The Oakridge High cafeteria was less of a dining hall and more of a gladiator arena dressed in glass and brushed steel.
Eloise Gilbert stood at the entrance, clutching her tray with white knuckles. The vibrant copper waves she had spent an hour taming that morning felt heavy against her shoulders, and the cream-colored knit top—which had made her feel striking in front of her bathroom mirror—now felt like a glowing target.
The room was strictly partitioned. On the left, near the massive floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the courtyard, sat the country-club elite. At the center table, absolute monarchs of the school, were the varsity athletes.
The rumor from the parking lot had fully solidified into gospel. Everywhere Eloise looked, girls were whispering while staring directly at Allie Grace Vance, who sat at the center table surrounded by her blonde entourage. The entire school truly believed Allie had been the one hiding in Mike Weller’s front seat that morning. The invisible ghost had been entirely written out of her own story.
Eloise scanned the room for her usual sanctuary—a small, chipped plastic table in the absolute back corner, right next to the noisy recycling bins where no one would bother to look at her.
"Yo! Gilbert! Over here!"
A loud, booming voice shattered the generic cafeteria hum. Jake Bill was standing up at the varsity table, waving a half-eaten slice of pizza in the air, his green eyes bright with his usual unbothered, chaotic energy. Next to him, Chad Miller looked up from his massive plate of grilled chicken, giving Eloise a brief, gruff nod of acknowledgment, his dark brows furrowing slightly as he shifted his injured shoulder in its thick black compression sleeve.
Eloise froze. Her heart did a violent, nervous thud. Every single head in the cafeteria slowly turned, tracking the trajectory of Jake’s shout until a hundred pairs of eyes landed squarely on her. Even Allie Grace paused, a forkful of salad hovering near her lips, her cold blue eyes narrowing as she locked onto Eloise with that same intense, calculating evaluation from English class.
For a split second, Eloise debated turning around and walking right out the double doors. But she swallowed her pride, squared her 5'9" frame, and began walking toward the varsity table. If she was going to be forced into their orbit, she wasn't going to look like a coward doing it.
As she approached, Jake eagerly pulled out the empty chair right next to him. "Sit down, Gilbert. We were just arguing about whether Mr. Harrison is secretly a vampire, and since you completely destroyed his Gatsby prompt this morning, we need an expert opinion."
Eloise managed a dry, small smile, preparing to slide into the seat.
"She's not sitting here."
The voice was low, gravelly, and cut through the table's chatter like a sheet of ice.
Eloise stopped dead in her tracks.
Mike Weller didn't even look up from his phone. He sat at the head of the table, looking impossibly broad and imposing in his varsity jacket, his golden blonde hair catching the harsh cafeteria lights. The purple bruise on his sharp jawline was a dark reminder of the warehouse fight, making him look even more dangerous and unapproachable. He lazily scrolled through his screen, his expression entirely deadpan, cold, and detached.
Jake’s arm dropped, his smirk faltering. "What? Mike, come on, there’s plenty of room—"
"I said, she’s not sitting here, Bill," Mike repeated, his tone sharpening as his piercing blue eyes finally snapped up from his phone. He didn't look at Jake. He looked directly at Eloise, his gaze completely devoid of the warmth, the intensity, or the protective energy he had shown her in the dim shadows of the warehouse a week ago. It was a brutal, public wall. "This table is for the roster. Go find somewhere else to eat, Gilbert."
The rejection hit Eloise like a physical slap to the face.
The entire cafeteria went dead silent, absorbing the massive public humiliation Mike Weller had just handed to the stable girl. A few varsity players laughed under their breath, and across the table, Allie Grace smirked, a satisfied, sweet-mean glint returning to her eyes as she turned back to her friends.
He is acting like I’m a disease, Eloise thought, her throat tightening with a sudden, furious heat. He’s ashamed. In his backyard, I’m good enough to clean up his mess and patch his wounds, but out here, I’m just an untidy guest hand who doesn't belong on his pedestal.
Eloise didn't let her tears fall. She refused to give him the satisfaction. She hardened her jaw, her hazel eyes flashing with pure, cynical ice as she looked down at the golden boy.
