She arrived with two boxes and a full scholarship. They've been running this campus for generations.
Noa Voss is nobody's charity case. The daughter of a Portuguese immigrant housekeeper, she earned her place at Wren University - an elite Connecticut institution dripping with old money, older traditions, and a social hierarchy as rigid as the stone buildings that house it. Her scholarship covers everything: tuition, room and board, books. What it doesn't cover is the cost of surviving a world designed to remind her, every single day, that she doesn't belong.
From her first night in Mercer Hall - the oldest legacy dormitory on campus - Noa feels watched. The Four, sons of Wren's most powerful founding families, rule the school from the attic suite above her room. They control invitations, dining hall seating, social access, and the unwritten rules that determine who thrives and who disappears. At their center is Silas Rathmore: cold, calculating, and devastatingly controlled. He doesn't look at Noa when she arrives. He doesn't acknowledge her in the halls. But he's the one who placed her in Mercer. He's the one who's been watching since before she ever set foot on campus.
Three years ago, Silas saw Noa reading Dostoevsky in his father's kitchen while her mother cleaned the floors. She never looked up. He never forgot.
Now she's living beneath him. Studying in his library. Running the same trail to the abandoned boathouse where he reads alone at dawn. Every encounter is a negotiation - of space, of power, of the charged silence between two people who refuse to be the first to blink. Noa won't perform gratitude. Silas won't admit desire. And the distance between them keeps shrinking.
But Wren has teeth. When Noa gets too close to the wrong Rathmore, the institution closes ranks. Fabricated evidence. A weaponized morality clause. A campaign of small cruelties designed to make her disappear quietly - orchestrated not by the boy who watches her from the attic, but by his father, a judge who treats legacy like law and people like portfolio assets.
Noa has seventy-two hours to save her scholarship, her reputation, and her place at a table she was never supposed to sit at. She has a best friend who fights with footnotes, a reluctant ally with a recording that could burn the most powerful family at Wren to the ground, and a speech that will make two hundred donors choke on their champagne.
She was supposed to be the glass jaw - the fighter who shatters on impact. They picked the wrong girl.
Glass Jaw is a dark academia romance about class, obsession, institutional power, and the devastating cost of letting someone past your defenses. It features a fiercely independent heroine, a morally complex hero learning to dismantle the cage he was raised in, and a love story forged in the space between fury and forgiveness.