***Valentina's POV***
I stared at the glowing screen of my phone until my eyes began to burn.
WELCOME TO WESTBRIDGE, VALENTINA.
My thumb hovered over the delete button, my heart hammering frantically against my ribs. I had spent the last four hours staring at the ceiling, analyzing every possible angle of that photograph. The angle. The lighting. The distance.
"It's just a prank," I told myself, repeating the lie and hoping it'd sound like the truth. It has to be a prank.
If my father had tracked me down, he wouldn't have sent a cryptic text message. Don Rossi didn't play games. He would have simply sent two men in sharp suits to drag me out of my dorm room and throw me into the back of a black SUV.
Some upperclassman probably snapped a random picture of the new girl looking lost. Maybe they got my name from the dorm registry. It was creepy, yes, but it was normal creepy. Not mafia creepy.
I locked my phone and shoved it under my pillow. I was not going to let paranoia ruin my first full day of freedom.
"Are you going to stare at your mattress all morning, or are you going to get up and tell me everything about your life?" I jumped, startled by the voice. My roommate, Chloe, was sitting cross-legged on her bed, perfectly applying a coat of mascara. She had bouncy blonde hair, a bright, friendly smile, and a personality that filled the tiny dorm room to the brim.
"Sorry," I muttered, sitting up and rubbing my eyes. "Just trying to wake up."
Chloe laughed, tossing her makeup bag onto her desk. "Well, wake up faster. I need details. Where are you from? What's your major? And most importantly, how did you manage to absolutely publicly destroy Damon Blackwood on your first day without immediately combusting?"
I couldn't help but smile slightly. Chloe was funny, a little nosy, and radiating a harmless, bubbly energy that puts me at ease. After a lifetime of being surrounded by guarded, dangerous people, her open book personality was refreshing.
"I'm from a boring town you've never heard of," I lied smoothly, falling into my practiced cover story. "I'm undeclared. And Damon Blackwood is just an arrogant jerk who doesn't know how to drive."
"He's a gorgeous, untouchable god," Chloe corrected, leaning forward with a conspiratorial whisper. "But I respect the rebellion. Seriously, you're already a campus legend. Let's go get coffee. We're officially best friends now."
I let out a genuine laugh. For a moment, the knot of anxiety in my stomach loosened. Maybe I really could do this. Maybe I could just be normal. Two hours later, I walked into the Westbridge athletic complex, the familiar scent of floor wax and clean sweat hitting my senses.
Volleyball tryouts were already underway. The massive gymnasium echoed with the squeak of rubber soles on hardwood and the smacks of volleyballs hitting the floor. I strapped on my knee pads, tied my dark hair into a tight ponytail, and stepped onto the court.
The moment my hands touched the ball, the rest of the world disappeared. There were no anonymous text messages here. There was no mafia, no father, no fear. There was only the net, the ball, and the kill.
I was in my element. I moved fluidly, diving for impossible digs and setting up plays with ease. When it was my turn to hit, I leaped into the air, feeling the familiar weightless suspension before driving the heel of my palm into the ball.
The gym went silent for a split second.
Coach Miller, a stern-looking woman with a clipboard, lowered her whistle. She looked at me, then looked at the spot on the floor where the ball had hit. "Rossi," she called out, her voice booming across the gym. "You're starting outside the hitter. Go get your practice gear." A rush of triumph washed over me. The other girls on the court clapped, some of them giving me impressed smiles. For the first time all day, things were actually going my way. I belonged here.
That feeling lasted exactly ten minutes.
I walked out of the gymnasium, a towel draped around my neck, riding the high of making the team. The path back to the dorms cut directly alongside the massive ice of the university hockey rink.
The men's hockey team was running drills. And standing right by the sideline fence, casually holding a hockey puck, was the bane of my existence.
Damon Blackwood.
He was wearing a tight gray practice shirt that clung to his athletic frame, a sheen of sweat making his dark hair stick to his forehead. He kicked the puck up, sliding on the ice to hit a goal.
Then, he turned his head. His dark eyes locked onto mine through the glass fence. From the look on his face, I could tell he recognized me instantly. He paused, a slow, wicked smirk spreading across his face. He walked right up to the fence.
"Well, if it isn't the campus terror," Damon called out, his voice carrying easily over the
chatter of the other athletes.
A few of his teammates stopped their drills, jogging over to see what their captain was
looking at. A group of girls from my volleyball team, walking a few paces behind me, stopped in their tracks.
I didn't back down. I walked closer to the fence, matching his arrogant stare. "Well, if it isn't the guy who compensates for his bad driving with daddy's money."
Damon's smirk faltered for a fraction of a second, his eyes flashing with a gleam I couldn't decipher. "You've got a sharp tongue, Rossi. You should be careful. It might get you in trouble around here."
"I'm not the one who needs to be careful, Blackwood," I fired back smoothly, crossing my arms over my chest. "I suggest you watch your back. Or at least learn how to steer." His teammates let out a collective "Ooh," laughing and shoving each other. The volleyball girls behind me started snickering.
Damon stepped even closer to the barrier separating us. The banter was gone, replaced by a simmering tension that made my skin prickle.
"Game on, freshman," he murmured, his voice dropping to a register meant only for me.
"You don't want to play with me," I whispered back, before turning on my heel and walking away, leaving him staring at my back.
The adrenaline from my clash with Damon carried me all the way back to North Hall. I felt invincible. I felt like a normal college girl with a normal college nemesis.
But the universe had a cruel way of reminding me exactly who I was. When I reached the third floor and walked down the quiet hallway, I stopped dead in my tracks.
Sitting perfectly centered on the welcome mat outside my dorm room door was a small, unmarked brown cardboard package. There was no postage. No return address. No shipping label. Someone had physically carried it up the stairs and placed it here.
My breath caught in my throat. I glanced quickly down the empty hallway. But I saw no one. I scooped the box up, hurried inside, and locked the door behind me. Chloe was still at her afternoon lecture so the room was dead silent.
With trembling fingers, I tore the tape off the box. Inside sat a cheap, black burner phone.
Beneath it was a single, crisp white index card with a message written in bold black marker.
YOU CAN'T RUN FROM WHO YOU ARE.
My stomach sank, a cold dread replacing the warmth in my veins. Suddenly, the silence of the room was shattered by a ring. The burner phone in the box lit up, vibrating aggressively against the cardboard.
I stared at it like it was a live explosive. My hand shook as I reached down, grabbed the
plastic device, and pressed the green accept button. I slowly brought it to my ear.
"Hello?" I whispered, my voice barely working. There was nothing but the hollow, crackling sound of static echoing over the phone. "Who is this?" I demanded, trying to force the steel back into my voice. Still nothing. Only the faint sound of deep breathing on the other end of the line. Then, with a sharp click, the call disconnected.
---
Down in the courtyard below North Hall, hidden in the shadows of a massive oak tree, a figure stood perfectly still. The figure raised a camera with a long-range telephoto lens, aiming it upward at the third-floor window. Through the glass, Valentina Rossi was visible, standing in the center of her dorm room, staring in horror at the black burner phone pressed to her ear.
The figure lowered the camera and pulled out a smartphone, attaching the high-resolution photograph to a new message.
'Target confirmed.'
The figure slipped the phone back into their pocket, stepped out of the shadows, and
blended seamlessly into the passing crowd of oblivious college students.