Victor’s first eting of the day started with good news.
The recruitnt report was waiting on his desk when he arrived, and he read it while walking from the elevator to the conference room.
Twenty-three new applicants.
Three B-rank candidates from neighboring cities and two Epic Classes among them.
More sponsorship requests than last week.
More partnership inquiries than the week before that.
His promotion to B-Rank and his role in the Mythical Dungeons had helped the guild imnsely. Organizations that had not returned calls three months ago were now initiating contact. Hunters who had committed elsewhere were asking about transfer arrangents.
Guild mbers greeted him as he moved through the corridors. So nodded or stepped aside. The respect wasn’t perford, and that was what mattered.
He had built this.
Not the guild itself, but the growth. Two months ago, Hale had been competing, and now people were competing to join Hale.
He sat down at the conference table, and the eting began.
Revenue up.
Recruitnt up.
New partnerships arrived every week.
The eting felt routine, and everything was working. Victor listened, asked the questions that needed asking, and made the decisions that needed making.
Then one of the executives cleared his throat. "There’s one issue."
Victor looked up as a folder slid across the table.
Westbridge Construction.
Victor recognized the na without needing the file. A reliable partner across several logistics operations, nothing prominent, the kind of organization that handled the work that made other work possible.
"What about them?" Victor said.
The executive said, "They’ve withdrawn. Paused all future cooperation."
One of the executives looked down at the table.
Another stopped writing.
Victor opened the folder to see professional language, polite framing, no accusations, and no stated conflict. A company exercising its right to restructure its partnerships.
Completely standard in form.
"Reason?" Victor said.
"Changing priorities," the executive said.
Victor looked at the page.
Westbridge had been enthusiastic about the next phase of cooperation as recently as three weeks ago. He rembered the conversation specifically because he had approved the preliminary agreent himself.
Changing priorities ant they didn’t want to say the real reason.
He closed the folder. "We’ll replace them."
The eting continued.
...
The second item arrived in the afternoon.
His assistant knocked while Victor was reviewing dungeon allocation requests, the new E-rank tier producing a surge in hunter coordination needs that Hale’s operational infrastructure was well-positioned to handle.
"The eting with Arcadia Investnts," the assistant said.
Victor nodded without looking up. A major investor that required months of work. They were important for Hale’s expansion.
"Has the conference room been prepared?" he said.
A pause. The specific pause of soone deciding how to say sothing.
"They canceled," the assistant said. "About an hour ago."
Victor set down his pen. "Canceled."
"Yes."
"Why."
"Scheduling conflict."
Victor looked at his assistant. "Reschedule it."
"We tried." The assistant already knew how this looked. "They declined."
Victor was quiet for a mont.
Arcadia had been engaged across every previous interaction. Arcadia had been interested from the beginning.
"Keep communication open," Victor said.
The assistant left.
Victor returned to the allocation requests. The Arcadia cancellation stayed in the back of his mind even after he returned to work. One withdrawal and one cancellation on the sa day were a coincidence. Many things could have gone wrong for them. One canceled eting wasn’t enough to an anything.
He returned to work.
...
The three missed calls arrived while he was walking between the afternoon’s final two etings.
He checked his phone in the corridor and saw them. Three separate contacts, three separate industries, all within a two-hour window.
Normally, he would not have grouped them. Today it felt different. He called the first number, but it went to voicemail.
The second was again voicemail and even the third was voicemail. Victor checked the ssage history. The last ssage from that contact had been sent four hours ago. The ssages had been normal with no disagreent, and both were laughing together.
The silence afterward felt stranger because of it.
All three of those contacts answered imdiately under normal circumstances. People answered Victor Hale’s calls because not answering had costs that answering did not.
A guild mber ca around the corner with a question about recruitnt procedure, and the mont passed. Victor answered the question and continued to his next eting, and the calls went into the sa background space as Westbridge and Arcadia.
The final eting ended after dark.
Hale Guild Headquarters was quiet by the ti Victor returned to his office. Most of the staff had gone ho. The city lights stretched across the window, thousands of points of light scattered through the dark.
He stood at the window for a while.
The reports on his desk were positive. Everything was growing faster than expected. This made Westbridge and Arcadia actions harder to understand. It led to so concern and a question about what had recently happened that led to them losing faith.
Outside the window, the city continued its recovery, three days past the celebration’s peak and settling into the new baseline the system had established. E-rank gates were active across every district.
New hunters finding their footing in a world that had moved its floor.
Victor had positioned Hale to benefit from that growth. The infrastructure was in place. The relationships were established.
And yet.
Westbridge had withdrawn without a real explanation. Arcadia had canceled and then declined the reschedule. Three contacts had gone to voicemail in a two-hour window. And sowhere below these specific events, in the week preceding them, three smaller partners had made similar quiet exits in similar polite language.
Victor stood at the window and looked at the city. He was not afraid, instead he began paying attention. Maybe the actions of the three guilds weren’t connected, or maybe they were. Either way, Victor intended to find out the real reason they quit. He didn’t reach where he was by ignoring his gut feeling that sothing was out of place.
He looked at the na for another second and then locked the screen. The phone vibrated but he ignored it, he needed answers now.
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