Thea Merritt is a senior at her school, and as part of a fundraiser to raise money for the dues needed to be paid, she works at one. The function is simple: someone has set up an online website where people are allowed to confess their feelings on the main board. What's said is private, or it could be chosen to be said publicly. Thea works with her friend Quince Adams, as well as several others, for this fundraiser. It's fun; it's surrounded by the holidays. Forget sending roses to your lover; send them confessions online. It's so much sweeter and way too fun, considering you never know who could send you a telegram. Thea's job is to read over the messages and, if appropriate, send them off. What happens when she is going through the public confessions to make sure they are appropriate and stumbles upon one that doesn't have names, no name of the person writing it, or who it should be sent to? Haisley doesn't know what to do with the message; she should just delete it, but something in the message causes her to contemplate. She can't ignore it, can she? After all, working as Cupid, she cannot ignore someone's Valentine.