LOGINThe first glitch should have ended there.
It didn’t. By the time the next class began, something was already wrong. Students noticed it in small ways at first. Schedules updating incorrectly. Classroom doors refusing to open for a few seconds longer than usual. Assignment files disappearing… then reappearing. Minor issues. Easy to ignore. Until they weren’t. Ivy Morgan walked through the hallway, her steps calm, her expression unchanged. Around her, frustration was beginning to rise. “My schedule just changed again!” “That’s the third time!” “Why can’t I access my class?” A digital panel near the corridor flickered violently before stabilizing. Then flickered again. Ivy slowed slightly. Watching. The pattern from earlier hadn’t disappeared. It had spread. Faster than expected. Behind her, a group of students rushed past, their voices tense. “They said the system is malfunctioning across multiple blocks.” “No way this place has backup systems!” “Then why is everything glitching?” Because something deeper was breaking. Ivy already knew that. Inside the main academic hall, the situation worsened. The large display screens that usually ran smoothly were now unstable data flashing, freezing, correcting itself too late. A sharp error tone echoed again. Then another. And another. SYSTEM ERROR: ACCESS FAILURE A door at the end of the hall refused to open, even as students tried repeatedly. “It’s not responding!” “Step back maybe it’s locked down!” “No one said anything about a lockdown!” Panic began to creep in not loud yet, but growing. Controlled environments made people comfortable. When control slipped So did they. Ivy stood still for a moment, her gaze moving across the chaos. Every failure was connected. Every delay… synchronized. Not random. Never random. At the center of the hall, Eliana Scott stood surrounded by her circle, irritation clear on her face. “This is ridiculous,” she said sharply. “Why hasn’t anyone fixed it yet?” Aria crossed her arms. “The system team should’ve handled this already.” Zara glanced around nervously. “What if it’s something bigger?” Eliana’s eyes narrowed. “It’s a system,” she said coldly. “It doesn’t just ‘break.’ Someone is responsible.” Her gaze swept the hall And for a brief second It landed on Ivy. Watching. Still. Unbothered. Eliana looked away. But the thought lingered. Across the hall, Ethan Cross stepped forward, his presence cutting through the noise without effort. “What’s the status?” he asked one of the staff members. The man hesitated. “We’re… still trying to stabilize the network.” “Trying?” Ethan repeated, his tone low. The man swallowed. “The issue isn’t isolated. It’s affecting multiple systems at once.” Ethan’s gaze shifted to the main display. Analyzing. Tracking. But even he couldn’t see the full picture. Not yet. Damien leaned slightly toward him. “This isn’t normal.” Cole scoffed. “Obviously.” “No,” Damien said quietly. “I mean it’s structured.” That caught Ethan’s attention. Structured. He looked again. Past the errors. Past the visible failures. Searching for a pattern. And somewhere in the room Ivy was doing the same. But faster. Cleaner. Because while everyone else saw chaos She saw design. Another loud alarm cut through the hall. SYSTEM ALERT: CORE RESPONSE DELAY The message flashed repeatedly before glitching out. Then For a split second The entire network froze. Lights flickered. Screens went black. Silence dropped like a weight over the building. Then everything came back at once. Too fast. Too forced. Like the system was struggling to hold itself together. Students gasped. Voices rose. Confusion turned into unease. And still No one had fixed it. Ivy exhaled quietly. This wasn’t just a glitch anymore. It was a collapse in progress. And if left alone It would only get worse. Her gaze shifted toward the nearest terminal panel. Then to the main system board. Calculating. Timing. Waiting. Because stepping in now Would expose too much. But waiting too long Would cost control. Across the hall, Ethan’s eyes moved again. Finding her. Watching. Because in the middle of rising chaos There was only one person who looked like she wasn’t surprised. And that Wasn’t something he could ignore. Ivy met his gaze for a brief second. Then turned away. Like nothing mattered. Like she wasn’t already deciding Exactly when to take control of a system that no longer belonged to anyone else.The academy returned to normal.At least that was what everyone believed.By the next morning, Starlight Elite Academy was functioning flawlessly again. No glitches. No delays. No errors.Everything perfect.Too perfect.Students moved through the halls as if nothing had happened, their conversations already shifting to other things.“Guess they fixed it overnight.”“Of course they did. It’s Starlight.”“It wasn’t that serious anyway.”People always said that when they didn’t understand something.Ivy Morgan walked past them quietly.Her expression calm.Unchanged.Like the system failure had never existed.Like she had never touched it.Inside the main control office, howeverThings were very different.Multiple screens displayed system logs, security layers, and internal reports. Staff members stood around, their faces tense.“This doesn’t make sense,” one of them said.“We checked everything. There’s no record of a manual override.”“Then how was it fixed?”Silence.No one had an a
