โTwo years ago, our final assignment for English was a class debate.โ
Julius had been placed on the affirmative team, and Iโd been placed on the negative, the battle lines drawn early. In the leadโup to it, Iโd spent
weeks preparing, diving into academic articles, researching everything on our topic: whether human cloning should be legalized. On the day, my head was on fire. I was ready. Most of the time it seemed to me that I was only pretending to be smart, like an actor who has to play a neurosurgeon. What mattered was convincing other people I was intelligent.
But as I stood up to make my points, I felt it too. My mind whirred, as smooth and fast as a machine, and my hands remained perfectly steady over the cue cards. I didnโt even need to look at them. I was so familiar with Juliusโs logic that I could predict his arguments and counterarguments in advance, could spot the gaps in his reasoning, prod at the inconsistencies in his evidence. I remember the uncommon quiet of the classroom as I spoke clearly and calmly, keeping my eyes on him the whole time. Nothing could faze me. When I finished, there was a beat of stunned silence, and Iโd heard someone whisperย whoaย in a tone of genuine awe. Then the applause had come, building into a crescendo, cheers rising over the claps. It was one of
the most satisfying moments of my life.
Iโd ended up winning not only the debate, but Best Speaker. When the final results were announced, Julius had glared at me, his jaw locked, his eyes blazing with an intensity that almost startled me. Iโd always been confident that I hated him a little more than he hated meโbut in that moment, I wasnโt so sure.
Itโs the same resentful expression heโs wearing the next morning when I bump into him outside the math classroom.
Literally.
Iโm about to head inside the exact second he steps out. My face crashes straight into his shoulder.
I lurch backward, rubbing my nose, certain heโs going to make a jibe about my poor coordination or demand an apology or mock me for the
emails again, but instead he fixes me with that awful, sharp look and says: โWeโve been asked to see the principal.โ
My heart stops beating.
โWhat?โ I choke out. My first half hope, half instinct is that heโs pulling a prank on me, messing with my head, that this is his perverse means of revenge. He should know this is my worst fear.
But then he moves past me, down the hall in the direction of the principalโs office, and my heartbeat starts up again at twice its normal speed.
โWait,โ I call, running after him. He slows down slightly without turning back. โWait, youโre being serious? We have to go right now?โ
โNo, Sadie, we are expected to see him twenty-three years down the line,โ he says, his voice so dry and scathing it could cut open bone. โI am only telling you now so that you have sufficient time to prepare.โ
Iโm too panicked to think of a comeback. โButโdid he say why?โ
โYou are awfully perceptive today. Why do you think? What event has occurred in the past forty-eight hours that is so terrible it warrants an inโperson meeting with the principal himself?โ
Yet even as heโs talking, the answer has already come to me. The emails. Of course it can only be that. I choke down a hysterical laugh. The last time Iโd visited the principal, it had been with Julius as well, but it was because we had both broken the record for having the highest grade-point average in the history of the school. Aย remarkable achievement, according to the principal, and something I ought to have celebrated, except our
averages wereย exactlyย the same, all the way to the second decimal. Iโd left that meeting promising myself I would boost my average so it was higher than his.
Maybe Julius is remembering the same thing, because his upper lip curls. โThis is a first for me, you realize. Iโve never been called to the principal for anything other than good news.โ
โA first forย you?โ I hiss. Class should have officially started by now, so the hallways are all empty, save for us. It feels strange to walk past the rows and rows of closed classrooms. Through the narrow glass panes in the doors, I can see the teachers marking off the roll, students shuffling through their notes. โIโve literally never been in trouble beforeโโ
โBefore two days ago,โ he cuts in, โin which you managed to offend half the faculty and student body in one go. Oh, and yesterday, when you decided to start a petty argument with me in front of the entire class. Itโs a pretty impressive feat, if you think about it. You always like to outdo yourself, donโt you?โ
โYouย were the one who was arguing with me.โ
โWell, we wouldnโt have been in that position in the first place if not for your emails. Thanks to you, the entire schoolโs talking about us. Itโs anarchy. And did you see what they drew over our captainsโ photo? There
was red marker.โ He pauses for emphasis. โOn myย face.โ
I doubt he would look this incensed if someone had vandalized the
Mona Lisa.
