LOGINThe walk from Vance Hall to the central quad was the first time the actual scale of Ashcroft University hit me. The morning air had a crisp, sharp bite to it, rustling through the massive oak trees that shaded the brick paths. Everywhere you looked, streams of students were moving with an intense, fast-paced purpose—iced coffees balanced in full hands, bags swinging from shoulders, and laptops tucked firmly under arms.
Back in Brookhaven, style was a game of conformity. You wore the exact same denim jacket or sneakers as everyone else just to ensure you blended into the background. But on this campus, fashion felt like a silent, deliberate language. People used what they wore to stake their claim on who they were before they even opened their mouths. "If you're wearing an ironed, full three-piece suit to an introductory lecture at ten in the morning, you're hiding something," Bianca murmured, her voice a low, smooth drawl. She casually adjusted the collar of her black blazer, her eyes scanning the crowd with an effortless, dry amusement. "You're either trying to sell me a pyramid scheme or you have zero personality. It's deeply suspicious." I let out a soft laugh, wrapping both hands around my travel mug. "Maybe he just wants the professor to think he's already a partner at a law firm." "He looks like an auditor who complains about text formatting, Kelsey. It's a tragedy." She didn't even blink as we climbed the wide stone steps of the psychology building. There wasn't a drop of malice in her face; she just had this sharp, unbothered way of looking at the world that stood completely on business. She wasn't going to force a fake smile for the crowd, and honestly, walking next to her, I loved it. The interior of the building was stunning—heavy mahogany paneling, towering ceilings, and that distinct, clean scent of old paper and expensive floor wax. But when we pushed through the heavy double doors into Lecture Hall 101, my stomach did a sudden, nervous dive. The room was a massive, semicircular amphitheater. Rows of tiered wooden desks sloped sharply down toward a polished stage and a green chalkboard that stretched across the entire front wall. Hundreds of students were already packed into the seats, creating a deafening hum of typing, rustling syllabi, and low, anxious chatter that echoed up into the vaulted ceiling. In Brookhaven, my immediate instinct would have been to look for a familiar face—any safe harbor to anchor myself in a room full of strangers. But staring down at this massive bowl of four hundred people, my actual personality kicked in. I adjusted my tote bag, shook out my curls, and let that bubbly, easy energy take the wheel. If you're going to navigate a room where nobody knows your name, you might as well hold your head up high and look like you belong there. "Middle row?" I suggested, nodding toward the center tier. "Middle," Bianca agreed, her stride slow and confident as we moved down the carpeted aisle. "The back row is for people who want to sleep, and the front row is for the sycophants. The middle is the sweet spot." We slid into a row of dark oak desks right in the center. I peeled off my cropped sage green cardigan, draping it over the back of my seat so the cream ribbed top underneath could actually show, letting my curls fall over one shoulder while Bianca neatly laid out her iPad. To our left, a girl with three different colored highlighters was already aggressively outlining a blank page, while two guys down the row were arguing over which campus dining hall had the better breakfast burritos. Right as the professor stepped up to the podium to adjust the microphone, a heavy shadow fell across our desk from the row directly behind us. "Are these seats taken?" a deep, smooth voice asked. I turned around in my seat, my eyes locking onto the guy standing in the row directly behind us. Okay, can we just pause the tape for a second? A full, respectful moment of silence for this man, please, because he was breathtaking. There is 'fine,' and then there is whatever genetic miracle was currently standing behind my chair. If my life had a camera crew, this is the exact moment they'd drop a slow-motion filter, turn the contrast up, and play a bassline so heavy it rattles your teeth. He was tall—easily 6'4"—with broad shoulders that completely filled out a simple, vintage grey university sweatshirt with the sleeves pushed up to his forearms. His skin was a rich, flawless dark brown, his fade was perfectly sharp, and he had these heavy-lidded, sleepy dark eyes that carried a massive, unbothered wave of confidence. He was holding a sports drink in one hand and a single notebook in the other. He was a fine boy, he knew he was a fine boy, and he didn't even have to try. It was just there, radiating off him like heat off asphalt. "They're empty," I said, keeping my voice light and natural, refusing to let him see that my brain had just short-circuited for a solid three seconds. "Appreciate it," he murmured. A lazy, slow smirk tugged at the corner of his lips as he slid into the seat, setting his notebook down on the wooden desk. "I'm Malik." "Kelsey," I replied, tilting my head slightly. "You actually look prepared," Malik noted, nodding toward my open notebook. "Unlike my guy Marcus over here, who forgot a pen on day one." The shorter guy sitting next to him with the buzz cut rolled his eyes. "Man, shut up. I have a tablet." Before we could say anything else, the professor's voice boomed through the speakers, cutting off the room's volume like a light switch. "Welcome to Cognitive Psychology. Look to your left, and look to your right. By December, one of you will have dropped this course..." The professor didn't play around. Within ten minutes, he dropped a digital syllabus onto the projector that looked less like a course outline and more like a federal indictment, casually mentioning that the midterm exam