Chapter 2 - Breaking News

By the time I was 11, I was part of a global competition to create a school newspaper. And thus, The Brackla Tattler was born—a journalistic masterpiece (or so we thought) with a name that suggested the kind of scandal and intrigue we were determined to uncover.
The inaugural issue had a front-page story so wild it could’ve been straight out of a crime thriller. The headline? “Body Parts Found in Bags Across City!”
It was gruesome, sensational, and absolutely perfect for the tone we were going for—true crime meets small-town gossip. I still remember writing it, trying to balance shock value with just enough professionalism to impress the judges.
Even though we were just kids with big dreams and bigger imaginations, that story gave The Brackla Tattler its identity. We weren’t afraid to tackle the dark stuff, even if we barely understood it ourselves.
Looking back, it was a little absurd. There we were, a bunch of kids, debating headlines about dismembered body parts in a city where the most exciting thing to happen was a new shop opening in town. But at the time, it felt important—like we were giving a voice to something people needed to know about.
It wasn’t just about the competition anymore. The newspaper became my first taste of what it meant to create something that people paid attention to. For the first time, I felt like my ideas—my words—could shape how people saw the world, even if it was just in the context of a school project.
The Brackla Tattler didn’t win—but it taught me how to make people look twice. I’ve been chasing headlines ever since.