“She tackled us!” Tiffany cried, squeezing out fake tears. “She slammed us against the lockers and ripped the chains right off our necks! They’re worth five thousand dollars each!”
“Maya?” Sterling looked down at her, his expression already deciding her guilt. “Is this true?”
“No! Sir, they ran into me! I didn’t take anything!” Maya’s hands were shaking. She looked around for help, but the other students just stared, whispering.
“Then you won’t mind if we check your bag,” Sterling said coldly. It wasn’t a question.
“I… I don’t mind, but I didn’t do it,” Maya said, handing over her frayed backpack. She had nothing to hide. She had her textbooks, her notes, and her lunch.
Sterling took the bag. He didn’t bother unzipping the main compartment. He went straight for the side mesh pocket.
With a dramatic flourish, he pulled his hand out.
Dangling from his fingers, glittering under the harsh lights, were two heavy gold chains.
The hallway gasped. A collective murmur of “thief” and “trash” rippled through the crowd.
Maya’s world stopped. The blood drained from her face, leaving her dizzy. “No… that’s not… I didn’t put those there!”
Tiffany covered her mouth, her eyes gleaming with malicious triumph. “I knew it! She’s a criminal! She’s trying to pawn them for rent money!”
“That is enough,” Sterling boomed. He gripped Maya’s arm, his fingers digging into her blazer. “Maya, come with me to the office immediately. We are calling the police.”
“Please, sir, I swear!” Maya was crying now, hot tears streaming down her face. “They planted them! Please believe me!”
But Sterling wasn’t listening. He was already dragging her away, parading her past the smirking faces of her tormentors.
Chapter 2: The Kneeling
The principal’s office smelled of expensive mahogany polish and stale coffee. Maya sat in a hard wooden chair in the corner, sobbing silently into her hands. Two police officers stood by the door, their arms crossed, looking bored but imposing.
Principal Sterling sat behind his massive desk, on the phone. “Yes, Mr. Vanderbilt. I assure you, we are handling it with the utmost severity. Yes, the police are here. We will make an example of her. Oakbridge has zero tolerance for thievery.”
The door opened, and the sound of a cane tapping against the floor broke the tension.
Eleanor rushed in, looking smaller and frailer than Maya had ever seen her. She was wearing her Sunday coat, but it was wet from the rain, and her gray hair was plastered to her forehead. She had clearly run to the bus stop.
“Maya!” Eleanor cried, ignoring the police and rushing to her granddaughter.
“Grandma, I didn’t do it,” Maya choked out, clinging to the old woman’s waist. “I swear on Mom’s grave, I didn’t do it.”
“I know, baby. I know you didn’t,” Eleanor soothed her, stroking her hair. She turned to Sterling, her eyes blazing. “Sir, there has been a mistake. My granddaughter is an honor student. She has never stolen a penny in her life.”
Sterling didn’t even stand up. He looked at Eleanor with disdain, noting her wet shoes and worn clothes. “The evidence was found in her bag, Ms. Eleanor. Two gold necklaces belonging to Tiffany Vanderbilt and Courtney St. James. Witnesses saw the altercation.”
“Altercation? They bully her!” Eleanor’s voice shook. “They have tormented her for months because we are poor!”
“Save the sob story,” a booming voice came from the doorway.
Richard Vanderbilt, Tiffany’s father, strode in. He was a massive man in a three-piece suit that cost more than Eleanor’s lifetime earnings. Beside him was Tiffany’s mother, a woman who looked at Eleanor as if she were a roach on the carpet.
“We want her arrested,” Richard barked at the police officers. “Grand larceny. I want her expelled and thrown in juvenile detention.”
“Please,” Eleanor stepped forward, her hands trembling. “Mr. Vanderbilt, please listen. Maya has a scholarship. She wants to be a nurse. A record will ruin her life. She is just a child.”
“She is a thief,” Mrs. Vanderbilt spat. “And clearly, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. You people think you can just take what we work for.”
“We work hard!” Eleanor defended herself, her voice cracking. “I scrubbed floors for thirty years! I raised this girl to have integrity!”
“Integrity?” Richard laughed, a cruel, barking sound. “The jewelry was in her bag. That’s not integrity; that’s stupidity.”
