Chapter 767 Lies
Chapter 767 Lies
Krystal’s mouth opened, then closed, then opened again.
"The money was for..." She stopped. Her mind was blank. The words she had rehearsed a thousand times, the lies she had polished until they shone, had abandoned her.
"Was it for your dress?" someone asked from the audience, a voice sharp with accusation.
Krystal looked down at her white dress. The expensive fabric. The perfect fit. The designer label that had cost more than some people’s rent.
"No," she whispered.
"Was it for your hair?" another voice called out.
Krystal’s hand flew to her curled waves. The salon treatment. The expensive products. The hours in the stylist’s chair.
"No."
"Was it for your makeup? Your shoes? Your jewelry? Your nails? Your bags?"
"No! No! No!"
"Then where is the money?"
Krystal’s face was white, bloodless, the color of paper. Her hands were shaking, her fingers trembling like leaves in a storm. Her tears had stopped, but her eyes were wild, darting around the auditorium, looking for an escape, looking for someone to save her, looking for a hole to crawl into.
No one came.
The annual day had become a mess. Voices overlapped, accusations flew, and the stage which had been a place of celebration became a place of judgment. The lights that had seemed so flattering now felt harsh, exposing every flaw, every crack in her mask.
Inside, Krystal was panicking.
She was not used to this. She was used to controlling the narrative, to being the victim, to having everyone believe her. She had spun lies for years, weaving them into a web so intricate and so careful that no one had ever found the edges.
But now, surrounded by angry faces and pointed questions, she could not think. Her answers came out wrong, contradictory and full of holes.
"I gave the money to the hospital," she said.
Dr. Raymond shook his head slowly. His eyes were sad now, not angry but disappointed. "I have no record of any donation. If you do not believe me, I can call the hospital right now. We can find out together. We can ask the administration. We can pull the records. Would you like that, Krystal?"
"Maybe... maybe it went to a different hospital."
"What hospital?"
"I... I do not remember."
Dr. Raymond’s voice was cold and clinical. "You do not remember which hospital received thousands of dollars?"
"It was... it was a long time ago."
"The donation was made this year. James said so. Just now. On this stage."
"I meant... I meant..." Krystal’s voice trailed off.
The audience watched. And slowly one by one they started understanding.
This girl was lying.
Krystal stood on the stage, frozen. Her makeup once flawless was smudged from tears she had cried and stopped crying and tried to cry again. Her mascara had run in dark streaks down her cheeks. Her lipstick was faded. Her hands were shaking. Her breath was shallow.
She opened her mouth to speak, to deny, to deflect, to do what she always did. Turn herself into the victim, make everyone feel sorry for her, escape yet again.
But before she could say a word, the screen behind her flickered.
The audience gasped.
The large display which had been showing the college logo and the names of donors crackled with static, white and black fuzz dancing across the screen. Then the image shifted and a girl appeared.
She was young, maybe in her early twenties, with dark circles under her eyes and a tired worn expression that spoke of sleepless nights and endless worry. Her face was pale, her lips chapped, and her hands were clasped tightly in her lap, the knuckles white.
She wore a casual hoodie, faded and soft, the fabric pilled from years of wear. Her hair was pulled back in a messy bun, loose strands escaping to frame her face.
Behind her was a small room: bare walls painted a dull lifeless beige, a single window showing a gray overcast sky, a cheap desk cluttered with papers and empty coffee cups. The room was cramped, cold and lifeless.
"Hello," she said. Her voice was quiet but calm, though there was a tremor beneath it, like a thread pulled too tight about to snap. "My name is Zara."
The audience leaned forward. The whispers stopped.
"I studied at the same school as Krystal," Zara continued. "We were in the same class. We sat next to each other. I thought she was my friend. I thought she was someone I could trust."
She paused, her eyes dropping to her hands.
"I trusted her."
Silence fell as everyone listened carefully.
"I was working on a big project. It was for a national competition. It was my idea. My research. My words. I had been working on it for months. Every night, every weekend, every spare moment. I poured everything I had into that project. My time, my energy, my heart, my soul."
Her voice cracked, but she kept going.
"I told Krystal about it. I was excited. I thought she would be happy for me. I thought she would support me. I thought she was my friend."
She laughed, a bitter hollow sound that echoed through the speakers.
"She asked to see my notes. Just to look, she said. Just to see what I had done. She was curious, she said. She wanted to learn from me, she said. She admired my work, she said."
Zara’s eyes filled with tears, but she did not let them fall.
"I showed her everything. My research. My drafts. My sources. My conclusions. Everything. Every page. Every note. Every thought."
She swallowed hard.
"A week later she presented my project at the competition. My idea. My research. My words. She didn’t change anything. She didn’t add anything. She didn’t improve anything. She just... took it."
The audience murmured, a low growl of disbelief.
"She won first place. She got the trophy. She got the prize money. She got the recognition. Everyone praised her. Everyone congratulated her. Everyone said she was brilliant. Everyone said she was a genius."
Zara’s hands clenched into fists.
"When I tried to tell the truth, she started crying. She said I was jealous. She said I was lying and trying to ruin her life because I couldn’t stand to see her succeed."
Her voice rose, filled with pain.
"She said I was a bad person. A bitter person. A person who couldn’t be happy for others. A person who wanted to tear her down because I was too weak to build myself up."
Her tears fell.
"And then she fainted. Right there. In front of everyone. In front of the teachers. In front of the judges. In front of the whole school."
The audience gasped.
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