“Sometimes, the smallest moments—the ones you don’t even notice—are the ones that change everything.”
The late-summer sun hung over Eastbridge University, washing the campus in a soft gold glow. Students hurried across the quad, their laughter echoing between glass buildings and ivy-covered walls.
It was move-in day, and the air buzzed with excitement, gossip, and the scent of fresh grass.
Among the crowd, Aleeyah Carter walked calmly, dragging a silver suitcase behind her. While others fussed over selfies and schedules, she moved with quiet confidence—unbothered, her chin slightly raised, her dark curls bouncing with every step.
To her, Eastbridge wasn’t about popularity or parties. It was about a new beginning—a place where no one knew her name, her past, or the expectations she’d left behind.
---
Her dorm room was on the third floor of Maple Hall. When she opened the door, she was met with a burst of energy.
“Oh my gosh! You must be my roommate!” The voice belonged to a petite girl in an oversized pink hoodie, hair in a messy bun, eyes sparkling like she’d just had three cups of coffee.
“Uh… yeah,” Aleeyah said with a small smile. “Aleeyah.”
“Tessa!” The girl rushed forward to hug her. “Tessa Rivera. Welcome to Eastbridge! You’re going to love it here—unless you hate fun, coffee, or the basketball team.”
Aleeyah chuckled, setting her suitcase by the bed. “I’ll survive without the basketball team, I think.”
Tessa gasped. “Oh no, no, no. You can’t say that! You haven’t met Jaxon Miller yet.”
Aleeyah raised an eyebrow. “Who?”
Tessa froze, staring like Aleeyah had just said she’d never heard of Beyoncé. “Jaxon Miller. Captain of the Eastbridge Falcons. Six-four, broad shoulders, ridiculously perfect smile—basically campus royalty. Every girl here drools when he walks by.”
Aleeyah smirked. “That sounds… unsanitary.”
Tessa burst into laughter. “You’re funny! I like you already.”
---
An hour later they’d unpacked, and Tessa had filled every silence with chatter about who dated who, where to get the best lattes, and the upcoming basketball season. Aleeyah mostly listened.
It wasn’t that she didn’t care—it was that she didn’t need to care.
When Tessa finally convinced her to take a “quick campus tour,” the quad was alive with music and club booths. Somewhere nearby came the steady thump of basketballs hitting hardwood.
“There he is!” Tessa squealed, gripping Aleeyah’s arm.
Across the path stood a group of tall guys in Falcons jackets. In the center—Jaxon Miller. Even from a distance, Aleeyah could see why the entire campus talked about him: a confident stance, easy grin, that effortless charisma people are just born with.
“Don’t stare,” Aleeyah murmured.
“I’m not staring,” Tessa whispered, eyes glued to him. “I’m appreciating art.”
Aleeyah rolled her eyes and started walking again.
---
They turned a corner near the gym entrance. Aleeyah glanced at a bulletin board full of flyers—and bumped straight into someone.
Her phone nearly slipped from her hand.
“Watch it,” a deep voice said, surprised but not angry.
Without even looking up, Aleeyah muttered, “Sorry,” and kept walking.
Jaxon turned, brows knitting. He hadn’t seen her face—only a flash of dark hair, the confident way she moved, the faint vanilla scent in the air.
No one ever ignored him like that.
His friends called out, laughing, but Jaxon’s eyes stayed on the crowd where she’d disappeared.
“Yo, Miller, you coming?”
He blinked, forcing a grin. “Yeah. Coming.”
Still, that glimpse of her lingered like a question he couldn’t quite answer.
---
Back in Maple Hall, Tessa flopped onto her bed, scrolling through her phone. “Did you see him up close? His eyes? His jawline? Aleeyah, tell me you at least noticed.”
Aleeyah smiled faintly, stacking her books. “I bumped into someone earlier. Could’ve been him.”
Tessa shot upright. “What? You bumped into Jaxon Miller and didn’t faint?”
“Didn’t even look at him,” Aleeyah said, calm as ever.
Tessa clutched her chest dramatically. “You’re impossible.”
Aleeyah laughed softly. “Guess I just don’t get the hype.”
Outside, the evening light spilled gold across the campus. Down on the court, Jaxon Miller was still thinking about the girl whose face he hadn’t seen—only her hair, her walk, and that lingering scent of vanilla.
And Aleeyah Carter, blissfully unaware, was about to learn that Eastbridge University had rules of its own.