Chyell didnât expect anything special on her first day.
New school. New class. New people.
It was just another beginningâquiet, ordinary, forgettable. At least, thatâs what she thought.
She stood outside Class 11A3, fingers lightly gripping the strap of her bag as voices echoed from inside. Laughter. Conversations. The kind of noise that only came from people who already belonged.
She took a small breath. âJust go in.â
The door opened. And everything paused. Thirty pairs of eyes turned toward her at once.
For a moment, the room felt too bright, too still, too aware of her presence.
âAh, you must be the transfer student,â the teacher said, smiling gently. âCome in.â
Chyell nodded and stepped inside, her footsteps soft but somehow louder than they shouldâve been.
âEveryone, this is Chyell. She transferred here from Canada. Please make her feel welcome.â
A few students smiled. Someone waved. Others simply looked and then looked away.
It wasnât cold. But it wasnât warm either.
âChyell, you can sit by the window,â the teacher continued. âNext to Charlie.â
She followed the direction of the teacherâs gazeâAnd she saw him.
He was the only one not looking at her.
While everyone else had turned, he remained still, leaning slightly back in his chair, eyes fixed outside the window as if the world beyond the glass mattered more than anything inside the room.
Sunlight fell across his desk, catching in his hair, softening the edges of his otherwise distant expression.
He didnât move. Didnât react. Didnât even acknowledge her existence.
For some reasonâThat made her notice him more.
Chyell walked toward the empty seat beside him, each step steady despite the unfamiliar weight of everyoneâs attention.
She placed her bag down.
Sat.
Waited.
Nothing.
â⌠Hi,â she said quietly.
No response. She hesitated, then tried again, a little more certain.
âHi.â
Still nothing. Chyell blinked, slightly surprised, before letting out a small breath and turning her attention to the front.
Okay⌠heâs one of those people.
She could handle that. The lesson began. The teacherâs voice filled the room, chalk moving across the board as notes appeared one line at a time. Chyell focused on writing, grounding herself in something familiar.
A few minutes passed.
âYou should ask to change seats.â
The voice was low. Calm. Indifferent. Chyell turned.
Charlie hadnât looked at her. Not even now.
âWhy?â she asked.
A brief pause.
âI donât talk to people.â
It wasnât rude. Just⌠final.
Chyell studied him for a moment. Then, unexpectedly, she smiled.
âThatâs okay,â she said softly. âI talk enough for both of us.â
That made him stop, not fullyâbut just enough.
Slowly, he turned his head. Their eyes met. His gaze was sharp. Quiet. Guarded in a way she couldnât quite understand.
â⌠Youâre annoying,â he said.
Chyell blinked. Then she laughed. Not offended. Not awkward. Just amused.
âWell,â she replied, âyouâre not very nice.â
For a second, something flickered in his expression.
Too fast to name.
Then he turned away again, back to the window, as if the conversation had never happened. But this time, the silence felt different.
Charlie had noticed her the moment she walked in. Before the teacher spoke. Before anyone else paid attention.
He noticed the way she paused at the door, like she was measuring the space before stepping into it.
Not scared. Just careful.
He shouldâve looked away like he always did.
People came. People tried. People left. That was how things worked.
So whyâWhy did he keep noticing her?
The way she wrote neatly, each word was placed with intention.
The way she tucked her hair behind her ear when she focused.
The way her voice soundedâsoft, but not weak.
Too noticeable. Too distracting.
Charlie clicked his pen once, eyes still fixed outside the window.
This is why I donât talk to people.
And yet, when she said, âI talk enough for both of us,â
Something about it stayed. Unwanted. Uninvited. But there.
The bell rang.
Chairs scraped. Voices returned. The room filled with movement again.
Chyell stood, adjusting her bag, glancing around as if trying to figure out where to go next.
Charlie didnât move. He didnât leave. Not immediately.
He told himself it didnât matter, that she was just another person who would eventually stop trying.
They all did. They always did.
But as she walked past his desk, he glanced at her.
Just for a second.
Long enough to notice the way she hesitated again at the door.
Long enough to thinkâShe wonât stay.
And, for the first time in a long while, he found himself wondering what would happen⌠if she did.