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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — Wrong Floor, Wrong Room, Wrong Boy

The acceptance letter had said Room 204.

Maya Santos had read it seventeen times. On the bus from Queens, standing in the elevator, walking down the corridor with her secondhand backpack and a rolling suitcase that squeaked on every third step. Room 204, Alderton Academic Building. She knew it the way she knew her own heartbeat.

So when she pushed open the door marked 204 and stepped inside, she was certain she was in the right place.

The boy at the head of the table was not.

He looked up slowly — the kind of slow that wasn't distraction, but deliberate, the kind that said I'll look when I'm ready and not a second before. Dark hair, sharp jaw, a blazer that probably cost more than Maya's monthly rent back home. Three other students flanked him like satellites, laptops open, notebooks spread in careful formation. The room smelled like expensive coffee and quiet authority.

Seven sets of eyes landed on her.

Maya didn't move.

"Can I help you?" the boy said. His voice was even, unbothered. Faintly amused, the way people are amused by things they consider small.

"I have this room booked," Maya said.

A beat of silence.

One of the girls beside him — blonde, pearl earrings — covered a smile with her hand.

The boy leaned back in his chair. "I have this room booked. For the rest of the afternoon."

"That's not possible. I submitted the reservation last week." Maya stepped fully inside and let the door close behind her. Her squeaky suitcase announced her with one final, undignified sound.

Nobody in the room laughed, but the air felt like laughing.

"My assistant books my study sessions at the start of every semester," the boy said, as if the existence of a personal assistant was the most ordinary thing in the world. "So whatever you think you reserved, I'd double check the confirmation number."

Maya held his gaze. She'd faced harder things than a boy in a blazer.

"I have the confirmation number," she said. "Do you want to compare?"

Something flickered in his expression. Not irritation exactly. Something more like surprise — the surprise of a person who hadn't been challenged in a while and had almost forgotten what it felt like. He straightened slightly.

"I reserved the entire floor," he said. Quieter now. Still certain.

"The entire floor," Maya repeated.

"Yes."

"That's—" she stopped herself. She breathed. She looked around the room — the long oak table, the high windows, New York City shimmering below like something from a film she wasn't supposed to be in.

She could argue. She had every right to argue.

Instead, she walked to the far corner of the room, set her suitcase against the wall, sat down, and opened her Economics textbook.

The silence that followed was exquisite.

"Excuse me," the boy said.

"Mm?" She didn't look up.

"I said I reserved the—"

"The entire floor," she finished for him, eyes still on the page. "You mentioned that. But you only reserved this room on the system, which means the booking is disputed, which means we both have a right to be here until administration resolves it tomorrow morning." She turned a page. "I'll be quiet. I promise."

The silence this time was different. Thicker.

She heard him exhale — not quite a sigh, not quite a scoff. Something in between, something that sounded almost involuntary.

She read for two hours.

When she finally packed up to leave, the others had gone. The boy was alone at the head of the table, still working, though she noticed his laptop screen had barely changed in the last forty minutes.

She zipped her bag.

"I'm Maya," she said, because she was raised to introduce herself, regardless.

He didn't look up. "I know."

She paused. Then picked up her suitcase and walked to the door.

She was halfway down the hall when she realized — she had never told him her name.

---

Outside, the city hummed its indifferent song. Maya stood at the elevator, heart beating a little faster than she wanted it to. She pressed the button and told herself it was just adrenaline. First day nerves. Nothing more.

The elevator doors opened.

She stepped in.

And on the other side of the building, in the quiet of Room 204, Zachary Harrington closed his laptop, leaned back in his chair, and stared at the empty corner where a girl with a squeaky suitcase had sat for two hours without once being impressed by him.

He stayed like that for a long time.

Then he pulled out his phone and typed a name into the search bar of the university student directory.

Maya Santos.

His thumb hovered over the search button.

He locked his phone without pressing it.

Put it face-down on the table.

Sat back.

Why did he just do that.

End of Chapter 1

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