CASSIAN
Boredom, I decided, was a form of violence. It was a slow, psychic poison administered by diocre minds in expensive suits.
I sat at the head of the glass conference table in Hendrix Corporation’s executive wing, a monunt to sterile wealth. The diterranean glittered beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows, a blue so aggressively serene it felt like a taunt.
The agenda was a parade of predictable incompetence: zoning disputes poorly argued, environntal impact reports padded with jargon, tiline delays presented as acts of God rather than failures of planning. It could have been an email. A strongly worded, insulting email.
To my left, Hendrix—Alex—held court. He was performing. The Charming CEO. He nodded at the right monts, smiled the reassuring smile, his attention not on the docunts but on the faces around the table, asuring reactions. I filed his performance away with a silent, contemptuous footnote. Amateur.
My own mind was elsewhere, dissecting the proposal’s financial architecture and finding it structurally unsound. I was ntally rewriting it, line by inefficient line, when the atmosphere in the room shifted.
It was subtle. A change in pressure.
The Head of Security, a man nad Vargas who stood with military stiffness by the door, leaned down as soone whispered to him from the hallway. Vargas’s spine straightened a fraction. A micro-tension in his shoulders. He moved, not to , but to Alex, bending to murmur sothing into his ear.
Alex’s affable expression didn’t crack, but it calcified. The warmth in his eyes cooled to alertness.
I noticed. I always notice when a room’s equilibrium is breached.
The legal counsel was droning on about liability clauses. I cut through his sentence like a wire through clay.
"If this is not relevant," I said, my voice flat, "you are wasting my ti."
The lawyer’s mouth hung open mid-syllable. Silence crashed down, heavy and sudden.
All eyes flicked to Alex, who was now wearing a mask of grave concern. He hesitated, weighing his words.
I didn’t wait for him. I turned my head, just enough, and pinned Vargas with a look.
"You," I said. "Speak."
Vargas, to his credit, didn’t flinch. His voice was clipped, professional. "An incident, sir. In the lower comrcial wing. A civilian beca disruptive in a leasing office, was escorted out, then barricaded himself in a maintenance annex. He is currently holding one individual hostage."
A ripple of subdued alarm traveled through the executives. Alex held up a calming hand.
My reaction was a dull pulse of irritation. An operational hiccup. Inconvenient.
"Then follow protocol," I said, turning back to the table as if to dismiss the matter. "Secure the periter, isolate the area. This is a matter for your security and local authorities, not a boardroom."
Vargas continued, his tone careful. "Local police are two minutes out. The perpetrator’s demands are... vague. He is asking to speak to ’soone in charge.’ To the ’head’ of the project."
I exhaled, a slow, weary sound. Idiots and their grandstanding. This was still an abstraction. A problem for soone else’s checklist.
Then Vargas delivered the line that transford the abstract into the absolute.
"We have confird," he said, choosing his words with surgical precision, "the hostage is an employee. He was seen wearing an assistant’s identification badge. From your delegation, Mr. Wolfe."
The room held its breath.
I didn’t move. My fingers, resting on the glass table, were perfectly still. Alex’s gaze was a physical weight on the side of my face.
The irritation sharpened, focusing into a single, laser point of intent. My voice, when it ca, was deceptively calm.
"Na."
Vargas paused. A flicker of uncertainty. He had a description, perhaps. Not a na. The badge would have been scanned for entry, but in the chaos...
Before he could formulate a response, the conference room doors burst open.
This wasn’t a controlled entry. It was a breach.
Luca stood there, one of Alex’s junior aides—a man whose purpose seed to be fetching coffee and radiating benign anxiety. He looked neither benign nor anxious now. He looked gutted. His face was the color of chalk, a fine sheen of sweat on his upper lip. His tie was knotted wrong.
A security guard moved to block him, to usher him out. I raised a single finger. The guard froze.
Luca’s wild eyes swept the room, found , and locked on. The terror in them was fresh and total, as if he were staring at the source of his impending ruin.
