The Teen Idol Who Chose His Childhood Friend Before Every Camera-eirian

Miranda Vale put the denial statement in my hand like she was handing me a receipt.

Not an apology.

Not a choice.

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A receipt for the part of my life she believed she had purchased on Nolan Chu’s behalf.

Outside the studio lobby in Los Angeles, the cameras pressed against the glass doors, and the people behind them shouted questions I could not hear clearly through the thick pane.

I heard my own name once.

Then I heard Nolan’s.

Then I heard the word girlfriend, and Miranda’s mouth tightened as if the sound itself offended her.

“You will read it exactly as written,” she said.

The paper was three paragraphs long.

It said I had exaggerated my connection to Nolan for attention.

It said we had been friendly as children, nothing more.

It said I apologized to his fans for causing confusion.

At the bottom was a blank line for my signature.

I stared at that blank line and thought of the first time Nolan wrote my name.

We were five, sitting at my kitchen table in Seattle, both of us sticky with grape jelly while our mothers laughed in the next room.

He wrote HAILI in blue crayon, forgot the e, and looked so proud that I kept the crooked paper in a shoebox for years.

That was the kind of evidence Miranda did not understand.

Some lives are not proven by contracts.

Some lives are proven by the way one person knows exactly which side of the couch you sleep on when you are sad.

Nolan and I had been neighbors before either of us could spell neighbor.

Our mothers were best friends.

Our backyards touched.

For most of my childhood, I did not knock on the Chu family’s door, and Nolan did not knock on mine.

We just appeared.

He was the boy who knew I hated orange candy and traded me all his blue ones without being asked.

He was the boy who climbed the maple tree first, then shouted down instructions because I was too stubborn to admit I was scared.

He was the boy who found me during every game of hide-and-seek, no matter how well I hid, and swore it was not cheating because he simply knew where I would feel safest.

By junior year, everyone at school had noticed his face.

It was impossible not to.

Nolan had the kind of sharp, quiet beauty that made hallways slow down.

Girls took blurry pictures of him near lockers.

Teachers smiled longer than they meant to.

One Wednesday, a talent scout showed up with two assistants and cornered him outside biology.

Nolan frowned at them like they were blocking the emergency exit.

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