Chapter 1 New School, New Nightmare
Zara’s POV
The map ripped.
Not a little. All the way down the middle, right before Zara could figure out which hallway led to the scholarship check-in desk. She stood in the middle of Cresthaven Academy’s main entrance, holding two useless halves of paper, with fifty students streaming past her like she was a rock in a river.
The entrance hall was enormous — vaulted ceilings with dark wood beams, floors so polished Zara could see a blurred version of herself staring back up. Trophy cases lined the left wall, their glass fronts gleaming under brass light fixtures. Everything smelled faintly of old books and money. Zara had seen photos online before today, but photos didn’t capture the weight of the place, the way it made you feel small the moment you stepped inside.
Nobody stopped. Nobody looked. That was fine. She did not need anyone to stop.
She pressed the two halves together, squinting at the tiny print. Scholarship Wing, Level B, Room 04. She had memorised this before she even arrived — she just could not find the stairs.
“Move.”
One word. Flat and bored. Zara looked up.
A boy was standing right behind her. Tall — at least a head taller than her five foot four — with dark hair that fell across his forehead like he had not bothered to push it away. He wore the standard Cresthaven blazer, but his tie was loosened, collar open, like the uniform was something that had been placed on him against his will. Silver eyes looked at her the way people look at things that are in their way. He did not say excuse me. He did not wait for her to step aside. He just walked around her, bumping her elbow as he passed.
Her map halves hit the floor.
She waited. Half a second. Just to see.
He did not turn around. A girl walking beside him — blonde, blazer perfectly pressed, gold scholarship pin gleaming — glanced back at Zara with something close to pity before turning away just as quickly.
Zara picked up her map herself, tucked the pieces into her pocket, and kept walking.
She found Room 04 seven minutes later, sweating through the back of her collar.
Eight other students were already inside. They all had the same small pin on their blazers — the silver scholarship pin, slightly different from the gold ones the regular students wore. Zara touched hers without thinking. She’d polished it that morning in the tiny bathroom of the flat she shared with her mum and younger brother Kofi, who had waved her off from the doorway with a cereal bar in one hand and a grin that was trying too hard to be casual.
She hadn’t told him she was nervous. She hadn’t told anyone.
A woman with reading glasses and a neat bun stood at the front. Ms. Adler, according to the lanyard around her neck. She went through the rules fast. Zara wrote everything down.
Scholarship students had access to the main campus but not the east wing recreation rooms. They ate in the main dining hall but had a separate lunch window. They could apply for tutoring resources but had to submit a form first. The Crown Contest — the school’s big yearly competition, open to all disciplines: science, arts, debate, design — was open to everyone. Including them.
Zara underlined that last part twice.
The Crown Contest came with a prize: a full bursary for the final two years of school, plus a mentorship placement. For most students here, it was probably a trophy to add to a shelf. For Zara, it was the only reason she’d applied to Cresthaven at all.
After the meeting, Ms. Adler handed out a printed list of all scholarship recipients. Their names, their assigned dorm rooms, their class schedules. Zara scanned it quickly.
She found her name. COLE, ZARA. Room B-12.
And then she saw it.
A red line. Thin but clear. Drawn through her name and only her name. Like someone had taken a pen and crossed her out.
Her stomach went cold.
She looked around. The other scholarship students were folding their lists, putting them in bags, chatting quietly. A boy near the window was already on his phone. A girl with locs and paint-stained fingers was reading something. Nobody else was looking at her paper. Nobody else seemed to notice.
She looked back at the red line.
It was not a mistake. It was not a smudge from printing. It was deliberate. Careful. Someone had held a pen over her name specifically and drawn it through with a steady hand.
Zara folded the list. Put it in her blazer pocket, right next to the ripped map. Her face did not change.
She had been at Cresthaven Academy for forty minutes.
She already had an enemy.
She just did not know who yet..