โIf I were you,โ he continues, โIโd be thinking up a very good explanation right now. Even if you didnโt send the emails, youโre the one whoย wroteย them and dragged both of us into this messโโ
โOh my god, shut up.โ
He falters briefly, then gives me an odd sort of smile, like heโs caught me doing something I shouldnโt, like he knows me better than I want him to. My skin tingles from the unwelcome attention. โYour language turns cruder by the day. Decided to drop the model student act for good?โ
โSeriously, Julius,โ I say through clenched teeth, lifting my hand, โif you donโt stop talking, Iโllโโ
โHit me?โ His smile sharpens, as though in challenge. Itโs a smile that saysย you wouldnโt dare. โChoke me, the way you fantasized about in your
email?โ
Immediately, my skin goes so hot I wouldnโt be surprised if you could see steam rising from my body. โAre you ever going to let it go?โ
โNo,โ he says, decisive. โNot until weโre even.โ
โWhat do I have to do, then?โ I demand. โFor us to be even?โ
He stops, his black eyes raking my face. I force myself to meet his gaze, even though everything in me wants to run away. โIโll let you know how you can make it up to me,โ he says, letting the words simmer in the space between us, stretching out the threat. โBut first, I have to see how bad the
damage is.โ
A spike of pure, cold dread runs through me when I realize weโve reached the principalโs office. Even though itโs in the same building, it feels like a completely separate space. The paint on the walls is newer, the
windows wider, the plaque that readsย PRINCIPAL MILLERย polished gold. The single door to his office is made of tinted glass, the kind that serves as a one-sided mirror. I imagine Principal Miller staring at us from his desk, watching me as I wipe my sweaty hands on my skirt. The thought only
makes my palms clammier.
Julius stares down at the doorknob, but makes no movement. โWhy arenโt you going in?โ I ask.
โWhy canโt you go in first?โ He says it coolly, as if Iโm the one whoโs being ridiculous, but thereโs a wariness to his expression. His eyes keep sliding to the door like it might open up the gates of hell.
Heโs nervous, I realize. I would take much greater delight in this discovery if I didnโt feel like throwing up my breakfast all over the white rug at my feet.
โJust go in,โ I urge him.
He doesnโt budge. โYou go.โ โWhat are you so scared of?โ
โIโm not scared,โ he says, actively backing away from the door now. โI just donโt want to be the first to step inside.โ
I make a sound halfway between a snort and a sigh. โThis is so childish
โโ
โYouโreย being childish. Iโm being chivalrous.โ
โRight,โ I say, rolling my eyes so far I can almost see the back of my
skull. โBecause youโre such a gentleman.โ โI am.โ
โOpen the door, Julius.โ โNo,ย youโโ
โCome in,โ a gravelly voice calls from inside.
I startle, my pulse skyrocketing. It takes me a moment to recover, another moment to shove the door open on my own, cursing Julius silently in my head.
Principal Miller is reclining back in his leather seat, spinning a ballpoint pen with one hand, holding a takeaway coffee cup in the other. The whole office smells like coffee. The reading lamp beside him is a pale, clinical
white that reminds me of hospital waiting rooms, the light glancing off his bald head.
โHi, Principal Miller,โ I manage, trying to read his expression. Itโs pointless, like trying to find a pattern in a blank wall. His dark eyes are devoid of emotion, the space between his thick brows smooth. โYou . . . You asked for us?โ
In response, he merely gestures to the two seats across the desk from him.
The chair is still warm when I sit down, and I canโt help thinking about the last person who was in here. Maybe they were expelled, or given detention, or maybe they were being congratulated on coming in first place in a national equestrian competition or finding a cure for eczema. Thatโs the thing about being called by the principalโyou know itโs either really good news or really bad news.
Julius takes his place on my left, his spine rigid.
โI know youโre both meant to be in class right now, so Iโll cut to the chase,โ Principal Miller begins, setting his pen down. โIt has come to my
attention that a series of rather . . . aggressively worded emails have been circulating around the school. Is that correct?โ
My mouth is too dry for me to speak. I can only nod.
โAh,โ he says. Itโs just one syllable, yet it sounds horribly ominous. โAnd is it also correct that you addressed many of these emails to your cocaptain and called him, among other things . . .โ He glances at his computer monitor and clears his throat. โAย spoiled brat, anย insufferable thorn, aย cold-hearted deceiver, and a certain word that refers to the . . . downward region of the human anatomy?โ
I blink. โSorry?โ
Principal Miller shoots me a pointed look.
โOh, rightโyou meanย asshoโโ I clamp my mouth shut, but not before I catch Julius laughing into his fist. Itโs nice that he can still find it in himself to make fun of me under our present circumstances. Very heartening.
