The envelope did not belong there.
Aarav noticed it the moment he entered his room.
It lay on the table, placed carefully between a stack of worn textbooks and a notebook filled with scribbled formulas. Nothing else in the room held that kind of stillness. Everything else looked… used. Lived in.
This did not.
He closed the door behind him, his eyes still fixed on it.
For a moment, he didn't move.
Then, slowly, he stepped closer.
The room itself was small—barely large enough for a bed, a desk, and a narrow cupboard that never quite shut properly. The ceiling fan above rotated with a tired rhythm, its sound blending with the distant noise of traffic outside.
It was a room built for function, not thought.
And yet Aarav thought a lot.
He picked up the envelope.
Off-white. Slightly textured. No logo. No sender's address.
Only his name.
Aarav Mehta
Written in clean, deliberate handwriting—not printed, not hurried. Each letter placed with intention.
He turned it over.
Nothing.
No seal. No mark.
Just weight.
"This is new," he muttered.
His life didn't include surprises.
It followed patterns.
Study. Practice. Repeat.
He had spent the last few years building something invisible—discipline, consistency, control over small things. Not because he wanted to be extraordinary.
Because he couldn't afford not to be.
He sat down, the chair creaking slightly under him.
For a moment, he just held the envelope between his fingers.
There was no excitement.
Only curiosity.
And something quieter beneath it.
He opened it.
A single sheet slid out.
No greeting.
No explanation.
At the top, printed in sharp black ink:
> Blackthorne Institute of Sovereign Studies
Aarav's eyes lingered on the name longer than expected.
It didn't sound like a university.
It sounded like something that had decided what it was long before he had ever heard of it.
Below it—
> You have been selected.
He frowned.
Selected?
For what?
He read on.
> Your presence is requested at Blackthorne Institute.
Reporting date: 12th October
Further details will be provided upon arrival.
No congratulations.
No instructions.
No contact details.
At the bottom—
A small emblem.
A crown.
Minimal. Precise.
Not decorative.
Symbolic.
Aarav leaned back slightly, the paper still in his hand.
"This has to be a mistake."
He hadn't applied.
Not to anything like this.
His plans were simple. Clear. Predictable.
Entrance exams. Scholarships. A steady climb.
Nothing about this fit.
He checked the envelope again.
Same handwriting.
Same certainty.
No mistake.
That night, he searched.
The internet, for once, felt… unhelpful.
"Blackthorne Institute."
Results appeared—but not the kind he expected.
No official website.
No campus tours.
No rankings.
Nothing that explained what it actually was.
Instead, fragments.
Disconnected pieces.
An archived article:
> "…an institution attended by individuals from influential global families…"
A financial report citation:
> "…graduates of Blackthorne occupy a disproportionate percentage of executive and policy-making positions…"
A forum thread, nearly a decade old:
> "You don't apply to Blackthorne."
> "If you receive something from them…"
The next line was deleted.
Aarav leaned back in his chair, staring at the screen.
Harvard.
Oxford.
Stanford.
Those names came with clarity. Structure. Visibility.
Blackthorne came with… absence.
And yet—
The few mentions that existed didn't feel small.
They felt… controlled.
He closed the laptop.
The room felt quieter than usual.
His eyes shifted to the envelope again.
Still on the table.
Still waiting.
That night, sleep didn't come easily.
Not because he was excited.
Because something didn't add up.
And Aarav had always trusted patterns.
This had none.
The days that followed moved faster than they should have.
Arrangements were made.
Quietly.
Efficiently.
Too efficiently.
No interviews.
No verification calls.
No paperwork delays.
Just… acceptance.
On the morning of departure, his suitcase sat near the door.
Small.
It had to be.
There wasn't much to take.
A few clothes.
A handful of books.
And a watch his father had given him years ago.
It no longer worked.
He carried it anyway.
The car arrived exactly on time.
Black.
Polished.
No branding.
The driver stepped out, opened the door, and gave a slight nod.
"Blackthorne Institute?"
Aarav hesitated.
Just for a second.
Then he nodded.
"Yes."
The journey was quiet.
Not uncomfortable.
Just… silent.
The city faded gradually.
Noise turned into distance.
Buildings gave way to older structures—stone replacing glass, history replacing motion.
Time felt different on this road.
Slower.
Heavier.
And then—
The gates.
They rose into view without announcement.
Tall.
Iron.
Intricately designed, yet devoid of decoration.
They did not welcome.
They did not threaten.
They simply existed.
The car stopped.
The gates opened.
Without sound.
Inside—
The campus stretched further than Aarav expected.
Stone buildings, tall and structured.
Windows aligned with unnatural precision.
Paths that curved just enough to feel intentional.
Students moved across the grounds.
Well-dressed.
Composed.
Not loud. Not distracted.
Each one seemed to walk with purpose.
No one looked lost.
Aarav stepped out of the car.
The air felt different.
Cooler.
Still.
For a moment, no one noticed him.
Then—
Someone did.
A boy stood near the entrance steps.
Dark suit. Hands in pockets.
At first glance, nothing remarkable.
But his stillness was… deliberate.
His eyes met Aarav's.
And didn't move.
It wasn't curiosity.
It wasn't judgment.
It was… assessment.
The boy began walking toward him.
Measured steps.
Neither fast nor slow.
"You're new," he said.
Not a question.
Aarav nodded. "Yeah."
A pause.
Brief.
Calculated.
"Scholarship?" the boy asked.
Aarav blinked. "How did you—"
"Eryndor," the boy replied.
Simply.
As if that explained everything.
Silence settled between them.
Not awkward.
Just… unfinished.
The boy extended his hand.
"Lucien Rathore."
The name lingered slightly longer than expected.
Aarav shook his hand.
"Aarav Mehta."
Lucien's grip was firm.
Controlled.
He smiled.
Not warm.
Not cold.
Just precise.
"Welcome to Blackthorne," he said.
A slight pause.
Then—
> "You'll find… things work differently here."
Aarav frowned slightly.
"What do you mean?"
Lucien's gaze shifted briefly—past him, toward the campus.
Students crossing paths.
Groups forming.
Invisible lines being drawn.
Then he looked back.
"You'll understand," he said.
And for a moment—
Just a moment—
Aarav felt it.
Not fear.
Not excitement.
Something quieter.
As if he had stepped into something…
that had already been waiting for him.
End of Chapter 1
