Chapter 26
JADE
The holidays don’t end with a bang.
They fade.
The lights come down one by one. The wreaths brown at the edges. The pine needles shed themselves into sad little drifts in corners no one bothers to sweep. Newport turns gray again—real gray, not cinematic gray. Steel skies. Salt wind. The kind of cold that seeps into your bones and stays there.
And Royal Oaks?
Royal Oaks is… quiet.
No whisper campaigns.
No snickering in hallways.
No phones snapping pictures like weapons.
The girls who once ran the school like a private kingdom are gone.
Expelled.
Some of them eighteen. Some of them charged. Real charges. Court dates. Mugshots their families paid to suppress—but not fast enough. The illusion cracked. Money couldn’t buy back time or erase screenshots or un-say threats made to the wrong people.
For the first time since I transferred here, the air feels breathable.
I walk through campus without my shoulders locked up around my ears. Teachers look me in the eye again—not with pity, not with fear, but with respect. The administration keeps their distance, careful now. Polite. Almost deferential.
They need me.
Positive PR has a funny way of changing power dynamics.
I said no to Good Morning America.
No to Hollywood.
No to late-night talk shows that wanted a soundbite, not a story.
But I said yes to Netflix.
Not because of fame. Not because of money.
Because the story didn’t end at the slime.
Because the quiet parts mattered too.
Filming starts slow. Observational. No manufactured drama. Cameras catching me in meetings, in therapy sessions, on the field, in classrooms. Royal Oaks signs off on it—they need the redemption arc just as badly as I needed the truth told.
And me?
I keep moving forward.
I run for student president.
I win.
Not because I’m viral—but because I show up.
I push for changes that don’t fit on a poster. More grant money. Expanded athletic funding. Cultural training that isn’t just a PowerPoint once a year. Anonymous reporting systems that actually protect people instead of feeding them back to the wolves.
Coach Roman watches it all with something like quiet awe.
“I didn’t bring you here just to play soccer,” she tells me one afternoon in her office. “But damn if I’m not glad I did.”
Then Boston College calls.
Then emails.
Then calls again.
A reinstated D1 offer.
Athletic scholarship.
Academic money layered on top.
I sit on my bed when I read it, phone shaking in my hands, the ocean pounding outside like it’s applauding.
I say yes.
When I tell Leo, he doesn’t even try to play it cool.
He picks me up and spins me around in the parking lot like we’re in some stupid rom-com, laughing into my hair, breathless.
“I knew it,” he says. “I always knew it.”
We’re together.
And we’re not.
We text constantly. Study dates. Long walks. Late-night talks in parked cars where the windows fog and nothing happens except honesty. We kiss—slow, unhurried, like we’re relearning each other on purpose.
We haven’t crossed that line again since Christmas.
And somehow, that feels right.
There’s no rush. No fear he’ll disappear. No fear I’ll lose myself.
We’re choosing each other—day by day—without possession.
Without performance.
Without crowns.
Sometimes I catch him watching me across campus like he still can’t believe I’m real.
Sometimes I catch myself smiling for no reason at all.
The magic didn’t disappear with the holidays.
It just changed shape.
The January cold in Boston isn’t merely cold—it’s a living thing, fierce and unrelenting, slicing through coats and skin alike.
The city is etched in ice and timeless brick, the Charles River gliding beneath a shroud of frost, slow and secretive.
Leo’s hand envelops mine, his warmth a steady anchor, his thumb tracing lazy, deliberate circles over my knuckles, as if reaffirming that I’m here, that this is ours.
We took a long weekend trip. Just the two of us.
In the city where we’d both go to college next fall.
“You sure you’re warm enough?” he asks again, voice low, eyes searching mine with that quiet intensity.
“Ohio winters,” I tease, breath clouding between us. “This is child’s play.”
His smile is slow, knowing. “You’re shivering, love.”
We wander into Harvard Square as dusk bleeds steel-gray across the sky, students brushing past in a flurry of scarves and ambition.
For a fleeting moment, I picture it: next fall, me in Boston College colors, him in Harvard crimson, our paths crossing on the T, our glances lingering like a secret promise.
Inside the hibachi grill, the air is alive with sizzle and flame.
The chef’s fire leaps high; we startle together, then dissolve into laughter, our knees pressing beneath the table—intentional now, a silent claim.
The scents of soy, garlic, and searing meat wrap around us like intimacy.
He lifts a perfect bite to my lips with his chopsticks, his gaze holding mine as I take it, the act simple yet charged, a taste of the ease we’re building.
At the aquarium, the world hushes to a dreamy blue.
Tanks pulse with soft light, fish drifting like whispers.
We pause before the vast ocean wall, sharks gliding in silent grace.
Leo steps behind me, his arms circling my waist with effortless certainty, his chest warm against my chest, chin nestled against my shoulder. His breath stirs the hair at my temple.
“I love when you’re like this,” he whispers, lips brushing my skin. “Quiet. Open. Mine.”
“I’m always open with you,” I murmur, leaning back into him, feeling the steady thrum of his heart.
His hold tightens just enough to make my pulse stutter.
Back at the hotel, the room’s heat finally thaws the chill from our bones.
Coats fall away, shoes kicked aside, as if we’re already settling into a shared life we haven’t dared name.
I drift to the window, city lights glittering below like scattered stars.
Then he’s there—his hands settling on my hips, slow and reverent, pulling me gently against him.
“Still good?” His voice is velvet, careful, laced with want.
I turn in his arms, palms sliding up to cradle his face, foreheads touching. “More than good.”
The kiss begins soft, exploratory—a question answered with deepening certainty.
Months of stolen calls and aching distance melt away.
His mouth moves over mine with growing hunger, yet never hurried; his hands trace the curve of my spine, slipping beneath my sweater to find skin, warm and deliberate.
I arch into him, fingers threading through his hair, tugging just enough to draw a low sound from his throat.
We undress each other slowly, savoring every reveal—the brush of fabric sliding away, the heat of bare skin meeting skin.
His lips trail fire along my collarbone, my neck, lingering at the hollow of my throat as I sigh his name.
My hands explore the planes of his back, the strength coiled there, pulling him closer until there’s no space left between us.
In bed, the world narrows to touch and breath.
He kisses me like I’m something precious, his body covering mine with tender weight, moving with a rhythm that’s both patient and consuming.
Every caress, every whispered endearment, feels like a vow.
I wrap around him, meeting him stroke for stroke, our gazes locked in the dim glow filtering through the curtains—raw, unguarded, utterly connected.
When release comes, it’s quiet and shattering, a shared tremor that leaves us breathless, clinging. He buries his face in my neck, murmuring my name like a prayer.
Much later, I stir in the tangle of sheets, his arm a possessive band across my waist, his body curved protectively around mine. Snow whispers against the glass, soft and un-intrusive. For the first time, the future doesn’t loom with uncertainty—it unfurls, warm and possible.
I press a lingering kiss to the curve of his shoulder, breathing him in, and let sleep claim me again.
This—this quiet, fierce closeness—is what’s coming.
Not flawless.
Not simple.
But deeply, undeniably ours.
And that makes it everything.