Principal Sterling cleared his throat. “The board will be meeting in three days to finalize the expulsion. Until then, the officers will take her into custody for processing.”
One of the officers stepped forward, unhooking handcuffs from his belt. The metallic click sounded like a gunshot in the room.
“No!” Eleanor screamed. Desperation took over. The thought of Maya—her sweet, brilliant Maya—in a jail cell, her future destroyed, was too much to bear.
Ignoring the agonizing pain in her arthritic knees, Eleanor did the unthinkable. She slowly lowered herself toward the floor. Her joints popped audibly. Maya screamed, “Grandma, don’t!”
But Eleanor ignored her. She hit the floor, her knees cracking against the hard wood. She clasped her hands together and looked up at the Vanderbilts.
“I am begging you,” Eleanor wept, her dignity stripped away for the sake of love. “I will pay you back. I will sell my car. I will sell my furniture. Take my wedding ring.” She fumbled with her ring finger, pulling off the thin, gold band that was her most prized possession. She held it up to them. “Please. Just don’t press charges. Don’t ruin her future. Punish me instead.”
The room went silent. The police officers looked uncomfortable, shifting their weight. Even Principal Sterling looked away.
Mrs. Vanderbilt looked down at the gold band in Eleanor’s shaking hand. She let out a short, incredulous laugh.
“You think we want your cheap junk?” Mrs. Vanderbilt sneered. She stepped forward and, with the toe of her designer heel, kicked Eleanor’s cane across the room. It clattered loudly against the wall. “Keep your trinkets. We don’t want your money. We want your granddaughter out of our school and in jail where she belongs.”
Maya broke free from the chair and threw herself onto the floor, wrapping her arms around her grandmother. “Get up, Grandma! Please get up! Don’t beg them!”
Eleanor sobbed, her head bowed, defeated. The image of the old woman on her knees, scorned by the wealthy elite, was a portrait of absolute cruelty.
Meanwhile, in the shadows of the school hallway, miles away emotionally but physically just outside the blast radius, was Leo.
Leo was the “ghost” of Oakbridge Academy. He had a severe stutter that made speaking a torture, so he rarely spoke at all. He communicated through his lens. He was the head of the AV club, a brilliant photographer and videographer who saw everything because nobody ever looked at him.
Leo was currently hiding in the AV storage closet, his heart pounding like a trapped bird.
Twenty minutes ago, he had been testing a new high-speed lens down the corridor. He had been filming the light reflecting off the lockers, adjusting the ISO. He had been recording when the “collision” happened.
He sat on the floor of the closet, the small LCD screen of his camera glowing in the dark. He played the footage back for the tenth time.
It was crystal clear.
08:14:22 AM: Tiffany and Courtney whisper to each other. 08:14:30 AM: Tiffany unclasps her necklace. Courtney does the same. They ball them up in their fists. 08:14:35 AM: They lunge at Maya. 08:14:37 AM: In slow motion, you could see Tiffany’s hand dart out and shove the gold chains into Maya’s side pocket while feigning the impact. 08:14:45 AM: The audio picked up Tiffany’s voice, low and vicious: “Let’s see her get into nursing school with a felony.”
Leo knew what he had. He had the truth. He held Maya’s salvation in his hands.
But his hands were shaking uncontrollably.
His father worked as a maintenance supervisor at one of Mr. Vanderbilt’s office buildings. It was a good job, the only reason Leo’s family had health insurance. Mr. Vanderbilt was known for being vindictive. If Leo exposed Tiffany, his father would lose his job before the day was over. They could lose their house.
Leo squeezed his eyes shut. He saw Maya’s kind face. She was the only person who ever waited for him to finish a sentence without rolling her eyes. She had shared her lunch with him once when he forgot his.
He thought of the rumors spreading through the school—that Maya was in handcuffs. That her grandmother had come.
Fear is heavy, Leo thought. But guilt is heavier.
He packed his camera into his bag. He didn’t know what he would do yet. But he knew he couldn’t delete the file.
Chapter 3: The Golden Truth
Three days passed. Three days of hell.
Maya had been released to her grandmother’s custody pending the hearing, but the damage
