
Silent Hearts, Golden Lies
She came to St. Jude's to be invisible.
He made that impossible.
Elara Vance doesn't speak. Not because she can't, because the world stopped being safe enough to speak to. She's brilliant, she's careful, and she has survived worse than an elite private school full of students who treat cruelty like a sport.
She just needs two semesters. That's all.
Julian Reed was supposed to be background noise. The soccer star. The golden boy. The one everyone watches and no one really knows. She was not supposed to catch his attention. He was not supposed to keep hers.
But when Julian steps in to help her and accidentally paints a target on her back, Elara discovers that some enemies don't just want to win. They want to destroy. And some protectors don't know when to stop.
She doesn't need saving.
She needs to get through senior year without falling apart.
She's failing at both.
Enemies in the hallway. Secrets in the group chat. A stepmother at home who calls it honesty when she cuts. And a boy in the front row who keeps sliding notes backward and saying things like I pay what I owe like he actually means it.
Elara has one rule: don't let anyone in.
Julian Reed is very bad for her rules.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 1
"Next!"
The registrar didn't even look up.
Elara stepped forward, her transfer documents clutched so tight the edges bent. The woman behind the desk had a coffee stain on her collar and reading glasses perched so low on her nose they were basically falling off her face. She stamped something, flipped a page, stamped again.
"Name?"
"E..." Elara opened her mouth. Nothing came out. Just air. Just the familiar, humiliating wall of nothing.
The woman looked up facing her gaze at Elara finally.
"Name, sweetheart. I don't have all morning."
Someone behind Elara in the line snorted. She didn't turn around. She pulled out her phone instead, already open to a note she'd typed at 5 AM that morning.
Elara Vance. Senior. Transfer from Westbrook High.
She slid the phone across the counter.
The registrar stared at it like Elara had handed her a fish.
"You can't talk?"
More noise from the line behind her. Elara felt her neck go hot.
"She's mute," someone said. A girl's voice, bored. "Just process her, Mrs. Flora. You're holding up the whole line."
The registrar processed her.
Elara took her timetable, her locker number, and her dignity, what was left of it, and walked away without looking at whoever had spoken. She didn't want to see pity. She'd had enough pity to last three lifetimes.
St. Jude's International Academy was beautiful in the way that places built to make you feel small are always beautiful. High ceilings. Marble floors that clicked under every shoe. Lockers that were actually clean. The kind of school that had a fountain in the courtyard and called it "the Atrium."
Elara had looked it up the night before. Founded 1987. Ranked third in the country. Dress code strictly enforced. Annual fees that would have made her old school principal faint.
Her father had insisted on St. Jude's. Beatrice had agreed, which meant there was something in it for Beatrice. Elara just hadn't figured out what yet.
She found her locker on the second floor. 247. The combination worked on the third try. Inside, someone had left a sticker, a small yellow smiley face, right at eye level.
Elara peeled it off. She didn't need smiling things watching her.
She was pressing her chemistry textbook into the locker when she heard them.
Three girls. Walking like the hallway was a runway and the other students were extras hired to fill the background. The one in the middle was tall, blonde, wearing her uniform like it had been tailored for her specifically, which Elara suspected, it probably had. Her blazer sat differently from everyone else's. Crisper. Custom.
"Is that her?" One of the other girls, shorter, dark-haired, spoke quietly. But not quietly enough.
"The transfer? Obviously." The blonde one didn't lower her voice at all. "Look at the uniform. It's from the budget package."
Elara looked down at her own blazer. It was fine. It was clean. It was just not tailored.
"Chloe, that's kind of mean," the third girl said, but she was already smiling.
"Mila. Baby. Honesty isn't mean. It's a service." Chloe Sterling, because that's who this was, Elara could tell just from the way she moved She finally looked directly at Elara.
Their eyes met.
Chloe smiled. The most dangerous kind of smile. The kind that looked perfectly fine to anyone watching from a distance.
"Welcome to St. Jude's," Chloe said, sweet as bad medicine. "Love the uniform."
They walked past.
Elara turned back to her locker. Her hands were steady. She'd learned a long time ago how to keep her hands steady while everything inside her was falling apart.
Stay invisible, she told herself. That's the plan. Invisible, quiet, graduate, leave.
She pressed her forehead briefly against the cold metal of the locker door.
