
Part I: The Chokehold The first thing I felt was the cold. Not the kind of cold that comes from a drafty window, but the visceral, bone-deep freeze of fingers wrapped tight around my windpipe. My vision was swimming in black spots. My lungs were burning, screaming for oxygen that wasn't coming. Above me, a face twisted in pure, unadulterated hatred hovered like a specter. "Say one more word about my father, Vivian," the voice hissed. It was a low, jagged sound, like gravel grinding against glass. "One more word, and I will snap your neck like a twig." I wheezed, clawing instinctively at the hands crushing my throat. My fingernails scraped against skin, but he didn't flinch. I looked into his eyes. They were dark, endless pits of rage. But it was the rest of his face that jolted my memory awake. The left side was perfect—high cheekbone, sharp jawline, the kind of face that belonged on a Calvin Klein billboard. But the right side... the right side was a roadmap of tragedy. Burn scars, jagged and pink, twisted the skin from his temple down to his jaw. Liam Thorne. The name hit me harder than the lack of air. I wasn't me anymore. I wasn't the college student who fell asleep studying for finals. I was Vivian Vanderbuilt. The heiress. The queen bee of Crestwood Academy. And, most importantly, the "cannon fodder" villainess of the trashy young adult novel The Rest of Forever. And the boy strangling me? He was the villain. The future psychopath who would eventually burn half the city down. And I—Vivian—was the reason he turned into a monster. I was currently dying in the prologue. "I..." I choked out, my voice barely a squeak. "I'm... sorry." The grip didn't loosen. If anything, it tightened. Confusion flickered in his dark eyes. The Vivian he knew would have spat in his face. She would have threatened to have her daddy buy the trailer park he lived in and bulldoze it. She wouldn't have apologized. "What did you say?" he growled. "I said..." I gasped, tears leaking from the corners of my eyes, "I'm sorry, Liam. I won't... say it again." He stared at me for a long, agonizing second. Then, as if my neck had suddenly turned into a red-hot coal, he released me. I collapsed onto the dirty tile floor of the boys' locker room, heaving in air. It tasted like sweat and bleach. I coughed, clutching my bruised throat, and looked up at him. He was wearing a faded, oversized hoodie that had clearly seen better decades, and sneakers that were held together by duct tape and prayer. His fists were clenched at his sides, trembling. "Get out," he said. "Before I change my mind." I didn't need to be told twice. I scrambled to my feet, my legs feeling like jelly, and bolted. I ran past the rows of gray lockers, burst through the double doors, and didn't stop until I was in the pristine, marble-floored hallway of the main building. I caught my reflection in a trophy case. The girl staring back was stunning. Platinum blonde hair, blue eyes, skin that looked like it had been airbrushed. I was wearing a designer skirt that probably cost more than Liam’s entire life savings. "Great," I whispered to my reflection. "I'm the rich bitch who dies in Chapter Ten." Part II: The Redemption Arc According to the plot of The Rest of Forever, Vivian Vanderbuilt was obsessed with the male lead, Chase Sterling—the captain of the football team, the golden boy, the sun around which Crestwood Academy orbited. To get Chase’s attention, Vivian bullied anyone who got close to him, especially the scholarship student, Grace Miller. And Liam? Liam was just Vivian’s punching bag. She used him to vent her frustrations. She mocked his scars, humiliated him publicly, and eventually pushed him too far. In the original book, Liam kills Vivian on the night of the Senior Prom, framing it as a suicide, which kicks off his career as a high-functioning sociopath. I had about six months until Prom. Tick tock. The next day, the cafeteria was a war zone of social hierarchy. I walked in, my tray trembling slightly in my hands. Usually, Vivian sat at the "Table of Gods" in the center, flanked by her minions. I looked over. Chase was there, laughing loudly, his arm draped over a chair. Grace Miller was walking past, and I saw Chase wink at her. The main plot was moving along nicely. I ignored them. I scanned the perimeter. The outcasts. The stoners. The kids who ate quickly so they could leave. There, in the far back corner, sitting alone near the trash cans, was Liam. He had his hood up. He was picking at a sandwich that looked like two pieces of stale bread and nothing else. I took a deep breath. Don't die. Just be nice. I walked past my usual table. My "friends"—Jessica and Chloe—waved at me. "Viv! Over here!" Jessica squealed. "Not today," I murmured, clutching my tray. The cafeteria went silent as I approached the back corner. It was like the parting of the Red Sea, if the sea was made of teenagers wearing Abercrombie and judgment. I slammed my tray down opposite Liam. He flinched. His hand instinctively went to his pocket—I knew he carried a box cutter there. He looked up, his eyes narrowing. "What game is this, Vanderbuilt? You want to pour milk on me again? Or maybe you brought your friends to film it this time?" His voice was tired. That was what broke my heart. He wasn't even angry yet; he was just exhausted by the cruelty of his existence. "No game," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. I opened my expensive bento box. Inside was sushi, fresh fruit, and a Godiva truffle. "I just... I don't like the noise in the center." Liam stared at me. He stared at the sushi. Then he looked back at me. "You're out of your mind," he muttered, and went back to staring at his empty bread. I pushed my tray toward him. "I'm allergic to crab." "Liar," he said. "I saw you eating crab cakes yesterday." Crap. Vivian had no allergies. "I developed it overnight," I lied smoothly. "Medical mystery. Look, just eat it. Or throw it away. I don't care." I pulled out my AP History textbook and pretended to read. For five minutes, he didn't move. Then, I heard the subtle sound of chopsticks. I risked a glance. He was eating. Fast. Like someone who didn't know when his next meal was coming. We sat in silence. The rest of the cafeteria was whispering, cell phones out, recording the downfall of the Queen Bee. But I didn't care. I looked at the faint purple bruises on his wrist, peeking out from his sleeve. His father. The drunk who beat him every time he lost money at the track. I have to save him, I thought. Not just to save myself. But because nobody deserves this. Part III: The Umbrella It rained in Crestwood for three weeks straight in November. The kind of relentless, freezing rain that soaked through your soul. I was waiting for my driver, standing under the massive portico of the school entrance. My Mercedes pulled up. As I walked toward it, I saw a figure walking toward the bus stop. No umbrella. Just that soaking wet hoodie. Liam was limping slightly. "Stop the car," I told the driver. "Miss Vivian?" "I said stop!" I grabbed the oversized golf umbrella from the backseat and jumped out. My Gucci loafers splashed into a puddle. "Liam!" I shouted over the roar of the rain. He didn't stop. He kept walking, head down against the wind. I ran after him. I wasn't built for running. I was out of breath by the time I caught up, shielding him with the umbrella. The sudden silence of the rain hitting the canopy made us both jump. He stopped and turned. Water was dripping from his nose, his scars standing out starkly against his pale skin. "What do you want?" he yelled. "Are you trying to see how pathetic I look? Is this funny to you?" "Get in the car, Liam," I shouted back. "Go to hell." "You're limping! Just get in the damn car! I'll drop you off!" "I'd rather walk on broken glass than get in a car with you."
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