“Come as you are, bring one secret you’re ready to share, and we’ll trade it for a dance,” the flyer read in Luna’s looping cursive. The deadline was midnight on Friday, and the venue? The old community center on Willow Street—a building that still smelled of pine and old paint, with a basement that had once been a dance hall.
Everyone nods. They’re nervous, but the promise of a night where everyone is equally vulnerable feels oddly freeing. The doors open at 9 p.m. and the first wave of classmates trickles in, each clutching a folded piece of paper with their secret written in shaky handwriting. The hallway outside buzzes with gossip, but inside the basement, the music hums, the fairy lights twinkle, and a sense of anticipation settles over the crowd.
Sofi, still shy, clutches a small notebook. She flips through the pages, her eyes landing on a poem she wrote in Spanish: “Yo soy más que la sombra que ves. Soy luz en la oscuridad.” She decides this will be her secret. Bacanal De Adolescentes 26
pulls out a folded paper, the corners frayed. I love Beethoven. I’ve been taking piano lessons in secret because I’m afraid my friends will think I’m a nerd. He opens the portable speaker and plays a snippet of Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata.” The crowd quiets, the music filling the room like a soft blanket. EJ, cheeks flushed, takes a tentative step onto the dance floor, his hands moving as if to play an invisible piano. The others join, forming a circle, each moving to the rhythm of his hidden passion.
is Maya and Jax, an unlikely pair. She’s nervous, but Jax’s easy smile eases her. “You draw,” he says. “What do you draw when no one’s watching?” She shrugs. “Mostly monsters that look like my homework.” He laughs, and they sway under the flickering lights. “Come as you are, bring one secret you’re
“Okay, friends,” she says, voice barely above the music, “the moment we’ve all been waiting for. Let’s trade our secrets for a dance. I’ll go first.”
She pulls out a crumpled piece of paper. Her eyes scan the words she wrote two weeks ago: I’m terrified of being left behind. My dad left when I was ten, and I’ve been trying to fill that emptiness with parties and plans. I’m scared that one day I’ll just… stop trying. The room falls silent. A few teens gasp, but most simply listen. Luna looks up, meeting the eyes of each friend. “I’m sharing this because I think I finally trust you all enough to let you in.” Everyone nods
Jax, ever the practical joker, hides a stash of glow‑in‑the‑dark stickers in his pocket, ready to plaster on anyone who tells a boring secret. “We’ll see who’s brave enough to get stuck on a wall,” he grins.