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Rain hammered against the stadium lights hard enough to blur the scoreboard. Westbridge University was losing again. But he crowd screamed anyway because Dante Cole was still on the field, and the devil always gave people something to worship.
I pulled my hoodie tighter as the rain soaked through my sneakers. My camera hung heavily around my neck while I snapped photos from the sidelines for the campus paper. The football team was pure chaos, helmets crashing, coaches screaming, fans chanting Dante's name like he was some kind of god. Maybe he was. A cruel one. The cheerleaders near the sidelines kept screaming his name every time he moved. Students were packed tightly beneath the stadium lights, drunk on football and the illusion that boys like Dante Cole were untouchable. I never understood it. People looked at Dante and they see confidence, fame, and future NFL money, but when I look at him and all I see is trouble. The kind of trouble that smiled while ruining people. The kind that kissed girls in dark hallways and pretended it never happened afterward. Unfortunately, I knew that from experience. "Smile, sweetheart." My stomach tightened instantly. I turned slowly. Dante stood a few feet away, drenched in rain and sweat, black eye paint smeared beneath his eyes. His jersey clung to every inch of muscle like it had been stitched onto him. Number Seven. Quarterback, campus king, and a professional menace, the kind of good looking that ruined lives. And unfortunately, he had a specific talent for ruining mine. His dark gaze slid over me mockingly. "You always look constipated when you take my pictures." I kept my face blank. "You always look ugly when you lose games." His teammates exploded with laughter behind him. Wrong move. Dante's expression darkened instantly. The storm around us suddenly felt smaller than whatever was brewing behind his eyes. He stepped closer, too close. "You getting brave now?" he asked softly. That soft voice was dangerous. Dante only whispered before something bad happened. I lifted my chin. "You're blocking my shot." "Maybe I like your attention." My pulse spiked, because that was the problem with Dante Cole. Nobody ever knew when he was joking. The whistle blew across the field. Coach screamed for the offense to line up. Dante never broke eye contact with me. "Take a good picture tonight, Angel," he murmured. "Might be the last clean shot you get before I destroy somebody." Then he walked away, like he hadn't just set my nerves on fire, like he hadn't spent three years making my life miserable, like he hadn't kissed me at a party last semester and acted like it never happened. The crowd roared as Dante took position. I forced myself to lift the camera again. That was my job, not Dante, not his smirk, not the memory of his mouth against mine in a dark hallway. Focus. The ball snapped and everything happened so fast. Dante dodged one defender, then another. The stadium exploded. He was running hard when it happened, suddenly, a body slammed into him from the blind side with a sickening crack. The entire stadium gasped as Dante crashed hard into the mud, his helmet rolling, his body completely still. Silence spread across the field. Even the cheerleaders stopped screaming. For one terrifying second, Dante Cole didn't move. And somehow, even after everything he'd put me through, fear knocked the air straight out of my lungs. People started shouting, coaches ran onto the field. One of Dante's teammates shoved the player who hit him, and suddenly players were screaming at each other in the rain while referees tried pulling them apart. I barely noticed any of it, because I couldn't stop staring at Dante.Please get up. The thought slipped into my head before I could stop it. He suddenly turned his head slowly, as though he could hear my thoughts. And through the pouring rain, his eyes locked directly onto mine.The dinner did something neither of them expected.It wasn't the food, though the small place Zoe found was good. It was just being four normal people at a table on a Tuesday night. Nobody mentioned Richard. Nobody mentioned the lawyer's call. Zoe knew about it, Ariana had told her before they left, but she kept the evening light, steering conversation toward safe ground. By the time they left, Ariana had laughed more than she had in two weeks, and Dante's shoulders had finally relaxed.That was three days ago.Walking across campus toward the media center, Ariana realized something had changed. The dinner had reminded them that their life wasn't only the difficult parts.Dante found her at her desk that evening.He sat down, pulled his chair beside hers, and set two coffees down, hers first, then his."You're quiet," she said."I'm just thinking.""About what?"He turned his cup slowly. "The lawyer called me back today. About the NDA challenge."She turned to face him properly. "And
Three weeks after their Saturday in the city, Ariana knew the layout of Dante's room better than her own dorm. She knew the room by heart. She could walk through it in the pitch dark without tripping over a single thing. She knew the exact spot where the floorboards groaned under a heavy step near the closet. She knew the way the winter cold leaked through the window glass, making the air smell like frost. She knew the tiny desk lamp gave off a soft, golden light that was much better than the ugly overhead bulbs. She knew the third shelf of his bookcase had a small gap right next to a row of thick football playbook binders. That gap was his personal landing pad. It was the exact place where he dropped his phone charger, his heavy car keys, and his loose pocket change at the end of every grueling day. She knew he brewed his coffee way too strong, using double the normal grounds. He did it every single morning, he saw absolutely no problem with it, and he was never going to change his