"My mistake, Weller," Eloise said, her voice steady, clear, and dripping with venomous sarcasm. "I forgot you need a specific tier of social currency just to digest your food. Enjoy your pedestal."
She turned on her heel and walked away, her heart hammering against her ribs as the whispers erupted behind her like a wave of static. She walked straight to the farthest, darkest corner of the cafeteria, sliding into the isolated table near the recycling bins, her hands trembling slightly as she stared down at her untouched food. She felt smaller than she ever had, completely crushed by the realization that the summer bubble had been an absolute lie.
"Mind if I sit here? The air near the windows is a little too toxic today."
Eloise blinked, snapped out of her spiral, and looked up.
A boy was standing across from her table, holding a vintage leather messenger bag and a modest lunch tray. He was nineteen, standing at an easy six feet, with a mop of soft, tousled dark curls that fell perfectly over his forehead. His eyes were a warm, empathetic hazel-brown, framed by thick lashes, and he wore a faded corduroy jacket over a graphic tee, with a few silver rings glinting on his fingers. A guitar case was slung casually over his shoulder.
It was Ethan Grey. The school’s resident musician, completely separate from the varsity hierarchy.
"Uh..." Eloise cleared her throat, quickly wiping her defensive expression away. "It's a free country. But you might want to watch out, I think sitting here drops your social credit score by fifty points."
Ethan let out a low, melodic chuckle, sliding into the plastic chair opposite her. His warm eyes crinkled at the corners, instantly radiating a sense of safety that Eloise hadn't realized she was starving for.
"I think I'll survive the drop," Ethan smiled, opening a container of fruit. "Besides, I've been wanting to talk to you since first period. Eloise, right?"
Eloise raised an eyebrow, genuinely surprised. "You actually know my name? I thought I was legally registered as 'the car girl' or 'the ghost' around here."
"I have ears," Ethan said softly, his gaze locking onto hers with total, undivided attention. "And I was in the back row during AP English. Your breakdown of The Great Gatsby was honestly the most brilliant thing I've heard in these hallways in four years. You completely dismantled Allie Grace's surface-level vanity project in about thirty seconds. It was amazing."
A faint, genuine flush crept up Eloise’s neck, completely different from the burning humiliation Mike had caused moments earlier. "Thanks. I just don't really buy into the whole old-money romance illusion."
"Clearly," Ethan murmured, his hazel eyes holding hers with a deep, respectful fascination. He leaned forward, resting his chin on his hand, his silver rings catching the light. "The nice guys in this school usually just nod along to whatever the popular crowd says. It's refreshing to meet someone who actually thinks for themselves. Someone real."
For the next twenty minutes, the heavy, suffocating weight of the cafeteria completely melted away. Ethan didn't talk about sports, country clubs, or social standing. He talked about melodies, acoustic resonance, and lyrics, his voice smooth and incredibly easy to listen to. For the first time all day, Eloise felt genuinely seen—not as an errand girl, a liability, or a guest hand, but as an intellectual equal.
But across the sprawling room, the atmosphere at the varsity table had turned suffocatingly tense.
Mike Weller sat completely still, his phone face-down on the marble table. His large, scarred knuckles were white as he tightly gripped his unbitten apple. His cold blue eyes were fixed unblinkingly on the far corner of the room, tracking every single time Eloise smiled at Ethan Grey, tracking the way Ethan leaned in close to whisper something that made her copper waves shift.
"Man, Mike, that was low-key brutal," Jake muttered beside him, looking uncomfortable. "You didn't have to do her like that in front of everybody."
Mike didn't answer. His jaw ticked violently, the purple bruise on his skin tightening as a dark, dangerous possessiveness flared deep in his chest. He had pushed her away to keep Allie and the elite vultures from tearing her apart, but watching her fall right into the soft-boy musician's trap was making his blood boil.
And from the corner of her eye, Allie Grace watched them all—the stable girl, the brooding golden boy, and the musician—a sharp, plotting smile slowly forming on her perfect lips.