scholarship girl
The cab smelled like pine air freshener and old leather. Cindy Bennett kept the window cracked despite the September cold. She needed the air. She needed something.
Outside, Manhattan moved the way it always did — without waiting for anyone. A guy on a bike cut between two yellow cabs. A woman in heels ate a bagel walking. The light changed and fifty people stepped off the curb at once, and none of them looked up.
Cindy looked up. She always looked up.
"Harrington University," the driver said, like he was announcing something.
Through the window, the campus rose up behind iron gates — old stone, ivy that had probably been growing since before her mother was born, a clock tower that actually worked. A banner stretched across the entrance: WELCOME CLASS OF 2027.
She wasn't class of 2027. She was a transfer, a sophomore slotting into a machine that had been running fine without her for a year. One scholarship. One suitcase. One plan.
Don't mess it up.
She paid the driver and pulled her own suitcase out before he could offer. Old habit.
Her room was on the fourth floor of Caldwell Hall — a single, she'd specifically requested, because she did not have the bandwidth for a roommate situation. The request had been denied. Someone named Maya Osei had already claimed the bed by the window, hung string lights above it, and arranged an alarming number of throw pillows.
Maya was sitting cross-legged on said bed, eating plantain chips, watching something on her laptop, when Cindy pushed the door open. She looked up. Took in the suitcase, the expression, the sweat from hauling everything up four flights because the elevator was broken.
"Okay," Maya said. "You're going to want one of these." She held out the bag.
Cindy stood in the doorway a second. Then she dropped her bag, walked over, and took a chip.
"Maya."
"Cindy."
"You took the window bed."
"I got here first." Maya smiled, completely unrepentant. "But I'll let you use it on weekends."
Cindy almost smiled. Almost.
She started unpacking. Maya kept watching her show, asking questions between chips.
"Where are you from?"
"Queens."
"Major?"
"Pre-law."
"Pre-med." Maya pointed at herself. "We're going to be absolutely miserable together. Where'd you transfer from?"
"Columbia Community."
Maya looked up. "Okay. Serious." She said it like a compliment.
"Yeah."
It was the easiest conversation Cindy had had in months. Maybe longer.
She didn't examine that too closely.
Orientation was in the main hall at two. Cindy got there seven minutes early, which apparently made her the first student in the room, just ahead of a cluster of freshmen who all seemed to know each other already and spoke at a volume she found unreasonable.
She found a seat near the aisle, third row, pulled out the folder they'd mailed her in August, and read through it for the third time. Pre-law seminar started Thursday. Office hours posted. Academic competition board announced end of semester. Scholarship renewal required a 3.8 GPA.
3.8. She could do that in her sleep.
She was highlighting the scholarship clause for the second time when she heard it.
Not a sound, exactly. More like a shift — the kind that happens when a room quietly reorients itself around a person without anyone meaning to.
She looked up.
He came through the side door like he'd built the building himself. Tall, genuinely tall, dark hair a little too long, the kind of jaw that looked put there on purpose. Grey sweater, dark jeans, the expression of someone who had never in his life been seven minutes early to anything.
Two guys followed him in, laughing at something he was already saying. He hadn't looked at anyone else in the room yet.
He didn't need to.
"That's William Cole." The girl who'd sat down next to Cindy had box braids and a lanyard already heavy with keycards. "Junior. Pre-law. His dad has a building named after him here. The Cole Business Center — the glass spaceship one."
"I know the one."
"His girlfriend — ex, I think — is Zara Voss. Pre-law too. Basically runs the social scene." A pause. "I'm Priya."
"Cindy."
Priya nodded toward the front, where William had dropped into a seat like he owned it, legs stretched out, still talking. "Why are you looking at him like that?"
"I'm not looking at him."
"You're looking at him like he owes you money."
Cindy turned back to her folder. "I just don't like people who take up that much space."
Priya laughed. "Girl. This is going to be a good year."
It happened on the way out.
Orientation ended and the room poured into the hallway at once. Cindy moved with the crowd, folder under her arm, already sorting the rest of her afternoon — unpack properly, buy a power strip, email Professor Whitman — when the crowd bottlenecked at the double doors and she got shoved sideways into someone coming the other way.
Her folder hit the floor. Papers everywhere.
"Sorry —" she started, already crouching.
"Watch where —" He stopped.
She looked up.
Of course.
William Cole stood over her, his friends a half-step behind, wearing the look people get when they've started saying something irritated and thought better of it mid-sentence. Up close he was even more annoyingly put together. Cedar, and something expensive she didn't have a name for.
He crouched and picked up two of her papers, held them out.
"Thanks." She didn't mean it warmly.
He looked at her for a second — not rude, just trying to place her and failing. "You're new."
"Transferred," she said. "Sophomore."
"Pre-law?" He'd glanced at the folder.
"Yes."
Something crossed his face, quick, gone before she could read it. "Good luck with Whitman," he said. "He doesn't curve."
He straightened up and walked past her. His friends followed.