Elle Dawson had never seen a school as glossy and soulless as North Ford Senior High. The entrance looked like it belonged to a tech firm, not a school—a wide glass facade, a digital announcement board that blinked WELCOME BACK, ROYALS, and a bronze cougar statue in the front courtyard, its jaws frozen in mid-roar.
She tugged at her secondhand hoodie and stepped into the building.
It was her first day. Her third school in two years.
As Elle walked past students in designer sneakers and polished nails, she felt the stares immediately. Not friendly. Not curious. Just... calculated. Like she didn’t belong. Like she was already labeled.
She kept her head down and found her way to the main office.
"Elle Dawson?" the secretary said without looking up. "Here’s your schedule. Locker number 47, second floor. Gym and basketball tryouts are after school. You’re signed up."
Elle blinked. "I didn’t—"
"Coach Putnam signed you up. She said you checked the interest box on your application."
Elle had checked it, hoping it would help her get in. She didn’t expect anyone to actually pick her.
“Right,” Elle mumbled. “Thanks.”
---
The locker hallway on the second floor was too quiet. Almost sterile. As she walked past rows of chrome-finished lockers, a chill tickled her spine. Students nearby whispered and giggled behind their hands, but no one greeted her.
She found Locker 47 at the very end of the row, under a flickering light.
The lock was stiff, like it hadn’t been used in years.
Inside, it was mostly empty. Except for one thing: a tiny sticker on the inner door, faded with time. It read:
“Speak only when they won’t.”
– D.W.
Elle’s stomach fluttered. D.W.?
She brushed her fingers over the letters. They felt... personal.
---
By lunch, she was ready to crawl into her locker and stay there. The cafeteria was a buzz of noise and laughter, none of which included her.
She stood in line clutching a tray of soggy fries and apple slices. Every table seemed full—of people who already had their groups, their inside jokes, their thousand-dollar jackets.
She spotted the basketball girls immediately. They sat at the back table—Savannah Blake, with her blinding smile and sharper tongue; Tinsley, looking down at her phone like she ruled a kingdom; and Hailey, laughing too loudly, her laugh more like a bark.
Elle knew better than to sit near them.
So she wandered to the corner table—empty, isolated, safe.
She sat. She chewed quietly. She avoided eye contact.
Then, someone sat across from her.
A girl. Pale as snow. White hair like clouds. Soft gray eyes that stared but didn’t judge. Lips the color of rose petals. She wore the school’s uniform, but it looked... older, like the cut was slightly outdated.
"Hi," the girl said softly.
Elle blinked. "Uh... hey."
"I’m Dora."
There was something about her voice. Gentle. Like a melody under water.
"You’re the first person who’s talked to me today," Elle admitted.
Dora smiled faintly. “I’m used to sitting alone too.”
They ate quietly, but it was the good kind of quiet. The kind that didn’t feel like judgment.
“People here... they act like they’re golden, but they’re rotten underneath,” Dora murmured, eyes scanning the cafeteria.
Elle followed her gaze to Savannah and the basketball clique. They were all laughing about something. Hailey was pointing at a girl who’d dropped her tray. Everyone was watching. No one helped.
"I’ve noticed," Elle said.
“You don’t have to let them shrink you.”
Elle scoffed. “That’s easy to say. I’m invisible here. Unless they need someone to mock.”
Dora leaned forward. “Then let them see you on your terms.”
Elle looked up. There was something about Dora’s eyes. Soft, but sharp, like they saw everything.
She wanted to say more—but when she looked again, Dora was gone.
Like... completely gone.
No tray. No sound of footsteps. Just gone.
---
Later that day, at basketball tryouts, the girls treated Elle like a speck of lint on their jerseys.
"Careful, Elle," Savannah called sweetly. "Don’t trip on your dollar store shoes."
The others laughed.
Elle clenched her fists. She wasn’t a bad player, but every pass thrown her way was too short or too long. On purpose.
And every time she glanced at the bleachers—she saw Dora.
Just sitting.
Watching.
Alone.
Elle almost smiled. At least someone was on her side.
---
That night, in bed, Elle replayed it all.
The way Dora had appeared and disappeared.
The sticker in the locker.
The way her words stuck like whispers in her mind.
She opened her phone. No mention of a Dora Wynn in the school directory. No social media accounts either. Not on Faceframe. Not on FlickChat. Not anywhere.
She didn’t exist.
But she had.
Right?
Elle closed her eyes.
“Speak only when they won’t.”
What did that even mean?
And why did it feel like everything was just beginning?
---