London
A light drizzle softened the windowpanes, turning the morning into a muted grey. The city outside was already stirring. Buses climbed the road with a low rumble, a train clattered somewhere in the distance, and a voice called out for a taxi that was probably already gone.
Inside a small bedroom in a narrow terraced house, a clock ticked past half six. Books lay open where they had been left, wires and components scattered across the desk, a chessboard missing a few pieces. A soldering iron sat to one side, unplugged. It looked untidy, but not careless.
Aarav opened his eyes.
He did not move straight away. He watched the faint movement of dust in the light and let the moment settle. Something felt different, though he could not place it immediately. Then it came into focus.
His thoughts were faster.
Not louder, not clearer in the usual sense, just quicker. He noticed details without trying. The angle of the ceiling. The rhythm of droplets sliding down the glass. A faint hum from the radiator that he had never paid attention to before.
It was not overwhelming. Just unfamiliar.
He pushed himself up slowly, steadying his breathing. The question came naturally. Who am I, really?
There were memories. School, lessons, unfinished work, the routine of a normal life in South East London. His foster parents. The small details that made up an ordinary day.
But underneath that, something else had shifted. His mind felt active in a way it never had before. As if it was not waiting for problems, but already working through them.
He reached for a notebook.
The pen moved before he fully decided what to write. Lines formed, then connected. Shapes became circuits. He paused only briefly, then continued, following the logic as it unfolded on the page. He did not understand everything he was drawing, but it did not feel random. It felt familiar, like picking up something he had once known and forgotten.
The whistle of a kettle carried up from downstairs. A moment later came his foster mother's voice.
"Aarav, you'll be late for school."
He stopped, just like that. The pen rested against the page as the room came back into focus.
He closed the notebook and slid it aside. Whatever was happening, it was not something he could explain yet. Better to keep it to himself.
He stood and glanced at his reflection in the mirror by the wardrobe. Lean, slightly tired, hair not quite in place. Nothing about him looked different.
But something had changed.
He could feel it, not physically, but somewhere just behind his thoughts. A quiet sense of awareness, like his mind had shifted into a higher gear without asking permission.
He let out a slow breath.
The world outside had not changed. It was still the same streets, the same routines, the same expectations.
But it no longer felt the same to him.
There was structure where there had only been noise before. Patterns where there had been guesswork. Problems that already hinted at solutions.
He picked up his bag, pausing briefly at the door.
For the first time, thinking did not feel like effort.
It felt like control.