Just two semesters. You can do two semesters.
The bell rang.
Room 12B. Advanced Sciences.
Elara slipped in before the teacher arrived, which meant she got to choose her seat. She went straight to the back row, third seat from the left, beside the window. From here she could see the courtyard, the exit, and most importantly, she could see everyone before they saw her.
She opened her notebook and dated the top of a fresh page. Her handwriting was small and precise, the kind that looked like it belonged in an architect's sketchbook.
The class filled slowly. Loud. Laughing. A boy in the front row was throwing balled-up paper at the whiteboard. Two girls in the middle were sharing earphones. A group of guys near the door were deep in an argument about a match, a foul, and someone's terrible footwork.
Then the argument stopped.
Not because a teacher walked in. Because someone else did.
Elara looked up from her notebook.
He came in mid-laugh, turning to say something to the guy behind him, and the laugh was the kind that made the room shift slightly, not because it was loud, but because it was real. Tall. Six feet and something, broad across the shoulders, the kind of build that came from discipline not luck. His school tie was slightly loosened at the collar. Dark hair, a little messy, like he'd dried it and then forgotten about it entirely.
He scanned the room once , quick, practiced, like someone used to assessing spaces, and his eyes landed on the empty seat.
The one directly in front of Elara.
She dropped her gaze back to her notebook.
She heard him sit. Felt the slight shift of air. He smelled like grass and something clean, like early mornings and cold water. She noticed this the way you notice things you're actively trying to ignore.
"Reed, don't think I didn't see you walking in at 8:04," the teacher said as she entered, dropping a stack of papers on her desk.
"It was 8:02, Mrs Victoria." His voice was unhurried. Not defensive. Just correcting the record with the confidence of someone who was almost never wrong.
A few people laughed. Mrs Victoria pointed at him with her marker.
"One more minute and I'm writing you up. Soccer season or not."
"Understood." He said it pleasantly, like he genuinely respected the warning and held no grudge about it.
Elara wrote the date again on her page. Then crossed it out. She'd already written it.
She stared at her crossed-out date.
She was fine. She was invisible. Everything was going to be fine.
It was not fine.
By third period, Chloe's friend Mila had "accidentally" knocked Elara's tray during the morning break. The juice soaked straight through the sleeve of Elara's blazer. Mila apologized with a smile that didn't reach anywhere near her eyes, and Sophie laughed from three feet away, pretending to look at her phone.
Elara walked to the bathroom, pressed paper towels against her sleeve, and breathed through her nose.
Two semesters.
Chemistry lab smelled the way chemistry labs always smell, slightly dangerous, slightly like someone had burned something last week and the ghost of it was still hanging around. The teacher, Mr. James, paired them alphabetically. Elara's partner was a boy named Victor who took one look at her, learned she wasn't going to speak, and declared he "worked better alone anyway" before drifting to whisper with his friend across the bench.
Fine. She'd work alone.
The problem was the equipment trolley.
The conductivity kit, glass, heavy, awkward, was on the top shelf, and Elara was five-foot-four. She reached. She got her fingers on the edge of the tray. She pulled carefully.
The trolley wobbled.
The tray tilted.
She grabbed for it with both hands, already watching it fall in her mind.
A hand reached over her head and caught it.
One hand. Flat against the bottom of the tray, completely steady, like it weighed nothing at all.
Elara went still.
She didn't look up immediately. She looked at the hand first. Large. A faint scar across the knuckle of the index finger. The kind of scar you get from something real, not careless.
She looked up.
Julian Reed was standing slightly behind her, arm still extended, the conductivity tray now balanced and safe. He wasn't looking at her. He was checking the tray, making sure it was stable. Then he lowered it slowly to the bench in front of her and stepped back.
He said nothing.
Neither did she.
For three full seconds they just looked at each other.
Then Julian nodded once, like this was simply a normal thing a person did, and returned to his own bench without any performance about it.
Elara stared at the conductivity kit sitting neatly in front of her.
She felt it before she saw it. That specific quality of someone watching with intention.
She glanced sideways.
Chloe Sterling was staring at her from across the room. Her eyes moved from Elara to Julian's back, then slowly back to Elara. Measuring. Calculating.
She didn't smile this time.
Elara looked back at her equipment.
Her hands were not as steady as before.
You may also like

