and visible as I take a slow step forward. The concrete floor is freezing, the cold biting right through my thin sneakers, but my blood is boiling. "My father died two years ago. He’s not sending a transmission. The system is just executing the final loop.""Shut up! You don't know what he did!" Marcus screams, a spray of saliva catching the white light of the monitor. "He locked the stabilization file behind your neural signature. If you don't press that key, the sequence will execute, and the purge will wipe everything. I’ll lose the last six years. I won't eve

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 38: The Ontario Grid

    "Play it again."Cole’s voice is sharp, cutting through the hum of the SUV’s heater as the tires crunch over the ice-covered gravel road. We’ve been across the border for two hours, the trees getting denser, the sky lowering until it feels like we’re driving through a cave made of white pine and gray cloud.I hit the button on my phone. The static fills the car again, a harsh, scraping sound that sets my teeth on edge before the voice cuts through. *"...I'm already inside."*"Marcus," Cole says, his hand slamming into the dashboard. "It’s Marcus Webb. He’s not dead, Nora. The overdose in the precinct... it was another extraction. Dex set it up before the rink went down.""He was at the cabin," I say, my fingers curling into the fabric of my hoodie. "He had the gasoline because he was cleaning the site. He wasn't working for Dex anymore. He was working for the people who bought the subsidiary.""The Whitfield Group," Cole says, his eyes fixing on the white road ahead. "My father’s boar

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 37: The Cold Horizon

    "We aren't going to Canada, Nora. It’s a trap."Cole is standing by the window of the hospital room, his arms crossed over his chest as the afternoon light turns a cold, watery gray. He hasn't stopped pacing since Agent Miller left the folder on my tray. The ink on the paper looks fresh, the numbers written in Theo’s shaky, uneven script."It’s not a trap," I say, my voice tight as I swing my legs over the edge of the bed. The tile is freezing against my bare soles, a sharp jolt that helps clear the remaining fog from my brain. "My father spent three months in Ontario the year before he died. He told us he was doing field research on low-temperature enzyme preservation. He wasn't preserving enzymes, Cole. He was moving the backup.""Let the bureau handle it," Cole says, turning to face me. His eyes are dark with a frustration that has been building for hours. "They have teams for this. They have tactical units. You almost died yesterday, Nora. Your brother is still sleeping off a chem

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 36: The Weight of Static

    "Wake up, Nora. Please, you have to open your eyes."The voice is rough, jagged around the edges, and it sounds like it’s traveling through a long metal pipe. I try to pull air into my lungs, but my chest feels like it’s trapped under a block of concrete. The smell of copper is gone, replaced by the sharp, sterile scent of white sheets and rubbing alcohol. My right hand is burning, a throbbing, rhythmic pain that sets my wrist on fire. I force my eyelids open, the bright fluorescent light from above slashing directly into my brain.Cole is there. He is leaning over the edge of the bed, his face pale under a layer of smudge marks and dark stubble. His eyes are bloodshot, wide with a frantic kind of panic that softens the second he sees me blink. He is gripping my left hand so tight my fingers are numb, but I don't care. The touch is the only thing keeping the room from spinning into the floor."Theo," I rasp. My tongue feels like sand. "Where is Theo?"Cole lets out a long, shuddering

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 29: The Variable of Chaos

    The alarm is the first thing that breaks the fog. It’s a low, pulsing sound that vibrates through the mattress. The white lights in the room flicker, turning a harsh, emergency red."System failure in Sub-Level 3. All personnel to containment."The efficient woman’s voice is gone, replaced by a fra

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 28: The Architecture of a Memory

    The first thing I feel is the cold. It’s a deep, clinical cold that smells like ozone and rubbing alcohol. I try to open my eyes, but my eyelids feel like they’ve been glued shut. There is a steady, rhythmic humming in my ears, the sound of a machine breathing for someone who can't do it themselves

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 27: The Taste of Tin

    "Don't hold your breath, Nora. It only makes the transition harder."Vass’s voice through the intercom is calm, almost fatherly, as if he is guiding me through a difficult lab experiment instead of gassing me in a bank vault. I scramble to my feet, the heavy brass key still clutched in my hand, but

  • The space between the wrong    Chapter 24: The Smell of Gasoline

    "Put the lighter down, Marcus. You don’t want to do this."Cole’s voice is low and steady, the kind of voice he uses to calm a teammate after a bad hit. He’s standing slowly, moving in front of me as I scramble back against the kitchen cabinets. The metal box is heavy in my hand, the sharp edge of

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status