My name is Théo Sullivan, I’m 11 years old, I’ve got a turbo brain and an almost too intense obsession with LEGO Technic, robots, retro video games, and weird space stuff. Basically, I’m a little genius (not my words—okay maybe I slightly forced my 3rd-grade teacher to say it).
And today... BOOM. New start. New city. New school. New me? Uh… we’ll see.
Last night, we landed in Opal City in full “move of the year†mode. My dad, my two brothers, and me, with a truck bursting at the seams and zero organization. The only thing I wanted was to find my LEGOs, my VR headset, and my Starhawk 5000 spaceship (made of cardboard but insanely detailed, thank you very much).
We unpacked boxes until super late (mostly me, the others looked like zombies). Result: I fell asleep on the floor, no pajamas, no blanket, window wide open—frozen burrito style. In the morning, I was a cryogenically frozen mummy, like I’d spent the night in a freezer. Lovely.
I jolted awake, hugging my pillow like an energy shield, ready to fight off a zombie attack. Blink. New ceiling. New walls. New room. No decor (yet).
I rushed to the mirror. Yikes. Horror show: hair like a level-F5 tornado, panda eyes, underwear two sizes too small. Total mental panic moment. What if someone walked in while I was sleeping?!
And then, as if my thoughts had summoned him: BAM, the door flew open at lightspeed.
— “Son? You awake?â€
It was Dad. Casual mode, coffee in hand, smug smile on his face. He looked at me, paused, and…
— “You know, I’ve already seen what you’re hiding under there. No need to cover up now.â€
I grabbed the towel he tossed me (thanks, ninja reflexes) and wrapped it around me like a Jedi of shame. Dad laughed even harder. He’s like that: part space mission commander, part sweet dad, with green eyes that glow in the dark (kinda creepy, honestly).
— “Meet me in the kitchen. I want to talk to you guys before school.â€
And poof—gone. Like a ninja too.
I stumbled into the hallway, still half-asleep, towel clutched like a superhero cape. Noah, my 7-year-old little brother, was asleep standing up against the wall, clinging to his blue stuffed toy (his name’s Bue, king of all plushies). He wore unicorn pajamas. Or was it a dinosaur? Artistic blur.
Gabriel, my big brother, stomped out of his room groaning about his alarm, hair looking like he’d stuck his finger in an outlet, growling like a bear. He’s strong, stubborn, grumpy—but deep down he’s a giant teddy bear. A giant teddy bear with abs.
Then Dad yelled like a cartoon general:
— “UP AND AT ‘EM, SOLDIERS! It’s the first day of school, no mercy for sleepyheads!â€
We groaned in unison. Like a choir of despair.
— “I know it’s hard, but you’re gonna love it here,†he added in his nostalgic-dad voice.
“Opal City is magical. I grew up here. Forests, beaches, secret spots… You’ll see.â€
Then he whipped out a schedule. Worse than a NASA mission chart.
— “Théo, your first class is at 8. But you need to stop by the office first. Your bus comes between 7 and 7:30. If you miss it... you walk.â€
(Needless to say, I stared at the clock like my life depended on it.)
He caught Noah just as he was literally falling over. Then he pointed at me like an imperial commander.
— “You—shower. Now. I’ll handle breakfast!â€
I dashed to the bathroom, hyperspace mode: ON. Once the door was shut, I dropped the towel. The mirror showed me a crumpled-up Théo, in striped underwear, looking like a gamer who stayed up too late.
I sighed. Okay. First day. New school. New… everything.
And then the existential question hit me: Am I ready?
The hot water woke me up like a cosmic hug. My brain started wandering: what if I joined a secret club? A team of hackers? A group of scientists on a top-secret mission?
My imagination was partying while I washed my hair.
After the shower, I put on my academy uniform: white shirt, black jacket, shorts, knee-high socks, tie.
And the most crucial detail: my white underwear with red trim. Because heroes always choose their armor carefully.
In the kitchen, Dad greeted me with a plate of eggs. Warm. Golden. Practically holy.
— “How are you always the first one ready?â€
I shrugged—Organization +1000.
Gabriel dragged himself in, still half-asleep, eyes barely open. Dad tossed him a plate too.
— “Your bus comes in 30 minutes.â€
— “PLENTY of time,†Gabe grumbled. Always the optimist, that guy.
I inhaled my eggs, eyes fixed on the window. A new day. A new mission. A new adventure.
Dad patted my shoulder.
— “Son, your bus will be here soon. Time to go.â€
My heart jumped. I grabbed my bag, my ID, my notebooks. I ran to the door, short of breath, thoughts all over the place…
Opal City, here I come. Get ready.