The gates of Blackthorn Academy rose before me like the iron jaws of a beast, tall and cold, crowned with thorned vines that twisted across black stone walls. They didn’t look welcoming; they looked hungry. The crest etched into the arch—a blood-red rose wrapped around a dagger—glimmered faintly, as if mocking me for daring to step through.
Around me, expensive cars lined the courtyard. Sleek black sedans, imported models with tinted windows, the kind I’d only ever seen in glossy magazines. Students stepped out of them effortlessly, dripping wealth from their polished shoes to their tailored uniforms. Every boy had an arrogant slouch, every girl a glossy confidence.
And then there was me.
I tightened my grip on my worn leather bag. My blazer was thrifted—clean but not the same shade as theirs. My shoes scuffed, my tie slightly too short. Blackthorn was a dream my mother had prayed me into. A scholarship that promised a “better future,” even if it meant I’d spend my days surrounded by people who would never see me as their equal.
Their laughter was sharp, ringing across the stone courtyard like the clink of crystal glasses. And every so often, I felt eyes on me. Cold, assessing, amused.
She’s the new one.
Scholarship girl.
Poor thing won’t last.
I heard the whispers, but I kept my chin up. If they wanted me to break, they’d have to try harder.
That’s when I felt it.
The weight of eyes—not mocking this time, but heavy, unrelenting. A gaze that pressed against my skin until I froze mid-step. Slowly, almost against my will, I turned my head.
And saw him.
He was leaning against the sleekest car in the lot—a black machine with lines sharp enough to cut. A cigarette burned lazily between his fingers, the smoke curling around his face like it belonged to him.
Tall. Broad shoulders filling his blazer. Shirt unbuttoned just low enough to show a sharp collarbone and a hint of muscle. His tie hung loose, rebellion woven into every careless detail. Dark hair fell over eyes that caught the sunlight and turned it into liquid obsidian.
But it wasn’t his beauty that made my stomach clench. It was the way he looked at me.
Like a predator sizing up prey. Like a king measuring the worth of a trespasser. Like he already owned me, and I was just late in realizing it.
His lips parted, and though his voice was soft, it carried easily through the noise.
“Evelyn Hale.”
My heart jolted. Nobody here should know my name yet.
I blinked, forcing my spine straight. “Do I… know you?”
The corner of his mouth curved upward. Not into a smile. Into something darker. Hungrier.
“Not yet.”
He pushed off the car, flicking his cigarette to the ground without breaking eye contact. The movement was fluid, practiced, like a dance he’d performed too many times. Every step he took toward me sent a cold shiver crawling up my back, even as heat pooled low in my stomach.
My instincts screamed at me to walk away. To run. To not let him close that distance.
But my feet? They stayed rooted.
He stopped only a breath away, his shadow swallowing mine. Close enough that I could see the faint scar cutting through his right brow. Close enough that the faintest hint of something—smoke, spice, and something metallic—drifted into my senses.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said softly, though his voice had weight, like a warning carved in stone. “This academy… it eats girls like you alive.”
My chin jerked up before I could stop it. “Good thing I’m not easy to swallow.”
For the first time, something flickered in his gaze. Amusement. Surprise. Desire.
His head dipped, and his voice dropped low, brushing against my ear like a touch. “You’ll learn, firefly. Everything burns out eventually. Even fire.”
My pulse thudded so loud I was certain he could hear it. Then—just for a split second—his lips parted enough for me to see the sharp glint of teeth. Too sharp. Too long.
My breath caught.
And then the bell rang, shrill and abrupt, shattering the moment. Students surged around us, jostling, laughing, shoving past to get to class. I blinked once—and he was gone.
No footsteps. No fading figure. Just vanished, like smoke dissipating into the air.
But his presence lingered. The burn of his gaze. The echo of his words. The taste of danger clinging to my skin.
I swallowed hard, forcing myself to move again. Pretend like I hadn’t just met someone who didn’t feel human. Pretend like I wasn’t trembling inside from something I couldn’t name.
Still, as I crossed the courtyard, one truth lodged itself deep into me.
Whoever he was, he wasn’t going to leave me alone.
And God help me… part of me didn’t want him to.