Thankfully, the rest of my day goes by without another class with Jaxon. I donât see him once I get back from having lunch at my apartment, or on my way to the admin offices. Itâs a long shot, but I am really hoping to switch into a different Algebra 111 class.
As I round the corner towards admissions, I run into a wall made of solid muscle.
âEasy there, turbo.â Looking up, I see a familiar face: Carter Hayes, quarterback for the PCU football team and my occasional escape from reality. Weâve hooked up a few times, nothing serious. He knew the score: no strings, no expectations. After a while, our physical connection fizzled into more of an easy friendship, giving me a much needed shoulder to lean on.
I plaster on a smile, grateful for the distraction. âSorry about that. I was in my own little world.â
He grins, his blue eyes twinkling. âNo worries. Iâm always happy to catch you.â
It would be so easy to lose myself in Carter, just like always, to use him as a shield against the emotions seeing Jaxon stirs up. Surely not a healthy coping mechanism, but Iâm in survival mode at this point.
âWhat brings you to this neck of the woods?â I ask, leaning against the wall.
Carter shrugs, his broad shoulders stretching his t-shirt in all the right ways. I never said he wasnât easy on the eyes. His sandy blond hair and blue eyes scream trouble. âJust turning in some paperwork for the athletic department. You?â
âTrying to switch classes,â I admit. âTurns out, Algebra 111 isnât my jam. Again.â
âMathâs never been my strong suit either.â He chuckles, running a hand through his hair. âThereâs a party at the Sigma house tonight. You should come. You know, blow off some steam.â
I bite my lip, considering. Having a few drinks and losing myself for a bit may be exactly what the doctor ordered after todayâs events. But what if Jaxon is there too?
âMaybe,â I say noncommittally. âIâll see how Iâm feeling later.â
Carter leans in closer, his voice dropping low. âCome on, Maddy. Itâll be fun. Plus, I missed you over the summer.â
âOkay,â I find myself saying. âIâll be there.â
Carterâs grin widens. âGreat. Iâll see you tonight then.â
âHey,â I call, stopping him before he can get too far. âWhy didnât you say anything about the new football transfer?â
His brow furrows in confusion. âMontgomery? He entered the transfer portal at the literal last second. Iâm still shocked we got him. I think we found out a day or so before camp started. Why?â
âJust curious. Iâll see you tonight.â I wave him off, more confused now than when I asked in the first place.
As I watch him walk away, I canât help but wonder what pulled Jaxon here. The last Iâd heard, he was tearing up the field at Michigan State, projected to be a first-round draft pick this year. Why would he risk that to come to PCU, a school with a decent football program but nowhere near the national spotlight of MSU? It doesnât make any sense, unlessâ¦
No. I shut that thought down before it can fully form. Thereâs no way heâd transfer schools to be closer to me, not after how things ended between us, after I walked away without a proper goodbye. I mean, shit, I didnât even tell him I wasnât going, and I definitely havenât replied to any of his texts over the last three years.
Shaking off the guilt, I push through the doors to the administration office, only to find a line stretching nearly to the door. Great. Just what I needâmore time alone with my thoughts.
I take my place at the end of the line, pulling out my phone to keep listening to my audiobook, anything to distract myself from the memory of Jaxonâs eyes across the classroom. The way heâd looked at meâit was like heâd been searching for me, like finding me was the only thing that mattered.
An hour later, I walk out of the administration building, frustration simmering under my skin. No luck with the class transferâapparently, there are no openings in any other sections of Algebra 111. Iâm stuck with Jaxon Montgomery three days a week for the entire semester.
By the time I make it back to my apartment, Iâm exhausted, both physically and emotionally. I drop my bag by the door and collapse on the couch, pressing the heels of my hands against my eyes.
