Chapter 3 : part 2

1118 Words
‎I pushed my way toward the living room, drawn by the bursts of laughter rising around the coffee table. ‎The string lights hanging along the walls cast shifting ripples of color, turning the room into a kaleidoscope of dancing shadows. ‎The bass thudded so hard it felt like it was pounding against my temples, yet beneath all the chaos, a strange calm began to settle inside me. ‎Not peace… more like a muted vigilance, as if my entire body were slipping into alert mode. ‎ ‎And then I saw her. ‎Serena. ‎ ‎She spotted me almost instantly, and my stomach twisted on instinct. ‎She slipped through the crowd with slow, confident grace, her hips swaying with theatrical assurance in a soft beige-white romper sprinkled with floral patterns that reminded me of summer. ‎Everything about her radiated provocation. ‎She wore that sharp, perfectly calculated smile—the one she wielded like a weapon. ‎ ‎“So, you’re the famous Avery?” she said, her voice sweet, though edged with poison. ‎“Calvin talks about you… a lot.” ‎Feigning ignorance. ‎ ‎Her eyes dragged over me from head to toe, barely bothering to hide the contempt. ‎I took the blow in silence. ‎My instinct screamed to fire back, to return her smile like an arrow—but instead, I simply nodded, pretending at neutrality I didn’t feel. ‎Every word that left her mouth vibrated with a sick kind of curiosity, almost a challenge. ‎She examined me the way someone studies a c***k in glass, waiting for the moment it shatters. ‎But I wasn’t about to give her that satisfaction. ‎ ‎“So what do you want, Serena?” Claire cut in, suddenly appearing behind me like an unexpected shield. ‎ ‎“Nothing I can’t get,” Serena replied, flashing a smug, satisfied smirk. ‎“Just confirmed a few things.” ‎ ‎“Then you can go,” Claire shot back, her politeness freezing into steel. ‎ ‎For a moment, silence weighed heavy. ‎Serena looked us over one last time, her eyes glittering with contempt. ‎Then she spun around, her hair snapping behind her like a victory flag. ‎ ‎“I hate that witch,” Claire muttered with a sigh. ‎ ‎“Same,” I breathed. ‎ ‎She shook her head, exasperated. ‎ ‎“How did Calvin end up with someone like that?” ‎ ‎“A mystery,” I murmured. ‎ ‎Yet my thoughts lingered on Calvin. ‎He was this strange blend—a deeply kind heart, a disarming generosity, but also that charming streak that sometimes ran ahead of him. ‎Intuitive, attentive to others… and yet he’d chosen to keep people as toxic as Derrick and Serena in his orbit. ‎How could two worlds so opposite pull toward each other? ‎Maybe popularity had its own kind of magic—one that bent truth and blurred logic. ‎ ‎The night regained its lighter rhythm. ‎Laughter, ridiculous games, lively conversations filled the room once more. ‎The tension Serena had left behind slowly dissolved. ‎Jackson arrived with a few friends, and his gaze caught mine. ‎Something taut settled between us—old memories, uneasy silences, promises left hanging. ‎ ‎“Remember when Avery almost spilled the punch in the school gym?” Claire said brightly, trying to break the tension. ‎ ‎A ripple of laughter spread through the group. ‎I mustered a smile, but a cold shiver crept along my neck. ‎That same feeling… a presence. ‎From the street, from the moment I arrived, I had felt it. ‎Someone—or something—had been following me, hiding in the shadow of every step. ‎Each time I scanned the room, I found nothing. ‎Just the party—its noise, its dancing shadows. ‎But the sensation lingered. ‎ ‎Calvin approached, cutting through my unease. ‎He set a drink on the table, close enough that I caught the familiar scent of him. ‎ ‎“You sure you’re okay?” he asked, this time his voice lower, almost worried. ‎ ‎There was a disarming sincerity in his eyes. ‎A flicker of warmth rushed through me, clashing sharply with the cold that had gripped me seconds earlier. ‎ ‎I gave him a small, crooked smile. ‎ ‎“Yeah. I’m fine. Thanks.” ‎ ‎He hesitated, like he wanted to insist, but behind him, Serena had already noticed us. ‎Her brows knit together just slightly, and her dark stare slid over me with barely restrained hostility. ‎Claire nudged me with her elbow, amused. ‎ ‎“Don’t worry about her,” she whispered. “She lives for drama.” ‎ ‎I nodded, though the spark of rivalry that crackled across the room left a bitter taste on my tongue. ‎ ‎The night carried on—voices rising, secrets whispered, laughter echoing. ‎Little by little, I felt myself lowering almost all my defenses. ‎I laughed. ‎I talked. ‎For the briefest moment, I rediscovered a version of myself I thought long gone. ‎And yet… every time I turned around, every time my eyes lingered on some corner of the room, the sensation of being watched returned—insistent, relentless. ‎ ‎It was close to midnight when the party reached its peak. ‎Laughter had erupted into drunken shouts, the bass shaking the walls like a giant heartbeat. ‎I slipped away, craving air. ‎ ‎I stepped outside to escape the crowd. ‎Stopping on the porch, alone, I inhaled deeply. ‎The night air—cold and damp—brushed against my face like relief. ‎In the distance, the mountains stood black and massive beneath the moon’s silver veil. ‎From the marsh drifted its heavy, suffocating scent—earthy, stagnant—but somehow, in that mixture of mud and water, I found a strange comfort. ‎For a moment, I thought I’d shaken off that invisible presence clinging to my skin. ‎ ‎I was about to close my eyes and savor the quiet when a warm breath grazed the side of my neck. ‎I spun around, heart slamming against my ribs. ‎ ‎My gaze met a face. ‎Close. ‎Too close. ‎ ‎His lips curled into a smile that had nothing reassuring in it. ‎ ‎“Hey, beautiful,” he murmured, his voice low and husky. ‎ ‎ ‎--- ‎
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD