Chapter 1 The Perfect Night
POV: Valeria Cruz
Everything was supposed to feel perfect tonight.
That’s what I told myself as I stood outside the house, staring at the front door like it held something bigger than just another party.
Because to me—it did.
Tonight mattered.
Not because of the music or the people or the fact that half the school would be inside pretending to be older than we were.
Tonight mattered because of him.
Jason Reed.
Quarterback. Untouchable. The kind of guy people didn’t question, didn’t challenge, didn’t lose.
And somehow—
for a while—
he chose me.
I smoothed my hands down my dress, more out of nerves than anything else, and let out a slow breath before stepping inside.
The music hit instantly.
Loud. Heavy. Consuming.
It vibrated through the floor and up my legs, like the house itself was alive. People were everywhere—laughing, shouting, pressed too close together like nothing outside these walls existed.
It should’ve felt exciting.
It should’ve felt normal.
But something in my chest was tight.
Like I already knew.
Like my body was trying to warn me before my mind caught up.
I scanned the room.
And of course—
I found him immediately.
Jason.
Surrounded by people like always. Center of attention without even trying.
And next to him—
Camila.
My best friend.
The person who knew everything about me.
The person who wasn’t supposed to be standing that close to him.
At first, I told myself it was nothing.
It had to be nothing.
Because what else could it be?
But then I saw the way she leaned into him.
Too comfortable.
Too familiar.
And his hand—
resting at her waist like it had been there before.
Like it belonged there.
Something in me dropped.
Hard.
I took a step forward without realizing it.
Then another.
Like if I got closer, it would make more sense.
Like if I could hear them, see them clearer, I could fix whatever this feeling was before it turned into something real.
Because it couldn’t be real.
Not like this.
Not with her.
Not with him.
He said something.
She laughed.
And then—
he kissed her.
Not quick.
Not accidental.
Not something you could explain away.
It was deliberate.
Confident.
Like it wasn’t the first time.
Like it was normal.
Like I didn’t exist.
Everything inside me went still.
Not shattered.
Not broken.
Just… empty.
Because if I let it hit all at once—
I wouldn’t be able to stand here.
And the worst part?
No one reacted.
No one gasped.
No one stopped what they were doing.
Because to everyone else—
this wasn’t new.
I was.
I was the one catching up.
I felt it then.
That shift.
The moment where something ends and you don’t even get the courtesy of a warning.
I turned before they could see me.
Before my face gave anything away.
Before I became something they could look at and pity.
I pushed through the crowd, ignoring the way people bumped into me, ignoring the music, the voices, the heat.
Everything felt too close.
Too loud.
Too much.
I needed air.
I needed space.
I needed—
anything that wasn’t that.
By the time I made it outside, my chest was tight and my hands were shaking.
I didn’t realize how fast I was breathing until I tried to stop.
But I couldn’t.
Because every time I closed my eyes—
I saw it.
Him.
Her.
Together.
I let out a laugh.
Short.
Sharp.
Empty.
“Of course,” I muttered to myself.
Because really—
why wouldn’t it be like this?
No explanation.
No honesty.
Just replacement.
Like I was something temporary.
Something easy to forget.
I wrapped my arms around myself, grounding myself in something physical before everything inside me spiraled.
That’s when it happened.
I stepped forward without looking—
and ran straight into someone.
Hard.
“Hey—watch it.”
I stumbled slightly, catching myself.
“I’m so sorry—”
I looked up.
And everything paused.
Not dramatically.
Not like in movies.
Just… enough to notice.
He wasn’t from here.
I knew that instantly.
Not just because I didn’t recognize him.
Because of the way he stood.
Calm.
Unbothered.
Like the chaos inside didn’t touch him the way it touched everyone else.
Taller than most guys I knew.
Built like he belonged somewhere more controlled than this.
And his eyes—
they weren’t scanning.
They were focused.
On me.
“You good?” he asked.
Simple.
Direct.
No hesitation.
I blinked.
Because I wasn’t ready for that question.
Not from him.
Not from anyone.
“I’m fine,” I said automatically.
He didn’t move.
Didn’t nod.
Didn’t pretend to believe me.
“Doesn’t look like it.”
I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding.
“Long night.”
His gaze flicked past me, toward the house.
Then back to me.
Like he already knew.
Or at least had a pretty good idea.
“Yeah,” he said. “Looks like it.”
There was no pity in his voice.
No judgment.
Just… understanding.
And somehow—
that made everything feel more real.
“I’ll survive,” I said, straightening slightly.
Because that’s what I do.
That’s what I’ve always done.
He studied me for a second.
Then the corner of his mouth lifted just barely.
Not a full smile.
But close.
“Yeah,” he said. “You look like you do.”
A pause settled between us.
Not awkward.
Not forced.
Just… there.
Like something shifted without either of us saying it out loud.
“Rafe,” he said after a second.
“Valeria.”
He nodded once.
Like that was enough.
Like he didn’t need anything else.
From inside, someone called his name.
He glanced back briefly.
Then looked at me again.
“You’ll be alright,” he said.
Not a question.
Not comfort.
A decision.
Like he had already made up his mind about me.
And before I could respond—
he turned and walked away.
Back into the noise.
Back into the world that suddenly didn’t feel like mine anymore.
I stood there for a moment longer.
The air cooler now.
The music distant.
Everything quieter.
But inside—
everything had changed.
Because I walked into that house thinking I knew exactly where I stood.
Who I was.
What mattered.
And I walked out—
realizing I was wrong about all of it.
About him.
About her.
About myself.
And maybe that was the worst part.
Not losing them.
Not the betrayal.
But the fact that I didn’t see it coming.
That I trusted something that was never real to begin with.
I took a slow breath.
Then another.
Letting it settle.
Letting it shift.
Because one thing was clear now.
I wasn’t walking back into that life.
Not the same way.
Not as the same girl.
And whether I was ready for it or not—
everything had just changed.