alone was worth forty percent of our final grade. A collective, stressed groan instantly rippled through the entire four hundred seats. The overachiever girl to our left actually let out a tiny, horrified gasp. Behind me, Marcus leaned over, whispering loudly to Malik. "Forty percent? Bro, why did you tell me to take this? I thought you said an introductory psych elective was supposed to be an easy GPA booster." Malik let out a low, amused chuckle, leaning forward slightly so his voice carried quietly over the back of my chair. "Don't look at me, man. It was the only elective on the board that fit around afternoon practice. I'm just a sophomore trying to get my credits so the coach stays off my back." I turned my head around just enough to glance at him, a small smile playing on my lips. "A sophomore in an introductory class? So you're basically an expert." Malik channeled that effortless confidence, his dark eyes fixing onto mine with an easy, unblinking focus. "Clearly not, considering I'm currently staring at a syllabus that looks like a legal brief. If you know how to decode any of this, let me know." "I'll keep that in mind," I said, turning back around as the professor started diving into the first slide on neural pathways. The class settled into a steady rhythm of typing and scribbling. Halfway through the lecture, Marcus tapped Malik on the shoulder, holding up his phone screen. "Yo, the entry list for the house party this Friday on the corner of the row is closing early because of campus security. We need to put down names now." Malik glanced at the phone, then leaned forward slightly toward our row. "You guys doing anything Friday night? The basketball team is hosting an off-campus thing. You should slide through. I can put your names on the door so you don't have to deal with the line." I looked at Bianca, who caught my eye and gave me a slight, approving nod. Bianca then turned her head slightly back toward Malik, her voice cool and completely direct. "Put us down. But make it three names. We have another roommate who is definitely not going to let us leave her behind." "Done," Malik said, his eyes sliding back to me with that same lazy, confident smirk. He pulled his phone from his pocket, tapping the screen before sliding it across the dark wood of the desk toward me. "Drop your I*******m. Send me the names and I'll text the list to the guys at the door." I picked up the phone, typing my handle into the search bar with a slow, unbothered smile before handing it back. "Sent. I'll DM you the details later." "Perfect," he murmured, locking the screen and slipping it back into his sweatshirt pocket as Dr. Harrison continued his lecture. "See you Friday, Kelsey." By the time the seventy-minute class finally let out, my hand was slightly cramping from taking notes. Bianca and I packed up our bags, joining the massive crowd of students filtering out of the air-conditioned hall and back into the bright, afternoon sun. The campus quad was gorgeous at midday—a massive expanse of manicured green lawn surrounded by those imposing gothic buildings. When we finally spotted Talia, she was sitting under a large canvas umbrella at a metal table, looking like an absolute vision. She had on her pleated white tennis skirt and a cropped knit top, her oversized sunglasses perched perfectly on her nose. She had a half-eaten salad in front of her, but the second she saw us walking up, she pulled her glasses down to the bridge of her nose, her wide eyes flashing with pure anticipation. "Finally!" Talia groaned dramatically, shifting her tote bag to make room for us. "Please tell me your morning had better scenery than mine. My acting seminar is ninety percent upperclassmen crying on the floor for 'artistic expression' and ten percent guys trying to use lines they definitely copied from an indie movie. It's a tragedy." "Well, the scenery in Cognitive Psych was definitely interesting," I said, sliding into the metal chair next to her and instantly stealing a fry from her plate. "We sat right in front of a sophomore named Malik. Plays basketball, very fine, and very aware of it." "And," Bianca chimed in, leaning back in her chair and taking a slow, appreciative sip of her iced coffee, "he already invited us to the off-campus house party this Friday night. I told him to put down three names, so you're already on the list." Talia froze, her fork hovering in mid-air as a massive, completely unhinged grin slowly spread across her face. Her inner radar had locked onto the signal instantly. "Friday night? Oh, we are absolutely going. I have been on this campus for less than twenty-four hours and the lack of a social life is already unconstitutional. I am officially finding someone to make out with this weekend, period. What is he like, Kels? Is he actually fine or is he just 'athlete fine'?" "Incredible," I admitted, laughing at her total lack of a filter. "He has that total effortless, smooth energy. Like he doesn't even have to try." "Perfect. My favorite type," Talia purred, her eyes already glowing with the prospect of a night out. "We are going back to the room tonight and figuring out the wardrobe. I need a look that says 'I just threw this on,' but actually took me hours of calculated stress to assemble." Bianca let out a genuine, low laugh, shaking her head as she watched Talia instantly dive into full party mode. "I can live with that. Just as long as nobody pours red wine down the front of us this time." I leaned back against the metal chair, the warm afternoon sun washing over my skin as the sound of the historic campus bells began to echo across the brick quad. The air was full of life, my girls were completely locked in, and Friday night was officially on the horizon. Day one was an absolute wrap—and nineteen was already starting to feel like a completely different universe.The transition from a chaotic campus freshman to a girl