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OUR LITTLE SECRET
OUR LITTLE SECRET
Author: Edna Ozibe

SHE DIDN’T CARE

Author: Edna Ozibe
last update Last Updated: 2025-07-22 21:01:53

Velgrave Academy loomed like a dark secret on the edge of the city — all sharp spires and obsidian glass that caught the morning sun like fire.

Ophelia Wolfe didn’t flinch at the sight of it. She didn’t flinch at much, really.

Not anymore.

Her black boots clicked against the marble steps as she walked past the metal detectors that weren’t built for her kind. Normal schools worried about guns and knives. Velgrave worried about bloodlines. And power.

Especially her kind of power.

Ophelia Wolfe, born to a legacy of Bloodborns gifted with memory manipulation, had been labeled dangerous before she could walk. She could rewrite moments, erase trauma, implant ideas so delicately you’d think they were your own.

And she hated using it.

But Velgrave was not a place that let you live soft. You either sharpened yourself or bled for someone else’s ego.

“Back again, Wolfe?” The voice sliced through the air behind her — smug, taunting.

Carl Maddox.

She didn’t need to turn around. She already knew it was him. That arrogant, blue-eyed menace had a way of poisoning the air before he even spoke. His power was disruption — the ability to neutralize the gifts of others. One touch, one glare, and your legacy meant nothing.

She turned anyway, slowly. “Still following me like a lost puppy, Maddox?”

He smirked, stepping forward with that infuriating swagger. “Just wondering how long you’ll last this year without screwing with someone’s memories.”

“Just wondering how long you’ll last before someone knocks your teeth out,” she snapped back, her eyes glowing faintly — not enough to trigger the hall’s surveillance, but enough to make him pause.

His smile faltered for a second. A split second.

Then he leaned in, close enough for her to smell his cologne — sharp, expensive, unnecessary. “Careful, Wolfe. Someone might mistake that fire for something else.”

She leaned in, lips barely an inch from his ear. “And someone might mistake your cockiness for actual talent.”

They pulled away at the same time, tension crackling between them like static. Around them, students stopped to watch — whispers already starting to spread.

She didn’t care.

Let them talk.

Ophelia strode down the hallway, ignoring the way her fingertips itched to rewrite the last three seconds — to wipe his smugness from her mind. But no. That would be weak. That would mean he got to her.

And no one got to her.

Not anymore.

Ophelia hadn’t made it five feet into the east wing before she felt it — that familiar static hum, like a warning buzzing just beneath her skin.

Carl Maddox was behind her again.

She turned around sharply, lips pressed into a line. “Don’t you have somewhere else to be?”

He was leaning against a locker, arms crossed, the same damn smirk dancing on his lips. “Nowhere nearly as interesting as this.”

She narrowed her eyes, not bothering to hide her disgust. “What do you want, Maddox?”

His gaze flicked down, then back up, unapologetically slow. “I want to know what a girl like you is so afraid of.”

She laughed — short, humorless. “Afraid? Please. If anything, you should be the one afraid of me.”

“I’m not,” he said simply, with no bravado. “That’s the problem.”

Ophelia’s jaw tensed.

It wasn’t that she hated Carl — it was worse than that. He got under her skin. He made her aware of herself in a way she resented. Most people either feared her or respected her. Carl challenged her.

And she didn’t like challenges that couldn’t be erased.

“You know what?” she said, stepping forward until there was no space left between them. “Keep pushing. One day, I won’t hold back.”

His voice dropped. “One day, I won’t either.”

A pause.

Then she brushed past him, shoulder knocking his as she walked away. She didn’t look back, even as his voice chased her down the hallway.

“See you in Combat Class, Wolfe.”

Combat Class at Velgrave was more than just sparring — it was controlled chaos. Every week, students were matched against each other to test their powers and limits.

This week, the names flashed across the screen: Wolfe vs. Maddox.

Of course.

Ophelia stepped onto the mat, tying her hair up with sharp, practiced movements. She wore a fitted black tank and combat pants — nothing flashy, just efficient. Deadly.

Carl entered the ring with a lazy grin and cracked knuckles.

“Try not to fall for me mid-fight,” he teased.

“I’d rather die.”

The whistle blew.

He lunged first, a blur of speed. She dodged, using memory foresight — replaying his fighting style from previous matches and predicting his steps. Her knee connected with his ribs, but he twisted, caught her wrist—

And then it was gone.

Her power blinked out like a candle. His fingertips brushed her skin and that was all it took. Disruption.

For two full seconds, she was just Ophelia. No power. No edge. Just muscle and instinct.

But two seconds was enough.

She headbutted him.

He staggered, laughing even as blood trickled from his nose. “Damn, Wolfe.”

“Don’t touch me,” she hissed.

“I think you like it.”

She kicked his leg out from under him, straddled him on the mat, hand hovering over his forehead — ready to rewrite his memory of the last ten minutes.

“Say it again,” she dared.

His chest rose and fell beneath her, breath ragged. “I think… you like me.”

A dangerous silence stretched between them.

Then the whistle blew again. Match over.

Ophelia stood, brushing off her pants. She didn’t offer him a hand.

But Carl stayed on the floor, grinning like he’d just won something far more valuable than a fight.