âSo,â Lyla prompts, dropping down beside me and tucking her feet under her. âWhat happened? Did you get to switch classes?â
I shake my head, taking another sip. âNope. Iâm officially stuck.â
âWith a hot football player from your past?â She raises an eyebrow, her lips curving into a knowing smile. âSuch a hardship.â
âShut up,â I mutter, but thereâs no heat behind it. âItâs more complicated than that.â
âMost things worth having are,â she says with a shrug, reaching to tuck a strand of hair behind my ear in a surprisingly tender gesture. âYou want to talk about it?â
For a split second, I consider telling her everything I left out before. How he was the only guy I ever had real feelings for. How I applied to a college I didnât even want to go to, just to tag along with my best friend. How I was humiliated when I got the letter saying I hadnât been accepted to Michigan State, so instead, I stayed in Bella Vista to attend community college before coming to PCU, breaking my own heart in the process.
But the words stick in my throat. Even now, years later, the memory of that night still stings, too vulnerable of a thought to share.
âNot really,â I say instead. âBut I could use a distraction. Carter invited me to a party at Sigma tonight. You in?â
Lylaâs eyes light up. âHell yes. Iâm in, as long as you donât bailâthough Iâm not sure a party with your ex-booty-call-turned-friend is really a âdistractionâ from your problems.â
I roll my eyes. âCarter isnât a problem. Heâs easy. Uncomplicated.â
âIf you say so,â she says, clearly unconvinced. âBut if weâre going out, you need to shower. You smell like anxiety and desperation.â
I flip her off, but thereâs a smile playing on my lips. This is what I need right nowâLylaâs particular brand of brutal honesty mixed with genuine care. She might be the only person on campus who can pull me out of my own head.
I step out of the shower later that evening, the steam slowly dissipating as I wrap myself in a towel and head to my dresser. I catch my reflection in the mirror, my eyes instantly going to the scars around my left shoulder and collarbone, and suddenly, Iâm no longer standing in my bathroom.
The stench of whiskey fills the car, thick and suffocating. It clings to my clothes, burns my nose, makes my stomach churn.
âDad, slow down.â My voice is tight, barely above a whisper, but it cuts through the tense air like a knife.
He ignores me, gripping the wheel too tight, knuckles white in the glow of the dashboard. The engine growls as he presses the gas harder, sending us flying down the winding back road.
I press myself against the passenger door, fingers digging into the armrest. I shouldâve known better than to get in the car with him. I shouldâve just let him scream at me from the driveway like all the other times.
âSelfish,â he mutters, slurring the word, his grip tightening. âYou think youâre better than me? Just like your mother.â
I squeeze my eyes shut. Donât engage. Donât make it worse.
The tires screech as he swerves, barely correcting the wheel in time. My heart lurches into my throat. âDad, pleaseâ ââ
He slams a fist against the dashboard, making me jump. âYou donât tell me what to do, girl.â
The road blurs past us, dark and endless, the headlights barely cutting through the night. We shouldnât be out here. Not like this. Not when heâs like this.
But he wouldnât let me leave.
I told him I was going to Jaxonâs, that I wasnât waiting around for him to start yelling at ghosts again.
He grabbed my wrist and dragged me toward the car, saying if I wanted to leave so badly, fine. Heâd drive.
I shouldâve fought harder, shouldâve run.
The speedometer creeps past 80.
âDad, stop!â My voice cracks. I reach for the wheel, desperate, but he jerks it away.
âGet your hands off!â His words are thick, mangled. The car sways violently as he swats my arm away, his attention off the road for one secondâ â
One second too long.
The headlights catch movement. A signâsharp curve ahead.
Everything slows.
He sees it too late.
The tires scream as he wrenches the wheel. The car skids, fishtailsâmy seatbelt locks against my chest.
I throw my hands up, bracingâ â
Impact.
Metal shrieks as the world flips sideways. My head slams against the window. My breath rips from my lungs as gravity twists, tangles, rips me loose. Glass shatters. Pain erupts everywhere at once.
We hit something hard. Everything stops.
Silence.
