Static & Signal
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
"Do you ever feel like the version of yourself you wrote is better than the real one?"
Caleb Sousa has spent four years perfecting the art of being untouchable. Star swimmer. Scholarship athlete. Quietly dependable. Fine. Always fine. In the water, everything makes sense—timing, movement, control. Outside of it, his life is a careful performance built around silence, routine, and the exhausting mathematics of never letting anyone see too much.
Online, though, he becomes someone else.
Under the username static202, Caleb spends his nights talking to cathoderay, a stranger from his university's anonymous LGBTQ+ chat server who somehow understands him with terrifying precision. Their conversations drift from music to loneliness, from art to identity, from the people they pretend to be during the day to the versions of themselves that only exist after midnight. What begins as late-night conversations slowly becomes something deeper—something Caleb cannot neatly compartmentalize or control.
Eli Vasik has always trusted words more than people. A first-year art student with an instinct for seeing what others try to hide, he lives half inside his paintings and half inside the private world he's built online. The connection he finds with static202 feels different from anything he's experienced before—honest in a way real life rarely allows.
Then second semester begins.
Without realizing who the other really is, Caleb and Eli become roommates in Room 214 of Garrison Hall, sharing a space only feet apart while continuing to reveal themselves online in ways they cannot yet manage face-to-face. By day, they learn each other's routines, habits, and silences. By night, they confess fears, desires, and truths through glowing screens in the dark.
But the closer they grow in both worlds, the harder it becomes to keep those worlds separate.
As old fears, family expectations, and carefully guarded identities begin to crack under the pressure of real intimacy, Caleb and Eli must decide whether the safest version of themselves is worth protecting—or whether risking everything for connection might finally be worth the fall.
Because eventually, every hidden signal gets traced back to its source.