The first day of senior year always came with a weird kind of pressure. New shoes. New rumors. New hierarchies that would either make you or break you. But for Amara Blake, it was supposed to be just another quiet start—just like the last three years.
She walked into Westbridge High wearing her usual black hoodie, jeans, and zero expression. She didn’t need to stand out. In fact, she preferred being unseen. No drama, no gossip, no fake friends. Just her books, her headphones, and her goal: survive high school and get out.
But something was off.
People were looking at her. Whispering. Turning their heads as she passed by. One girl even nudged her friend and pointed directly at her.
Amara’s stomach tightened. She glanced down—no food stains, no weird wardrobe issues. She checked her phone—no viral post. Nothing. So why the sudden attention?
She made it to her locker and tried to ignore it, but the feeling only grew stronger. Her best friend, Zoe, came sprinting down the hallway, nearly knocking over a freshman.
“You could’ve warned me,” Zoe hissed, clutching her phone.
“Warned you about what?” Amara frowned.
Amara shook her head. “They’ll get bored eventually.”
But deep down, she wasn’t so sure.
Because that’s when he walked in.
Axel Cruz.
Taller. Sharper. Colder.
He hadn’t been at school in over a year. Rumor was he’d been expelled for breaking some guy’s jaw in a fight. Others said it was worse. No one knew for sure—only that he vanished, and no one dared speak his name too loud.
But now he was back. And he looked straight at her.
Not like the others did. Not with curiosity or fake friendliness.
Axel looked at her like he knew her.
Like he knew something she didn’t want anyone to remember.
***
After lunch, she cornered her dad in his office.
“You didn’t tell anyone, right?” she demanded.
Principal Blake looked up from his desk, adjusting his glasses. “Tell anyone what?”
“That I’m your daughter. That you’re the new principal. People found out.”
He sighed. “I didn’t go around announcing it, Amara. But we both knew it might come out eventually.”
She paced. “This is bad. They’re already acting weird. And now Axel Cruz is back?”
Her dad stiffened. “Stay away from him.”
“You know him?”
“I know his file. He’s not someone you want to be involved with.”
She narrowed her eyes. “And yet, you let him back in this school.”
“That wasn’t my decision alone.”
Zoe held up the screen. It was a post from the school’s gossip page:
*“BREAKING: The new principal is none other than Amara Blake’s dad. Talk about sleeping with the enemy.”*
Amara’s face drained of color.
“They found out?” she whispered.
“I told you this would happen,” Zoe said. “Why didn’t you just say your dad got the job?”
“Because I didn’t want the attention. I thought I could keep it quiet.”
“Girl, this is Westbridge. Nothing stays quiet here.”
Amara felt like the floor shifted beneath her. She wasn’t just the quiet girl anymore. She was the principal’s daughter.
And in this school, that made her a target.
***
The whispers followed her all the way to homeroom. Eyes stared a little too long. Smiles looked more like sneers. Even the teachers seemed to pause when calling her name during attendance.
By lunch, her usual table was full of people who had never spoken to her before.
“Hey Amara,” a cheerleader chirped, scooting closer. “So… does your dad, like, read our files? That’s so creepy, but also kinda cool.”
Amara forced a tight smile. “I wouldn’t know.”
Another guy leaned in. “Can he, you know, delete detentions? Asking for a friend.”
Zoe sat down next to her and whispered, “You want me to throw my juice at someone? Just say the word.”
Amara didn’t like the look in his eyes. It wasn’t just about Axel being trouble.
It was something else.
Something no one was saying.
She left the office with her mind racing and nearly bumped straight into Axel himself, leaning against the wall outside like he’d been waiting.
“Didn’t take long for you to run the school,” he said, voice low and unreadable.
Amara stepped back. “What do you want?”
He leaned in slightly. “You sure you don’t remember me?”
Her heart jumped. “I’ve never met you.”
“Liar.”
He walked off without another word.
And suddenly, being the principal’s daughter wasn’t her biggest problem.
Her past might be.