Alice grew up in a small house filled with noise, love, and unfinished dreams. Her family wasn’t rich—not in money, at least—but it was whole. Her father worked long hours to keep the lights on, and her mother knew how to stretch little into enough. Their life was modest, sometimes uncertain, but it was honest. And in that honesty, Alice learned gratitude, discipline, and quiet strength.
She learned early how to work for what she wanted.
School was her escape.
Alice attended the same private school as Patricia, a place filled with polished shoes, expensive bags, and conversations about holidays abroad. The only reason Alice was there was because she had earned a scholarship—one she guarded fiercely. Every grade mattered. Every mistake felt heavier than it should. She walked the school halls knowing she didn’t quite belong, yet refusing to let anyone see how hard she was trying to stay.
Patricia never made her feel small.
They had been friends since childhood, inseparable long before uniforms and classrooms shaped their days. Patricia knew Alice’s struggles without being told, and Alice understood Patricia’s silences without questions. Their bond was built on years of shared laughter, secrets whispered under blankets, and promises made without fear.
Patricia’s life had changed after her father died.
The loss left a hollow space in her home, one that grief couldn’t fully fill. But time moved on, as it always does. Patricia’s mother remarried—a wealthy man who brought comfort, security, and a different kind of life with him. Their house grew larger. Their world grew softer. Things became easier in ways Alice had never known.
Yet Patricia remained the same with her.
She still dragged Alice home after school. Still shared everything. Still treated her like family.
Alice noticed the difference, though.
She saw it in the way Patricia spoke about money without worry, in the ease with which doors opened for her now. And sometimes, late at night, Alice wondered how two girls who started from almost the same place could end up standing on such different ground.
Still, Alice was grateful.
Her parents were alive, present, and loving. They cheered her scholarship, reminded her of who she was, and believed in her even when she doubted herself. That belief kept her steady.
At that point in her life, Alice thought she understood struggle and balance. She believed love was simple, loyalty unbreakable, and friendship permanent.
She didn’t yet know that stepping into Patricia’s world more fully would change everything.
She didn’t know that comfort could be tempting, that lines could blur, or that loving the wrong person could cost her more than she was prepared to give.
For now, Alice was just a girl with dreams bigger than her circumstances, standing between two worlds—and unaware that her heart was already walking toward danger.