Chapter One: Shattered Beginnings

564 Words
The last bell of high school rang like a death toll, not a celebration. Arianna Blake didn’t toss her cap or hug classmates. She didn’t take selfies, sign yearbooks, or even pause at the front gates. While the others cried or cheered, Ari pulled the faded hoodie tighter around her thin frame and walked straight past the rusted fence. No one called her name. No one noticed her leave. She didn’t care. At least, that’s what she told herself. The walk to the shelter took twenty-three minutes, past two convenience stores, one liquor shop, and a bus stop with a broken bench. The city heat stuck to her skin like sweat and regret. Her backpack sagged on her shoulder, filled with everything she owned: two shirts, a notebook, a toothbrush, and a broken phone she used only for Wi-Fi. She was eighteen now. Legally free. No more group homes. No more social workers. No more case files that described her in bullet points: uncooperative, trauma-affected, survival-focused. Just Ari. Alone. Again. When she reached the shelter, the front desk worker barely looked up. “You’ve got mail,” the woman muttered, shoving a crisp white envelope toward her. It stood out like a dove in a storm—thick, clean, and sealed with a pale pink wax stamp that looked hand-pressed. Ari frowned. She didn’t get mail. Ever. She took the envelope slowly, like it might bite. Her name was written in elegant calligraphy: Miss Arianna Blake. No return address. “What the hell…” she whispered, peeling it open. The paper inside was thick and smooth, printed with soft pastel ink: Eden Hollow Academy
A sanctuary of healing, discovery, and care.
Miss Arianna Blake,
You are formally invited to attend Eden Hollow Academy as a candidate in our specialized care and regression program. Our faculty has selected you based on your demonstrated resilience, emotional depth, and unique need for safe, structured nurturing.
Room, board, and tuition are fully covered under scholarship.
Please arrive by June 15. Transportation can be arranged.
Warmest regards,
Miss Eden Lark, Headmistress Ari blinked. “Regression program?” she muttered aloud. She turned the page over—no fine print. No explanation. This had to be a scam. Or a prank. She snorted and stuffed the letter in her bag. Yeah, right. Someone was clearly screwing with her. Probably from that last foster home. Or worse—one of the creepy cult recruiters who came through shelters sometimes, promising love and "purpose" if you gave up your phone and name. She climbed to the top bunk in the back dorm, headphones in, blocking out the noise of babies crying and TVs blaring. Still, she couldn’t stop thinking about that letter. Not the words—those were weird. But the feeling it gave her. It didn’t feel fake. It felt…warm. Like someone had written it just for her. Like someone had seen through her hard edges and still said, Come anyway. We want you. She pulled it out again, tracing the soft ink. Eden Hollow. Sounded like a spa or a daydream. Still… even a fantasy sounded better than this place. And for the first time in a long time, Ari considered something wild: What if it wasn’t a scam? What if this strange school—this “regression program”—was real? What if someone, somewhere, actually wanted her?
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