7.9
Indianna Hughs had always been the quiet one, the shy one. She stayed in the background, blending in, never getting noticed.
She liked it that way.
So when she's forced to move schools, she isn't happy. Everyone notices the new kid, and she doesn't want that kind of attention.
Especially not from Mr. Bad Boy, who seems a little too interested in her.
"She's shy," Brooke shrugged, glancing at Indianna, who looked like she'd rather be anywhere else but in the classroom with them.
"Well, come on," Greyson said, a hint of amusement in his voice. "I don't bite."
Indianna stiffened just like before.
"Don't say that," she replied quietly, but there was firmness in her tone now.
Greyson raised an eyebrow, a slow smirk forming on his lips.
"Did I hit a nerve?" he asked.
"Guess you're not as innocent as you look."
This is the edited and rewritten version of Shy.
All rights reserved.

9.6
Ezran Williamson never asked for a new family, especially not one that comes with a stepbrother he can't stand.
At twenty-one, Ezran is sharp-tongued, rebellious, and determined to graduate and build a future in programming on his own terms.
But when his mother remarries a powerful businessman, his carefully controlled life collides with Lucian Banks, his cold, dominant, and dangerously untouchable stepbrother. Successful, older, and infuriatingly composed, Lucian is everything Ezran hates.
Slowly, hatred turns into tension, tension becomes chemistry, and chemistry ignites something neither of them is prepared to face.
What begins as resistance slowly unravels into a forbidden obsession, one that defies family, morality, and control. As secrets surface and pressure mounts, Ezran and Lucian are forced to choose between duty and desire, legacy and love, because some feelings don't fade and some obsessions are worth every consequence.

8.3
I lost my memory. Or rather, I faked it.
Conrad Gallagher, the boyfriend I had been secretly dating for five years, effortlessly erased our entire relationship.
"You're only fit to be a casual hookup."
Then, he announced his engagement to a woman approved by his parents.
To save myself from utter humiliation, I faked amnesia, conveniently forgetting no one but Conrad.
But when it was time for me to get married, Conrad regretted it. He kidnapped me right out of my wedding and spirited me away: "Don't marry him, okay?"

9.5
This is wrong Clark, Rachel is my sister." I said out of breath as he continued assaulting my neck with kisses.
"I don't care Eva, it's you I want and desire and not her."
"what will the world say??? what if she finds out about this Clark?? what then??" I asked with uncertainty.
"I want you and care only about you Eva and the world can go to hell!!! are you ready to hold my hand as we walk through this path together???"
"Clarkkkk."
"Answer me, Eva!! are you ready???"
Eva Mendes harbours a secret attraction for her sister's husband Clark Anderson and as she struggles with her guilt and shame, she finds herself drawn to Clark's confident nature despite the danger of ruining her sister's relationship and her own reputation.
As their desires intensify, they realize that their secrets and lies may ultimately lead to their downfall or will it???

8.9
WARNING: FOR MATURE READERS ONLY!!!
This erotica collection is raw, hot, intense, and packed with deliciously filthy fucktwists that will leave you breathless.
Each story is steamy, gripping, and driven by compelling plots that pull you deep into forbidden desire.
You will find A strict 59-year-old professor bends his tempting student over his desk and growls that she's been a very bad girl.
A college student wakes up sore and dripping in her biggest rival's bed, with no memory of how many times he fucked her senseless.
Her hot stepdad has a secret camera aimed at her bed. When she catches him watching, she doesn't rage - she spreads her legs and gives him the show of his life.
A seductive woman is the only weakness of a ruthless mafia king, and he finally claims her body as his own.
She knows her sister is cheating, so she seduces her husband right in front of her - and her sister can't say a single word.
Piper's rent is overdue. Instead of paying up, she drops to her knees for the landlord while her boyfriend watches.
A spoiled, arrogant rich brat demands a private striptease. The dancer doesn't walk away - she dances for him until he completely loses control.
An assistant's boyfriend has a huge cock, but "Daddy" knows exactly how to ruin her with his tongue. She chooses Daddy.
Best friends make a wicked bet: seduce my dad. She takes the bet... and loses all control the moment he bends her over.
Chloe has been secretly masturbating to her stepbrother's photos, moaning his name as she comes. She can't hide it much longer.
A married gym coach can't stop staring at the sexy teacher. She goes all the way and lets him take her between her thighs.
Her doctor tells her she needs rest... but she's determined to prove she's strong enough to be fucked senseless on his examination table.
Every twisted fantasy and every scorching answer waits inside these pages.
Flip the pages, spread your legs... and get ready to throb.

8.0
I was the perfect Mafia wife, my dowry the foundation of my husband's ambition. I paid for his Yale degree, his tailored suits, and the very mansion he called his own. My reward? He paraded his mistress into my bedroom and declared her his second wife, expecting me to silently finance their affair.
They thought they had broken a merchant's daughter. They forgot I was raised by wolves.
Armed with a blood chit—a life debt owed to my family by the most feared man in Chicago—I walked into the lion's den. I went to Damien 'The Wraith' Falcone, the Dark Don who rules the Outfit with an iron fist, to demand a simple annulment.
But the King of Chicago isn't interested in simple transactions. He saw the steel beneath my silk, the vendetta burning in my eyes. He granted me my freedom, but at a price: my allegiance. Now, I'm a pawn in his lethal game of thrones, caught between a treacherous husband I swore to destroy and a ruthless Don who looks at me with a terrifying, possessive hunger.
In a city built on loyalty and betrayal, I'm about to teach them all that a queen's wrath is the deadliest weapon of all.