Emily liked to believe that if she stayed quiet enough, the world would forget she was there.
Rosewood High was loud in the mornings—lockers slamming, voices overlapping, laughter bouncing off the walls like it belonged there more than she did. Emily walked through it all with her head slightly down, fingers tight around the strap of her bag, moving like a shadow between bodies.
She slid into her seat just as the bell rang.
English class was usually safe. Predictable. Essays, discussions, the occasional presentation. Emily opened her notebook, already bracing herself for another hour of invisibility.
Then Mrs. Carter smiled.
That was never a good sign.
“Alright, everyone,” she said, clapping her hands once. “For our next assessment, you’ll be working on a digital media project.”
The room immediately reacted—groans, excited whispers, chairs shifting.
“You’ll be placed into groups,” Mrs. Carter continued. “And this project will count for a significant portion of your grade.”
Emily’s pen paused mid-word.
Groups.
She hated group work. Not because she didn’t do her part—but because she always ended up doing all of it. Or worse, being ignored completely.
Mrs. Carter began reading names.
Emily tried not to listen. Tried not to hope she’d be paired with someone normal. Someone quiet.
Then the room changed.
Not loudly. Not obviously. Just… subtly.
Like a current passing through it.
“And finally,” Mrs. Carter said, glancing down at her list, “this group will consist of Kai Bennett, Jace Holloway, Rowan Cross, Leo Whitmore… and Emily Carter.”
Silence.
It's not the awkward kind. The heavy kind.
Emily’s heart dropped.
Slowly, she looked up.
F4.
They sat scattered across the room like they owned it—relaxed, confident, untouchable. Kai Bennett leaned back in his chair, expression unreadable. Jace smirked, already amused by the reaction around him. Rowan didn’t look surprised at all, just thoughtful. Leo’s gaze flicked toward Emily for half a second before he looked away.
Whispers broke out instantly.
“Is that a joke?”
“Her? With them?”
“She doesn’t even talk.”
Emily felt heat crawling up her neck. She wished—desperately—that she could disappear into her chair.
Mrs. Carter cleared her throat. “You’ll have three weeks. I expect creativity, teamwork, and effort.”
Emily swallowed.
Teamwork.
After class, the hallway buzzed louder than usual. Emily packed her things slowly, hoping—stupidly—that if she waited long enough, the situation would undo itself.
It didn’t.
“Emily.”
She froze.
Kai Bennett stood in front of her.
Up close, he was calmer than she expected. No smug smile. No arrogance. Just steady eyes and a voice that didn’t need to be loud to be heard.
“We’re meeting after school,” he said. “Library. Five minutes after the bell.”
She nodded before her brain caught up.
“Okay.”
He hesitated, like he wanted to say more. Then he stepped aside, letting her pass.
As Emily walked away, she felt it—the shift. Eyes on her back. Curiosity. Judgment.
She had no idea why she’d been placed with them.
I have no idea why Kai had looked at her like he already knew her.
And no idea that this project—this one announcement—was about to pull her into a story she didn’t remember… but had lived before.