She moved silently across the plush carpet. Her fingertips trembled, a tiny vibration of excitement and nerves. She took a slow breath, the air tasting stale. Calm. She had to be calm.
Nina picked up the phone. It felt warm in her hand.
She tapped open his social media. Pinned to the top of his messages was a contact named "My Queen." The profile picture was a professionally lit selfie of Ashleigh Meadows, all perfect teeth and vacant eyes.
With a flick of her thumb, Nina scrolled up. The conversation was a pathetic monument to one-sided devotion. Ryan's messages were desperate bids for attention. Ashleigh's replies were brief, dismissive, sometimes just a single emoji.
The latest message from Ryan, sent an hour ago, was still unread.
"Ashleigh, did you see? I won the game today!"
Nina's lips curved into a cold, thin smile. This was the fuel she needed. This pathetic, unrequited obsession was the key.
She pressed her thumb down on the conversation. A menu popped up. Her eyes found the words she was looking for.
Delete Chat.
A confirmation window appeared, stark and final. "Are you sure?"
The question reflected in her pupils. She felt a strange sense of ceremony, a priestess performing a sacred rite. Her thumb moved with deliberate grace and pressed "Yes."
The chat with "My Queen" vanished. It was as if Ashleigh Meadows had never existed in his digital world. A clean slate. A perfect void.
She didn't leave immediately. She placed the phone back on the nightstand, carefully adjusting the charging cable to the exact angle it was before. She was a ghost. A phantom of vengeance.
Her gaze drifted around the room. The walls were covered in posters of sports heroes and photos of Ryan with his football team. In every picture, he was grinning, a golden boy shining like a miniature sun.
She felt nothing. No guilt. No remorse.
She hoped his sun would burn him alive.
A sound from downstairs cut through the silence. The roar of a car engine, then the heavy slam of a door.
He was back.
A jolt went through Nina's chest, a sudden, sharp spike of adrenaline. Her heart hammered against her ribs. She moved instantly, slipping into the adjoining walk-in closet and pulling the door almost shut, leaving only a hairline crack to see through.
Ryan burst into the room, humming off-key. He was still in his varsity uniform, the fabric stained with grass and dirt. He threw his duffel bag onto the floor with a heavy thud.
He went straight for the phone, his movements casual, practiced. He swiped it off the nightstand and tapped the screen.
The humming stopped.
The smile on his face froze, then melted away, replaced by a mask of confusion.
He tapped the screen again. Faster this time. His thumb moved frantically, refreshing the app, pulling up the search bar. He typed A-S-H-L-E-I-G-H.
Nothing. The conversation was gone.
His breathing changed. It became shallow and ragged. His blue eyes, usually so bright and carefree, narrowed into dangerous slits. The muscles in his jaw tightened.
He lifted his head, his gaze sweeping the room like a predator searching for its prey. His eyes passed over the closet door, then snapped back.
He saw the crack. He saw the shadow behind it.
Through the tiny opening, Nina's eyes met his. His were burning with a rage so pure it was almost beautiful.
She was found.
She didn't hide. She didn't cower. She pushed the closet door open and stepped out into the light, her expression a perfect mask of indifference.
Ryan stared at her, his whole body rigid with fury. His voice was a low, guttural growl, ripped from the depths of his chest.
"Did you do this?"
Nina lifted her chin, a deliberate, defiant gesture. A slow, mocking smile spread across her face.
"Yes," she said, her voice clear and steady. "I did it on purpose."
She watched the emotions play across his face. Shock. Disbelief. Then, a tidal wave of incandescent rage. It was like watching a storm gather on the horizon. It was magnificent.
His hands clenched into fists at his sides. The knuckles were white. He was a statue of coiled tension, every muscle in his athletic frame screaming for release.
He took a step toward her. Then another.
His tall, broad frame blocked out the light, casting her in his shadow. He was a mountain of muscle and fury.
Nina didn't retreat. She took a step forward, closing the small distance between them. She looked up into his furious eyes and spoke in a voice so low only he could hear.
"Go on," she whispered, her voice a siren's call to violence. She tilted her head toward the large window behind her. "You know you want to. Push me."
His fist came up, fast and powerful. It stopped an inch from her face, the air from the movement making her hair stir. He was trembling, his breath coming in harsh gasps.
For a heart-stopping second, she thought he would do it. Hope, sharp and painful, flared in her chest.
Then, with a roar of pure frustration, he spun around and slammed his fist into the wall beside him.
Plaster exploded. A spiderweb of cracks radiated from the point of impact. His knuckles were instantly red, then purple. But he hadn't touched her. He hadn't laid a single finger on her.
He stood with his back to her, his shoulders heaving, sucking in air like a drowning man. He turned his head, his eyes promising murder.
"Get out."