
My Roommate Stole Him and Tried to Ruin Me
Chapter 3
I crossed the distance before he could finish forming whatever word was coming out of his mouth.
My palm connected with his cheek — hard, clean, the kind of slap that has no heat in it, only precision. His head turned with the impact. The sound of it cut through the amber-lit quiet like a crack in glass.
He blinked. His hand came up to his face.
'We're done,' I said. 'Don't contact me.'
I turned and walked.
'Cat —' His voice came from behind me, already reaching, already trying to pull me back into the version of this where he got to explain. 'Cat, just — wait. Let me —'
I didn't stop.
I didn't slow down. I didn't look back over my shoulder to see if he was following, didn't check whether Laylah was still standing there with her fingers curled into nothing where his jacket had been. The lamp behind me threw my shadow long across the path and I walked straight through it.
He called my name one more time.
The sound of it reached me and passed through me and left nothing behind.
I kept walking.
---
Oaklynn and Mila were in the suite when I got back. I don't know if they'd been waiting or if it was coincidence — I never asked. It didn't matter.
Oaklynn took one look at my face and didn't say a word. She turned and started moving Laylah's remaining items — the ones the police hadn't already bagged — to one consolidated corner of the room. Methodical. Efficient. Like she'd been planning the logistics of it for weeks.
Maybe she had.
Mila put the kettle on.
I sat down on the floor with my back against my bed and looked at the wall. The adrenaline had finished its work. What was left underneath was not grief, exactly. It was more like the feeling after a fever breaks — wrung out, clear-headed, slightly hollow.
The takeout arrived twenty minutes later. Mila set a container of noodles in my lap without asking what I wanted. Oaklynn dropped chopsticks on top and sat down across from me with her own container.
We ate.
The room was quiet in the way that only feels comfortable between people who don't need to fill it. Outside, the campus made its usual sounds — voices, a distant bass line from somewhere, the elevator down the hall. In here it was just the three of us and the steam rising off the food and the small click of Mila refilling my tea without being asked.
I stared at the wall and turned it over in my mind. Not the kiss — I was done with the kiss. The timeline. The coffee on my desk. The library walk. The half-second in the narrow room when he'd handed me a box and his eyes had gone somewhere else.
'I should have seen it,' I said.
Oaklynn didn't look up from her noodles. 'You saw it. You just gave him the benefit of the doubt.'
I thought about that.
She wasn't wrong. I had seen it — every small thing, filed and catalogued in the back of my mind the way I catalogued everything. I had just kept the file closed because opening it meant admitting that the foundation I'd built the last two years on was not what I thought it was. That the boy who had supposedly pulled me out of the ocean had been standing on the shore the whole time, watching someone else do it, and then walked over and taken the credit.
I didn't know that part yet. But I think some part of me had already started to suspect that the story I'd been told about myself — about who had saved me, about what I owed and to whom — had a seam in it somewhere.
Mila said nothing. She refilled my tea.
We sat on the floor until past midnight. I did not cry. I ate my noodles and I let the quiet do its work, and by the time I finally got into bed I felt something I hadn't expected to feel.
Light. Fractionally, cautiously light.
---
I found out about the post the next morning.
Not from a notification. Not from a text. I found out the way you find out about things on a campus that loves a scandal — from the quality of the air when I walked into my morning lecture.
The room shifted before I saw a single face clearly. It was in the way two people near the door stopped talking mid-sentence. In the way a girl I'd nodded to twice this week suddenly became very interested in her laptop screen. In the particular texture of a room that has been talking about you and has not yet decided whether to stop.
I took my usual seat. I opened my notebook. I kept my face neutral and my spine straight and I waited.
Oaklynn texted me four minutes into the lecture.
*Campus forum. Anonymous post. Check it.*
I didn't check it in class. I already knew the shape of it — I could feel it in the room, in the careful way no one was looking at me, which is its own kind of looking. Cayden's ego was not built for what had happened yesterday. A man like that, with a story like his, does not absorb a public slap and a clean exit without reaching for something to throw back.
I had taken his narrative away from him. So he had built a new one.
I read the post after class, standing in the hallway with my back against the wall and my coffee going cold in my hand. It was detailed. Specific enough to identify me, specific enough to identify the instructor — the one I'd noticed on the ROTC field, the one who went still in himself while everything around him moved. It painted a picture of preferential treatment, of something transactional and ugly dressed up as academic access.
I read it twice.
Then I put my phone in my pocket and finished my coffee.
The dining hall would be worse. The afternoon would be worse. I could already map the spread of it — the whisper chain, the screenshot forwarded to group chats, the particular cruelty of a campus that processes everything as content.
I had handled Laylah with a clasp held up to the light.
I would handle this too.
I just needed to figure out how.
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