โNow, normally, we do not like to interfere with personal disputes between our students,โ the principal says. โBut in this specific scenario, Iโm afraid I have to. After yesterdayโs session, Samantha Howard has expressed her grievances to me regarding your shocking behavior. Disrupting the class, fighting with each other, makingย open threats. Needless to say, she
has a terrible impression of our school, and she wonโt be coming back here again.โ
โIโm sorry, Principal Miller, but sheโs exaggerating,โ Julius says. I have to admire the fact that he can even find the courage to speak. Iโm just about ready to curl into the fetal position. โYes, Sadie and I were having a somewhat . . . lively conversation, and perhaps we got carried away, but itโs really not as bad asโโ
โAs this?โ Principal Miller holds up his phone. We both lean in with confusion.
A video is playing on loop over the screen. A fan-edit, to be exact, of Caz Songโthat popular actor all my cousins in China have a major crush on. We watch about five seconds of him running his hand through his hair
to special flash effects before Principal Miller abruptly retracts the phone and scrolls down.
โSorry,โ he says, turning the screen around again. โNot that one.ย This.โ
The new video is less confusing, but infinitely more concerning. It must have been taken by one of our classmates during the cybersecurity session yesterday. Julius and I are both standing up andโeven in the bad lighting of the hallโvery clearly arguing. My hands are clenched tighter than they are now, and his chin is lifted at a defiant angle, his jaw taut.
โIt seems you learned absolutely nothing from the session, because this is a blatant breach of the schoolโs IT policy.โ Principal Miller shakes his head. โWeโve asked the student to take the video down, of course, but it had already gained fifty-three views.โ
Julius lets out a sound that could very well be a scoff. Privately, I agree with the sentiment. โOnly? Thatโs barely anythingโโ
โFifty-three is fifty-three too many,โ Principal Miller cuts in with a stern look. โAs it stands, the video was seen by one of the mothers who attended the tour. She had been planning on sending her daughter to our school, but sheโs since changed her mind, and the other mothers are reconsidering too. This has already reached the school board, and needless to say, theyโre most displeased. Do you understand the severity of the situation?โ
I nod, fast, clenching my teeth to stop them from knocking together. Iโm still not entirely sure which direction this is going, but I can already predict itโs going to end with a crash. All I can do is brace myself for the impact.
โRight now, our chief concern is making sure we prevent any further negative impacts to the schoolโs image and culture.โ His eyes land first on Julius, then on me. โAs a solution, we ask that you work closely together
over the coming month to bridge your differences, until your tensions have dissolved. I donโt just mean in your regular captain duties, but across the school, throughout various activities. Consider it a show of comradery.โ
My stomach drops.
Iโm already around Julius Gong way too oftenโI canโt imagine spending evenย moreย time with him. I donโt think Iโll be able to without
losing my sanity or leaving his body in a ditch.
When I glance over at him, he looks equally horrified, as if the principal has just proposed that he snuggle up with a feral cat. And though the feeling is very much mutual, it still drives a small, blunt nail into my gut. Turns out I always want to be wanted, even by the boy I loathe.
โWith all due respect, I didnโt do anything,โ Julius says. His voice is level, almost convincingly calm, yet thereโs a breathless edge to his sentence. His hands flex over the wooden armrests, like heโs trying to steady himself against them. โIย wasnโt the one who wrote the emails. Why do Iโโ
โIt may seem unfair, but the reality is youโre both involved. If you are unhappy with my proposal or unwilling to take the necessary steps to
resolve your conflict, I will have to reconsider your suitability for the role and contact your parentsโโ
โNo,โ Julius says sharply, with such force the principal flinches.
โApologies,โ he adds, quieter, recomposing himself, though I can still see the muscle working in his jaw. โI only mean . . . I only mean that I agree with your solution.โ
โIโm glad youโre being reasonable,โ Principal Miller says. Then he turns to me. โAnd you, Sadie? Are you happy to cooperate?โ
Happyย is hardly the right word for it.ย Disgustedย would be more fitting. Orย appalled. Orย incensed. Iโve never resented anything more. But itโs not like I have much of a choice in this. Without my captaincy on my final transcript, Berkeley could cancel my admission. Forget Julius. I would
force myself to work with the devil if it meant I could keep my future plans intact. Iโm supposed to be the reliable child in the family, the person most likely to succeed and turn our lives around. My mom and my brother are counting on me.
โYes,โ I get out. โI am.โ
โExcellent.โ The principal claps his hands together, smiling at both of us. Heโs the only one. โIn that case, you can start by cleaning the bike shed together after school.โ





