Chapter 5 Glitter Bomb
POV: Silver Preston
The heavy oak door thuds closed behind me, cutting off the sounds of the courtyard but not the memory of his voice.
Welcome to Yale.
The words lodge somewhere between my ribs like an unwelcome splinter, refusing to be ignored. I shove the feeling down and limp toward the staircase that will carry me to whatever version of normal college life awaits.
The residential college hallway stretches before me like something from a Harry Potter movie. Narrow and dimly lit, with worn wooden floors that creak under every footstep.
The air carries the distinctive scent of old wood polish mixed with industrial cleaning supplies and the lingering traces of too many teenagers crammed into spaces designed for medieval scholars. Fluorescent bulbs buzz overhead, their harsh light doing nothing to soften the Gothic atmosphere.
Already, barely six hours into move in day, the corridor has taken on the chaotic personality of freshman year.
Colorful posters plaster every door I pass.
Yale Whiffenpoofs Auditions. Women's Rugby Welcome BBQ. Pre Med Study Group Forming Now.
Someone's stereo thumps bass through thin walls, while another room leaks the sounds of what sounds like a very animated phone call home. The energy is infectious in a way that makes me feel even more isolated. All these people diving headfirst into their Yale experience while I'm just trying to figure out how to walk without wincing.
I find my assigned room number etched into a brass nameplate that's probably been polished by generations of students.
The old fashioned key fights me for a moment, requiring the kind of jiggling technique that suggests centuries of use, before the lock finally surrenders with a metallic click.
The room beyond is smaller than my walk in closet back home in Atlanta, but somehow it feels more real.
Two narrow beds face each other across a space barely wide enough for both occupants to stand simultaneously. Tall Gothic windows look out over the courtyard where I nearly face planted twenty minutes earlier, their diamond paned glass casting geometric shadows across hardwood floors that have probably witnessed more late night study sessions than I can imagine.
One bed has already been claimed with a precision that speaks of military level organization.
Floral duvet spread smooth as glass, a small mountain of coordinating throw pillows arranged with mathematical accuracy, desk supplies lined up like soldiers awaiting inspection.
The other bed stands bare and expectant, a blank canvas waiting for whatever personality I might bring to this new chapter.
My duffel bag hits the unclaimed mattress with a dull thump that seems to echo in the unexpected quiet.
After months of arenas filled with music and coaches shouting corrections, after hospitals buzzing with machinery and doctors speaking in urgent whispers, the silence feels almost oppressive.
For one wild moment, I entertain the hope that maybe I lucked into a single room, that my mysteriously organized roommate is just a very neat person who already moved out.
Then the door explodes inward like a glitter bomb went off in the hallway.
"Roomieeee!"
I nearly jump clear out of my post surgical brace.
The girl who bursts through the doorway isn't so much a person as a force of nature. A hurricane wrapped in sequins and pure, undiluted enthusiasm.
Her crop top catches light like a disco ball, throwing tiny rainbows across the stone walls. Her skirt seems to be made entirely of some material that sparkles with every movement, and her hair, dark brown curls streaked with what appears to be professionally applied magenta highlights, bounces with the kind of energy that suggests she just chugged three Red Bulls.
Behind her comes chaos in physical form.
An enormous suitcase covered in stickers from what looks like every Broadway show of the past decade, a garment bag that's leaking feathers, and an armload of accessories that defy both gravity and good taste.
I open my mouth, close it, then open it again.
No sound emerges.
"Americus Bentley!"
The girl thrusts out a hand that glitters with rings on every finger. Some delicate, others chunky enough to double as weapons.
"Yes, like the continent. No, I don't know what my parents were thinking. Yes, I've heard every joke. No, I don't care because it's iconic and you know it."
I find myself shaking the offered hand before my brain catches up with the situation.
"Silver Preston."
Americus's eyes, lined with enough mascara to supply a small theater production, go wide as dinner plates.
"Silver? Are you kidding me right now? That's the most elegant name I've ever heard in my actual life. Like, Olympic medal elegant. You sound famous already."
My stomach clenches reflexively.
"I'm not."
But Americus has already moved on, spinning toward the unclaimed bed with the kind of dramatic flair that belongs on a stage. She launches herself onto the mattress like she's claiming territory, and immediately a shower of loose sequins scatters across the plain institutional bedding.
