That one lands.
Because unlike Travers, Kane doesn’t say shit just to hear himself sound tough.
He says it when he thinks it’s true.
I look toward the door Stella disappeared through.
Then toward the one Travers just slammed on his way out.
And for the first time since I transferred, I feel it cleanly enough to name.
This isn’t a triangle.
It isn’t drama.
It isn’t harmless overlap.
It’s the point where all the halves of my life stop cooperating and start demanding I choose.
And I’m running out of room to pretend I can keep everybody standing while I figure out which fire I’m actually willing to burn in.
Kane follows my line of sight.
Then looks back at me.
“You good?”
No.
Not even close.
I straighten anyway.
Cold face back on.
Prince armor up.
“Yeah,” I say.
He snorts like the lie offends him on a personal level.
Then he claps my shoulder once and heads back toward the weight room.
I stay where I am for one extra second, pulse still too high, hands still half useless with adrenaline, Travers’ words ringing in my head.
Pretty-boy bullshit.
Maybe.
But he was wrong about one thing.
I’m not toying with anything.
If I were, this would be easy.