Tuesday, 3:55 PM.
I stood outside the conference room in the Administration Building, checking my reflection in the glass panel of the door. I wasn’t wearing a tuxedo today, but I wasn’t wearing a hoodie either. I’d opted for a charcoal sweater over a button-down—academic, serious, but approachable.
"You look like a professor," Darius muttered. He was leaning against the wall down the hall, scrolling through his phone. He wasn’t allowed in the eting, obviously, but he insisted on walking to the door.
"That’s the point," I said. "I’m the Chair. I have to look the part."
"Just don’t bore them to death," Darius said, pushing off the wall. "I’ll be at the vending machines."
I took a breath and opened the door.
The conference room was imposing. A long mahogany table dominated the space, surrounded by high-backed leather chairs. At the head of the table sat Dean Vance.
To her right sat Roger Thorne (no relation to Marcus, thankfully), the President of the Student Council. Roger was a senior, a poli-sci major, and the kind of guy who wore a tie to an 8 AM lecture. He had a binder open in front of him that was thicker than my arm.
"Mr. Hart," Dean Vance said, not looking up from her tablet. "You’re on ti. Take a seat."
I sat at the opposite end of the table. The power dynamic was clear: Vance at the head, at the foot, Roger flanking her like a loyal vizier.
"We are here to discuss the implentation of the Sterling Grant," Vance began, her voice crisp. "Mr. Sterling has released the first tranche of funds. We need a roadmap for the ’Legacy Initiative’ by the end of the month."
"Dean Vance," Roger interrupted, raising a hand. "If I may. The Student Council has already drafted a preliminary proposal regarding the allocation of resources for the new center. We believe a subcommittee should be ford to evaluate the environntal impact of the digital archives."
He slid a packet across the table. It was color-coded.
Vance looked at the packet, then at . She didn’t say anything. She was testing .
The System flickered.
[Social Encounter: Bureaucratic Ambush]
[Opponent: Roger (Rank: Bureaucrat)]
[Objective: Seize Control of the Narrative]
[Strategy: Decisive Action]
I didn’t open the packet.
"That’s excellent initiative, Roger," I said, my voice calm. "But Mr. Sterling was very specific. He doesn’t want subcommittees. He wants results. He signed that check because he believes we can preserve history, not debate it."
Roger bristled. "Process is important, Jake. We can’t just—"
"We have a tiline," I cut in gently. "The environntal impact is minimal; it’s a digital archive in an existing basent. What we need isn’t a subcommittee. We need a curator. We need to identify the first hundred docunts to be digitized. That’s the story we sell to the alumni."
I looked at Vance.
"I propose we bypass the council review and work directly with the History Departnt. I can have a list of artifacts on your desk by Friday."
Roger looked like he’d swallowed a lemon. "Friday? That’s impossible. The departnt head is—"
"Already on board," I lied. (I hadn’t asked yet, but I knew Nia could get his schedule). "We move fast, or the money sits in an account doing nothing. And Mr. Sterling hates idle capital."
Vance watched the exchange, her face impassive. She tapped a pen against the table.
"Roger," she said finally. "Jake is right. We don’t have ti for committees. The Council’s input is noted, but Mr. Hart is the Chair. We proceed with the digitization plan."
Roger deflated. He closed his binder with a snap. "Understood, Dean."
[Authority Established]
[Respect Gained: 10 (Vance)]
[Rival Created: Roger]
The rest of the eting was a blur of logistics. I assigned tasks, set deadlines, and kept the conversation moving. I didn’t act like a student. I acted like a project manager.
At 5:00 PM, Vance dismissed us.
"Roger, close the door on your way out," she said. "Jake, stay a mont."
Roger shot a glare that promised a strongly worded email later, and left.
The room went quiet.
Vance stood up and walked over to the window, looking out at the darkening campus.
"You handled him well," she said. "Roger is useful, but he mistakes motion for progress."
"He likes rules," I said. "I prefer outcos."
She turned to face . The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across the room. She wasn’t smiling, but her eyes were bright.
"Outcos are what matter," she agreed. "But be careful. People like Roger don’t fight with fists. They fight with bylaws and anonymous complaints."
"I’ll keep my paperwork in order."
"See that you do." She walked back to the table and picked up a book that had been sitting next to her tablet. It was a hardcover, worn at the edges. The Prince by Machiavelli.
She slid it across the mahogany.
"Read this," she said.
"I’ve read it," I said. "In Intro to Pol-Sci."
"No," she corrected softly. "You read the excerpts. You read the quotes about being feared versus loved. I want you to read the Chapters on fortresses. On advisors. On how to hold a state that is used to freedom."
I picked up the book. It felt heavy.
"Is this howork, Dean Vance?"
"It’s a manual," she said. "You have instincts, Jake. Good ones. But instincts only get you so far. If you want to survive in my world—or Sofia’s—you need structure."
She ntioned Sofia. It was a subtle reminder that she knew exactly whose orbit I was in.
"Thank you," I said.
"Don’t thank yet. We’ll discuss Chapter Three next Tuesday." She sat back down, dismissing . "Go. Before Roger files a grievance about favoritism."
I walked out of the building, the book tucked under my arm.
Darius was waiting. "You survive?"
"Yeah," I said. "I think I won."
"Good. Because your girlfriend is texting you. She says you’re late."
I checked my phone.
Sofia: Dinner at 8. I ordered Thai. Don’t be late, or I start the movie without you.
I smiled.
The contrast was jarring. Elena gave Machiavelli and warnings about bureaucracy. Sofia gave Thai food and threats about movie spoilers.
One was teaching how to rule. The other was teaching how to live, the sa way I had taught her.
I got into the Uber Darius had called.
"Aldridge holdings," I told the driver.
I opened the book Elena had given . On the inside cover, in elegant, sharp handwriting, was an inscription.
To the student who understands that history is just a list of people who didn’t hesitate.
I closed the book.
The ga was slowing down, but the stakes were getting higher.
I had a week to read Machiavelli. And a lifeti to figure out how to survive two of the most powerful won in the city.
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