ascorpiorising:
Oh my god, Sophia silently thinks to herself, I’m going to fail this class.
She would never admit it, but Science was not Sophia’s strong-suit, nor had it ever been. She would have to work twice as hard as everyone else to get an A – and anything below that was just unacceptable. Normally that wouldn’t bother her – Sophia was used to a busy schedule, filled with internships, part-time work at her father’s law-firm, volunteering at the local women’s shelter and the mayor’s office, along with studying and making connections with professors. Sure she ran on coffee and only slept for an average of four hours a day, but sleep was for the weak, and Sophia was not weak.
But now, sitting before her in… whatever it is he’s wearing, is the reason she’ll be failing this class, and all he can say is: “I’ll have them next class.”
No, this was unacceptable. She’d have a stern, yet open conversation with the professor after class. If that didn’t work, she’d have her father make a call – he made a very generous donation to the school last year, so she was sure they’d be willing to hear her out. Switching lab partners can’t be that hard, right?
“You do realize that because of you, we’ve just lost five points off our final grade.” She can barely hide her disgust at this point. Syllabus day? Does he think NYU is a state school or something?
Sophia can’t even look at her companion now, turning away to face the professor. She keeps her eyes locked on the older man until he concludes the lesson. She closes her iPad, hiding her color coded notes and slipping the device into her briefcase. Sophia works on packing up slowly and approaches the professor once all of the students leave.
“Can I speak with you?” She starts, and the man nods. “It’s about my lab partner… he’s, well, not prepared. He didn’t even bring to supplies you requested,” she pauses to point at the table they’d inhabited just moments ago. “I’m really worried he’s going to bring down my grade.” The professor interrupts her, nodding his head.
“I’ll see what I can do, Miss. Thompson.” She smiles – Dad’s right, she will make a good lawyer.
Five points isn’t the end of the fucking world, although Grayson spends the rest of class being uncomfortably aware of how pissed his new lab partner is about that. He can see her color coordinated notes out of the corner of his eye the entire lecture. Along with the briefcase and the first day outfit that probably costs almost as much as his entire wardrobe, it doesn’t paint a flattering picture of—whoever this is, because she didn’t even bother to give Grayson her name. This is why he hates Manhattan.
They make it through the rest of the class somehow, but nothing about her makes him want to stick around. As soon as the professor releases them, Grayson shoves his hands into his hoodie pockets and escapes through the back door.
Except. Well. Grayson’s not completely unsocialized, despite what his new lab partner might think. More importantly, he’s stuck with her for the rest of this semester. As much as he’d rather not, it might be a good idea to suck it up and play nice. Apologize for the five points and offer to buy her a coffee or something, even if he isn’t that sorry. It’s a goddamn miracle he made it to class today at all, frankly, with the way the morning went. But maybe if he explains that, she’ll deign to make eye contact with him again. He’s not above playing the single dad card, especially if he conveniently neglects to mention that Alexis lives within walking distance or that she comes over almost every day.
When he pushes the door open to find his new lab partner though, she’s up by their professor’s desk instead of at their table. In the now empty room, their voices echo more than before. So Grayson does the obvious thing—he pauses in the doorway, straining to overhear, especially when his new lab partner says something about he didn’t even bring the supplies.
Now he definitely can’t bail. He shuts the door as quietly as he can, but he doesn’t walk away. Instead, he waits for Sophia to walk out into the hallway herself. “Hey, Miss Thompson,” he says casually, pushing off the wall to fall into step beside her. “Nice to meet you, by the way. I never got your name, but thankfully I overheard the professor.” He jerks his thumb back towards their classroom, as if she might think he means a different professor. “You went crying to him and called me a bad influence over five points? Are you serious? Something tells me you’re not going to be sweating five points at the end of this semester.”
















