The cafeteria at Oakridge High buzzed with noise that never fully stopped. Bright overhead lights reflected off long metal tables, flashing across trays, soda cans, polished floors. Laughter overlapped conversations. Chairs scraped. Someone shouted across the room. It was loud. Crowded. Alive.
At one of the tables sat Jacob Daniels.
Sixteen. Athletic build. Brown hair falling slightly into his eyes. A hoodie pulled over his shoulders like a habit, not a style. He sat with his shoulders slightly rounded, staring down at the tray in front of him. A burger in his hands. Half-eaten. He chewed slowly, eyes lowered present, but not part of the room.
Nearby students talked and laughed, barely noticing him.
Until Martin Pike arrived.
Seventeen. Tall. Muscular. Varsity jacket open, confidence worn openly like armor. He didn’t slow as he approached Jacob’s table. His movement was casual, practiced like this wasn’t new, and definitely wouldn’t be the last time.
He swung his arm.
The tray slid instantly, metal shrieking against metal before tipping off the table. The plate hit the floor with a sharp clatter. Food scattered bun rolling, lettuce crushed, sauce spreading across the tiles.
The sound cut through the cafeteria.
Then came laughter.
Students nearby leaned in. Fingers pointed. Phones lifted not obvious, but ready. The moment shifted. Attention locked onto a single target.
Jacob didn’t move.
He stayed seated, still holding the burger in his hand. His grip didn’t tighten. His face didn’t change. He just looked down at what remained, calm in a way that felt almost unreal against the noise around him.
Martin stood in front of him, smiling. He said something mocking, loud enough for everyone nearby to hear. Laughter followed sharper now, more confident.
Then Martin reached out and took the burger from Jacob’s hand.
Not a snatch. A slow, deliberate motion.
He took a bite while standing there, chewing exaggeratedly, eyes fixed on Jacob. A performance. A message.
Jacob stayed quiet.
No anger.
No reaction.
Just stillness.
Then he stood.
Slowly. No sudden movement. No shove. No threat. He straightened to his full height and finally looked Martin in the eyes. The cafeteria didn’t go silent but something shifted. Like the air itself had tightened, like everyone sensed they’d crossed into unfamiliar territory.
Jacob spoke one sentence. Calm. Even. Almost tired.
“I hope this makes you feel less empty.”
The laughter stopped.
No one pointed now. A few students looked away. Others stared, unsettled, unsure why the moment suddenly felt heavier than it should.
Martin’s smile faded.
Just slightly.
Enough to be seen.