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.
Ivy held her gaze for a moment.
Then, without hesitation, she walked over and sat down.
A few students exchanged looks.
Bold.
Eliana’s smile didn’t change but her eyes sharpened.
“Good,” she said softly. “At least you understand basic manners.”
Ivy said nothing.
She placed her tray down calmly, her movements slow and controlled.
For a moment, silence stretched.
Then Eliana leaned forward slightly.
“Tell me,” she said, loud enough for nearby tables to hear, “what was it like getting in here?”
A pause.
“I mean,” she continued, tilting her head, “it couldn’t have been easy… for someone like you.”
Soft laughter rippled around the table.
Aria smirked. Zara didn’t bother hiding her amusement.
Ivy picked up her glass of water.
Calm.
Unbothered.
“Define ‘someone like me,’” she said quietly.
The question landed sharper than expected.
Eliana’s smile thinned just a little.
“Oh, don’t misunderstand,” she replied lightly. “I’m just curious. This academy has standards.”
Her gaze dropped briefly to Ivy’s uniform.
Subtle.
But deliberate.
“And you don’t exactly… match them.”
More laughter.
This time louder.
Across the room, a few students turned fully, attention locked on the scene.
Even Ethan Cross, seated a few tables away with Damien Lane and Cole Knight, glanced over.
Damien raised a brow. “She’s bold.”
Cole smirked. “Or stupid.”
Ethan said nothing.
His eyes rested on Ivy.
Watching.
Waiting.
Back at the table, Eliana leaned back, satisfied with the attention.
“You should be careful,” she added. “This place can be… overwhelming for people who don’t belong.”
Ivy set her glass down.
Gently.
No sound.
Then she looked up.
Her gaze moved from Eliana… to Aria… to Zara…
And back to Eliana again.
Steady.
Unshaken.
“For a place built on standards,” Ivy said calmly, “you seem very focused on appearances.”
The table went still.
Eliana’s expression froze just for a second.
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Zara snapped.
Ivy didn’t look at her.
“I thought elite meant capability,” Ivy continued softly. “Not… performance.”
A few students nearby went quiet.
The words weren’t loud.
But they carried.
Aria’s smile faded.
Zara frowned.
Eliana’s eyes darkened slightly.
“Are you implying something?” she asked, her tone no longer as light.
Ivy met her gaze.
“No,” she said simply. “Just observing.”
Silence.
Heavy this time.
Then Eliana laughed.
Light. Dismissive. Controlled.
“Interesting,” she said. “A scholarship student talking about standards.”
She reached for her drink
And as she did, her hand tilted just slightly.
The glass tipped.
Water spilled across the table
Straight onto Ivy.
A sharp gasp echoed from somewhere nearby.
“Oh,” Eliana said, placing a hand lightly over her lips. “How careless of me.”
There was nothing accidental about it.
Drops of water slid down Ivy’s sleeve, soaking into her uniform.
All eyes were on her now.
Waiting.
For embarrassment. For anger. For reaction.
Ivy looked down at herself briefly.
Then back up.
Her expression didn’t change.
Not even slightly.
“It happens,” she said calmly.
No anger.
No humiliation.
Nothing.
That… wasn’t the reaction Eliana wanted.
A flicker of irritation crossed her face.
Around them, whispers began again but different this time.
“Why isn’t she reacting?”
“Is she serious?”
From across the room, Damien leaned forward slightly.
“Okay… that’s not normal.”
Cole nodded slowly.
Ethan’s gaze remained fixed on Ivy.
Unblinking.
Because once again
She didn’t respond the way she should have.
And people who didn’t react…
Were the ones you had to watch the most.
Ivy stood.
Water still clinging to her sleeve.
Unbothered.
She picked up her tray.
“Enjoy your lunch,” she said quietly.
Then she walked away.
No rush. No hesitation.
Like nothing had happened.
Behind her, Eliana’s smile faded completely.
Something about that exchange didn’t feel like a win.
And that
Was new.
Very new.