Chapter 1:The Transfer

1079 Words
The first thing I noticed about my new school was how loud it was. Not just the noise — the laughter echoing down the hallways, the lockers slamming shut, the buzz of conversations that blended into one restless rhythm. It was alive in a way my old school never was. Or maybe I was just more aware now. When you move somewhere new, everything feels amplified — every stare, every whisper, every step you take. I tightened my grip around the strap of my bag as I stood in front of the tall iron gates. The school name was engraved above it in bold silver letters, polished and intimidating. This was it. My “new beginning.” That’s what Mom kept calling it. A fresh start. I inhaled slowly and stepped inside. Students moved past me like they already knew where they belonged. They walked in groups, shoulders brushing casually, laughter spilling effortlessly from their lips. I suddenly felt like a misplaced puzzle piece — cut from a different picture entirely. I told myself this was necessary. No one here knew what happened last year. No one knew about the whispers, the embarrassment, the silent lunches, or the way I learned to keep my head down. Here, I could rebuild myself. I could be someone lighter. Someone braver. Or at least, someone invisible. The guidance office was on the second floor. Each step up the stairs felt heavier than the last. When I finally reached the classroom assigned to me — Room 3-B — my heartbeat began to pound in my ears. You can do this. I knocked softly. The door slid open, and suddenly thirty pairs of eyes were on me. “Class,” the teacher said warmly, “we have a new student today.” I stepped forward, forcing my shoulders to relax. “Introduce yourself,” she encouraged. “My name is… Eliana Reyes,” I began, hoping my voice didn’t tremble. “I just transferred here. I hope we can get along.” A few polite claps followed. Some students smiled. Others looked uninterested. A group of girls near the windows whispered to each other.. “There's one seat left,” the teacher said, scanning the room. “At the back.” Of course there was. I walked between rows of desks, acutely aware of every movement. My palms were slightly damp. I avoided eye contact until I reached the last row. That’s when I saw him. He was seated by the window, sunlight falling across the side of his face. His uniform was neat but slightly loosened at the collar, like he didn’t care enough to fix it properly. Dark hair fell just a little over his eyes — eyes that weren’t looking at me, but outside. As if whatever was happening in this room didn’t concern him at all. He didn’t clap. He didn’t whisper. He didn’t even glance my way. There was something strangely calm about him. Detached. Like the noise of the classroom couldn’t reach him. I hesitated for half a second before taking the empty seat beside him. Up close, I noticed the small details — a faint scar near his wrist, long fingers loosely holding a pen, a notebook filled with neat handwriting. Not messy. Not careless. Just… quiet. He finally shifted slightly, just enough to acknowledge my presence. “Hi,” I whispered awkwardly. He didn’t look at me immediately. Then, after a brief pause, he nodded once. “Hi.” His voice was low. Not cold. Just… minimal. And that was it. No smile. No follow-up question. Nothing. Okay. So maybe he was just not the friendly type. The lesson started, and I tried to focus, but I was hyper-aware of him sitting inches away. He didn’t speak the entire time. When called to answer, he responded correctly — clearly intelligent — but without enthusiasm. No unnecessary words. No wasted expressions. At one point, a group of boys in front of us tried to joke around with him. “Hey, you joining practice later?” one asked. He shook his head. “Not today.” That was all. They didn’t push further. Interesting. By lunch break, I was mentally exhausted from pretending not to feel out of place. I considered staying inside the classroom, but my stomach growled in protest. As I stood up, I accidentally dropped my pen. It rolled — of course — toward his side. I bent down at the same time he did. Our hands brushed. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t slow motion. It was brief. But for some reason, it felt… noticeable. “Sorry,” I muttered quickly, pulling my hand back. He picked up the pen and handed it to me. “You dropped it,” he said simply. “Thanks.”I said Our eyes met for the first time. They were darker than I expected. Not sharp. Not unkind. Just guarded. Like he had built invisible walls and didn’t intend to let anyone through. Then he looked away first. And somehow, that tiny moment lingered longer than it should have. I found out later that his name was Adrian Vale. No one seemed to dislike him. But no one seemed particularly close to him either. He wasn’t the class clown. Not the athlete everyone talked about. Not the top student who bragged. He was just… there. Quiet. Observing. Existing on the edges. And maybe that’s why I noticed him. Because in a room full of loud voices trying to be seen, he was the only one who didn’t try at all. As the final bell rang and students rushed out, I packed my things slowly. When I finally stood, I saw him already by the door. For a second, I thought about saying goodbye. Before I could decide, he glanced back at me. Not fully. Just a slight turn of his head. “You’re new,” he said. “Yes… obviously,” I replied, cringing internally. A faint — almost invisible — curve touched his lips. “Don’t worry,” he added. “You’ll get used to it.” Then he left. And I stood there, strangely frozen. It was such a small sentence. But for someone who had been trying so hard to feel invisible… It felt like the first time someone had actually seen me. And I didn’t know yet — not then — that transferring schools wouldn’t just change my surroundings. It would change my heart.
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