Hannah had perfected the art of being invisible by the time she was seventeen.
She kept her eyes on the floor when she walked the hallways. She wore her dark hair brushed forward on the left side, where the birthmark spread across her cheek — a deep wine-colored mark that stretched from her cheekbone to her jaw in a shape she had spent years trying not to think about. Other kids had spent years making sure she did.
She lived with her mother in a small apartment near the edge of town. Her mom worked two jobs — a day shift at an office supply company and evenings at a diner three nights a week. Most nights Hannah heard the front door click open past midnight, the quiet sound of exhaustion coming home.
On a Tuesday in late March, her mother happened to be home for dinner, which was rare enough to feel like an occasion. She set a plate of spaghetti in front of Hannah and sat down across from her with a sigh that said she had been carrying weight all day and was finally setting it down.

“You’ve barely touched your food, sweetheart.”
“I’m not hungry.”
Her mother studied her face the way mothers study their children’s faces — not looking at the surface but reading underneath it.
“Is it school again?”
Hannah shrugged. “They put up the prom posters today. Brittany was handing out the tickets like she personally organized the whole thing.”
Her mother’s lips pressed together. She knew Brittany’s name. Everyone at the school knew Brittany — head cheerleader, student council vice president, the girl who always had an audience and knew exactly how to use it. Hannah had been a target of hers since freshman year. Not loudly, never loudly enough to get caught, but consistently, the way a faucet drips into a bucket until the bucket overflows.
“Mom, I don’t want to go to prom. I’m serious.”
Her mother reached across the table and took her hand. “Hannah, listen to me. You get one senior prom. One. Give yourself one good memory before you graduate.”
“A good memory.” She said it quietly, the way you repeat something when the words don’t quite fit. “Mom, the only memory I’d make is being the girl standing in the corner trying not to be noticed.”
“Then stand in the middle of the room for once,” her mother said softly. “Just once.”
Hannah stared at her plate and didn’t answer.
What Megan Said at the Bus Stop, and What Hannah Found When She Opened Her Locker
The next morning, Megan was waiting at the bus stop with her backpack on one shoulder and her usual direct assessment of Hannah’s face.
“You didn’t sleep,” she said. Not a question.
“My mom’s pushing the prom thing.”
“Of course she is. Moms always do.”
Hannah almost smiled.
Megan was the only person in that school who had kept choosing Hannah’s company even when there was a social cost to it. She was the kind of friend you earned rather than stumbled into, and Hannah knew it.
At school, she went straight to her locker and did the automatic motions — spun the combination, opened the door, pulled out her history textbook. Shut it.
And then there he was.
Caleb was leaning against the locker beside hers, hands in the front pocket of his football jacket, his expression softer than she had ever seen it. He was the kind of person who occupied the center of every room he entered without appearing to try. Tall, dark-eyed, easy smile, the whole impossible picture of someone who did not belong in her particular hallway on her particular Tuesday morning.
She stood very still.
“Hey, Hannah,” he said. “I wanted to ask you something.”
“Okay.” Her voice came out smaller than she intended.
“Would you go to prom with me?”
The hallway noise behind her faded into something muffled and far away. She was certain she had misheard him. She waited for the version of the sentence that made more sense. It didn’t come.
“You want me to go to prom. With you.”
He smiled — not the public smile he gave at games and hallway conversations, but something quieter. “Yeah. I do.”
“Why?” The word came out sharper than she meant it to.
He looked at her directly, without the practiced indifference most people applied in conversations they didn’t want to be in.
“Because you’ve always seemed kind. And I’ve watched how people treat you for a long time. It isn’t right.”
She searched his face for the joke. For the edge, the smirk, the slight widening of the eyes that would tell her this was entertainment for someone nearby with a phone. She didn’t find it. At least not obviously.
“Okay,” she said. “Yes.”
The word left her mouth before she had fully decided to say it.
What Megan Said at Lunch, and the Moment Brittany Found Her in the Bathroom
At lunch, Megan set down her sandwich the second Hannah finished telling her.
“Caleb Hartwell.” Her voice was flat and careful.
“Yes.”
“He just appeared at your locker out of nowhere.”
“Yes.”
“Hannah.” Megan lowered her voice. “People like Caleb don’t just decide things like that. There’s always a reason. Please be careful.”
Hannah pushed her tray to the side. The cafeteria noise pressed in from all directions. A part of her had known this was coming from the moment Caleb walked away. A bigger part of her did not want Megan to be right.
That afternoon, Hannah went into the second-floor bathroom to splash water on her face and spend two minutes in a space where nobody was looking at her. She had barely turned on the faucet when the door opened behind her.
Brittany walked in with the particular energy of someone arriving rather than entering. Her perfume reached Hannah first. She stopped behind her, looking at both their reflections in the mirror.
“So. Prom with Caleb.”
Hannah kept her eyes on the sink.
“Enjoy your one night, sweetie,” Brittany said. “Make it count.”