The rental company had delayed charging the final balance intentionally, holding the paynt in reserve in case any rented equipnt returned damaged. Any repair costs would have been added to the total before the transaction finalized.
Apparently, nothing had been destroyed badly enough to matter.
He scrolled through the itemized list.
The prop firearm rentals.
The flyboard equipnt.
The motorcycle fleet.
The traffic vehicles used during post-production, cars driven repeatedly through controlled passes so Zoey could stitch together the illusion of a crowded, high-budget chase sequence.
The rented locations were the hotel suite that had served as the production base.
The improvised control room set for the Ghost Signal opening sequence.
And dozens of smaller expenses, smoke charges, costus, props, ergency equipnt purchases, all the miscellaneous costs Maya had tried to reimburse him for afterward.
Twice.
Stan had declined both tis with the sa calm finality he always used whenever soone attempted to return money he had already ntally categorized as spent.
At the side of his vision he got the system notification that showed him his rebate...
’Two hundred thousand dollars huh?’
Stan stared at the number for several seconds then sighed
Two hundred thousand dollars. From a single student film trip to Starfall Isle.
His brain perford the comparison automatically. Current liquid balance. The billion-dollar threshold he’d crossed after Sophie’s livestream detonated across the internet.
The absurd upward trajectory his finances had followed ever since the system activated.
Against numbers like those, two hundred thousand dollars was objectively insignificant.
A rounding error.
And yet...
This money had co from Sothing real, sothing tangible.
Sothing that had produced Ghost Signal, a film sitting at 2.3 million views and climbing by the hour.
A project already attracting reviews discussing "visual language" and "cinematic instinct" from people who had no idea they were analyzing a student production stitched together through improvisation, obsession, and barely controlled chaos.
The rebate felt almost incidental
’Better sothing than nothing,’ Stan thought with a sigh...
He slipped the phone back into his pocket, picked up his bag, and headed for the exit.
The Vivian situation was tomorrow.
The Grayson question remained unresolved.
Sowhere in the background, patient and unfinished, the audit, and the person behind it, continued moving quietly through his life like a delayed storm.
And sowhere across two different platforms, thousands of people on the internet were still trying very hard to figure out exactly who Stan Harrison was.
He drove ho through the early evening as the city transitioned around him.
Lights flickered on across buildings and storefronts. Traffic thickened. Restaurants filled. People crossed intersections carrying conversations, exhaustion, plans for the night, fragnts of ordinary lives colliding briefly beneath neon and headlights.
The city felt alive at this hour in a way it never did during the day.
Stan drove through the middle of it all thinking about nothing in particular.
The next day, Stan skipped class.
He had places to be, and the lecture hall was not one of them.
After showering, he changed into sothing clean and understated, presentable without trying too hard, then headed downstairs, slid into the Huracán, and pulled out of his apartnt garage.
The drive to Velaris City followed the sa coastal highway he’d taken to Starfall Isle four days earlier.
This ti, though, the destination was different.
Where the island road branched left toward the water, Velaris continued straight ahead, the city rising gradually from the coastline, glass and steel catching the morning light.
At the boundary of Starfall Isle, he stopped at a small restaurant positioned exactly between the two territories, the sort of place that existed because geography created traffic and traffic created business.
He ate without rushing.
The food was good.
The view of the ocean through the window was better.
Then he continued on.
The previous evening, he had spoken to Vivian and given her very specific instructions.
Security at the branch entrance was to be inford of his arrival and his vehicle. Nobody else.
He wanted no announcents, no preparation, no executives waiting downstairs rehearsing smiles for a shareholder visit.
He wanted to see the branch as it actually operated, not the polished version presented when a major shareholder walked through the door, but the real thing: two hundred people working an ordinary Tuesday because that was their job.
Vivian had accepted the instructions without argunt.
Whatever version of Vivian Reeves existed after yesterday’s termination-and-reinstatent cycle was significantly more compliant than the version that had once made antagonizing him a hobby.
Her termination, however, had not yet spread through the branch.
As far as the staff knew, Vivian Reeves was still the branch manager.
The Star Entertainnt Velaris City branch occupied a twelve-story building near the city’s dia district, a structure that sohow managed to look both expensive and practical at the sa ti. Dark glass, clean architectural lines, subtle branding integrated directly into the design instead of pasted onto it as an afterthought.
Stan parked in the visitor lot.
At the entrance, a security guard, the only employee Vivian had been permitted to inform, stepped forward with a brief professional nod. He checked Stan’s ID against a tablet, confird the license plate number, then waved him through without ceremony.
He walked into the lobby and stopped for a mont.
The building was alive, not in the curated way companies perford productivity for shareholders, but in the genuine chaos of an organization with too much to do and never enough hours to do it.
Beyond the glass walls of the ground-floor production bays, scriptwriters clustered around a table littered with printed pages. Two argued rapidly through a scene while a third scribbled notes into the margins, all with the focused urgency of people who had discovered a problem that needed solving before the next eting.
Nearby, a row of editors worked in near darkness, blue monitor light washing across concentrated faces as raw footage cycled endlessly across the screens above them. In one corner, the VFX departnt occupied a dense cluster of workstations surrounding a central display, where a sequence was being refined fra by fra. An artist moved a stylus in careful, precise motions while colleagues watched over their shoulder, offering rapid-fire adjustnts and critiques.
Near the windows, the marketing team stood before a massive trend dashboard tracking audience engagent across multiple regions in real ti. Conversations overlapped in fragnts of analytics, demographics, and release timing. Legal and business affairs occupied a quieter stretch beyond them, glass-walled offices where negotiations unfolded behind closed doors, phones pinned to ears while contracts and reports passed steadily from hand to hand.
Producers moved constantly between departnts with the brisk, purposeful energy of people carrying the entire production ecosystem in their heads, translating large-scale strategy into imdiate tasks as they went.
Localization teams worked in long rows with headphones on, adapting productions for entirely different markets. Nearby, scheduling boards tracked projects across four ti zones, every slot packed with overlapping deadlines.
The entire operation moved with the synchronized montum of sothing that had been running long enough to discover its own rhythm. They after all had deadline to et...
Stan stood in the lobby for nearly one full minute, simply watching.
’So this is what Star Entertainnt looks like from the inside,’ he thought. ’This is what I own a piece of.’
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