Reborn in The Princess Diaries: My Multiverse Empire
Chapter 21 – Looking Beyond India
The small website Anshul created for StudyFlow stayed online quietly for several days.
At first, nothing happened.
Every evening after finishing his homework, Anshul sat in front of the family desktop computer and checked the website statistics. The slow dial-up connection took almost a full minute to load the page each time.
Visitors: 3
Visitors: 7
Visitors: 11
Most of them were likely students who had found the website through the small message boards where Anshul had shared the download link.
But after a few days, something interesting appeared on the statistics page.
A new visitor location.
United States
Anshul stared at the screen for a moment.
Someone from the US had opened the website.
He refreshed the page again.
The entry was still there.
A visitor from California had viewed the download page.
For most people, it would have been just a small piece of information.
But for Anshul, it meant something more.
The program had reached another country.
---
The next day at school, Rahul noticed him unusually quiet during lunch.
"You look like you're thinking about something big again," Rahul said.
Anshul nodded slightly.
"I checked the website statistics yesterday."
"And?"
"Someone from the US visited the site."
Rahul blinked.
"Wait… seriously?"
"Yes."
Rahul leaned forward.
"Did they download the software?"
"I'm not sure yet."
Rahul grinned widely.
"That's amazing!"
Anshul remained calm.
"It's just one visitor."
"Still," Rahul said, "your program traveled across the world."
Anshul smiled faintly.
That simple fact carried more meaning than Rahul realized.
If someone in the United States was interested in StudyFlow, then the software had potential far beyond his local school.
---
That evening, Anshul sat at the computer again and checked the statistics once more.
The numbers had changed.
Visitors: 19
Downloads: 3
Two of those downloads were from India.
But one entry stood out clearly.
Location: California, USA
For a moment, Anshul simply stared at the screen.
Someone in California had downloaded StudyFlow.
He leaned back in his chair slowly.
The possibility he had imagined earlier was now becoming real.
The program was no longer limited to his school.
Or even his country.
---
Over the next few days, Anshul focused on improving the website.
He added clearer instructions explaining how teachers could install the program in a classroom.
He wrote a short guide describing the main features.
Study scheduling.
Assignment tracking.
Progress charts.
Everything needed to be easy to understand.
Because if someone from another country downloaded the program, they wouldn't have anyone nearby to explain it.
The software had to speak for itself.
---
Late one evening, just as Anshul finished updating the website, a new notification appeared in the inbox connected to the site.
An email.
The sender address ended with .edu.
A university domain.
Anshul opened the message.
The email was short.
The sender introduced himself as a teacher assistant at a small community college in California.
He had found StudyFlow while searching for study planning tools for students.
After trying the software, he had a simple question.
"Is there a version designed for classroom use?"
Anshul read the message twice.
A smile slowly appeared on his face.
Because the feature the teacher was asking about already existed.
The teacher dashboard he had recently built.
Anshul quickly opened a new email reply.
He explained how the classroom version worked and attached the newest version of the software.
Before sending the message, he paused for a moment.
Then he clicked Send.
The email traveled across the world through the slow internet connection.
For the first time since starting the project, Anshul felt that StudyFlow had truly taken its first step onto the global stage.
And this time, the future no longer felt distant.
It felt closer than ever.
