CHAPTER ONE — THE PERFECT STUDENT
Elena Thorne was, by all accounts, the perfect student. She was at the top of her class and captain of the debate team, the kind of girl who could recite Hamlet while blindfolded and still land every beat of the iambic pentameter. Teachers adored her, classmates admired her or quietly resented her depending on their GPAs, and college admissions offices were already salivating over her file, convinced they were witnessing the rise of a future prodigy.
None of them knew the truth.
Elena's real transcript was written in bloodstains and encrypted mission logs, and her extracurriculars included dismantling supernatural threats before they could level cities.
The bell rang, sharp and insistent, snapping her back to the present. She filed out of the classroom with the rest of the herd, her movements practiced and her smile effortless. The hallway was a symphony of teenage chaos with lockers slamming, gossip ricocheting, and someone in the distance attempting a high note they had absolutely no business attempting. Elena moved through it all with the ease of someone who had spent years perfecting the art of being invisible.
She had mastered the skill of appearing unremarkable, which was ironic considering her life was anything but.
Elena was not just good at lying. She was artful at it. Her classmates saw a girl who solved calculus problems before breakfast. Her teachers saw a prodigy with a heart of gold. Even her foster parents, who had taken her in after the tragic accident that was actually a classified Aegis operation gone wrong, only saw the polished veneer of a model daughter. Beneath the gloss of honor rolls and student council meetings, Elena's life was a ledger of calculated risks and collateral damage. She could disassemble a pistol faster than most kids could text, and her idea of a study break involved decrypting manifests for smuggled relics.
She was halfway to her next class when her watch buzzed. It was not the soft vibration of a text or a reminder. It was sharp, coded, and unmistakable. Elena's steps faltered for the briefest moment, so slight no one else would have noticed, but her pulse jumped.
She lowered her eyes, pretending to adjust her sleeve, and tapped the underside of the watch face. A thin line of text scrolled across the inner screen, visible only to her.
ANIMAL EXTRACTIONS
MULTIPLE INCIDENTS
LOCATION: WILDLIFE PARK
POLICE PRESENCE: ACTIVE
AEGIS REQUESTS OBSERVATION
Her expression did not change, but her mind sharpened instantly. She found it strange that Aegis would assign her to something as simple as an animal theft. They never involved her in routine cases. If they had sent her, then something about this situation was already wrong, something the police could not explain or handle on their own.
She slipped into her next classroom, took her seat, and opened her notebook. To anyone watching, she looked like she was preparing for a surprise quiz. In reality, she was already assembling a plan. After school, she would go to the wildlife park. She wanted to see the scene firsthand, talk to the staff, and look for patterns the alert had not mentioned.
But she could not simply walk in and start asking questions. She needed a reason to be there, something harmless, believable, and easy to maintain.
Her gaze drifted to a group of students in the corner working on posters for the school newspaper. One of them was interviewing another student with a recorder, nodding earnestly as they spoke. The idea clicked instantly, sliding into place with the ease of instinct.
What if she was there on a school journalism piece?
It was perfect. It was harmless enough to disarm suspicion, plausible enough to grant her access, and flexible enough to let her steer conversations wherever she needed them to go. She rehearsed the lines in her head as the teacher droned on, imagining the tone she would use, the smile she would wear, and the way she would tilt her head just enough to look curious without seeming intrusive.
By the time the final bell rang, the plan was fully formed.
The last bell of the day sounded like a starter pistol. Students surged toward the exits, eager to escape homework, teachers, and the existential dread of cafeteria food. Elena moved with them, but her mind was already miles away.
She slipped out the side doors, crossed the parking lot with her usual purposeful stride, and unlocked her car, a perfectly average sedan chosen specifically because no one ever remembered it. She slid into the driver's seat and shut the door. The moment the latch clicked, her entire demeanor shifted. The smile she had worn all day vanished, her posture straightened with practiced precision, and the carefully constructed mask she used to navigate school life fell away completely.
She tapped her watch again, rereading the alert even though she had already memorized every word. Animal extractions did not warrant Aegis involvement unless something about them was wrong, and Aegis never sent her unless they expected the situation to escalate. She exhaled slowly, letting the last remnants of her student persona dissolve as she settled fully into mission mode. The shift was so complete it felt like slipping into a second skin. By the time her breathing steadied, she knew exactly what she had to do.
It was time to blend in.
She started the engine, keeping the radio off because silence helped her think. The drive was not long, but it was enough for her to mentally rehearse her cover story and consider the possibilities behind the alert. By the time she reached the outskirts of the wildlife park, the transformation was complete. The girl who had walked out of school was gone, replaced by the operative Aegis had trained her to be.
She did not pull into the main lot. Instead, she turned down a narrow side road and parked behind a line of trees, far enough away that no one would connect her car to the scene. She killed the engine and scanned the area. Police vehicles clustered near the entrance, their lights off but their presence unmistakable. Staff members moved in tight, anxious groups, their faces drawn and tense. Something had rattled them deeply.
Elena stepped out of the car, grabbed her notebook — the one with the school's journalism logo on the front — and let her posture soften again. Her expression brightened, her smile warmed, and she slipped effortlessly back into the persona she needed: the model student, the curious teenager, the girl doing a school project.
Inside the visitor center, the atmosphere was thick with unease. Staff whispered urgently to one another, police officers moved in and out of back offices, and even the tourists lingering near the informational displays seemed unsettled.
Elena scanned the room in a heartbeat, then approached the nearest staff member, a woman in a park polo who looked exhausted but determined to remain professional.
"Hi, sorry to bother you. I am doing a piece for my school's journalism program, and I was hoping to ask someone a few questions about the park."
The woman blinked, startled but relieved to see someone who was not panicking. "Oh, sure. What is this for again?"
Elena held up her notebook, her smile warm and harmless. "Just a small article. We are covering local conservation efforts and animal behavior. My teacher said this place would be perfect."
The woman visibly relaxed when she realized she was dealing with a student instead of another police officer, and the shift in her demeanor told Elena everything she needed to know. The cover was working exactly as intended.
