The flight felt longer than it was.
Anya barely slept.
Every time she closed her eyes, she saw:
Her father standing at the bus stand.
Her mother's folded note.
Her small room.
When the plane landed in Seoul, her heart started beating fast.
This was it.
Another country.
Another life.
The airport announcements were in Korean first, then English.
She understood only half of it.
Suddenly, she felt very small.
Very far from home.
A company staff member held a small board with her name written in capital letters.
"ANYA SHARMA."
Seeing her name there felt unreal.
She walked toward him.
He smiled politely.
"Welcome."
Just one word.
No celebration.
No excitement.
Just procedure.
The trainee dorm wasn't fancy.
Two bunk beds.
Four girls in one room.
White walls.
One shared cupboard.
This was not the shiny world she saw on YouTube.
It was simple.
Tight.
Competitive.
Three other girls were already there.
One from Thailand.
One from Japan.
One from Korea.
They looked confident.
Slim.
Sharp features.
Clear skin.
Perfect posture.
Anya suddenly became aware of her worn sneakers.
Her slightly outdated clothes.
Her accent.
"Hi," she said softly.
They nodded.
Polite.
But distant.
Everyone here was chasing the same dream.
Friendship wasn't the priority.
Survival was.
Training started the next morning at 6 AM.
No adjustment period.
No "rest after travel."
A trainer stood in front of them.
Expression strict.
"You were selected. That means nothing now."
The words were translated into English.
"You are trainees. You are replaceable."
Replaceable.
The word hit hard.
"Weight check every Monday. Vocal test every Friday. Dance evaluation every two weeks."
No one reacted.
Like they were used to this tone.
Anya wasn't.
Dance practice began immediately.
The choreography was faster than anything she had done before.
Counts were sharper.
Energy higher.
Mistakes were not ignored.
"Again."
"Again."
"Again."
Her legs started shaking after 40 minutes.
The Korean trainee didn't look tired at all.
Anya felt slow.
Behind.
Out of place.
By evening, her body was aching everywhere.
When she finally lay on the top bunk, staring at the unfamiliar ceiling, tears rolled silently.
Not because she regretted coming.
But because now she understood something clearly:
This wasn't a dream anymore.
It was war.
Back home, she was scared of marriage.
Here, she was scared of being eliminated.
Different fears.
Same pressure.
Her phone buzzed.
A message from her father.
"Pahunch gayi?"
Just two words.
She stared at the screen for a long time.
Then replied:
"Haan."
She didn't write:
"It's scary."
"I feel alone."
"I don't know if I'm good enough."
She just wrote:
"Haan."
Because she chose this road.
And she would walk it.
Even if her legs trembled.
That night, before sleeping, she whispered to herself:
"You wanted this."
Tomorrow at 6 AM—
The real fight begins.