Her phone buzzed against the wooden nightstand at exactly eight fifteen on a Saturday morning. Ariana buried her face deeper into the pillow, ignoring the vibration and pulling the thick blanket up over her shoulders to block out the sound. The phone went off a second time, followed immediately by a third sharp vibration. Giving up on the idea of sleep, she reached out of her warm cocoon, her fingers brushing the cold laminate surface, and grabbed it. There were three text messages from Dante, each sent precisely a minute apart.Are you awake.Actually don't answer that. Stupid question. It's eight fifteen.Okay but are you awake. Ariana turned onto her back, her eyes tracking across the small, shadowed room. Zoe's bed was completely empty, the sheets tossed back in a rushed scramble. She had stayed over at Eli's house the previous night and hadn't made the slightest attempt to hide the fact when she left. The dorm room felt hollow and cold, the morning light filtering through the
Mason texted at seven forty-three on a Tuesday morning. The message was brief. Call me. Now. Dante dialed his number back immediately, his boots hitting the cold floorboards as he swung his legs out of bed. Mason picked up on the very first ring, his breathing heavy through the line. He skipped any form of greeting, cutting directly into the quiet room. "Have you seen the campus paper yet?" "I just woke up," Dante muttered, running a rough hand over his face. "Look at it," Mason told him bluntly, his voice laced with an aggressive sort of tension. "Front page. Right now. Call me back when you've actually read it." Dante didn't call back. Instead, he kept Mason on the line while he opened the browser on his phone and loaded the university’s student publication home page. It took a few agonizing seconds to buffer in the morning quiet, the blue light of the screen reflecting sharply in his eyes, and then the massive headline appeared in bold black text at the very top of the layout:
The facility was not what he had expected. For two agonizing years of dead ends and quiet searches, Dante had built a specific version of this place inside his mind. He had envisioned something clinical, cold, and deliberately anonymous—the kind of high-walled institution explicitly designed to keep someone unfindable. Instead, at the end of a long, forty-minute drive through a winter countryside that had turned entirely flat, bare, and grey, the GPS directed him to a narrow country road. Behind a low, weathered stone wall sat a large, converted house. Wrought iron gates stood open, offering a clear view of a dormant winter garden, and beside the intercom hung a small brass nameplate. The letters engraved into the metal were modest enough that a person could easily drive right past the entrance without ever registering they were there: Hillcrest Recovery Centre. He sat in the idling rental car outside the gates for exactly four minutes. The engine purred quietly against the win
The football house was completely quiet when they got there. Most of the team had already left for the break, cars packed, heavy bags dragged down the stairs, the sudden, sweeping exodus of a building that had been bursting with noise only hours ago. Dante let her in with his key, and they walked up the quiet stairs. When he pushed his bedroom door open, the space was exactly as she remembered it, the intricate play diagrams on the whiteboard, the neat stacks of books on the nightstand, and the photograph of Elena resting right above the desk. It felt familiar now. It felt like his. He’d texted her at six.Come over. I need to tell you something. She’d known from the sudden weight of those three words that it was something real. He went over to make coffee, mostly because he needed something to do with his hands to quiet the nervous energy. Ariana sat on the hardwood floor with her back resting against the mattress, pulling her knees up to her chest. She watched him move around
Dante couldn't sleep. He was laying on the leather couch inside the football house at three in the morning with one arm over his eyes while the rest of the team drank downstairs. The loud music playing downstairs from the speakers shook the walls, girls laughed, somebody broke a bottle, and Dante b
The photograph arrived on a Thursday afternoon. Dante was in the middle of a film session with Mason and two other players when his phone lit up on the table beside him. It was an unknown number, a clean and unmarked digital footprint. He looked at the flashing screen for half a second, excused hi
The thing about watching Dante Cole practice was that it was nothing like watching him play. Games were pure performance, thirty-eight thousand people in the stands, the crushing weight of expectation, and every single movement calibrated for an audience whether he admitted it or not. Practice was
Rainwater dripped from the ends of Ariana Vale's hair as she stood frozen beside the football field. Around her, chaos exploded. Players shouted, coaches ran across the soaked grass, and medical staff rushed toward Dante Cole's unmoving body while the crowd buzzed nervously in the stands above. B







