The scandal spread across Crestwood overnight.
By morning, everyone seemed to know. The whispers started softly in the hallways, barely audible at first, then quickly escalated into full conversations.
Lockers slammed, voices hushed, and heads turned whenever Noah Reyes or Ethan Vale passed by.
The news traveled faster than wildfire, carried by screenshots and rumors that leapt from phone to phone, each retelling a little more exaggerated than the last.
Students scrolled frantically through their social feeds, reading and sharing the posts. Noah and Ethan were trending on every campus page. Comments ranged from shocked to mocking, supportive to cruel, each one feeding the storm. It was everywhere at once.
In classrooms, students exchanged glances, some trying to act normal, others unable to hide the smirks or frowns that betrayed their curiosity.
Ethan sat outside the law building, hunched over his phone. His fingers swiped automatically, scrolling through the endless notifications that kept flooding in. Every new message seemed louder than the last, piling on a pressure he couldn’t escape.
Support messages offered encouragement, but hate messages cut sharper than knives. Memes of every possible kind circulated, mocking, exaggerating, and twisting the truth. Rumors multiplied faster than he could read them.
Across campus, Noah was facing his own private disaster. He had woken to the sound of his phone ringing nonstop, each call and message a reminder that there was no hiding from the consequences now. His father had called again that morning. The conversation was brief, tense, and brutal.
“I didn’t raise you like this,” his father said, his voice low and sharp.
Noah gripped the phone tighter, the plastic edges pressing into his palm.
“I’m not lying anymore,” he said, trying to keep his own voice steady, trying to maintain some sense of control.
“Then don’t bother coming home,” his father replied, and the line went dead. The click at the end sounded heavier than any shout, leaving Noah sitting in stunned silence afterward.
He had expected anger, but this felt like something else entirely. Rejection, disappointment, finality—it wrapped around him like a cold, heavy coat he couldn’t shrug off.
But even that call would not be the worst. Later, as Noah was leaving campus, his phone rang again.
It was his mother.
Her voice trembled the moment he answered.
“Noah…” she said, and the simple utterance of his name carried more fear than any words he had heard in years.
“What’s wrong?” His voice caught slightly.
There was a pause that stretched longer than he wanted. And then she said the words that made his chest constrict, that made everything else—the scandal, the rumors, the rage of social media—fade into nothing.
“Your father collapsed.”
Noah froze, the words landing on him like stones.
“What?” he managed to gasp.
“The doctors think it’s a heart attack,” she whispered, and the world tilted on its axis, the sky suddenly darker and heavier around him.
“I’m coming,” Noah said immediately, urgency sharpening every syllable. Without another thought, he grabbed his keys and jumped into his car, heart hammering, mind a chaotic blur of fear and guilt and anger at the timing.
Rain began to fall lightly, droplets blurring the windshield, making the world outside a smear of gray and green and faint streetlights.
His phone buzzed relentlessly beside him, a constant reminder that nothing could wait. Messages from teammates.
Messages from Ethan. Messages from strangers, from people he didn’t even know, all reacting to the scandal that had erupted overnight.
Notifications from news pages spread the story further, every headline a fresh blow, every alert a new wave of stress.
Then, another message appeared, this time from an unknown number:
Look what you’ve done to your family.
Noah’s grip on the steering wheel tightened, knuckles white. His pulse raced. Another notification came almost immediately, this one from Ethan:
Please call me.
And then another, again from an unknown number:
You should have stayed quiet.
The messages scrolled one after the other, piling up like rocks on his chest. Noah glanced down at the phone for just a second, long enough to read a single threatening line, and that was all it took.
Suddenly, headlights appeared in front of him, bright and blinding on the wet asphalt. Panic flared. The horn blared, cutting through the tension and the rain. Tires screeched as Noah jerked the wheel, heart leaping into his throat.
Then—the impact.
Metal twisted violently. The sound was deafening, a grinding, tearing cacophony that made him wince and close his eyes instinctively. Glass shattered across the pavement in tiny, glinting shards, scattering like diamonds across the gray wet road. For a moment, everything went silent except for the pounding of his own heart.
The rain continued to fall steadily, drumming against the crumpled metal of the car and splashing around the wreckage. Noah’s phone slid out of the car door, bouncing once, twice, and landing on the wet road. The screen cracked but still lit up, the glow harsh against the dark, rainy night.
Ethan’s name flashed across it.
Incoming call.
But Noah wasn’t there to answer.