Chapter 1
The night before the SAT, Instagram exploded with a viral post:
"Madison, tomorrow I'm going to confess my love to you with my SAT exam! I'll write you love letters in my English essay, bubble 'I LOVE YOU' on my math answer sheet, fill my physics test with your name......"
Below the text was a photo of two hands intertwined.
I tapped to enlarge it. The familiar scar on his right wrist stabbed straight through my heart.
Comments poured in below: "This is insane! What kind of earth-shattering love is worth sacrificing standardized test scores for?"
The blogger immediately responded: "No worries, I already got MIT early admission anyway. Taking the SAT is just a formality."
"But as long as she's happy, what are test scores anyway?"
I took a deep breath and closed my quantum physics notes.
Madison was the transfer student who arrived during senior spring.
And the person posting was my boyfriend Liam, who had just called me an hour ago encouraging me to do well on the test so we could attend the same university.
I exited Instagram and dialed MIT Admissions.
"Sir, regarding the joint-authorship application—I want to withdraw it."
...
"The secondary applicant, Liam Davis, demonstrated a severe lack of foundational knowledge regarding the source code. Consequently, he has been permanently removed from the MIT candidate pool for suspected academic misrepresentation."
I read the final paragraph of the email from the MIT Admissions Office. I pressed 'Archive'.
At 11:58 PM on June 14th, MIT confirmed the kill. Two days ago, I submitted the raw, date-stamped logs of my quantum algorithm directly to the ethics committee. I withdrew my joint-authorship claim. I provided the security footage of myself working alone in the lab. The admissions board reviewed the evidence. They awarded me the full-ride Merit Excellence Scholarship. They blacklisted Liam.
I picked up my phone from the desk. I opened Instagram. The Explore page pushed a trending hashtag to the top slot: #PrepSchoolDrama.
It displayed 15,400 views. In a school of eight hundred students, that meant the entire student body and the surrounding zip codes were currently refreshing the feed. I tapped the tag. An anonymous carousel post loaded on my screen.
The title read: The King and the Queen Bee: A Timeline.
I swiped to the first slide. A photo taken from the sidewalk, looking through the glass window of Le Petit. Liam sat across from Madison. They held hands over a plate of oysters.
The timestamp in the corner read: Last Saturday, 8:15 PM.
Last Saturday at 8:15 PM, I sat in the basement of the campus library. I had three reference books open on the desk. I typed Liam’s supplemental essays for his MIT application.
He texted me at four o'clock that afternoon. “Chi Phi emergency. The frat brothers need me to sort out a dispute. Cover the essay for me? You know my voice better than I do. Love you.”
I swiped to the next slide. A leaked screenshot from the Chi Phi group chat.
Liam: Catching dinner with Madi at Le Petit.
Brother 1: What about the MIT deadline? Didn't you have supplements due?
Liam: Chloe’s got it. Free academic labor. She loves doing homework anyway.
I locked my jaw. Free academic labor. I spent two years doing his coursework. I wrote his term papers. I put his name first on my algorithm project. I engineered his entire Ivy League profile from scratch.
I swiped to the third slide. A flash photograph taken in the dark. Liam pressed Madison against the steel casing of the school’s quantum accelerator. They kissed. Madison had both hands tangled in his hair.
Timestamp: May 24th, 11:30 PM.
May 24th was the date of our final system debug. The protocol required two people to monitor the outputs. At nine o'clock, Liam called me. He coughed directly into the microphone.
“Stomach cramps are killing me, Chloe. I’m throwing up. I can’t make the debugging session.”
I stayed in that lab alone. I ran the diagnostics myself. I packed my bag at three in the morning.
I walked out to the empty campus parking lot. Three drunk men from off-campus cornered me by the dumpsters. One of them grabbed my backpack strap. Another blocked my car door. I screamed. I kicked the man blocking the door. A campus security patrol drove around the corner, and the three men ran into the woods.
I sat in my locked car shaking for an hour before I turned the ignition.
Liam was three blocks away. He used the exact lab where I built his future to have sex with Madison.
I scrolled down to the comment section of the post.
@PrepGossip: Didn’t Liam grab the mic at the freshman assembly and call Chloe his 'future wife'? Messy.
Liam’s verified account replied to the thread.
@Liam_Athletics: People grow up. She’s an academic robot. Zero social skills. Every date night is 'let's go to the lab to check the code.' It’s exhausting.
Madison replied right below him.
@Madi_Moneybags: Some people compete for GPA because they literally have nothing else going for them. #LiveInTheMoment
@Liam_Athletics replied to Madison: ❤️ facts.
I read the comments. I turned off my phone screen. I set the device face-down on the desk.
Madison’s family foundation donated a seven-figure check to the school every year. She had a trust fund. She had a guaranteed board seat at her father's hedge fund. She possessed a permanent financial safety net. She could afford to live in the moment.
Liam possessed nothing.
Liam was a sports recruit. He lacked legacy connections. He lacked family wealth. His entire social currency at this school relied on his reputation as a genius applicant headed for MIT. I built that reputation. I owned the code. I owned the data.
He believed he could steal the project, discard the academic robot, and walk into the Ivy League with the billionaire's daughter. He thought he secured the position.
He knew nothing about the email in my archive. He knew nothing about the ethics committee.
Right now, he attended the senior pre-graduation party. He bragged to Madison's friends about his MIT early decision. He thought he won.
Tomorrow morning is the Graduation and Elite Scholarship Ceremony. The principal will read the final college placements and scholarship awards. The entire school, the board of trustees, and the parents will sit in the audience.
I stood up from my desk. I walked to my closet. I pulled out my graduation gown and hung it on the door handle.
Tomorrow, I execute the reality check.
