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“Yes.” Something cracked in my chest.

Somewhere on the table, the recorder I hadn’t paid much attention to hummed.

“Beth,” someone called my name, direct, in a way that demanded my attention. So I lifted my gaze again, hoping my lies hadn’t slipped through my confidence, wishing my guilt was buried so deep in a chamber of my heart that had never once kissed the light.

“I need to ask you something very important,” Mr. Coker said. “And I need you to answer honestly.”

I nodded, my heart hammering.Honestly?

I didn’t come here with honesty. I came to play a script.

“Did Mr. McRae ever touch you in a way that made you uncomfortable?”

The room narrowed.

I thought of his hands that were always warm and gentle. The way they held me like I was something fragile, something to be protected.

“Yes,” I said, my nails digging into the fresh, jagged line across my wrist, the cut I had made this morning, feeling the zap of pain shooting up my arm.

“Can you describe when that first happened?”

My finger dug deeper until I felt the draw of blood, warm and thick. “In his classroom. After school.”

“Did you consent?”

Consent.

The word landed wrong, like a blade turned sideways.

“I didn’t say no.” I gave a light shrug.

“That’s not the same thing, Beth,” Mr. Coker said softly. “Did you want it?”

I thought of guilt, of debt. I thought of owing Rowan McRae something I could never repay.

“No,” I whispered. “I didn’t consent.”

I consented. I kissed him first. I was the one that popped open his buttons. When he asked if I was sure, I said yes. Then he asked again, and I said yes…firmly.

“Did he stop when you showed hesitation?”

“No.”

He showed hesitation. I went all in.

The burn on my wrist intensified, blood coating my nails and sliding over my skin, soaking into my arm warmer. I deserved this pain. I deserved to feel pain. I deserved nothing but…pain.

“Did he ever suggest that refusing him would have consequences?”

I hesitated. Mother’s words rang in my ears again. I must not go off script. I must not say the wrong things. I must not disappoint her again.

“He said,” I murmured, hiding the grimace in my voice at the fire licking at my skin. “that I would ruin him if anyone found out.”

Mr. Coker’s jaw tightened, anger and disappointment flashing in his eyes. He had liked Rowan. I often saw them eat lunch together. They even went to the gym together sometimes. They were friends, I supposed.

“Thank you,” Principal Rozanov concluded. “You can go now, Beth Fraser.”

The recorder clicked off, the sound of pen over paper ceasing.