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The Probability Of Us  Novel Cover

The Probability Of Us

Aiden Cole has it all-looks, charm, and a reputation that keeps every girl guessing. Behind the confident smirk, though, hides the secret of being the school's untouchable playboy and the illegitimate son no one talks about. Then she shows up. The girl who isn't afraid to call him out, the one who sees through the act he's perfected. Between whispered rumors, cruel bullies, and a love triangle that blurs every line, Aiden starts to wonder if maybe, just maybe, someone like him could actually be worth loving. But in a world built on secrets and lies... what are the chances that love could ever be real?
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Chapter 1

The morning sun always looks better on glass than on people. At least, that is what I tell myself as I lean against my locker, watching it bounce off the polished walls of Westbrook Academy. Everything here gleams. The students, the hallways, even the smiles. But underneath, it is all just cracked glass pretending to be diamonds.

"Cole, you coming to practice?"

That is Ryan, my best friend and the school's golden midfielder. He looks like he stepped out of a prep-school magazine, tie loose, grin cocky, the kind of guy teachers pretend to hate but secretly adore.

"Eventually," I say, slipping my phone into my pocket. "Got a few hearts to break first."

Ryan laughs like he has heard it a hundred times, and he has. The thing about being Aiden Cole is that people expect me to play the part. The playboy. The heartbreaker. The one who smiles like he has never lost anything in his life. It is easier to let them believe that. People do not dig too deep when they are busy admiring the surface.

The bell rings, shrill and impatient. Westbrook's halls come alive, a symphony of chatter and perfume and laughter that sounds just a little too rehearsed. I walk through it like I own the place, because that is what they expect me to do.

"Hey Aiden," a girl from my math class says, brushing her hair back in a move that is definitely not accidental.

"Morning, Ivy."

She blushes. They always do.

Ryan nudges me as we head toward first period. "You really should start charging for that smile."

"I am generous," I say, smirking. "Community service."

He laughs, but his eyes flick toward a group of guys near the end of the hall. Three of them, varsity jackets, too much swagger and not enough substance. Tyler Mason stands in the middle, smirk already loaded.

"Watch it, Cole," Tyler calls out as we pass. "Wouldn't want you stealing anyone's girlfriend again."

His voice is loud enough for the whole hallway to hear. Heads turn. A few girls giggle.

"Relax, Mason," I say, keeping my voice light. "You need someone to make her feel wanted while you are too busy talking to your mirror."

The crowd bursts into laughter, but there is a sharp edge in Tyler's eyes. He steps closer, the air tightening just enough for me to notice. For a second, I think he might actually do something. But then the teacher's voice echoes down the corridor, and he backs off with a smirk that does not reach his eyes.

Ryan mutters, "One day he is going to swing."

"One day I might let him," I reply, but my smile does not quite reach either.

It is always like this. The jokes, the girls, the attention. People think I thrive on it. And maybe I do. But it also keeps them at arm's length, which is exactly where I want them. No one looks too closely at someone who keeps them laughing.

Classes drag by. History, then literature. Mrs. Lyle drones on about tragic heroes and fates they cannot escape, and all I can think is that she sounds like every romance novel ever written.

"Aiden, perhaps you can explain why Shakespeare used fate as a device in Romeo and Juliet?" she asks, because of course she would.

I lean back, half-smile in place. "Maybe because it is easier to blame the stars than admit they made bad choices."

A few students chuckle. Mrs. Lyle raises a brow, but there is something like approval in her eyes. She knows I am half-serious, even if no one else does.

By lunch, the cafeteria feels like a stage. Tables divided like territories. Athletes in one corner, artists in another, the silent kids hidden along the edges like they hope to vanish. Ryan and I sit at our usual spot in the center, surrounded by noise.

Across from me, a cheerleader named Tessa leans forward, smile too sweet. "So, Aiden, are you coming to the party tonight?"

"Depends," I say, lazily stirring my drink. "Will it be fun, or another one of those events where everyone pretends to like each other?"

She laughs, flicking her hair. "Maybe both."

