Csc Struds 12 Standard -
On the last page of his worn notebook, he writes the motto that now hangs in every CSC lobby, next to the old one:
And every year, during the 12th Standard Crucible, a single question appears on every student’s screen—the one Rohan added to the source code before they patched him out:
The simulation begins to glitch. The CSC’s quantum core has never encountered a human refusing its logic. The system tries to punish Rohan, throwing wave after wave of chaos—a bridge collapse, a cyberattack on comms. But Rohan doesn’t solve problems like a machine. He listens. He asks the virtual villagers what they need. He fails fast, adapts faster.
But Rohan is failing. Not in marks—the system won’t let you fail. It simply “re-routes” you. His AI mentor, a floating orb named AURA-12, keeps flashing a yellow warning: “Cognitive Divergence Detected. Student Rohan shows persistent analog thinking patterns. Recommend re-assignment to Basic Service Sector.” CSC Struds 12 Standard
But Rohan can’t. He keeps asking why . Why does the algorithm always choose the solution that benefits the largest demographic but crushes the smallest? Why does it never allow for creative failure? One night, while trying to download a practice Crucible scenario, Rohan’s cracked smartwatch syncs accidentally with the CSC’s quantum core. A cascade of data flows into the watch—not study material, but something forbidden: the original source code of the CSC evaluation system .
“Option 4: Write your own solution. Are you brave enough?”
Rohan sees his own profile: “Subject Rohan: High creativity, low compliance. Suggested destination: Red Stream (Field Maintenance). Neural modification recommended.” On the last page of his worn notebook,
“You broke the Crucible,” Rathore whispers. “No one has ever rejected the tree.” Rohan is hauled to the central adjudication chamber. The regional minister watches via hologram. “You have disrupted the 12th Standard for 10,000 students,” the minister booms. “Your rank is void. You will be expelled from all CSC streams.”
The Last Algorithm of the 12th Standard
The room freezes. Project Phoenix was myth. The minister’s face twitches. “That program is dead.” But Rohan doesn’t solve problems like a machine
But as they are about to wipe his records, Rohan holds up his father’s watch. “Before you do, run Project Phoenix.”
Near-future India, 2032. The government’s CSC (Common Service Centres) have evolved from simple digital kiosks into sprawling, AI-driven “Stratospheric Learning Hubs.” Every village and urban block has one. The final exam of the 12th Standard is no longer a written test but a 48-hour immersive simulation called “The Crucible.”
His hands tremble. The watch also contains one final, corrupted file: Project Phoenix —an alternate evaluation model that his father had been working on before he died. It was scrapped because it valued “unstructured human judgment.” The morning of The Crucible arrives. Rohan enters the simulation pod, heart pounding. Around him, a hundred other Struds plug in, their faces calm, sedated by preparatory beta-blockers. Meera gives him a worried nod.
