Chapter 1: The School by The Lake
“Who are you?” Jayden King smirked at his reflection in the mirror, fingers running over his sharp jawline with a casual confidence. His white hair, streaked with a hint of lavender, fell in just the right messy locks over his intense, dark brown eyes. With a chiseled face, broad shoulders, and a wide, athletic chest, he looked every bit the part he claimed to be.
A wicked glint in his eye. “I’m Jayden. Jayden King.” He winked at his reflection and tossed on his sports jacket, slinging his bag over one shoulder. “The dream of every girl,” he added, a cocky grin curling at his lips.
At Deep Lake High School, Jayden ruled. The school was a beautiful structure, a grand building that looked like something out of a fairytale—at least from the outside. But within its shiny halls lay a darker truth: Deep Lake was no palace, but a prison, its students subjected to a brutal bullying by one ruthless group—the Crow Gang. This gang of bullies walked the school’s halls with relentless cruelty, driving students to breaking points that landed some in mental asylums and forced others to flee.
And Jayden? He was their leader, the most feared and charming of them all. His sidekicks only added fuel to his reign. Benjamin, with bulging muscles and his backward cap, was the enforcer, a tank-top-wearing muscleman who could intimidate anyone with a single look. Monty, tall, skinny, and red-haired, played the follower, clinging to the gang because it made him feel cool—and because Jayden threw girls his way to keep him loyal. Ivy, with her sharp black bangs streaked in pink, was the gang’s watchful spy, always noting down the latest gossip, mapping every new relationship and arrival, keeping Jayden’s crew one step ahead of the rest.
Jayden stepped into the canteen, spotting his three gang members bickering around a table. Without missing a beat, he swaggered over, yanked Monty’s juice from his hand, and took a loud slurp, grinning as his friends fell silent.
“What’s with all the fuss?” he asked, settling into his chair, kicking his legs up onto the table in a show of indifference.
Ivy leaned in, grabbing his attention with an excited whisper. “Felix,” she said, her eyes gleaming. She turned his head toward a table in the far corner, where a solitary student sat, seemingly oblivious to the glances and whispers around him.
“That kid?” Jayden asked, arching an eyebrow. Ivy nodded, her smirk widening.
It was only halfway through the year, and already, twenty-three students had left Deep Lake High because of them. And as Jayden sized up Felix, he knew there would soon be one more victim to add to their list.
For the Crow Gang, Felix Blanchard was more than just the new kid—he was a threat. With his lean build, quiet intelligence, and those striking eyes that seemed to catch every girl's attention, Felix had shifted the spotlight, pulling it away from Jayden and his gang. He was simple, almost shy, with a decency and charm that didn’t need any swagger. And that, somehow, made him magnetic. It wasn’t long before every girl who once hung on Jayden’s every word was whispering a different name: “Felix.”
The Crow Gang felt their control slipping, and Jayden wasn’t about to let his hard-won status be challenged by some quiet newcomer. They had to break him, drive him out, or make him a laughingstock—anything to regain their hold on Deep Lake High.
But Felix was tougher than they’d expected. Every attempt to humiliate him or get under his skin fell flat. He didn’t lash out or crumble, which only made him more intriguing to everyone around him. Desperation grew within the gang, especially Jayden, as they watched Felix become even more popular by simply staying true to himself.
One afternoon, the gang gathered in the canteen, their frustration brewing.
“He’s just shy—that’s why he doesn’t talk much,” Ivy said, tossing a glare across the room at Felix, who sat reading alone.
Benjamin scoffed, jealousy written all over his face. “So what? Are you falling for him too, Ivy?”
“No, idiot!” Ivy snapped, rolling her eyes. “But I’ve got something. Turns out he’s an artist—good, too. And I have a plan.” With a cunning grin, she pulled a folded piece of paper from her bag and slapped it on the table. It was a sketch, one of Felix’s that she’d managed to swipe. “Everyone knows he’s amazing at drawing,” she continued, her eyes gleaming with a dark idea.
The gang leaned in, eager to hear her plan, and by the end of it, Jayden couldn’t help but smile. They were going to use Felix’s own talent against him.
That night, they set the scheme into motion. Benjamin broke into Felix’s locker, filling it with fake sketches of naked girls in compromising positions—explicit images edited to look like Felix’s own work. It was cruel and underhanded, exactly the kind of thing the Crow Gang thrived on.
The next morning, Felix opened his locker to a nightmare. The sketches tumbled out, scattering onto the floor right as the halls began to fill. Whispers turned to laughter, and mocking eyes turned toward him as he scrambled to gather the pages, his face flushed with humiliation. He could feel the stares, the ridicule, burning into him as he rushed down the hallway, clutching the fake sketches against his chest.
He barely made it to the bathroom, slamming the door shut and locking himself in a stall. He slumped to the floor, shaking as he wanted to tear the papers to shreds, unable to understand why he’d become a target for such cruelty. His hands trembled, his heart pounded, and alone in the suffocating silence, he couldn’t hold back the tears.
Felix’s hands trembled as he clutched the humiliating sketches, each one a cruel reminder of the gang’s mockery. Embarrassed and furious, he felt the sting of being targeted by people who seemed untouchable. They expected him to cower and disappear, just like all the others they’d driven out. But this time, Felix did something different—something no one had dared to do.
Instead of flushing the papers in shame, he held his head high, marched straight to the principal’s office, and presented the evidence, demanding the truth be seen. He spoke up, quiet but determined, and in that moment, something changed within him.