I canât move, canât breathe. My head throbs, my vision swims. Smoke curls through the wreckage. A distant ringing fills my ears. I gasp, sucking in air, lungs burning. Dad.
I turn my headâpain lashes through me. My left side feels as if itâs on fire. My hand trembles as I reach out.
Heâs slumped over the wheel, unmoving.
âDad?â My voice is barely there.
No response.
A gasp leaves me, and I grab the counter hard, almost to the point of pain, to bring me out of the memory of the night I lost my father to the bottle, for good. My glance drops to the faded photographs of Jaxon and me, memories still clinging to the surface like desperate reminders of a past I canât fully escape.
There we areâsmiling, carefree, a decade younger, and a world away from the guarded, broken person I am now. The images spark an internal battle: a part of me longs to let someone in, to believe that maybe Iâm worthy of happiness and love, yet another part recoils in terror, convinced I could never truly have it.
I start pulling out an outfit for tonightâs party, my hands touching one hanger after another. Nothing in my closet is speaking to me, so I settle on my trusty pair of skinny jeans and an oversized shirt I took some scissors to when I was bored one evening. Itâs basic but sexy, showing off my body in all the right places but covering enough so I donât feel self-conscious about my scars from the accident.
Since working out has been the most helpful thing for my mental health, Iâve been hyper fixated on it for the last couple of years. Now, I have the body high school me could only dream about.
As I finish getting ready, I hear a knock on my bedroom door. Itâs Lyla, right on time, as usual.
âHey, girl. You ready?â she calls out.
âJust a sec!â I yell back, hastily applying some mascara and lip gloss.
I open the door to find Lyla looking stunning in a tight red dress and chunky combat boots. She gives me a once-over and grins. âDamn, bitch. Youâre gonna turn some heads tonight.â
I roll my eyes. âYeah, right. Letâs just go and get this over with.â
âNot with that attitude,â she scolds, stepping into my room and closing the door behind her. âYou look hot as hell, but you need to at least pretend you want to be there.â
âI donât want to be there,â I remind her. âIâm only going because I need a distraction, a good moment of disassociation.â
Lyla snorts, leaning against my dresser. âI thought thatâs what your book boyfriends were for?â I narrow my eyes, and she sighs, grabbing my favorite body mist before spritzing herself down. âLook, I get seeing Jaxon today threw you for a loop, but this could be a good thing, you know? Maybe itâs time you actually deal with whatever happened between you two instead of burying it.â
I shoot her a look. âI thought you were my friend, not my therapist.â
âIâm both,â she says, unphased. âPlus, Iâm your buffer tonight, so be nice to me.â
Despite myself, a smile tugs at my lips. Lylaâs always had a way of piercing through my defenses without making me feel exposed. Itâs why weâve stayed roommates for so longâshe pushes me when I need it, but she also knows when to back off.
âFine,â I concede. âBut if heâs there tonight, promise me you wonât try to play matchmaker.â
Lyla holds up her hand, three fingers raised in a mock salute. âScoutâs honor.â
âYou were never a Scout.â
âSemantics.â She waves dismissively before linking her arm through mine. âNow, letâs go get drunk so you forget about your newly complicated love life for a few hours.â
If I hadnât brought up the party in the first place, Iâd be curled up on the couch in my sweats, binge-watching some comfort show for the hundredth time. Maybe Iâd be buried under a blanket with a book, pretending like my mind isnât racing with thoughts I have no business thinking.
Thoughts about him.
I shove aside the idea before it can take root, before Iâm reminded how much easier it was when I could convince myself I didnât care.
Tonight is supposed to be a distraction, a few hours of noise and bodies and forced smiles. A night to stand next to Lyla, nodding along as she flirts, pretending like I donât feel like an imposter in my own skin.
But even as we step out the door, even as I steel myself for the chaos ahead, I already knowâ â
Thereâs only one set of brown eyes Iâll be looking for in that crowd.
And I hate myself for it.