Chapter 1 · The Medal With My Name Under It
My sister walked onstage wearing the medal for my stolen research.
Ethan stood beside her and mouthed, Don’t ruin this.
Behind them, the ballroom screen glowed with gold letters:
Sophie Blackwell, winner of the Ashbourne Founders Fellowship.
My project title sat under her name.
The applause rolled through the hall. Professors stood. Donors lifted champagne glasses. Students in black dresses and rented tuxedos turned to look at me, waiting for the poor scholarship girl to clap for the rich girl who had stolen her future.
Ethan stepped down from the side of the stage.
“Ava,” he said softly.
The microphone clipped to his jacket caught my name and carried it through the speakers.
Sophie’s smile trembled in exactly the right way. Not too much. Just enough to look hurt before I had even spoken.
In my last life, I stayed in my chair.
I let Ethan hold my hand under the table. I let him whisper that his family would fix it later. By winter, I was expelled for data theft. My scholarship vanished. My campus housing was revoked. My mother’s research notebook disappeared from my room.
By spring, Sophie was on national television calling me unstable.
By summer, Ethan married her.
This time, I stood.
My chair scraped the marble hard enough to cut through the applause.
Ethan’s eyes dropped to the small black U drive in my hand.
That was when I knew.
He recognized it.
“You knew,” I said.
His jaw tightened. “This isn’t the place.”
“This was the place when she wanted applause.”
Sophie leaned toward the microphone. “Ava, are you okay? I know tonight is hard for you.”
“Hard?” I looked at the medal around her neck. “You stole my research.”
The room went quiet.
Dean Caldwell rose from the front table. Tall, silver-haired, smooth as polished stone.
“Miss Hart,” he said, “this is a donor event. If you have concerns about your disciplinary review, we will handle them privately.”
“Privately?” I said. “Like the confession you tried to make me sign before dessert?”
A murmur moved through the ballroom.
Ethan reached for my wrist.
I stepped back.
“Don’t touch me.”
His hand stopped in midair.
For one second, he looked like the boy I had loved. The boy who ate vending machine pretzels with me in Lab B at three in the morning. The boy who promised me I would never have to fight alone.
Then he glanced at Sophie.
And I remembered the truth.
He had never been unable to choose.
He had chosen her every time.
I walked toward the stage.
Two student volunteers shifted near the stairs, unsure whether to block me.
Sophie laughed softly into the microphone. “Ava, please. You’re scaring people.”
I lifted the U drive.
“If Sophie built the project,” I said, “she can run the raw model from the original files.”
Professor Wren, chair of the fellowship board, pushed back his chair.
Sophie’s fingers tightened around the medal ribbon.
Dean stepped toward me. “The board has already reviewed Miss Blackwell’s submission.”
“Then reviewing mine should take five minutes.”
Ethan moved close enough that only I could hear him.
“Give me the drive.”
I looked at his open hand.
In my last life, I had given him everything. My trust. My passwords. My first draft files. The location of my mother’s archive.
This time, I placed the U drive in Professor Wren’s hand.
Ethan’s hand closed on air.
Professor Wren studied the drive. “If this is falsified, Miss Hart, your expulsion will be immediate.”
“If it’s not,” I said, “take that medal off her neck.”
Sophie made a tiny wounded sound.
No one moved to comfort her.
Professor Wren plugged in the drive.
Folders appeared on the screen.
Hart_Model_Raw
LabB_Backup_0214
MaraHart_Archive
Blackwell_Submission_Edited
My mother’s name filled the ballroom.
Sophie whispered, “No.”
Professor Wren opened the raw model.
Lines of code filled the screen. Failed runs. Corrections. Comments in my own shorthand.
At the bottom, one line blinked.
Original author: Ava Hart.
The ballroom froze.
Professor Wren turned to Sophie. “Explain this.”
Sophie opened her mouth.
Nothing came out.
Dean Caldwell stepped behind the laptop and pulled the projector cable.
The screen went black.
The room exploded.
I lifted my phone.
The red recording light blinked.
“Too late,” I said. “The gala livestream caught all of it.”
Ethan stared at me.
“Ava,” he whispered. “What livestream?”
“The one Ashbourne runs for every Founders Gala.”
Professor Wren’s laptop chimed.
A new email flashed on the dark screen.
Sender: Julian Reyes, Northbridge Institute.
Subject: Urgent: Ava Hart’s submission was received before Blackwell’s.
Ethan read the subject line.
For the first time that night, fear crossed his face.
Not for Sophie.
For himself.
