Once the elevator reached it’s destination, Stan stepped out, got to his lamborghini, drove to the gym, and pushed through a forty-minute circuit that left his muscles pleasantly spent and his mind clear.
His bandaged hand limited what he could do with weights, so he redirected the session toward bodyweight work and cardio, pull-ups, dips, a long run on the treadmill that ended with him standing at the machine’s console, breathing hard, sweat soaking through his shirt, feeling more awake than he had in days.
He showered at the gym, changed, and drove to campus.
The Lamborghini caused exactly the kind of disruption he’d expected.
He pulled into the campus parking area and stepped out, and the reaction spread outward like a stone dropped in still water, heads turning, conversations pausing, phones rising.
People who had seen him arrive on a battered bicycle a week ago were now watching him lock a matte-black limited-edition Huracán and were performing very visible and uncomfortable recalculations about every assumption they’d made.
The ones who approached did so with the particular energy of people who had recently decided that soone they’d dismissed was worth knowing, all smiles, all warmth, all carefully calibrated friendliness that had materialized with suspicious precision exactly when the forum post about Stan had been publicly dismantled.
Stan moved through them without slowing. He ignored them, having no particular desire to pretend that people who’d spread lies about him two days ago had beco genuine friends overnight.
They could only shrink back when Stan ignored them...
His classes that day were unremarkable in the best possible way, no confrontations, no forum drama, no Vivian arriving with bodyguards or Quinn materializing with a recording device and a moral crusade.
Just lectures, notes, the quiet rhythm of a university morning operating as it was supposed to.
Stan found himself genuinely paying attention.
Sothing had shifted over the past week, so internal recalibration that made the ordinary feel valuable in a way it hadn’t before. He was rich beyond any practical need.
He had influence that most students his age couldn’t conceive of. And yet sitting in a lecture hall, taking notes in the back row, eating lunch with Zack at a cafeteria table, these things carried a texture and a warmth that the Lamborghini and the bank balance didn’t.
He was walking out of his last class of the day, Zack falling into step beside him, when his phone rang.
It was Maya.
"The school has a trip planned," she announced, without preamble, "and I’ve already signed you up. We’ll go together, day after tomorrow."
Stan blinked.
"I didn’t agree to,"
"Is sothing wrong? Are you uncomfortable going on a trip with ?"
"That’s not what I said,"
"Perfect. Get ready. Day after tomorrow." A brief, satisfied pause. "I’ll send you the details, it’s been long since we’ve spent ti together, so I’m missing you."
She said the last line in a rush so she won’t get embarrassed, then the line went dead.
Stan stared at the phone for a mont, then pocketed it.
Beside him, Zack had his head tilted with the alert, slightly predatory curiosity of soone who had caught the distant sound of sothing interesting.
"Who was that? I heard a girl’s voice."
"Maya."
Zack’s eyebrows rose. He was quiet for exactly three seconds, the amount of ti it took his internal processing to complete, and then he turned to Stan with the gravity of a man delivering a solemn judgnt.
"Brother. I say this with love and deep personal respect." He placed a hand on Stan’s shoulder. "You are becoming a womanizer of historic proportions."
"I’m really not."
"Sophie. Maya. Vivian Reeves apologizing to you in public." Zack ticked them off on his fingers. "Three campus belles. Three. Simultaneously. Are you not at all concerned about the structural instability of this situation?"
"Not particularly."
"Not, not particularly." Zack shook his head slowly, the gesture of a man watching soone walk toward a cliff edge with complete serenity. "Alright. Fine. I give up. Let’s get lunch."
They ate without further philosophical discussion. Stan was grateful for that.
Halfway through the al, he checked the ti and felt a quiet pulse of anticipation.
The hearing. Quinn Carter’s defamation case.
Sophie had told him about the scheduled date about a day ago, and Sarah had confird the ti last night.
He’d been carrying it in the back of his mind all morning like a weight he was looking forward to setting down.
Not out of malice, or maybe out of malice but not entirely, but out of the sa cold, settled certainty that had driven him to tell Quinn, on the floor of a hot pot restaurant, that this ti there would be consequences.
He finished his al, told Zack it was about ti, and drove to the courthouse.
He would’ve gone with Zack, but Zack had sothing important to do that very mont, Zacked urged Stan to update him on what happens when they teach Quinn a lesson.
Soon Stan reached the court house
The building was a mid-rise of polished concrete and tinted glass, the kind of architecture that communicated institutional authority without quite achieving elegance. Stan parked the Huracán in the visitors’ lot and walked toward the entrance.
Sarah was waiting on the steps.
She was dressed formally, a structured charcoal blazer over a fitted dress, her hair pulled back, the deliberate, professional composure of a woman who had prepared for this. Her attorney stood a few steps behind her, reviewing docunts on a tablet.
When she saw Stan, her expression shifted, the professional mask softening into sothing warr.
"You ca," she said.
"Did you think I wouldn’t?"
"I hoped you would." She glanced at his bandaged hand and her eyes sharpened with brief concern. "What happened?"
"Long story. I’ll tell you later."
She studied the bandage for another second, then let it go. They walked into the building together.
The courtroom was smaller than television had trained Stan to expect, a modest, functional space with paneled walls, fluorescent lighting, and the particular sll of institutional carpet and old paper.
The public gallery had perhaps thirty seats, most of them occupied by students from Peak University who had arrived with the specific energy of people who had co to watch sothing they’d been waiting for.
Quinn Carter was already seated at the defendant’s table when Stan and Sarah entered.
He looked terrible.
Not in the theatrical, movie-villain way of soone whose downfall is being staged for an audience.
Just, genuinely terrible. Pale, hollow-eyed, wearing a suit that fit poorly and looked like it had been ironed by soone running on three hours of sleep.
There were shadows under his eyes that suggested he hadn’t been sleeping well since the summons had arrived at his dormitory door.
When Quinn saw Stan walk in, sothing moved across his face, a complicated, layered expression that contained elents of sha, resentnt, fear, and the particular misery of a man who understood, for the first ti in his life, that his actions had produced consequences he couldn’t talk or maneuver his way out of.
Stan held his gaze for a mont. Then he sat down in the gallery without expression.
The proceedings began with the asured efficiency of a judge who had seen a hundred cases like this and intended to resolve it with minimum theatrical indulgence from either side.
The charges were read. Defamation. Deliberate dissemination of false information. Demonstrable damage to reputation and professional standing.
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