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There’s a reason Jay never liked questions thrown back at him.
Because someday, one of them might stick.
And today, Ruthie asked one that did.
“Why are you really here, Jay? Bakit ka talaga lumipat sa school na ’to?”
She wasn’t smiling when she said it.19Please respect copyright.PENANAy1BnrIDICC
Wasn’t teasing.19Please respect copyright.PENANAh7Cy9R6OGC
Just staring at him like she already knew the answer.
Jay inhaled slowly.
The truth wasn’t simple.
It had never been.
He wasn’t just an assistant in the school’s media org.19Please respect copyright.PENANAVc6lZBo9R7
And he wasn’t there just to finish the semester quietly.
He was there to observe.
To record.
To uncover the person behind a harassment case that had been quietly swept under the rug two years ago.
The school wanted it forgotten.19Please respect copyright.PENANA2cdbbF5ki7
The victim transferred.19Please respect copyright.PENANAVsJeG8WpGY
The teacher “retired early.”
But someone high up didn’t let it go.
That someone—an old family friend who still believed in consequences—asked Jay to look into it.19Please respect copyright.PENANAGfesojaiSU
He wasn’t a cop. But he had access. He had training.
And he had reasons.
Ruthie wasn’t even a suspect at first.
But her name kept showing up.
Marginal notes. Old logs. Rumors.
The last girl the victim talked to before she vanished?19Please respect copyright.PENANArUj2WMFXqM
Ruthie.19Please respect copyright.PENANAOcFFno9twV
The only one who stood up to the accused teacher in class?19Please respect copyright.PENANALEtlYSCHZI
Ruthie.19Please respect copyright.PENANAV8IcJbN79X
The one who disappeared from orgs that year without explanation?
Ruthie.
Jay didn’t want to believe it.
She was too sharp, too haunted, too full of fight to be part of something dirty.
But he knew better than to trust what people showed.
And Ruthie never showed everything.
“Jay,” she said again, arms crossed. “Sino ka ba talaga?”
He stepped closer to her locker. Looked her in the eye.
“I’m here to find out the truth.”
“About what?”
“About a teacher who ruined someone’s life. And maybe about the people who let it happen.”
“And you think ako ’yon?”
Her voice didn’t rise. But her jaw tightened.
“No. But your name keeps coming up.”
Silence.19Please respect copyright.PENANAW1RvlrLAWL
Then laughter—short, bitter.
“Of course it does. Lahat naman ng mali, idinidikit na lang sa pangalan ko.”
She looked away, shaking her head.
“You think I was part of it?”
“I don’t want to think that.”
“But you did.”
Jay didn’t respond.
Because she was right.
He saw the hurt in her eyes, even when she blinked it away.
But instead of storming off, she leaned against the wall. Voice lower, cracked.
“I knew about the teacher.”
Jay’s eyes narrowed.
“What?”
“I knew what he was doing. Hindi ako bulag. Pero wala akong nagawa.”
“Did he hurt you?”
“No,” she said quickly. “But he hurt someone close to me. And she begged me not to speak.”
Jay’s stomach twisted.
“So you kept it.”
“Wouldn’t you?”
She turned toward him.
“Kung lahat ng makakalaban sa’yo, mas mataas sa posisyon mo, may hawak na sikreto mo, at wala kang pamilya na pwedeng sumalo… wouldn’t you?”
Jay didn’t answer.19Please respect copyright.PENANAqPHxd2kh40
Because that wasn’t a question—it was a confession.
And maybe the real reason Ruthie’s name kept showing up…19Please respect copyright.PENANA0S0VO9Mxs5
Wasn’t because she was guilty.
It was because she was trying to survive.
“The girl who vanished,” Jay said slowly, “do you know where she is?”
Ruthie looked up.
“No. I wish I did.”
She paused.
“But I remember her name.”
“Tell me.”
“Mae. Mae Galvez.”
Jay filed it away.
“Thank you.”
“Don’t thank me. Just… don’t turn this into another story where I’m the villain.”
He stepped closer.
“I won’t.”
She looked unconvinced.
So he added—
“But if you remember anything else… you can tell me. Kahit hindi bilang investigator. Bilang ako.”
Ruthie’s gaze softened for the first time.
“That’s dangerous, Jay.”
“What is?”
“Believing I’m worth trusting.”
“Then make me regret it.”
They stood in silence for a moment. The hallway was empty.19Please respect copyright.PENANAWwx3P2RZsI
The lockers cold. The world suspended.
And for the first time, Jay felt that this case wasn’t just something to solve.
It was something to understand.
Later that night, he sat in his room, re-reading old files.
Mae Galvez.19Please respect copyright.PENANAQpBTQxf8Mv
One picture. One audio recording. A journal entry with parting words: “He said no one would believe me. I think he’s right.”
Jay clenched his fists.
The same teacher Ruthie had argued with.19Please respect copyright.PENANAVl5pgVYYva
The same teacher who had left quietly, after a “scandal” was buried.
“She wasn’t lying,” he whispered.
And Ruthie—Ruthie had held that secret like a thorn in her mouth for years.
He texted her.
Jay: You did the right thing surviving.19Please respect copyright.PENANAgZ34UNTrWM
Jay: But you don’t have to survive alone anymore.
She didn’t reply.
But he saw the three dots.
Then they vanished.
And that was enough for tonight.
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