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My Roommate Stole Him and Tried to Ruin Me Novel Cover

My Roommate Stole Him and Tried to Ruin Me

I had a system. Everything I owned was packed in four labeled boxes and two rolling suitcases, organized by category, cross-referenced with a handwritten list in my notebook. I had researched the elevator wait times for NYU move-in day and arrived forty minutes before the rush. I had a plan for where every item would go. What I did not have a plan for was Laylah Tucker. She was already there when I pushed open the door to suite 412. Her side of the room looked like a magazine spread — fairy lights strung with mathematical precision, a white duvet without a single wrinkle, a mini-fridge humming quietly in the corner with a small succulent on top. She turned when I walked in, and her smile was the kind that reached her eyes on command. "You must be Cataleya." She said my name like she'd been practicing it. "I'm Laylah.
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Chapter 1

I had a system.

Everything I owned was packed in four labeled boxes and two rolling suitcases, organized by category, cross-referenced with a handwritten list in my notebook. I had researched the elevator wait times for NYU move-in day and arrived forty minutes before the rush. I had a plan for where every item would go.

What I did not have a plan for was Laylah Tucker.

She was already there when I pushed open the door to suite 412. Her side of the room looked like a magazine spread — fairy lights strung with mathematical precision, a white duvet without a single wrinkle, a mini-fridge humming quietly in the corner with a small succulent on top. She turned when I walked in, and her smile was the kind that reached her eyes on command.

"You must be Cataleya." She said my name like she'd been practicing it. "I'm Laylah. I got here early — hope that's okay. I saved you the side with the better window light."

I looked at the window. Then at her. "Thanks."

"I have extra hangers if you need them. And you're totally welcome to use the fridge." She tilted her head, warm and open. "What's your major?"

I told her. She asked about my family with bright, interested eyes — not the polite version of asking, but the version that leans in slightly, that makes you feel like the most interesting person in the room. I answered in short sentences and started unpacking my first box.

Oaklynn Cooper arrived twenty minutes later with a single duffel bag and the energy of someone who had already assessed the situation from the hallway. She set her bag down, looked at Laylah's side of the room, looked at Laylah, and said, "Nice setup."

Two words. Completely neutral. But when she caught my eye over Laylah's shoulder, something passed between us — quick and wordless, the kind of look that means I see it too, and we'll talk later.

Mila Oliver came in behind her, carrying a tote bag full of snacks and a small speaker. She introduced herself to everyone with genuine warmth, the kind that didn't need to perform anything. Within ten minutes she had offered Oaklynn a granola bar and asked Laylah a question about her hometown that made Laylah's smile go slightly stiff before recovering.

I filed that away.

Cayden showed up at noon.

He knocked twice and came in already talking, easy and familiar, the way he always moved through rooms — like the space had been waiting for him. He kissed my cheek and grabbed the heaviest box without being asked, and I felt the knot in my chest loosen a little. This was the part I knew. This was solid ground.

"Where do you want this?"

"Closet shelf, top row."

He was halfway across the room when Laylah turned from her desk. "Oh — you must be Cayden." Her voice was light, almost surprised, like she hadn't already heard his name from me three times this morning. "Cataleya talks about you."

Cayden set the box down and smiled. "All good things, I hope."

"Obviously." She laughed.

It was a small laugh. Easy. The kind between people who are already comfortable.

The room was narrow. That was the thing about dorm rooms — there was nowhere to stand that wasn't close to someone else. When Laylah moved toward her dresser, she had to squeeze past Cayden in the gap between the beds. Her fingers brushed his arm. Brief. Incidental.

Except Cayden's gaze followed her for a half-second after she passed.

I was handing him a second box. He took it without looking at me.

They laughed at something — I didn't catch what, I was already turning back to my suitcase — and the sound of it was a fraction too easy. The kind of easy that takes time to build.

I pressed my thumbnail into the edge of my notebook and kept unpacking.

He saved your life, I told myself. You know him.

The feeling settled in my chest anyway. Small and dense, like a stone dropped in still water.

---

The first week moved fast.

Laylah was good. I'll give her that. She never did anything I could point to directly. She texted Cayden for econ study advice — I had mentioned, once, that he was good at it. She told me, casually, that he'd stopped by while I was in my afternoon seminar. "He left a coffee for you," she said, nodding at my desk. "I told him you'd be back by four."

The coffee was there. The gesture was sweet. I drank it.

Two days later she mentioned he'd offered to walk her to the library since it was on his way to the gym. "I told him he didn't have to," she added, with a small, self-deprecating smile. "He insisted. He's so thoughtful."

Each thing was deniable. Each thing landed.

I had nothing I could confront without sounding paranoid. So I said nothing, and the stone in my chest got a little heavier.

---

The fitness elective met on the east side of the athletic complex, which shared a chain-link boundary with the ROTC training field.

I noticed him on the third day.

He was running drills with a group of upperclassmen — not shouting, not performing, just speaking at a volume that somehow carried across the field and made everyone move faster. Sharp-tongued. Completely still in himself even when everything around him was in motion. The kind of person who doesn't need to raise his voice because the room — or the field — has already decided to listen.

He was looking in my direction when I glanced over.

I looked away first.

I didn't know his name yet. I registered him the way you register a door that's slightly ajar in a house you're still learning — not a threat, not an invitation. Just something to be aware of. Something that might matter later.

I filed him away and went back to my warm-up.

---

That night, I heard Oaklynn's voice through the thin wall between the bathroom and the kitchen.

"She's performing every single interaction." A pause. "And Cayden is already compromised."

Mila's response was quieter. I couldn't make out the words, only the tone — careful, measured, the sound of someone urging patience.

I stood very still with my hand on the bathroom door.

Then I turned on the faucet, washed my face, and looked at myself in the mirror for a long moment.

I knew what I'd heard.

I just wasn't ready to do anything about it yet.

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