He stumbled forward, words tripping over his own panic. "Sir—I—they said not to—but I saw it—it’s— it’s Noah."
Noah.
The switch flipped.
Silently. Internally. A vault door slamming shut in the core of , sealing away everything that was not this mont, this problem, this na.
I stood.
The movent was smooth, but the sound of my chair scraping back against the floor was a raw, shocking noise in the quiet room. I was already pulling my phone from my inner pocket, thumb unlocking it before it cleared the fabric.
"Clear the lower floors. Full lockdown. No one in or out," I said into the device, my voice low, carrying to the room. I was moving toward the door, the eting already a fossilized mory. "I want live cara feeds on my phone in fifteen seconds. dical team to the secondary command post. Now."
I stopped in front of Vargas, who had taken a half-step back. I looked at him, and I made sure he saw the absolute zero in my gaze.
"If he bleeds," I said, the words barely a whisper, yet they seed to freeze the air, "I will dismantle your entire departnt. Piece by piece."
It wasn’t a threat. It was a forecast.
"Cassian."
Alex was beside , his hand coming up in a placating gesture that didn’t touch . The golden boy CEO, stepping into the crisis. "Let them handle this. The negotiators are trained. You charging in there won’t help him."
I stopped walking and turned to face him fully. The difference between us was never more apparent. He was all compassionate concern, the responsible leader. I was a blade held perfectly still.
"Your building," I said, each word a chip of ice. "Your failure."
Alex didn’t rise to the anger. He absorbed it, his expression softening into one of pained understanding. The performance was masterful.
"I know you’re worried. But he’s asking for ’the head.’ The face of the project. That’s , publicly. I’m the better choice here. I can de-escalate. You..."
He left it hanging, but the aning was clear. You radiate violence. You are the last person who should walk into that room.
A muscle in my jaw tightened. I saw Vargas and the other security personnel watching, their silent agreent with Alex palpable. They saw a volatile billionaire. They saw a polished local hero.
The most infuriating part was that they were right.
The cold, logical part of my mind, the part that had survived prisons and rival families, conceded the point. Sending in the man who looked like he wanted to tear the building apart with his teeth was not a strategy. It was a catalyst for disaster.
I gave a single, clipped nod. A concession that tasted like ash.
Alex would go in. The hero.
I would stand here, in the command post, and watch. The monster on a leash.
As I turned to follow Vargas toward the secured elevator bank, the question escaped, not as a roar, but as a low, incredulous murmur to the empty air beside .
"How does he keep ending up like this."
It wasn’t really a question.
---
The secondary command post was a hive of controlled urgency. Police radios spat static and Spanish. A bank of monitors flickered to life, showing angles of empty corridors, the sealed door of the maintenance annex, a wide shot of the comrcial atrium now cleared of people.
My phone buzzed. The live feed link. I opened it, my expression impassive.
The image was grainy, from a ceiling-mounted cara inside the annex. It showed a clutter of workbenches, tool racks, industrial cables. And there, in the far corner, slumped against the wall—Noah.
His hands were bound behind his back with what looked like zip-ties. His head was down, chin nearly to his chest. Even in the poor resolution, I could see the frantic rise and fall of his shoulders. He was breathing too fast, on the edge of panic. Then, as if sensing the electronic eye, his head lifted.
His face was pale, smudged with dirt or grease. His eyes, wide and shockingly green even through the digital distortion, scanned the room. They weren’t looking for an exit. They were searching, desperately, for sothing else. For a sign. For .
A cold, possessive fury settled in my bones, quiet and absolute.
On another screen, I watched Alex being fitted with a wire, his expression sober and determined. The perfect volunteer.
My grip on the phone threatened to crack the glass. The rage was there, a contained inferno, but beneath it, powering it, was sothing else: a guilt as precise as a surgical cut. I brought him here. Into this building of polished knives. I left him alone.
Alex nodded to the tactical lead, ready to approach the door.
My voice cut through the low buzz of the command post, cold and clear, leaving no room for ambiguity. It was a directive, not for Alex, but for the universe itself.
"Do not let him touch him."
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