Chapter 1 Chapter 1

Evelyn's Pov

The train slowed with a long metallic groan, pulling into the small station just outside Westbridge University. My fingers tightened around the strap of my bag as the announcement crackled through the speakers.

This was it.

After months of applications, interviews, and late-night prayers, I had finally been accepted to transfer here, to his school.

My heart hammered as I stepped onto the platform. The autumn air was sharp and clean, filled with that distinct scent of rain-soaked leaves and coffee from the café across the street. I smiled to myself, imagining the look on his face when he saw me.

He had no idea I was coming.

When he’d transferred to Westbridge last year, we promised each other that distance wouldn’t change anything. We called every night. We texted, sent photos, made plans for the future.

And now, I was here to tell him I’d made it too.

I could already picture his surprised grin, his slightly uneven front tooth, the way his eyes lit up whenever I showed up unannounced.

It had been almost two weeks since our last video call. He’d seemed distracted, exhausted, but I brushed it off as exam stress. He’d promised he’d call me tonight. I wanted to beat him to it, with the best surprise of his life.

The campus gates came into view as I followed the crowd of students. Westbridge University looked just like its pictures, old brick buildings framed by sprawling oaks, their golden leaves drifting down in the breeze. A lake glimmered at the far end of the quad, surrounded by a ring of willows.

I pulled out my phone and snapped a quick picture. I made it, Alex. I’m here.

But I didn’t send it. I wanted to see his reaction in person first.

As I crossed the quad, I noticed a noise that didn’t quite fit the serene scenery, an uneasy murmur, like a hive of whispers. Dozens of students were clustered along the lakeside, their voices sharp and hushed, their faces pale.

A chill crawled up my spine.

I slowed my steps, scanning the scene. The crowd had formed a semicircle near the dock. Some people were crying. Others were filming with their phones.

For a second, I thought maybe it was a prank or an art performance. Then I saw the yellow tape.

And the police.

A uniformed officer stood near the water, talking into his radio. Another one crouched beside something, or someone, lying half-submerged at the edge of the lake.

My breath caught.

The body floated facedown, bloated and pale beneath the morning light. The ripples lapped gently against it, rocking it like some grotesque puppet.

“Oh my God…” someone whispered near me. “They said it’s a student. Found him this morning.”

My chest tightened. I didn’t mean to step closer, but my feet moved anyway, almost on their own.

A hand shot out in front of me. “Sorry, miss, you can’t come any closer,” the officer said firmly.

I nodded dumbly, unable to form words. My eyes locked on the body again. His shirt was torn, soaked, the color almost unrecognizable under the water.

And then I saw it.

The T-shirt’s design, faded but unmistakable, a small, crooked hand-painted constellation of stars across the front.

My fingers went cold.

No one else in the world had that shirt. We’d made it together during a summer art fair. He’d laughed the whole time, paint smudged on his cheek, teasing me for drawing the stars unevenly.

“Now we match,” he’d said, tapping my nose. “Even if we’re far apart, we’ll always find each other in the same sky.”

My vision blurred. The world tilted, the ground dissolving beneath me.

“No,” I whispered. My voice cracked, barely audible. “No… that’s not him. That’s not, ”

But even as I said it, I knew.

I could see his wrist, the thin black bracelet I’d given him before he left for Westbridge. A tiny silver charm in the shape of a compass.

The one I’d told him would always lead him back to me.

A low, hollow ringing filled my ears. I stumbled backward, gasping. Someone reached out to steady me, but I jerked away, my legs trembling.

I wanted to scream, to deny it, to wake up, but the image burned into me like acid.

The crowd’s whispers blurred into static.

“Who was he?”

“They say his name’s Alex.”

“Alex Carter, the sophomore from the engineering department.”

Alex.

The world went silent.

My knees gave out, and I sank onto the cold grass. A sound tore out of me, half sob, half breath, raw and broken.

Someone called for help, but I barely heard them. The sky above spun in slow motion, the clouds melting together.

I remember a woman’s voice, gentle, worried. “Sweetheart, are you all right?”

But I couldn’t answer. Because no, nothing was all right.

Not when the boy I loved lay dead in that lake.

