George retreated to his office like a man fleeing a battlefield.
The door slid shut behind him with a whisper of hydraulics, sealing him inside his sanctuary of glass and steel.
The office was immaculate, as always. Files aligned to the millimeter, pens capped and arranged in strict order of color, monitor tilted at a perfect forty-five degrees. The air hummed faintly from the building’s climate control, sterile and predictable.
Predictable.
Until now.
He set his notes on the desk, squaring each page against the edge as though geometry itself might steady his pulse. His reflection glimmered in the glass wall: flawless suit, neatly pressed tie, expression carved into stone. A portrait of discipline. Nothing betrayed the tremor running beneath his skin.
Mathew Evans.
The name slipped out before George could stop it. A whisper meant only for the steel and silence of his office. Immediately, he despised the sound. It didn’t belong here. It belonged in dorm rooms filled with textbooks and the hum of overworked computers, in whispered laughter over broken printers, in mornings when George should have walked away but never did.
He forced his focus back to the present, to the endless stream of numbers and projections glowing across his monitor. Numbers never faltered. Numbers never smirked while balancing two cups of burnt coffee. Numbers never leaned against his shoulder at two in the morning and asked if he thought the stars above the campus library looked lonelier than they should.
A notification chimed.
Internal message.
George’s gaze flicked to the corner of the screen. His pulse betrayed him.
...----------------...
Sender: Evans, Mathew
Subject: Compliance
...----------------...
He clicked.
...----------------...
Per your instruction, I’ve familiarized myself with the administration policy.
Just to clarify—does that mean I can’t invite the COO for a drink, or only that I can’t call him ‘Matty’ in the break room?
Seeking clarity,
– M
...----------------...
George’s jaw locked. The audacity. Casual, irreverent, sliding past his carefully built walls the way Mathew always had.
He hovered above the keyboard, fingers stiff, before typing:
...----------------...
Mr. Evans,
Please keep all correspondence professional. Personal familiarity has no place within Aether Solutions.
– G.H.
...----------------...
He sent it immediately, the keystroke sharp, decisive—like slamming a door.
For a moment, silence. The office returned to its hum, as though mocking him. Then—another ping.
He shouldn’t have looked. But he did.
...----------------...
Crystal clear, COO. Consider me fully compliant.
(Though for the record, you always hated that word.)
...----------------...
George exhaled sharply through his nose. Not a laugh. Certainly not that. He snapped the laptop shut, the sound precise, controlled.
Through the glass wall, the city stretched outward in glittering order: towers stacked with ambition, streets flowing with purpose, neon pulsing in a rhythm that promised progress. He had built himself into that same order. Ten years of discipline, of precision and authority. Ten years of proving that control was stronger than chaos.
And in a single morning, Mathew had walked back into it—unchaged. A smile at the corner of his mouth. A question in his eyes. A challenge he wasn’t supposed to issue.
George pressed his palm flat against the desk until the bones of his hand ached. He told himself the rules would hold. They had to. They were the foundation of Aether Solutions, the spine of the machine. Without them, there was only disorder.
Yet the words on the screen lingered, as though etched into the glass walls around him: You always hated that word.
He had. Still did. Compliance meant surrender. It meant bending when he had spent years standing straight.
George closed his eyes briefly, just long enough to picture the past—a dorm room at dawn, Mathew’s laugh cutting through exhaustion, warmth he hadn’t wanted but had taken anyway.
He opened them again to his office, his fortress of rules and silence. He whispered the mantra in his head: The rules will hold.
But even as he repeated it, he felt the truth gnawing at him.
The fracture had already begun.
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Updated 29 Episodes
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