The Midnight Ride That Exposed Why Noah Priestley Knew Her Name-eirian

I should have checked the license plate.

That is the sentence people kept repeating later, like it was wisdom, like one little act of caution could have stopped everything that followed.

Maybe it could have.

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Maybe if I had bent down in the rain outside the university library and looked at the numbers on the back of that black sedan, I would have gone home in a normal Uber with a driver who smelled faintly of fast food and air freshener.

Maybe Noah Priestley would have stayed a stranger.

Maybe his family would have stayed intact for one more week.

Maybe my name would never have appeared on gossip pages, business blogs, and comment sections full of strangers deciding whether I was lucky, stupid, lying, or all three.

But that night, I did not check anything.

I was twenty-two years old, broke in the very specific way college makes you broke, and exhausted enough that the whole world felt slightly underwater.

My hoodie smelled like coffee grounds and fryer oil from the campus café.

My socks were damp because the rain had started before my shift ended and I had stepped in a puddle outside the student center.

My phone had died at two percent while the Uber app was still open.

The last thing I saw before the screen went black was a black sedan arriving in three minutes.

At 11:07 p.m., a black sedan was exactly where it was supposed to be.

That was all the proof I had energy for.

I had been awake for almost two days with only four hours of sleep between classes, my library shift, and the café job that paid for groceries when financial aid did not stretch far enough.

The university library had already turned cold in that end-of-night way, when the air vents kept humming and the last few students packed up their laptops without looking at one another.

Outside, the rain shined under the campus lights.

The black car sat by the curb, engine running, windows tinted, clean enough to look almost unreal against the wet street.

I opened the back door.

No one stopped me.

No one said my name.

No one asked where I was going.

So I climbed inside, pulled my backpack onto my lap, and sank into leather so soft I actually paused.

My first thought should have been fear.

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