navigating the upper echelon of university life happened so smoothly I barely registered the shift. Over the next three weeks, The Era Society officially transformed from a midnight blueprint on Chris's bedroom floor into a living, breathing reality. The Student Administration Board had sent the official approval email on Tuesday morning, and Chris, Bianca, and I had celebrated by screaming in the middle of the quad until campus security gave us a warning look. My grades were perfect, my social media feed was a curated aesthetic of espresso blazers and luxury student life, and my relationship with Malik Thompson had solidified into something that felt untouchable. I was officially campus royalty, floating on a cloud of my own making. By Friday evening, I was frantically throwing satin slip dresses, oversized hoodies, and my psychology textbooks into a leather weekend duffel bag. My Uber was already idling downstairs on the gr
The campus fitness center was an absolute ghost town on Sunday mornings. Most students were either sleeping off the sins of Friday and Saturday night or dragging themselves down to the dining hall for greasy hangover food, which meant the mirrored studio room in the back was entirely my personal sanctuary. I took a deep breath, pressing my palms into the purple yoga mat and pushing my hips back into a downward dog. My phone was propped perfectly against my insulated water bottle, the front-facing camera capturing the empty studio behind me. On the digital screen, a completely identical purple mat was spread across the hardwood floor of my childhood living room back home. My mom smoothly transitioned into the same pose, her face perfectly serene despite the distance. Even virtually, doing our traditional Sunday flow together felt like a warm, protective shield against the chaos of campus life. "Alright, let's take a deep breath in," Mom's voice echoed through the speaker, crisp a
Saturday afternoon arrived with a heavy, unbothered silence that my soul desperately needed. The dorm room was entirely mine. Talia hadn't been back since Monday night—she'd packed a weekend bag to go crash at her friend's off-campus house, meaning she was completely oblivious to the Malik drama, the midnight running, and the absolute emotional shredder I'd been through all week. Bianca had a mandatory music ensemble practice that ran all day, and Chris was currently out on a date he've spent three hours getting ready for. I was alone. And honestly? I was leaning entirely into my natural state: unhinged drama. I was sprawled across my bed in my most oversized, ragged graphic tee and grey sweat shorts, my curly hair piled into a chaotic, loose messy bun on top of my head. The blinds were drawn, a family-sized bag of spicy potato chips was balanced on my stomach, and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days was playing on my laptop. I crunched loudly on a chip, pointing a finger at the screen
The blue light of my laptop screen felt like hot needles against my eyes as the clock on the dorm wall ticked past 3:00 AM. For the last fourteen hours, my phone had been a paperweight. No notification banners. No vibrations. Just the mocking, empty expanse of my lock screen. Ever since Malik had walked right past our table at the café, grabbed his coffee, and exited those glass doors without so much as a sideways glance, a suffocating, heavy knot of panic had been tightening in my throat. Did I push him too far? Was a midnight exit really enough to make him erase me? "Kels, honey, stop staring at the digital void. It's bad for your skin barrier," Chris murmured, slumping down onto the edge of my bed. He had traded his sharp daytime look for a pair of silk pajamas, but his laptop was still balanced on his knees. "Look at this font instead. Do we prefer the minimalist serif or the bold modern for The Era Society cover page?" "Minimalist serif," Bianca answered from her desk, her
The pavement of the off-campus strip was freezing under my bare feet, the bitter 1:00 AM air biting straight through my lounge shorts and thin t-shirt. I didn't care. My chest was heaving, my heart hammering a furious, erratic rhythm against my ribs as I hauled my heavy tote bag down the dimly lit sidewalk. I couldn't go back to the dorms like this. I didn't want to see Talia's face, and I didn't want to explain why the glittering, perfect romance had just shattered into a million pieces on a charcoal grey bedroom floor. My mind flashed to a month ago—the night of the retro-neon roller rink. I remembered the exact turn Malik had taken in the AMG when we dropped Chris off at his apartment building. It was only a six-block walk from Malik's penthouse, but by the time I reached the brick facade of the building, my breath was coming in ragged gasps, my toes completely numb. I pressed the buzzer for apartment 4B, my fingers trembling. A long, agonizing thirty seconds passed before
A month flies by at a completely different frequency when you're living inside a campus bubble.For the past four weeks, my life had been a blur of matte-black Mercedes drives, late-night takeout on a charcoal grey comforter, and getting to know the quiet, guarded boy behind the elite athletic facade. I learned that Malik hated tomatoes, that he listened to old-school jazz when he was genuinely stressed, and that he had a habit of biting his lower lip right before he drove the lane. And in return, the entire campus learned one definitive fact.Everyone knew I was Malik Thompson's girl."Kelsey, honey, if you don't stop fidgeting, the eyeliner will detect your anxiety," Chris warned, leaning across my desk with a liquid brush in his hand."I'm not anxious," I insisted, though my fingers were tightly gripping the edge of the vanity stool.For tonight's official pre-season opener, I wasn't just attending; I was representing. I was wearing an oversized Ashcroft basketball jersey with







