Your Girlfriend Calls Me Daddy-Chapter 55 | Noel Stark Has A Binder Full Of Ways To Kill Me
I looked at her for a long moment.
She meant it. Every word. This was not posturing for an audience because there was no audience. Hargrave had disappeared into the back bay and his assistant had found somewhere else to be, and Noel Stark was standing in a fabrication lab telling me she planned to publicly destroy me on Friday with the specific conviction of someone who had been saving this particular promise for a long time.
I ran the math on that.
Two days. She had known me for two days. You do not develop that kind of focused, personal investment in two days unless you are working from existing material.
Something clicked.
Short Stack.
I had called her Short Stack this morning and she had reacted like I had pulled a pin from something. Not just annoyance. Not the standard Noel Stark cold dismissal she applied to everything else I said. Something rawer. Something older.
I thought about the novel. I thought about what I had actually retained from skimming the school arc at two in the morning over a bag of chips in my old life. Noel Stark, Stark Industries heiress, prideful, technically brilliant, destined to lose to Nolan at the festival, eventually comes around, ends up somewhere in his orbit by the third act.
That was what I had. That was my entire file on her.
Except.
There had been a footnote. A throwaway detail in one of the early Chapters I had mostly skimmed. Something about a corporate event. Something about a childhood encounter between the Stark and Angelo families.
Something about a nickname.
Oh.
Oh, that was bad.
The original Rome D’Angelo, the actual version of this person whose body I currently occupied, had met Noel Stark as a child. At some Angelo-Stark corporate function where the families were performing civility at each other over expensive canapes. And he had looked at this girl, this small girl with the then-boyish haircut who had probably worked up the nerve to talk to him, and he had called her a guy. And then he had called her Short Stack because of her height. And then he had walked away.
That was it. That was the whole story. One dismissal. One careless, thoughtless, genuinely terrible thing that the original Rome had done without registering it as anything meaningful, because the original Rome was by all available evidence a spectacular piece of work.
And Noel Stark had been carrying it ever since.
I looked at her now. The violet bob. The perfect posture. The grey eyes that were currently doing their level best to reduce me to constituent particles through sheer force of contempt.
She had come to this school with a plan. Not to learn. Not to rank. To make me understand exactly what I had dismissed.
Years. She had been building toward this for years.
I should have felt something complicated about that. Instead I mostly felt like I needed to recalibrate my entire read on Noel Stark, because I had been treating her as a standard rival character with a grudge and she was something significantly more specific than that.
"You said that like it was supposed to land," I said.
Her expression did not change. "It did land."
"You’ve been planning that sentence."
"I have been planning Friday." 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚
"No," I said, and I took one step toward her, closing maybe six inches of the distance between us. "You have been planning this conversation. Friday is the delivery mechanism. You have been building toward telling me exactly where I stand since before you knew we were going to the same school."
Something moved across her face. Fast. Gone.
"You don’t know anything about me."
"I know you expedited a costume fitting to make sure you were in this building at the same time I was." I glanced at her portfolio case. "What’s actually in that?"
A beat.
"Adjustment specifications."
"Open it."
Her jaw did the thing. The almost-clench, the one she had probably spent eighteen years training herself out of. "Excuse me?"
"Open the portfolio. Show me the adjustment specifications."
She stared at me the way people do when they are deciding in real time whether holding the line is worth what it costs. Her hands moved to the portfolio anyway. She unclipped it and held the flap back.
It was full. Design work, materials research, structural notation in handwriting so precise it looked like it had been typeset. None of it was costume adjustments. Not a single measurement, not a single hem line. All of it was combat analysis. Observed Essentia outputs logged for every student in Class 1-A, charted across three separate columns by type, output ceiling, and exploitable drawback. Simulation projections for Friday’s format. Her own notes on potential team configurations, ranked by success probability, with contingency branches for the ones she considered unstable.
My entry was in there. Of course it was.
I looked at it for a moment. Let her watch me read it.
"Thorough," I said.
She closed the portfolio. The motion was controlled, the clasp resecured before I had finished the word. "Strategy is how I operate."
"You flagged my entry on day one." I had seen it myself, my name sitting at the bottom of one of her notation columns, 89 RP circled in ink, a question mark pressed hard into the page beside it. "You have been watching me since orientation."
"I watch everyone."
"You circled mine."
"It was anomalous." She lifted her chin. The movement put her eyes at approximately my collarbone. She was wearing low heels today and it still did not close the gap between us, and she was too smart not to know that, and she held the look anyway. "You are registered as a Null with no combat history, no agency record, no documented Essentia output, and within forty-eight hours of arriving on campus you were trending on Channel Seven and receiving personal contact from a Four-Star hero. That is not normal. That is something I need to understand before Friday, and I intend to."
"If I didn’t know any better I would think you liked me."







