Maya Aubert, a distinguished scholarship student at Trident Academy, is a dedicated scholar on her journey to becoming valedictorian, with her dream university eagerly awaiting her presence.
Her radiant skin and lustrous hair complement her top-notch grades, as her aspirations materialize, and her boyfriend, the most popular boy in school, adds an unexpected sweetness to her life.
However, one fateful day, everything shatters like fragile glass, dismantling her meticulously crafted life plans in an instant.
What will she do when she discovers that her boyfriend is engaged to her bully, and she was merely a fleeting change in his life?
Ashton Hughes, the sole heir to his father's multi-billion dollar tech empire, is the charming footballer who has had every girl he desired-except one. The new scholarship student, who devotes her time to her studies rather than to him, becomes the object of his fascination.
A bet he made with his fiancée-he would have her madly in love with him by the end of high school-began as a lighthearted challenge but spiraled into utter tragedy when the devastated Maya finds herself ensnared in the clutches of a serial killer, facing a brutal fate.
The adage rings true: one often fails to appreciate the worth of another until they are irrevocably lost.
In a car drenched in crimson, marked by the remnants of love and life, the essence of what once was can never be replicated.
Aiden Hughes, estranged from his father for rejecting a union devoid of affection, chose a path of academia that his father disdained, refusing to be a mere marionette.
His existence had been a relentless pursuit of labor since he departed his childhood abode at eighteen, four years past. Yet, when a vehicle with a shattered door, a splintered windshield, and a blood-stained interior halts him in the midst of nowhere, he transforms into a man reborn.
In a world where no one came to her rescue, no one claimed her, he stepped forward, embracing her with unwavering devotion.
Falling for a woman in a coma may seem irrational, yet such madness often defines the very fabric of life.