Daisy Novel
Trang chủThể loạiXếp hạngThư viện
Trang chủThể loạiXếp hạngThư viện
Daisy Novel

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Chapter 24 The Captain Runs

Chapter 24 The Captain Runs

Noah POV

I left before sunrise. The sky was still bruised with night, the city quiet, the streets empty enough to make my escape feel like something secret, like I could outrun myself if I just moved fast enough. Every step I took carried a weight I couldn’t shake a weight of decisions I’d made, words I couldn’t unsay, and a longing that didn’t know how to stop.

I didn’t call anyone. I didn’t answer texts. I didn’t look at my phone. Each vibration, each ping would have been a trap, a reminder that I was tethered to things I couldn’t face yet. I couldn’t face Elias. I couldn’t face Nadia. I couldn’t even face myself.

Practice came and went. I went through the motions like a ghost wearing my face. My teammates talked, laughed, joked but I heard it all muffled, like I was underwater. Their voices were shapes, not words. Their laughter was distant. I moved, I ran, I passed, I tackled but my mind wasn’t on the field. It was elsewhere, in rooms I couldn’t enter, with people I couldn’t look at.

Silence became my shield. Every word I didn’t say, every text I ignored, every glance I avoided was a brick in the wall I was building between me and the world.

Elias. His name burned behind my ribs every time I blinked. I saw his face in the corner of my eye, imagined the curve of his lips, the tilt of his chin, the way he looked at me like he already knew. I had to force myself to look away, to bury the thought, to push it down where it couldn’t reach me.

The apartment was empty when I returned. Nadia’s absence was a relief and a punishment at the same time. The silence mocked me. The space between the walls felt like it was pressing in, reminding me of everything I had done, everything I had lost, and everything I was still running from.

I didn’t eat. I didn’t sleep properly. I couldn’t. Every sound, every movement reminded me that reality was closing in, that avoidance wasn’t a solution it was a temporary reprieve from the chaos I had created.

I ran through my schedule mechanically. Classes, practice, meetings, the same routine I had always relied on. But it was hollow now. Everything I did felt like a performance, a mask. I was still the captain, still the golden boy, still the one people trusted but inside, I was fraying. The edges of control I had built my life around were unraveling, and I didn’t know how to stop it.

I avoided the quad. Avoided the common areas. Avoided people who might ask questions I didn’t want to answer. Rumors were already starting, I could feel them brushing against me like wind, like whispers that weren’t quite words. But I ignored them. I had to. Because if I stopped to face them, I would crumble entirely.

Elias. Again, his name rose, unbidden. I hated him for it. Hated the way he made me feel, the way he had ripped open the part of me I had kept locked away for so long. Desire, need, obsession they were all tangled together, and I couldn’t separate them. I didn’t want to. But I also couldn’t act. Not yet. Not ever, maybe.

I spent nights walking the streets, circling the campus, avoiding my dorm like it had become a trap. The city lights reflected in puddles from an earlier rain, and I imagined Elias’ face in every shimmer, every shadow. I cursed him silently for being everywhere I wasn’t, for existing so vividly in a life I was trying desperately to leave behind.

Distance became everything. Physical distance. Emotional distance. Mental distance. I built walls with every step I took away from him, with every hour I spent ignoring his messages, with every second I allowed myself to retreat deeper into silence.

And yet, no matter how far I ran, no matter how much I avoided, the pull didn’t weaken. It didn’t fade. It didn’t disappear. It was still there, persistent, relentless. Like a shadow I couldn’t shake, like a voice that didn’t quiet even when I stuffed my ears with words and routines.

I started to notice cracks in my own armor. Small things at first hesitation when a teammate joked too close, a pause when someone mentioned relationships, a tightening in my chest when I saw someone I thought I knew too well. And every time, I felt the truth I was trying to bury: running didn’t change anything. Hiding didn’t help. Silence didn’t erase the feelings that had already taken root inside me.

I hated it. I hated that I cared. I hated that my body remembered him, remembered the warmth, the pressure, the way he made me feel alive and terrified at the same time. I hated that even as I built these walls, I wanted to tear them down just to see him again.

I didn’t allow myself to think about Nadia. Not really. Not yet. Her absence was a relief, yes but it was also a knife twisting in my chest. I had broken her, left her, and I couldn’t undo it. That knowledge was heavier than any physical burden I had ever carried.

I kept busy. Over-scheduled. Over-extending. Every extra practice, every meeting, every errand was a way to keep myself from the room where I knew Elias might be, where I knew I would see the truth I wasn’t ready to face.

But reality doesn’t wait. Desire doesn’t wait. Need doesn’t wait. And every night, alone, I felt the walls I had built shiver. My solitude was no longer protection it was punishment. A reminder of everything I had lost and everything I couldn’t have.

I ran because I had to. I stayed silent because speaking would mean admitting weakness. I kept distance because closeness would mean collapse. And every choice I made reinforced the same truth: I was terrified of what I wanted.

Because wanting him meant vulnerability. And vulnerability meant risk. And risk… could destroy everything.

But avoidance has a cost. Silence has a cost. Distance has a cost. And I was paying it with pieces of myself I couldn’t
afford to lose.

And yet, I kept running.

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