By late afternoon, Starlight Elite Academy was no longer functioning smoothly.It was holding on.Barely.The glitches hadn’t stopped they had only learned to hide better.Doors delayed before unlocking.Screens froze for a second too long.Commands responded… just slightly off.Enough to disrupt.Not enough to shut everything down.Which made it worse.Because no one could fully control it.Ivy Morgan stood at the edge of the main hall, watching the system struggle to stabilize itself.Temporary patches.Surface-level fixes.Ineffective.They were treating symptoms.Not the cause.Across the hall, staff members moved quickly between terminals, voices low but urgent.“We’ve isolated part of the issue”“No, it’s spreading again”“Reboot the secondary layer!”“It’s not responding!”Frustration was turning into pressure.Pressure would turn into mistakes.Ivy’s gaze shifted.Timing mattered.And the window was closing.She turned quietly and walked away from the crowd, her steps calm, de
The first glitch should have ended there.It didn’t.By the time the next class began, something was already wrong.Students noticed it in small ways at first.Schedules updating incorrectly.Classroom doors refusing to open for a few seconds longer than usual.Assignment files disappearing… then reappearing.Minor issues.Easy to ignore.Until they weren’t.Ivy Morgan walked through the hallway, her steps calm, her expression unchanged. Around her, frustration was beginning to rise.“My schedule just changed again!”“That’s the third time!”“Why can’t I access my class?”A digital panel near the corridor flickered violently before stabilizing.Then flickered again.Ivy slowed slightly.Watching.The pattern from earlier hadn’t disappeared.It had spread.Faster than expected.Behind her, a group of students rushed past, their voices tense.“They said the system is malfunctioning across multiple blocks.”“No way this place has backup systems!”“Then why is everything glitching?”Becau
By midday, Starlight Elite Academy was running exactly as it always did.Perfectly.Too perfectly.Classes flowed without interruption. Schedules updated in real time. Notifications chimed softly across student devices, keeping everything in sync.A flawless system.Or at least that was what everyone believed.Ivy Morgan sat quietly in the back of her next class, her eyes on the digital board at the front. Lines of structured data moved across the screen as the teacher explained system integration protocols.Most students weren’t paying attention.They didn’t need to.The academy system handled everything for them.Attendance. Assignments. Access control.It thought for them.Ivy watched it think.Watched the way information moved.The way commands were processed.The way responses came back… almost instantly.Almost.Her gaze sharpened slightly.There.A delay.So small no one else would notice.A fraction of a second.Then gone.The system corrected itself.Smooth. Clean.Invisible.
Starlight Elite Academy didn’t run on rules.It ran on patterns.Ivy Morgan noticed that by her second day.She walked through the corridors slowly, her steps unhurried, her presence easily ignored. Students passed by in clusters laughing, whispering, performing.Everything looked effortless.But nothing here was random.She stopped briefly near the main hall, her eyes scanning the flow of movement.Groups weren’t just groups.They were structures.At the top those who led without speaking.Below them those who followed without question.And at the bottomThose who didn’t belong at all.Ivy shifted her gaze slightly.Eliana Scott stood at the center of it all.Surrounded.Admired.Followed.Every laugh near her was a little louder. Every reaction a little quicker.Control through attention.Predictable.Across the hall, Ethan Cross moved differently.He wasn’t surrounded.He didn’t need to be.People made space for him without being told.No noise.No effort.Just presence.Control th
The cafeteria at Starlight Elite Academy was less of a dining hall and more of a display of status.Who sat where mattered.Who you sat with mattered more.Ivy Morgan walked in alone.Conversations dipped slightly not silent, but enough for her to notice the shift. Eyes followed her again, some curious, most amused.“She really has no idea how things work here.”“Or she just doesn’t care.”Ivy ignored them.She picked up a tray, simple and untouched by luxury, and scanned the room for an empty seat.There were many.But none were truly available.Then“Ivy.”Her name stopped her.Eliana Scott.Seated at the center table, surrounded by her usual circle Aria Cole and Zara Blake beside her, along with a few others who existed only to agree with everything she said.Every seat at that table was occupied.Except one.Directly across from Eliana.Too intentional.Too public.A trap.“I saved you a seat,” Eliana said sweetly, her smile flawless.The entire cafeteria seemed to pause, waiting.







