Raven hated high school cliches — but Jaxon seemed to make them... interesting. He was infuriatingly charming, with that careless grin and those piercing eyes that always seemed to catch her off guard.
"Hey, you," he called one morning as she slipped passed him in the hallway.
"Me? Why me?" Raven raised an eyebrow, trying to hide the flutter in her chest.
"Because," he said, leaning causally against the lockers, "you always look like you're planning a secret escape, And I like the challenge."
She rolled her eyes but felt herself smiling anyway. "A challenge, huh? You don't even know me."
"Yet," he said, and that one word carried a weight she couldn't ignore.
Over the next few weeks, their friendship became a ritual. Lunches spent under the giant oak tree behind the gym, whispered conversations during study hall, small dares and bets that ended in laughter echoing down the empty corridors.
One raining afternoon, Raven found Jaxon waiting at her locker. He was soaked, hair plastered to his forehead, and the corners of his lips tugged into that impossible grin.
"Need a ride?" he asks, knowing she doesn't own a car.
"Depends." she replied.
"On what?" he asks.
"On if you can handle a passenger who's stubborn, sarcastic, and refuses to wear a helmet properly."
He laughed, brushing the water from his eyes. "I like a little danger."
They shared a motorcycle ride that day — just around the outskirts of town, wind whipping past them, hearts racing, and for a moment, it was just them. No clubs, no legacies, no secrets.
Evenings brought texts that lasted hours, conversations that revealed small truths. Jaxon liked classic rock and secretly wrote poetry. Raven could recite obscure movie quotes and had a knack for sketching motorcycles that looked like they belonged in a magazine.
One night, Raven sent a text that she almost regretted:
"I feel like I can actually breathe when I'm with you."
His reply came almost instantly:
"Good. Because I don't plan on letting you go anytime soon."
But the pull of their worlds lingered like a shadow. Small hints — the way Raven flinched at the sound of a motorcycle engine at night, the way Jaxon's phone buzzed with coded messages he never explained—were dismissed as coincidences. Neither wanted to think too hard about the what-ifs.
And neither of them noticed the subtle rise of danger-two worlds inching closer, unaware that the threads of date were tightening around them.