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  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 44

    The girl hadn’t moved since they brought her in.She sat on the floor of the diagnostic chamber, knees tucked under her chin, hands glowing faintly like bioluminescent fireflies. Her silver hair fell over her eyes, veiling the eerie calm in her face.Nadine’s scans were inconclusive.“She’s not fully conscious,” she told Mira. “It’s like… a fragment of her mind is here, and the rest is inside something else.”“Another system?” Carl asked.“No,” Nadine said. “A network.”Ophelia stared at the girl.Her voice had echoed in her mind for hours now.“I am the memory of what you tried to erase.”It haunted her.It sounded like something Ophelia herself would say.Too sharp. Too calculated. Too aware of what pain meant.“She’s a failsafe,” Mira explained. “Her code is partially linked to yours, Ophelia.”“How?” Ophelia asked.Mira pressed her lips together. “Because she was grown from the same strand. You’re not just her ‘key’—you’re her source.”Carl’s head snapped toward them.

  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 43

    The next day, a name resurfaced from the hidden layers of Velgrave’s internal system. An ancient student registry, never meant to be recovered, blinked into existence for exactly thirty-four seconds—just long enough for Nadine to screenshot it before it wiped itself clean.And there it was.Carl Maddox — Entry: RedactedNot deleted.Redacted.There’s a difference.Deleted meant the file was gone.Redacted meant someone had erased it from view.“You never told me,” Ophelia said, sitting across from him in the greenhouse they often snuck into after hours. “Your record is ghosted.”Carl exhaled. “I didn’t know.”“You seriously never tried to check your own past?”“I tried. Every trace of my childhood before Velgrave ends in white noise.”She stared at him. “Carl, that’s not normal.”“I know.”His voice was quiet.“I think I didn’t want to find out what they’d hidden. I thought maybe… if I didn’t search, I could just live.”She sat beside him, fingers playing absently with

  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 42

    For the first time since she arrived at Velgrave, Ophelia couldn’t stop replaying her own past.Not the version she’d memorized.But the holes.The parts that didn’t make sense.She remembered her mother being cold.She remembered being transferred between “safe houses.”She remembered a man with gloves who used to press two fingers to her temple and say, “Just a little longer, sweetheart.”But she never remembered his name.Never remembered his face.“Decoy,” she whispered under her breath as she stood at the academy library archives.It echoed.Like it was meant to.She dug through old files under the identity registry section—a part of the Bloodborn system that Mira said hadn’t been touched in years.She found her own entry.Ophelia Wolfe. Born 17th of March. Classified: Grade A — Memory Class. Ability: Memory manipulation.But something was off.There was no birth record attached.Only a single line typed in the background clearance:“Synthetic implantation cleara

  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 41

    When the lights exploded, it wasn’t from heat or power overload.It was resonance.Every bulb, every wire, every screen—shattered not from force, but from frequency.The Echo didn’t just enter the room.He changed it.Carl shielded Ophelia instantly, arm wrapped around her as a pulse of invisible energy rippled through the chamber. The air itself vibrated, filled with high-pitched static that turned their thoughts into noise.“Contain him!” Mira yelled, struggling to access the dampener console.But the Echo didn’t move.Didn’t need to.He just stood in the center of it all—hands at his sides, eyes closed, like a god in prayer.Then he opened his mouth—And every voice in the room spoke at once.Their own voices.Distorted.Replayed.Mimicked.“Carl Maddox, Ophelia Wolfe, Mira Kassel, Nadine Ayre.”Each name echoed from their own lips—except they hadn’t spoken.Carl gritted his teeth. “He’s inside our fields.”“He’s broadcasting on a neural loop,” Mira shouted. “He’

  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 40

    Ophelia didn’t sleep that night.Not because she couldn’t—but because she didn’t want to.She lay in bed, staring up at the ceiling, fingers curled tightly around the edge of her blanket. Her thoughts looped, rewinding again and again to that one flickering moment. That blurred figure. That single glowing word.Echo.A name.A warning.A forgotten ghost.By morning, she was already in Mira’s office.“You’re absolutely sure?” Mira asked, her tone clipped.“As sure as I was the day Lyra glitched,” Ophelia replied.Carl leaned forward, arms folded. “You said the Echo program was shut down years ago.”“It was,” Mira confirmed. “The Echo Initiative was part of a classified tier of experiments. The idea was to train a single Bloodborn to replicate others’ abilities perfectly—without exposure limits.”“Wait,” Nadine cut in. “That’s impossible. Mimics can barely hold one ability at a time. The neural strain alone—”“This one didn’t mimic,” Mira said slowly. “He absorbed.”Everyon

  • OUR LITTLE SECRET    CHAPTER 39

    A week after the Lyra Incident, Velgrave initiated what Mira termed “a hard recalibration of trust.”New security protocols were introduced. Memory scanning regulations were tightened. Dorm access points now required triple authentication. And every student had to undergo a personal “resonance test” to ensure no fragments of Lyra’s code had embedded themselves unknowingly.To most, it was tedious.To Ophelia Wolfe, it was insulting.“So let me get this straight,” she muttered as the scanner hovered over her temples, “you think I could have a piece of Lyra bouncing around in my head?”Nadine, holding the scanner, didn’t blink. “You made direct contact with her. We’re not taking risks.”“You know if anyone’s brain would fry a digital parasite, it’s mine.”“That’s exactly what worries us.”Ophelia frowned. “That’s… fair.”A green light blinked.“You’re clean,” Nadine confirmed.“Obviously,” Ophelia said, hopping off the scanner bed. “I run on spite and caffeine. No room for vi

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