"This room is absolutely tragic," she announces, surveying our surroundings with the critical eye of someone who takes interior design very seriously. "We're going to need fairy lights. Lots of them. And posters, but not the generic college ones. Something with personality. A rug, definitely something fluffy that screams 'successful coeds live here.' Oh! And candles. Wait."
She pauses, tilting her head.
"Are candles allowed in the dorms? Actually, who cares. We'll live dangerously."
I lower myself carefully onto my own bed, extending my braced leg with the kind of conscious precision that's become second nature.
I'm not entirely sure what to make of this whirlwind in human form who just reorganized my expectations of college roommate dynamics.
Americus props herself up on one elbow, studying me with the intensity of someone trying to solve a particularly intriguing puzzle.
"So what's your thing? Please tell me you have a thing. Sports? Theater? Secret underground DJ career? Competitive chess? I'm literally dying to know."
The question catches me off guard.
Back home, my thing was so obvious it barely needed stating. Everyone knew Silver Preston. The figure skater, the Olympic hopeful, the girl whose entire identity could be summed up in one word.
Champion.
Now, sitting on a narrow dorm bed with my reconstructed knee throbbing, I'm not sure I have a thing anymore.
"None of those."
"None?"
Americus looks genuinely scandalized, like I just announced I don't believe in gravity.
"No, no, absolutely not. Everyone has a thing. It's like, the fundamental rule of college. Mine's musical theater slash event planning slash being generally fabulous. And glitter, obviously."
She waves her hand in demonstration, releasing a fresh shower of sparkles onto the floor.
"Glitter is basically my signature."
Despite myself, I feel the corner of my mouth twitch upward.
"Glitter counts as a thing?"
"Glitter is the thing," Americus declares with the solemnity of someone making a religious proclamation. "It's joy in physical form. It's impossible to be sad when you're covered in sparkles. Science fact."
Then her gaze drifts downward, landing on my knee brace with the kind of recognition that makes my defenses snap back into place.
But instead of pity or awkward questions, Americus's expression shifts into something that might be impressed curiosity.
"Okay, injury backstory time. Please tell me it's something epic. Like, 'I fought off a bear while saving orphans' epic. Or at least 'extreme sport gone wrong' epic."
My throat tightens.
"Skating accident."
The two words hang in the air between us like a confession.
Americus's eyes go wide again, but this time with genuine excitement rather than shock.
"Skating? Like hockey? Or, oh my god, figure skating?"
I don't answer, which apparently is answer enough.
Americus actually squeals, grabbing one of her perfectly arranged pillows and hugging it to her chest like she just got told Christmas is coming early.
"Roomie, are you being serious right now? That's incredible! Did you do the spinny things? The jumpy things? That move where they go around and around and somehow don't fall down even though physics says they should?"
"Triple jumps and spins," I mutter, surprised to find myself almost smiling at Americus's unabashed enthusiasm.
"YES! Those!"
Americus bounces on her bed hard enough to make the ancient frame creak in protest.
"Oh my god, you're officially the coolest person I have ever met in my entire seventeen years of existence. This is destiny. We're going to be best friends. I can feel it."
The declaration is so matter of fact, delivered with such absolute certainty, that I find myself blinking in bewilderment.
I've been at Yale for exactly three hours. I haven't even unpacked. And this human sparkler has already decided we're destined for friendship based on what? Shared living space and a few questions about figure skating?
Americus must see the skepticism written across my face because she grins wider, if such a thing is physically possible.
"Don't fight it, Preston. Resistance is futile. Besides..."
She gestures to herself with obvious pride.
"Glitter's contagious. You'll be bedazzled within the week."
Despite everything, the pain in my knee, the uncertainty about my future, the memory of hazel green eyes that saw too much, I feel something crack open in my chest.
Something that might be the beginning of actual laughter.
Maybe chaos isn't the worst possible roommate to have.
Americus flops back onto her bed with characteristic drama, arms spread wide like she's making snow angels in sequins. The late afternoon light catches every glittery surface, turning our small dorm room into a kaleidoscope of reflected color.
"Trust me, roomie," she says, her voice warm with the kind of confidence that suggests she's never met a stranger she couldn't befriend. "We're going to be absolutely legendary together."
