Khushi Doshi
Title: The Game of Shadows (EXERCISE 2 DRAFT 1)
Year: 2104
They say the war didn’t start with bombs or armies. It started with data—little bits of information that no one thought would matter. But now, data is everything. It’s the new weapon, the new currency, and the battlefield is in the minds of children.
My name is Kara. I’m 12 years old, and I’ve been playing The Game of Shadows for as long as I can remember. It’s not like the games people used to play, with controllers and screens. This one is different. This game is real.
The world used to be connected by invisible lines, networks that held everything together. But when the hackers began to take control, those lines became weapons. Cities fell into chaos. Governments collapsed. Now, the war is fought in secret, not with soldiers, but with children like me—kids who’ve been trained to play the game.
I was taken when I was seven. They said it was because I had a special mind, one that could solve puzzles and see patterns where others couldn’t. They plugged us into the Grid, a massive network that controls everything. They call us The Shadows because no one can see us working, but we’re always there. Every move we make on the Grid can mean life or death in the real world.
The adults run things from the outside, but they need us to fight their war. They can’t navigate the Grid like we can. Our brains are still growing, still flexible enough to handle the speed and complexity of the system. So, they use us to break into enemy networks, steal their data, crash their systems. It’s like a game, but every time we lose, people die.
I have this headset. It’s wired directly into my brain, connecting me to the Grid. I can see everything—the firewalls, the traps, the pathways that lead deeper into the enemy's system. I move through them like a shadow, unnoticed, invisible. But sometimes, I wonder if they see us too. The other kids. The enemy has their own Shadows, and sometimes I think I can feel them, moving just beyond my reach, playing the same game we are.
The worst part? I don’t even know who the enemy is anymore. They say it’s another country, another faction, but all I see are other kids, just like me, trying to survive in a war we didn’t start, playing a game we didn’t choose.
The adults promised that the war would end once we won. They said the Grid would be ours again, that life would go back to the way it was before. But I don’t believe them. I think they just want us to keep playing, to keep fighting for control of a world that’s already lost.
The Game of Shadows isn’t about winning or losing. It’s about survival. Every time I plug in, I feel a little more of myself slip away. The Grid changes you. It’s fast, it’s cold, and it never lets you rest. But I have to keep going. I don’t have a choice. Because if I stop, if I lose, the world outside falls apart even more. And that’s not something I can let happen.
So yeah, I’m 12 years old, wired into a war that no one can see, playing a game that’s as deadly as it is invisible. What could possibly go wrong?
Thankyou
