Ryan grins at me over his sandwich. "You will be there. You always are."

He is right. I always am. Because it is easier to stay busy than to stay still.

I glance around the room, the chatter fading just a little as my eyes land on something unexpected - an empty table near the window. No one ever sits there. It is the only untouched thing in this entire place. The sunlight hits it just right, dust floating lazily through the air, and for a strange second, I imagine someone sitting there. Someone who does not belong to this polished world. Someone who does not look at me like they already know what to expect.

The thought fades when Tessa giggles again, asking about my plans for the weekend. I answer without thinking. The same routine. The same mask.

After lunch, I head to the field. Soccer practice is supposed to burn off energy, but all it really does is keep me moving. The coach yells instructions, the air smells like sweat and grass, and the world shrinks down to speed and focus. Out here, no one asks questions. Out here, I can be anyone I want.

When practice ends, I linger behind, kicking a stray ball into the goal just to hear the satisfying thud. Ryan waves goodbye, calling out something about meeting later, but I barely hear him. The field is empty now, the sun slipping lower, the edges of the sky painted gold. For once, it is quiet.

That is when I hear it - laughter, soft but real. Not the polished kind that echoes through Westbrook's halls. It comes from the bleachers, from someone who clearly does not know that this is my space.

I turn. There is a girl sitting near the top row, hair pulled into a messy bun, a book balanced on her knees. She looks new - not in the obvious way, but in the way she does not carry herself like she owes anyone an explanation. Her uniform fits wrong, her tie loose, and her shoes are scuffed. She is reading like she actually cares about the words.

I take a few steps closer before I even think about why.

"You know this is a restricted area, right?" I say, voice casual, hands in pockets.

She looks up slowly, eyes meeting mine. They are not the kind of eyes that flinch. "Is it?"

"Technically," I say. "Only players are supposed to be here after hours."

"Technically," she echoes, turning a page. "And you always follow the rules, I guess?"

Her tone is teasing, but not in the flirty way I am used to. More like she already knows I will not have a real answer.

I grin. "Depends on who is watching."

"Maybe I am," she says, without looking up.

For a moment, I just stand there, watching her read. Something about her calmness throws me off. Everyone else in this school tries too hard - to fit in, to impress, to be seen. She is the first person who seems completely uninterested in doing any of that.

Finally, I ask, "You are new."

She glances up again. "What gave it away? The lack of shiny shoes or the fact that I am not staring at you like everyone else?"

That earns a real laugh from me, the kind that feels unfamiliar in my throat. "Both, maybe."

"I figured," she says simply, closing her book. "Well, now you know. I am new. And you are..."

"Aiden," I supply. "Aiden Cole."

She nods slowly, as if the name does not impress her. "Right. The one everyone talks about."

I raise a brow. "Depends what they are saying."

"That you are trouble."

"And you believe them?"

Her eyes linger on me for a second longer than comfortable. "I will let you know."

There it is. The spark. The challenge. The thing I did not realize I had been waiting for.

The wind picks up, rustling the pages of her book. She catches them with one hand, calm and unbothered. I notice the faint scar along her wrist, the kind people do not get from accidents. It is gone before I can think too much about it.

I clear my throat. "You planning on sitting there all evening?"

"Maybe," she says, smiling slightly. "Unless you are kicking me out."

"Not yet," I reply. "But I might need to start charging rent."

"Then you should pick a better view," she says, standing up. "Because this one feels a little overrated."

I blink, caught off guard by the audacity in her tone. She steps down the bleachers, brushing past me like she has known me her entire life. She smells like vanilla and something sharp underneath it, like she is both soft and dangerous at once.

"See you around, Aiden Cole," she says over her shoulder.

And just like that, she is gone.

The air feels different after she leaves, like the world tilted slightly when I was not looking. I stand there for a while, trying to name the feeling sitting heavy in my chest, but nothing fits.

For the first time in a long time, I do not have a line ready. I do not have a plan.

All I have is the faint sound of her laughter echoing across the field and the strange thought that maybe - just maybe - something finally changed.

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