I don’t remember how long I sat there. Minutes, maybe hours. The officers moved around me, voices muffled and distant.

By the time I finally stood, the crowd had thinned. A sheet covered Alex’s body.

I watched as they lifted him onto a stretcher, the fabric clinging wetly to his frame. His hair, once dark and soft between my fingers, now plastered lifelessly against his forehead.

Someone led me to a bench by the quad. They asked questions, my name, whether I knew him, when I’d last seen him. I answered on autopilot, my voice mechanical.

When they released me, the sun was already setting, bleeding orange across the lake. The water looked calm again, as if nothing had happened.

I clutched my bag to my chest and stared at the ripples, my reflection fractured on the surface.

It didn’t make sense.

Alex was a strong swimmer. He’d grown up near the coast. We’d spent countless summers by the water. He loved the ocean more than anything. He wouldn’t just… drown.

The idea of him slipping, falling, and not fighting back, it was impossible.

Something was wrong.

The next morning, the school released a statement calling it a “tragic accident.” The police ruled it as drowning, with no signs of foul play.

That was it. Just like that. Case closed.

But I knew better.

Alex Carter didn’t die by accident.

Someone did this.

And I was going to find out who.

Classes started the following week, but I barely registered them. Every corridor, every classroom felt haunted by his absence. People whispered when I passed by, their eyes darting away.

“She’s his girlfriend.”

“Poor thing. She transferred here for him, didn’t she?”

“They said he’d been acting weird before he died.”

I pretended not to hear.

At night, I lay awake in my dorm room, staring at the ceiling, replaying every conversation we’d ever had. Searching for something, anything, I might have missed.

He’d told me about new friends, about group projects, about a girl who’d helped him settle in, a student leader everyone seemed to adore.

Lila Montgomery.

The name came up again and again. I’d seen her tagged in his photos. Tall, beautiful, confident, the kind of girl who made everyone else fade around her.

I told myself not to be jealous. Alex wasn’t like that. But now…

Now I couldn’t stop wondering.

The last message he’d sent me was simple:

“Hey, I’ve got something important to tell you soon. Wait for my call, okay?”

He never got the chance.

My phone still showed the unread text. I couldn’t bring myself to delete it.

I opened my notebook and wrote his name across the first page. Beneath it, I scribbled one line:

Find the truth.

I didn’t know where to start. But I knew one thing for sure, someone on this campus knew what really happened.

And I wasn’t leaving until I found them.

That evening, I walked back to the lake. The police tape was gone, the path empty except for a few scattered leaves. The water reflected the soft glow of the campus lights, deceptively peaceful.

I knelt near the dock, tracing the spot where they’d found him. The wood was still stained, faintly darker than the rest.

“Why here?” I whispered. “What were you doing, Alex?”

A soft rustle behind me made me turn.

A figure stood a few feet away, a girl with honey-blonde hair and striking green eyes. She wore a soft smile, though it didn’t quite reach her eyes.

“I’m sorry,” she said quietly. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”

I straightened, brushing the dirt from my jeans. “It’s fine.”

“You were… close to him, weren’t you?” she asked, stepping closer. Her voice was calm, almost too calm.

I hesitated. “You knew Alex?”

“Everyone did,” she said, smiling faintly. “He was kind. Brilliant. It’s such a tragedy.”

Her gaze lingered on the lake, then flicked back to me. “I’m Lila, by the way.”

The name hit me like a spark.

Lila Montgomery.

Of course. The golden girl of Westbridge. The one Alex couldn’t stop mentioning.

I forced a small nod. “I’m… I’m his girlfriend.”

Her expression shifted, just for a second, something unreadable passing through her eyes before she quickly masked it with sympathy.

“I’m so sorry,” she said softly. “If you ever need anything, please come to me. I’ll help however I can.”

Her hand brushed my arm, light and cold.

And just like that, she turned and walked away, her figure dissolving into the mist rising off the lake.

I stood there long after she disappeared, my pulse hammering in my ears.

Something about her tone. The way she said tragedy. The flicker in her eyes when she realized who I was.

It wasn’t grief.

It was recognition.

And for the first time since Alex’s death, I felt it deep in my gut, an instinct I couldn’t ignore.

Lila Montgomery knew something.

Maybe even everything.

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